Moon Road

By Sarah Leipciger

5 Stars


It’s irksome to her, how well she knows this man, how much he has changed and how exactly the same he is …

Kathleen and Yannick have not spoken for nineteen years, not since what happened with their daughter.

Now, there’s unexpected news from the other side of the country, and the call for a road trip they can only make together.

This is a great story. A road trip unlike any other. It’s one of those wonderfully written books with the characters really living in it. No super humans,  just ordinary people with their thoughts and problems we can all identify with. It has a way of holding the reader so that you’re eager to see what happens next, as a good read should. I absolutely loved this book. 

It’s due to be published on the 16th May 2024. 

My thanks to #NetGalley for this free ARC in exchange for my honest review. 

Life after Writing 101

Well it’s Sunday morning and Writing 101 is over. To be honest, it all seems a bit flat today. After four weeks of trying to interpret a different prompt each day, I look at my email inbox and something is missing and that’s not quite right.

Maybe it’s also because I’m going home today too. Spending a week and a half, juggling various internet connections in bars, restaurants or wherever I could get online. Using my laptop, tablet and phone to make sure I managed to post something as near to the allotted day. Losing posts as the phone or tablet kicked me out of the App for some, as yet, unexplained reason. This evening I will be back in the bosom of my high speed, unlimited WiFi filled home but will removing some of the past few days obstacles make a difference?

You bet it will !! Bring it on because as they say ‘Home is where the WiFi is’

How can you tell when you’re old?

In this modern, fast paced world of ours I am beginning to wonder how I will I know when I am old? When the media tells us that 50 is the new 30 and 60 is the new 40 and middle age seems indeterminate, how will I know when the time has come for me to sit in my armchair, button my cardigan and watch the world go by? Don’t get me wrong, I don’t feel old, although I probably am in the eyes of most people, but I’m not yet old in my own head. I look in the mirror and sometimes see another, older image staring back at me and that can be hard to accept. Certainly, when I was in my twenties, anyone over forty was old, and perhaps, in those days, they probably were. So what is it that defines us as old? As the date that we can officially draw our pension is constantly increased, I am beginning to wonder if, for some, that time will never be reached and they will stay on the treadmill while the retirement time remains elusive and at the last moment snatched away from their grasp.

Retirement for many is the time in their lives to have the time of their lives. When families have grown and flown the nest and they can have time for themselves at last. Learning to sail, surf, climb mountains, cross deserts, sky dive, cruise around the world, and enjoy those adventures that time never allowed during their working life. So to try to unravel the mystery of ageing I thought a useful check list may help us to identify when we are old.

So when:

  • Going out for a meal is planned around getting back home by eight o’clock so you can put your slippers on.
  • In conversation with younger people, you have and can quote life experiences which covers almost every subject
  • You, like the rest of your peers wore short trousers for school
  • You remember when everyone wrote letters to each other and those letters were more than 160 characters long.
  • You used to listen to the radio and when TV finally came to you it was black and white, with only two channels.
  • When you went shopping the prices of the goods never changed
  • Shops would sell you a single cigarette
  • You think young fashions look ridiculous but then you realise that kids are wearing the same things you used to wear.
  • It’s easier to catch a train rather than drive places
  • You make “Aaah” noises when you sit down
  • At school you had to draw maps of the world freehand.
  • You become cynical about everything
  • There was no such thing as technology in your world

You also remember:

  • “The Beatles” as a new band
  • When spelling was important
  • The end of food rationing in the 50’s and petrol rationing in the 70’s
  • Cross ply tyres
  • When AA patrol men rode motorcycles and saluted you
  • When policemen were older than you
  • Your first colour TV set
  • Video remote’s were connected to the set by a wire
  • When children played together in the street and came home when it was dark
  • When you could cross the road without worrying about being hit by a car
  • When shops closed at 5 and were never open on a Sunday

If some of these items are familiar to you then, unfortunately, the world is viewing you as old and it begins to make allowances for you. Although you have just landed after a sky dive or stepped off a white water raft, they will still think you are a senior citizen. Never mind; always remember, their time will come.