books I want

Recommend me a series!

A bit of a change today, because I’ve realised that I need some new series to read! I’ve finished some recently, and I’m up to date with a bunch of others, and my usual method of wandering “if you liked this, try this” type spaces doesn’t seem to be writing as well these days. If you were to order me for a reading why that is, I would say my theory is around the inclusion of TikTok sensation in so many book descriptions at the moment, which seems to be serving me a very disparate group of books, rather than getting romance suggestions from romance books and cosy crime from cosy crime. So, if you have found a a good series that you think I would enjoy binging, let me know!

Have a great weekend!

Book previews, books

Out this week: To Woo and to Wed

I think this is the first of the books I mentioned in my anticipated sequels post to come out into the world. This promises a widowed heroine who arranges a fake engagement so that her sister will feel that she’s able to marry, and they’ll call it off once her sister is happily married. Except the engagement is to someone that she was almost engaged to when she was younger – so what could possibly go wrong… Doesn’t that sound great? I’m resisting the urge to buy it already!

books, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: January Quick reviews

Just the three this month to mention – and three very different books. Well sort of. I read quite a lot last month but many of them you have already heard about – like eleven novellas in the Real Estate Rescue series…

Breathless by Beverly Jenkins

There was a big sale on Beverly Jenkins books in December and this was one of the ones I picked up. It’s the middle book in her Old West Trilogy and the one of that series I hadn’t already read. The heroine of this is Portia, an educated and independent woman who runs some of her family’s business interests. The hero is a cowboy rancher who worked for Portia’s family in the past and has just ridden back into town. He knows he’s in love with her straightaway, she’s not interested in marriage and men and this features one of my favourite romance things – kissing (or more) to try and get it out of (one of their) system(s). It doesn’t work of course and so it’s a lot of fun watching them work towards their happy ending.

It Happened One Fight by Maureen Lee Lenker

So this is a romance set in Golden Age Hollywood, which we all know is a particular favourite setting for me. It features Joan and Dash, two movie stars who are a double act – think Fred and Ginger, Hepburn and Grant etc – but who don’t get on behind the scenes. Just as Joan is finally about to get what she wants – freedom to make movies without Dash – a gossip column exposes that they’re married because: romance novel reasons. I really, really wanted to like this more than I did, but early doors I was struggling to work out how Dash was redeemable – but by the end it was Joan who was doing the awful stuff. And now you see why it didn’t end up as a Book of the Week!

Two Women Walk into a Bar by Cheryl Strayed

This Amazon Original story looks at Cheryl Strayed’s relationship with her mother in law and more particularly at the end of her mother in law’s life. I haven’t read Wild – with deals with Strayed’s trek to try and get over the death of her mother, but this has made me really want to – even though I don’t usually do grief related memoirs that much. Short but impactful.

Happy humpday!

Book of the Week, books, Forgotten books

Book of the Week: The Belting Inheritance

So another year, another British Library Crime Classic BotW pick – but hey I made it into February before I recommended one!

The Belting Inheritance is not a murder mystery. Well it is, but that’s not the main thing it is. It’s the story of a supposedly dead son arriving back home, and the events that ensue. It’s told by Christopher, who is not a son of the house, but whose moved there after the death of his parents when his mother’s aunt swept in and moved him from his old life to Belting. Lady Wainwright reigns over the house with her two remaining sons in residence. Except one day, just her health is failing, a man appears claiming to be her son David who was shot down in the war and reported killed.

This isn’t the first book I’ve read with a plot about someone returning from the dead – I studied Martin Guerre as part of my history degree, and Josephine Tey’s Brat Farrar is brilliant too. This is equally twisty and peopled with characters that you really dislike which adds an extra twist to it all. I raced through it and although I wanted more at the end, that was just because (as ever) I wanted to know more of what happened next. Definitely worth picking up if you see it.

My copy was via Kindle Unlimited, which means it won’t be on Kobo at the moment, but I’ve definitely seen it in the usual bookstore who carry BLCC books so hopefully it’ll be findable if you are interested.

Happy reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: January 29 – February 4

Well a slightly better list than I was expecting this time last week, but still got some long runners going on. Still this week is looking marginally less busy so I can endeavour to change that (but it’s been going on a while now hasn’t it!).

Read:

Vintage Murder by Ngaio Marsh

Double Shot by Diane Mott Davison

Artists in Crime by Ngaio Marsh

Murder on the Salsette by Edward Marston

Death in a White Tie by Ngaio Marsh

Death in the Stacks by Jenn McKinlay

Lady Thief of Belgravia by Allison Grey*

The Belting Inheritance by Julian Symons

Started:

Knife Skills for Beginners by Orlando Murrin*

Still reading:

The Last Action Heroes by Nick de Semelyen

Travellers in the Third Reich by Julia Boyd

Four books bought – including The Breakup Tour which dropped price on Kindle last week!

Bonus photo: a truly amazing sunset last week, courtesy of my dad!

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

books, stats

January Stats

Books read this month: 37*

New books: 27

Re-reads: 10 (7 audiobooks)

Books from the to-read pile: 6

NetGalley books read: 4

Kindle Unlimited read: 12

Ebooks: 5

Audiobooks: 7

Non-fiction books: 2

Favourite book this month: Birder, She Wrote by Donna Andrews

Most read author: Patti Benning because of all those Real Estate Rescue novellas (but also Ngaio Marsh)

Books bought: 14 – including 1 pre order

Books read in 2024: 37

Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 730

Ummmm. A few. I’m still not sure I want to count this year!

Bonus picture: another picture from the January holiday!

*includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels -13 including this month

books

Books in the Wild – new stuff at last!

After the disappointment of the airport the other week, I was in Waterstones this week and finally there are some new books starting to appear – or at least books I hadn’t seen before…

Firstly there’s a new group biography from Paula Byrne. I haven’t read much Thomas Hardy – although I have visited some of his houses – but I’ve read and liked several of her previous books like The Adventures of Miss Barbara Pym, Kick, and Mad World so it maybe that I end up picking this up at some point too.

The new Kiley Reid is also out now too. Such a Fun Age was such a sensation I’m interested to see how Come and Get It does – the cover is very pretty but it did strike me how different it is from that previous one.

I don’t think this is that new (last summer for the hardback I think) but it is in a time period that I’m interested in – this is about a former cinema director who travels across Europe with his family who include a member of Oswald Mosley’s party and a communist. I’ll have to do a bit more research before I read it because it has the potential to be grim as anything but I’m quite interested.

Speaking of Oswald Mosley adjacent fiction – I hadn’t realised Jessica Fellowes’ Mitford mystery series was still going, but apparently it is and this is the final one. I keep meaning to go back and give these another try, but the tbr pile is so very huge it just hasn’t happened yet…

And finally there was a big old display of the new Sarah J Maas – freshly released that day and which Gower Street had opened at midnight for which is why I mention it because it gave me such vivid flashbacks to my younger years!

Have a great weekend everyone.

books, new releases, reviews

Bonus review: A Death in Diamonds

Instead of a series post this week – and because it came out yesterday and I read it the other week, today I’m doing a quick review of the new Her Majesty The Queen Investigates mystery – because even though it’s the fourth in the series it can absolutely be read standalone. And that’s because this time it’s entirely set in the past. It’s 1957 and the Queen is still adjusting to being in charge, and Britain is still adapting to the post war, post colonial world. Then two bodies turn up on Chelsea and there’s a connection to the household. So of course she takes an interest and tries to find out what happened. This time she’s helped by a young secretary, working at the palace after an interesting war and busy trying to deal with the ‘men in moustaches’.

I said in one of my earlier posts about this series that I wondered how this series would carry on – and maybe this is the answer – going back and doing more historical-set mysteries. Because this was pretty good. There is plenty of palace manoeuvring along side the mystery and it keeps you reading to find out what happens there as well as who did the crime. Fingers crossed there’s more where this came from.

Have a great weekend everyone.

Book previews, books

Out today: Knife Skills for Beginners

It’s new book Thursday again and I’ve got a new murder mystery to mention. This features chef who gets roped in to teach a residential cookery course in Belgravia. But when someone ends up dead on the first night Paul needs to solve the mystery himself so he doesn’t get blamed. I’m well underway in this and I’m enjoying it so far – and Orlando Murrin is a cookery writer and chef himself so it has recipes and some of them look really good!