Books bought: 9 books and 9 ebooks – it was all going really well until the last 10 days of the month when the Heated Rivalry books went on offer and then the damn burst on a bit of physical book purchasing too.
Most read author: hard to tell because it’s probably among the audiobooks – either Ngaio Marsh or Elizabeth Peters, because the Falcon at the Portal is now the longest book I’ve read this year and I’m a way through the next one too, but I’ve also done four Inspector Alleyns.
Books read in 2025: 58
Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 599 – this is back a little again because I’ve added a bunch of the 2026 releases that I either want to read or have copies of via NetGalley. So hopefully that will come down again as I read them!
Firstly an apology that I’m posting this so far into March, but there were a few things that I wanted to talk about in the first week of the month that couldn’t really wait, and so this was the thing that got bumped. A pretty good month in reading to be honest. I’m pretty pleased with the number of books on the list from NetGalley, even if the to-read pile list is a bit shorter. I’m still some way off getting the list down to where I want it, but progress is progress.
Bonus picture: Unexpected stained glass spotted while wandering through Soho.
*often includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – 7 this month!
I’m actually sad writing this post, because it’s the last time I’ll have a new book by Kerry Greenwood to write about, but I wanted to send Phryne and her off in style, so this Saturday I’m here with a bonus review to mark the release of the final book in the series in the UK, a few months after it came out in Australia and just a couple of weeks short of a year after she died.
In Murder in the Cathedral, Phryne is in Bendigo (famous to Brits as a place where people moved to from Ramsey Street*) where her old friend Lionel is about to be installed as bishop. But when a murder occurs actually during the ceremony, she finds herself called upon to investigate. Because how could she not. The murder victim seems to have had a knack for alienating people and so there are no shortage of suspects. There are also a lot of returning characters from across the series who pop up to help, even though Phryne is away from her home patch.
I’ve read this twice now and although I don’t think it will be my favourite book in the series, but if there has to be an ending, it’s feels like a nice note to stop at. It’s not a “series finale” “tie up all the loose ends” sort of book but there are plenty of call backs to previous adventures and it will leave you with the sense that Phryne and the gang are still out there in the world solving mysteries and living their lives.
Thank you Kerry Greenwood for all the hours of happy reading – and listening – to the adventures of Phryne and also Corinna Chapman.
*that’s a vintage Neighbours reference, you’re welcome, Drew didn’t deserve to die, Toadie’s ponytail was an abomination.
A pretty solid week, considering that it included a theatre trip, an art gallery trip and another evening out as well. However I seem to be developing a bit of an issue on the still reading shelf by starting books and then not finishing them when I already have a few on the go. So I need to work on that. But on the bright side, more than half of the things I did finish last week were from Netgalley, so that is something.
The Winter Olympics hangover starts here. How will I cope without a ready flow of (winter) sports to watch all day? It’s a whole month until the Figure Skating World Championships and my final skating fix of the season – but at least we have that, for a lot of the other winter sports their seasons ended in Milan-Cortina. What will I do? What’s that? The MotoGP season starts in Thailand on Sunday? Excellent. Anyway, also in last week was a trip to the theatre so I’m surprised I read as much as I did.
Restraint went out the window at the weekend, because Rachel Reid’s Game Changer series were on offer for 99p each on Kindle so I may have bought the lot, and on top of that, there was one of the Alexa Martin’s that I don’t own on offer too so I snapped that up as well as three secondhand books. Ooops.
Bonus picture: my set up on Monday night for the pairs free programme. If you haven’t watched Miura and Kiyahara’s routine, you should.
*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.
As expected, I’m too busy watching the Winter Olympics (as well as a weekend away!) to get a lot of reading done, so this is a bit of a list dominated by novellas – although I did get two books finished. It could have been a lot worse. This week I have the Winter Olympics *and* a theatre trip so who knows if the situation will be any better come next Monday. I’m really enjoying the Games though and it will soon be over, so I’m not complaining at all.
It’s day three of the Winter Olympics proper and I’m having such a good time watching it all I’m almost surprised I finished anything over the weekend. But I did, although it wasn’t any of the long runners that I’m meant to be targeting. Hey ho, onwards and upwards towards the ice dance, where the Brits have a chance of a medal if all the stars align for them.
As I said yesterday, there’s a new Amazon valentines novella series and so there are a few of those on here. Otherwise I’ve nearly finished one of the long runners and so I’m getting there, despite a night out at the theatre in the week and a very busy weekend. Onwards into February.
Books bought: 4 actual books (3 of them in Sheffield), 1 pre-order placed, 5 ebooks
Most read author: Goodreads tells me that the Elissa Sussman is the longest book I’ve read this year so far so it must be that!
Books read in 2025: 31
Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 597 (I told you I’d done a cull!)
January started well, but then sailed a little bit off course on account of that entire week of skating in Sheffield. Which was amazing and I regret nothing. The week of recovery I regret a little bit more, but hey these things happen. There are more novellas on this list than usual – because at times that was all my fried little brain could cope with, but also because Patti Benning writes annoyingly readable things and I kept going straight on to the next one but also because Amazon dropped another Valentines Novella collection with a bunch of romance authors I like and I ended up reading those instead of finishing off some of the things I had on the go. I’d like to think February will be a better month in reading, but the Winter Olympics start on Friday and we all know how much I love the Olympics. And given that I can only watch one thing at a time and I also have to work, the reading may get a little sidelined in favour of figure skating, skiing and sliding,
Bonus picture: Another picture from my fabulous week in Sheffield!
*often includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – 10 this month!
Not quite back to normal service after Sheffield because it was a very, very busy week but I’m getting there. And as we’re hurtling towards the end of the month that’s probably for the best. Hopefully now I’m back up to date with everything and I can get down to finishing some more books and not just starting them!
Bonus picture: I love an old school logo, and this moving van in Fitzroy square felt like such a mix of modernity and tradition that I had to take a photo!
*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.
How long has this post taken me to write? A long time. Did I start it in summer 2025 when I saw that there was a sequel to The Socialite Spy coming? Yes. Has this see-sawed wildly in the writing between abdication books and Edward VIII books? Also yes. Am I posting it now because yesterday was the 90th anniversary of Edward VIII’s accession? Yes. Was that the thing that finally gave me the push to post it? Yes again. Anyway, here we are.
Andrew Larman’s The Windsor’s At War is actually his second book in a trilogy about the Windsors. The first, The Crown in Crisis, followed the events leading up to the Abdication, and this follows the relations between the now-Duke of Windsor and his brother the new King from 1937 and through to the end of the Second World War. The final book in the trilogy is The Power and the Glory and examines what happened after the Duke of Windsor’s wartime activities emerged and finishes with Elizabeth II’s coronation. I’ve only read this one of the three, and I’m not sure this told me anything I didn’t already know – and the writing can be a bit dry at times. But if you’re after an in-depth look at the situation this – and the others in the trilogy – might be a good option for you. I’ll be keeping an eye out for them, at a sensible price of course!
I’m following that with Abdication by Brian Inglis, which was actually written in 1966 for the 30th anniversary of the abdication, by an author who remembered it happening when he was a school boy and who had access to lots of the people involved because they were still alive. And it’s definitely got a different sort of sensibility to the more modern books, but those eyewitness reports are worth it if you’re really interested in the minutae of what went on and already know a bit about the characters. Which I am, and I do. It’s especially good on the political context of the time and who the different non-royal characters were. But probably one for the completists.
Next up is Anna Pasternak’s The American Duchess, which is a 2019 biography of Wallis Simpson originally called Untitled, but renamed for the paperback publication. Pasternak says she’s trying to understand the woman behind the headlines, and as is often the case with Wallis biographies says it’s “her story as it’s never been told before”. Having read that, I would say that the way that it is different is that it is giving Wallis a very easy ride – putting the best possible interpretation on her behaviour and ascribing the worst interpretation to everyone else’s actions. It was published before Lownie’s Traitor King, which led to a re-evaluation of the Nazi sympathies of the couple, but even bearing in mind what was known before that Pasternak glosses over the pre-war visit to Hitler and the events surrounding it. It gives a lot of weight to Diana Mosley’s views on the Duchess – without giving the context of Mosley herself – married to the head of the British Fascists, who was friends with Hitler and wrote an incredibly partisan and gushing biography of her friend. The Anne Sebba is better on pre-war Wallis, the Lownie better on post war.
Talking of Diana Mosley, I have also read her book about The Duchess of Windsor and I cannot recommend it. My goodreads review from back in 2016 reads: “I was expecting this book to be partisan, but it was much, much more biased than I had expected… Worth reading only as a lesson to retain your critical faculties when you read any non-fiction book to remind yourself what the author’s objectives may be.” I need say no more.
Moving on… The Kings Loot by Richard Wallace is a look at the astonishing jewel collection that Edward bought for Wallis and the origins and provenance thereof. Like the Brian Inglis, it’s probably only one for the truly interested because the writing style is hard going. But there is some really interesting stuff in there about Edward VIII’s potential raiding of the royal jewellery hoard which had been gathered from colonising the world and marrying into various European royal families.
There are still a couple of books I’m yet to read – the Phillip Ziegler Edward biography and the Michael Bloch Wallis biography as well any of the Andrew Morton about Wallis. I’ve tried some of the Alan Lascelles diaries and never managed to get through them, but I may yet give them another go. I have the Larman that precedes Windsors at War on the Kindle as well. And of course it’s a source of endless fascination to historians, particularly in the current climate, so I’m sure there will be more in the pipeline…