bookshops

Books in the Wild (sort of): Barbican Shop

Did I go and see Kiss Me, Kate for a third time this week? You bet I did. And did I take the opportunity to have a good old nosy in their shop. Why yes. I even bought something (a t-shirt not a book, I was fresh from a three book trip to Waterstones Gower Street), but they have books and it’s an interesting selection

The fiction selection has some of the usual suspects – Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow and the Dolly Alderton for example, but also some stuff I haven’t seen like Big Swiss and some of the books in translation.

Then there’s a lovely section of London-set books of all sorts, from novels to walking tours to non-fiction.

There’s also a music section – on the first picture you can see there’s another shop on the top level – and that is mostly records, but the downstairs shop also has records, including The Slits album – which reminded me again how good Viv Albertine’s memoir is.

There’s also lots of art and trinkets and some really nice prints of the Barbican or that fit with the brutalist style, but I’m back on the books – this last table has some more of the more regularly spotted literary fiction. All in all a good selection if you’re looking to pick up something in a rush!

Have a great weekend.

bingeable series

Bingeable Series: Darling Deli

After blitzing my way through Patti Benning’s Real Estate Rescue series earlier this year, I’ve now done the same thing with her Darling Deli series, and now I’ve made it to the end – and I think this series is completed – it’s time to talk about it.

Our heroine is Moira Darling. She’s a single mum with a just about adult daughter and owns and runs a deli in a small town near Lake Michigan. In the first book of the series the owner of one of the rival businesses in the town is found dead and Moira finds herself suspected of killing him. Over the course of the next 32 books she continues to stumble across an improbably high number of bodies and help solve the crimes, with the help of her daughter, a handsome local private investigator and an increasing group of friends. The locations expand to include a nearby town where her daughter opens her own business and the occasional trip to other parts of the country.

Like the Real Estate Rescue series, these are not the longest books, or the most complicated on the plot front. This is an earlier series, so at times the writing is a bit clunkier, but they’re basically the perfect length to read on my commute to work – which means that I don’t often read more than one in a sitting (although you’ve seen that I’ve often done more than one in a week) so you don’t notice the issues as much. The main one being that if you think too hard about how many bodies Moira is finding, and in such a short space of time, you realise that she’s a bigger curse than Jessica Fletcher and Maple Creek has a higher homicide rate than Cabot Cove! But they’re a nice easy read – and it’s not always the new character who has just been introduced who gets murdered, so that makes a change too.

These are all available in Kindle Unlimited – if you’re a KU subscriber they’re a good deal, but given their length (usually around 120 pages) I’m not sure they’re worth the non-KU price.

Have a great weekend!

Book previews

Out Today: New Matt Haig

I know Matt Haig is an autobuy for some people, so today I wanted to mention that he has a new book hitting the bookshops. It’s called The Life Impossible and it’s his first novel since the mega hit The Midnight Library, which I still need to get around to reading, especially given how much I enjoyed How to Stop Time. Anyway, this is about Grace, a retired maths teacher who is left a rundown house on Ibiza and sets out with a one way ticket and absolutely no plan about what to do about it. The blurb promises hope, adventure, wonder and the power of a new beginning. From which I deduce it may make you cry so maybe not one to read on the plane, but perhaps one for behind some big sunglasses on your late summer holiday!

Book previews, previews, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Autumn new release preview

Happy Wednesday everyone, and I’m taking the opportunity today to do a quick run through of some of the new books coming this autumn, as we’re about to hit the flood of books arriving in the shops in time for Christmas. The literary fiction headlines are the new novels from Sally Rooney, Elizabeth Strout, Olga Tokarczuk and Haruki Murakami, but we all know my tastes run slightly differently.

Lets start with the ones I’ve already got on the Kindle waiting for me, thanks to the joys of NetGalley. Firstly there’s the new book by Lissa EvansA Small Bomb at Dimperley, which comes out next week, so I’m doing this just in time. This is set at the end of the Second World War, with a second son returning to his ancestral home – where he is now responsible for the whole kit and caboodle after the death of his older brother. Also waiting on the Kindle but not out until October is Miss Beeton’s Murder Agency by Josie Lloyd, a cosy crime which features a distant descendent of *the* Mrs Beeton who runs a household staff agency where one of her staff ends up dead over the festive period. This might be the first of the Christmas themed novels I’ll read this year – but it won’t be the only one…

And that’s because only a few months after the third instalment of the series, we have a fourth Three Dahlias book and as I mentioned in my post about the series, this next one is a Christmas one. I don’t have this on Netgalley so I will have to wait – or maybe put it on my Christmas list, but A Very Lively Midwinter Murder is out on November 5. Out the same day is The Author’s Guide to Murder by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig and Karen White which appears to be a bit of a new direction for the trio – as the blurbs are promising a whodunnit with literary satire when a superstar author is found dead on a remote Scottish Island. I look forward to getting my hands on it.

A couple of memoirs to finish today – firstly Lisa Marie Presley’s, From Here to the Great Unknown, which has been completed after her death by her daughter Riley Keogh. I watched Priscilla on the plane to Manila, and I’ve watched most of Elvis (probably need to start again from the beginning at this point though) so I look forward to seeing where Lisa Marie’s story fits in on that spectrum given all the controversy about those two movies and the family splits they caused, not to mention all the fighting after Lisa Marie’s death early in 2023. That’s coming in early October. And then there’s Darren Hayes Unlovable (another one out on 5 November). You may remember Hayes as the lead singer of Savage Garden, and you may also remember that I went to see him in London the other year and was in floods of happy tears to hear all my favourite songs of his sounding amazing, more than 25 years on. Given that one of my favourite songs of his is the haunting Two Beds and a Coffee Machine, which is clearly about domestic violence, there’s obviously going to be some difficult stuff to read in here – even before you get to the attitudes of the music industry to his sexuality. But I’m looking forward to reading it – and to finding out more about what he was up to in his ten year hiatus – and what made him come back.

That’s your lot for today – I’m sure you’ll be hearing more about some of these in the next few months though. Happy Humpday everyone.

Book of the Week, books, Forgotten books

Book of the Week: Guard Your Daughters

Today’s pick is part of the bounty from that Persephone trip I mentioned on Saturday. And I’m quite pleased with my choice!

Guard Your Daughters is the story of a family of five sisters – four of whom are still living at home, whilst the oldest has recently married. It’s the early 1950s and their mother stops the girls from going to school, or making friends – and if she can from leaving the house at all. Their father is a mystery writer and devoted to his wife and to keeping her from being made ill by goings on around d her. Told by Morgan, the middle sister, in some ways it’s a light and fluffy book as you follow the day to day lives of the girls. But under that there is a darker secret.

I remember my mum saying to me once that as a parent it is your job to bring your children up so that they can go out into the world and live independently without you. On that front, Morgan’s parents appear to have failed big style. The elder girls had a governess, but she left some time before the start of the novel and the youngest sister, Theresa, is going without a proper education and is busy trying to make sure no one forces her out of the world that she’s made for herself. And the elder girls seem to being kept in the sort of splendid isolation that a strict Victorian father might have come up with – encouraged to work on accomplishments – despite the fact that the world has changed. How did eldest sister Pandora manage to escape in marriage? Well read it and you’ll find out.

Interestingly Persephone have included a selection of reader reactions to the end of the book – because this is a bit of a polarising one. I can’t say that I liked many of the characters but I was fascinated to see what was actually going on in the household. I’ve seen some people compare it to I Capture the Castle and I don’t think that’s necessarily wrong, although this is darker than I remember that being. Anyway, I read it in less than a day and it gave me lots of thoughts, so I recommend it!

My copy came from Persephone in Bath – you can order direct from them or you may be able to find it (or order it) in larger bookstores

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: August 19 – August 25

A good week in reading – not least because the long running list is finally nearly under control! I’m really quite pleased with myself. Anyway, finished one series, cleared another few books off the to read pile, which is good because before I went to Book Con I was feeling quite pleased with myself that we were down to just the bookshelf and not a pile in front of the shelves as well – and then i realised that’s because I have a couple of secondary piles near my spot on the sofa. So a fresh push at the physical to-read pile is underway!

Read:

Shamrocks and Murder by Patti Benning

Dimsie Moves Up Again by Dorita Fairlie Bruce

Let’s Play Dead by Sheila Connolly

Sugar Coated Murder by Patti Benning

Murder, My Darling by Patti Benning

The Cracked Mirror by Chris Brookmire*

Death and the Maiden by Gladys Mitchell

The Swish of the Curtain by Pamela Brown

Guard Your Daughters by Diana Tutton

Started:

What Time the Sexton’s Spade Doth Rust by Alan Bradley*

Still reading:

Five Love Affairs and a Friendship by Anne de Courcy

Two books bought. Trying to restrain myself

Bonus picture: A slight change to my office décor with some lovely Discworld prints.

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

streaming

Not a Book: Only Murders in the Building new series

This is a bit of a preview, but the fourth series of Only Murders in the Building starts on Tuesday and I am very excited. Here’s the trailer – but don’t watch it if you’re not up to date with the series or you’ll get some spoilers. Instead, go and read my earlier post about the show!

Anyway, I’ve really enjoyed the first three series and I can’t wait to see how they build out the world in this latest one. As usual, we already know who the victim is, because we saw it happen at the end of series three. Selena Gomes, Steve Martin and Martin short are back as Mabel, Charles and Oliver, and it looks like Meryl Streep is too, given that she was at the premiere the other night (holding hands with Short – which has got all that speculation going again) and although it seems like Jesse Williams is not (another Mabel love interest bites the dust) there are a whole load of A-listers who are due to appear including Molly Shannon, Eva Longoria and Eugene Levy. I would say I can’t wait, but I will wait until the whole series is available because I do like to be able to go straight on to the next episode and not have to wait another week. Also I’ll wait because it’s on Disney + here in the UK and I don’t currently have a subscription to that so I’ll need to finish out some other things on the other services before I swap it in!

Have a great Sunday everyone.

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Persephone Books

As well as Book Conference, my trip to Bristol a few weeks back included a day out in Bath, where I finally got a chance to go to Persephone’s Bookshop, which moved here from London a few yeas back and was basically everything I was hoping it would be.

As you may remember I got a Persephone subscription for Christmas a few years back, which yealded a fair few BotW picks, and I now have a fairly substantial collection of their books, but as with a lot of forgotten-type books, it can sometimes be hard to figure out which ones are going to be your thing from the blurbs, so it was a real joy to have so many of them in such close proximity to each other so you could have a read and sample to work it out.

And they’ve got a couple of comfy chairs for you to sit in to work it out and it all just looks so lovely and welcoming and the displays look so good. They have a multibuy going as well so if you buy in multiples of three you can save a little money. They also have a nice selection of Persephone related merch and items that you might like if you like the books and their design ethos.

And then there is this shelf of the fifty books that they wish that they had published, which includes a fair few that are on my shelves – like The Light Years from the Cazalet series, Elizabeth Taylor’s Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont, Elizabeth Jenkins’s The Tortoise and the Hare, Nancy Mitford’s The Pursuit of Love and Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca.

I bought two books for me (which you’ve already seen), a third that was a gift and a little fabric pouch to put your book in to keep it nice in your bag – which is an improvement on the padded envelope that I had been previously using. All in all a great stop on a lovely day out.

Have a great long weekend if you have a bank holiday on Monday.

books, Series I love

Series redux: Campion

BBC Four showed one of the Peter Davidson Campion adaptations the other week, so I thought this Friday was a good time to remind you about Margery Allingham’s Golden Age series. I’ve re listened to a lot of them on audiobook as well as having read all bar one I think of the original nineteen novels featuring her response to Lord Peter Wimsey. They are dated in patches – some novels much more than others – but so are some of Agatha Christie and Dorothy L Sayers. If you’re interested in the Queens of Crime and you haven’t read any of these, you should. And you can read my much longer thoughts here.

Book previews

Out today: The Lantern of Lost Memories

This week I wanted to highlight a book that might not be as obvious or prominent in the shops. Of course now I’ve said that, it’ll turn out to be everywhere but hey, here we are. I think you can tell from the cover but Sanaka Hiiragi’s The Lantern of Lost Memories is looking to appeal to people who have enjoyed Before the Coffee Gets Cold and its sequels. And I am one of those people, but I’m also someone who quite enjoys the fact that Japanese fiction is just so different from the rest of what I read so I’m prepared to risk tears and melancholy in it even when I’m not in anything else!

It’s about a magical photo studio where people go after they die to view key moments of their life and relieve one of them before they go on to the afterlife. You can see why I might be expecting some tears. Anyway, I’ll try and remember to report back when I read it…