I mean this may be the quickest one of these that I have recently written – because actually the easiest thing may be to point you at the reviews I’ve already written for this year’s picks at the midway point! I don’t think it’s going to surprise you that two of the five are romances, then there’s one rich people problems and a non-fiction book. And so in no particular order my favourite new releases of the year so far are:
Let’s see what has been added to the list by the end of the year!
Still to come for the halfway point: how many states have I ticked off my read the USA challenge? How am I getting on with colouring the bookcase drawing in my journal? And of course my favourite not new books of the year so far.
The topic of today’s post probably shouldn’t come as a surprise to you if you were paying attention on Monday because I basically read these (slightly out of order) in less than three days!
So this trilogy follows the Fitzhugh siblings – two sisters and their brother as they find their happy endings. Each book centres on one sibling but also has bits of the other siblings’ stories – I read Ravishing the Heiress (book two) first because I got an offer for it and went back for book one straight afterwards because of the split narratives. Book one is Beguiling the Beauty featuring Venetia, who has been widowed twice and hears herself being insulted by the Duke of Lexington and decides to get revenge – and of course falls in love with him in the process. Book two is Ravishing the Heiress – Fitz’s marriage to Millie was arranged – he got her fortune to save his estates and she got to be a countess. EIght years on they’re best platonic best friends but he has no idea that she’s been in love with him all along. Will he realise before it’s too late. And then book three Tempting the Bride is Helena – who has been risking her reputation through the first two books after falling in love with a man who has married someone else. But she ends up engaged to her brother’s best friend who has been tormenting her for years (because he’s secretly in love with her) after a rendezvous goes wrong. And then she loses her memory…
The amnesia plot – and the disguise plot in the first book – are pretty wild but they do work. The third book is actually my least favourite of the three – despite or maybe because of the slow build you’ve seen with Helena and David through the other books. But then I don’t really love amnesia plots usually although as far as they go this isn’t too bad and it does round off the series nicely. My favourite (of course?) is book two because I love a marriage of convenience historical – to the point where I’m sure I must have written a post about my favourites but it seems not. Like their cousin the Fake Relationship contemporary, they are just my absolute catnip and Fitz and Millie are a great couple – friends where one of them hasn’t realised that they’ve fallen in love after all and that the other has been in love with them the whole time.
Anyway, thoroughly recommend. If you’ve read Sherry Thomas‘s Lady Sherlock series I think you’ll recognise the writing style, but these are definitely straight romances rather than the historical mystery with a romantic subplot that she’s doing with Charlotte Holmes. Which reminds me, I’ve got the latest in that series waiting on the shelf. I should really go and read that shouldn’t I…
As I said on Sunday, I’ve already written about so many books this month that I don’t have much left to tell you about. But I’ve managed to write a few sentences about a couple more books from the June pile for you!
Jean Tours a Hospital by Doreen Swinburne
I’m starting with something completely left field that I’m not expecting any of you will ever read. This was one of my purchases at Book Conference last summer and as the title suggests is a career book encouraging girls into nursing for a profession. It’s not a great work of literature, but it is a fascinating look at what nursing was like in the 1950s – lots of cleaning, nothing disposable, lots of people on bedrest and not a drop of blood insight on Jean’s tour! Of course nursing is for girls and doctoring is for boys and there is the usual suggestion that if you’re a good girl you might get to marry a doctor but there’s also some interesting (for the time) ideas from the Matron about nursing becoming a degree subject. Not a masterpiece, but fun half hour for what I paid for it!
Final Acts ed Martin Edwards
This is another collection of classic crime short stories all set in or around theatres. I know I mention the BLCC stuff a lot – but usually in the context of the novels (see last week’s BotW for example) because I find the short story collections can be a bit patchy. But this one is a good one, with some big names you’ll recognise including Dorothy L Sayers doing a not Wimsey story and Ngaio Marsh Alleyn short, and some smaller names you may have read full length novels from like Christianna Brand. I do like a theatre-set story (be it murder mysteries or romances) so maybe that biased me, but it’s in Kindle Unlimited at the moment so worth a look.
Piece of Cake by Mary Hollis Huddleston and Asher Fogle Paul*
This is a contemporary romance set in Nashville about a woman working at a struggling wedding magazine who has to work with a social media star on a video series that they hope will secure the magazine’s future. I read the previous book from these authors (borrowed it from the library) and liked the premise but thought that there was too much going on and that the romantic element was unsatisfying because all the options had issues. So I read this to see how the authors managed to redeem Claire – who was the villain of the piece in the last book. And the answer is: they didn’t really. And therein lies the problem. If you haven’t read the previous book, you spend a lot of the time wondering how bad she could really have been – and then when you find out what she did, I assume you lose any sympathy you have left for her – if you’ve managed to keep any with the “oh I’m so poor” thing, whilst living in a flat of her own and driving an expensive car. But, on the plus side – this has less plot elements and there is only one romantic option and he seems like an OK kind of guy – it’s just the heroine that’s the problem. So all in all, I think this is probably a sign that these authors are not for me. But it may work better for other people as these things often do and so I mention it anyway.
An incredibly Verity week – in reading and in life. I got a bit obsessed with the Sherry Thomas series and binged it instead of finishing some of the stuff I already had going, I went to a musical on the spur of the moment and I went to a concert to see a band I’ve loved for literal decades for the first time. I spent three nights away from home (two for work, one after that concert) and had a shocking time on the trains (the story of June on the commute) and binged a documentary series on Netflix. Standard stuff. And we’re halfway through the year now, so expect some half year review posts this month too.
Oopsie daisy, Words and Kisses is having a closing down sale and I went a bit nuts because: discounts. Six books there. And then another two paperbacks second hand. And then five ebooks too because I went nuts for Sherry Thomas. All the ebooks were in June though, so they’re already accounted for in the stats. The rest though…
Bonus photo: honestly, an embarrassment of riches on the photo front this week. I changed my mind twice, but here I am at the aforementioned concert – which was The Chicks on Sunday night – which was ah-May-zing. Truly brilliant.
*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.
Most read author: Sherry Thomas – all three novels in her Fitzhugh series and one of the novellas too.
Books bought: 5 paperbacks, 8 ebooks bought, 3 preordered paperbacks and one pre ordered ebook arrived.
Books read in 2023: 191
Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 693
Quite a satisfactory month in reading all in all. Lots of new books read, I don’t think the physical pile got any bigger (although it also didn’t get any smaller!) and loads of stuff that I’ve wanted to tell you all about. I’m actually not sure how much I have left to write about in the Quick reviews I’ve already written about so many of them. But I’m sure I’ll manage somehow. And of course the major victory here is that I’ve already posted my New Summer Romance Recommendsday – because usually I’ve been very, very bad at getting any summer reading recs out before the summer is nearly over!
Bonus picture: some peonies in the wild that are much more impressive than the plant in my garden. They really are my favourites.
*includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – including 1 this month
You may remember a couple of weeks ago, I had a really good week in reading and said I had come up with a plan to write about more than one of the books I had read. Well delaying the stats, here is part of that plan, because Cathy Yardley’s new book Role Playing – which I read as part of Amazon’s First Reads offer – is out today!
Since Maggie’s son left for college she has embraced her inner grump and her naturally introverted state and basically hibernated at home. But she’s worried that her son isn’t making friends at college – so he makes a deal: he’ll be more sociable more if she is too. And that is why she joins a new online gaming guild led by a healer called Otter. Just so no one gets the wrong idea, she calls herself Bogwitch, but Otter is friendly and his guild seems to be refreshingly untoxic. Otter is Aiden. He’s not the teenager Bogwitch thinks he is – but a fifty year old who moved back to town to look after his (ungrateful) parents and who is using the guild as an outlet for his frustration from his family drama. He thinks Bogwitch is a little old lady, so when they meet it’s a bit of a shock. It turns out they get on really well, although everything is easier online. But will their pasts end up keeping them apart?
I really like that we’re seeing more romances with older protagonists. Maggie and Aiden make a great duo and I thought the online gaming identity confusion worked really well as a device. They’ve both got totally valid reasons for being wary of relationships and also a sensible amount of baggage for their age. It’s lovely watching them get together but also seeing them come into their own because of the confidence they gain. I read this in less than twenty four hours – and if I hadn’t had to work it would have been faster. And then I went and found some more Cathy Yardley books to read – luckily Past Verity had already bought a few…
Role Playing seems to be exclusive to Kindle on the ebook front, but it does list a paperback, although given the Kindle Exclusive situation I don’t know if you’ll be able to get it in stores, but I’ll be watching out for it.
Ok – lets start with the elephant in the room, I don’t think these have an official title as a group – but they’re three interconnected novels and they’re by Lissa Evans, and so I christen it thusly. And I’m recommending them today because when I was thinking about stuff you might like if you like Emmy Lake and the World War Two novels from the other week, these came to mind.
The three novels are Crooked Heart, Old Baggage and V for Victory and they cover an interconnected group of characters. Noel and ace appear in the first and third which are set in the Second World War and Mattie, Noel’s former guardian is the centre of Old Baggage, which is set in 1928. The themes running through all three are about finding your place in the world, what family means and breaking the rules in various shapes and forms. I think they would work in chronological order as well as publication order if you wanted to meet Mattie first, but I think in terms of character development you probably want to meet Noel first and then read about Mattie to discover why he is the way he is.
And I should say as well that they’ve also all been Books of the week – so you can also read more thoughts at length on Crooked Heart, Old Baggage and V for Victory in those posts. But basically, if you want some beautifully written historical fiction which will make you laugh and cry, this will do it for you. They’re great and I’m so glad that I found that proof copy of Crooked Heart on the shelf at work back in the day (I miss the shelf still, although it’s probably better for the state of the pile that it’s gone) and started me on the journey even if my set doesn’t match and you know how much that annoys me!
You should be able to get hold of these fairly easily even though they’re a few years old – they were published by Penguin and I’ve seen them all over the place, including in Foyles relatively recently. And of course then you can go and read Their Finest Hour and a Half, Lissa Evans’ other World War Two-set novel which was turned into the film Their Finest. And that’s your weekend sorted isn’t it?!
A bunch of Beatriz’ Williams’s books have featured on the blog over the years. I’m enough of a fan of hers that I was on her mailing list, back in the time when authors had actual, physical lists and still sent stuff to readers abroad – so I have a postcard from her for the release of A Certain Age. Her Last Flight and A Hundred Summers were Books of the Week and a couple of others have featured in various recommendsdays and roundups. And of course she also writes books with Lauren Willig and Karen White. Her earlier books tended to be interlinked, but more recently they’re more standalone. And The Beach at Summerleys looks like it’s a standalone-y one. The blurb is promising Cold War intrigue, New England rich people and secrets and a split timeline between 1946 and 1954. I’m also really interest that the cover art is quite different to her other novels – in colours and design so I’m wondering if that’s indicating a change too. I’m looking forward to reading it – when I can justify getting my hands on it!
It’s the end of June, so it’s probably about the right time for a Summer Romance recommendsday. After all I’ve been reading them for months at this point – and as I’ve said already – I’ve read most of the ones you’ll see on the romance tables in the bookshops. And yes, these are all longer reviews than I usually do in Recommendsday posts – but that’s because all of these could have been Books of the Weeks in their own rights.
Same Time Next Summer by Annabel Monaghan
Our heroine is Sam, visiting her family’s Long Island Beach house with her fiancé to tour wedding venues. But back at the house next door is her first love, Wyatt, who she spent every summer with as a child and teenager until suddenly it was over. But Sam’s got her life on track now – and there’s no reason to be this affected by the guy who broke her heart when she was 17… As you all know I loved, loved, loved Nora Goes Off Script when I read it at the start of the year and immediately pre-ordered this and then read it within three days of release. And it’s good. For me, it’s not quite as good as Nora, but then Nora was just so in my wheelhouse. This is different – it’s a second chance romance with big flashbacks of the before so although the relationship between Wyatt and Sam is complicated in the present day bit, you get to see the past bit to understand what went wrong. I’m not 100 percent that you can still be in love with your first – teen – love so many years on and that you’re still going to fit together, but Monaghan was clever enough with this that you just get swept along reading it and don’t notice all of this until you sit down to write a review afterwards and think about it! Perfect for the beach.
Once More With Feeling by Elissa Sussman
On to another second book from an author whose (adult) debut I read and loved earlier this year and another that is a second chance romance (if you’re only going to read one of them from this post, then make it this one) because it’s so good – I read it in one evening. As a teenager, Katee Rose was a one of America’s biggest pop stars. She was touring the country, scoring number ones, surrounded by screaming fans and papped by photographers everywhere she went – with or without her boyfriend Ryan LaNeve – the hearthrob from an equally adored boyband. But it all blew up after she found herself in the arms of Cal, one of Ryan’s bandmates. But that was then. Now Kathleen Rosenberg is ok with her life and with her popstar life being in the past. Then Cal shows up to offer her a starring role in the Broadway show he’s about to produce. Each blames the other for what happened before, but they find themselves working together and it seems that not everything is really in the past. If the hint of cheating in that plot description is worrying you, don’t worry. And if you lived through the Britney and Justin situation in the early 2000s, you’ll also get a lot out of this. Or at least I did. And I love a Broadway/theatre-set romance so it ticked so many of my boxes and pulled it off so well. perfect for a sun lounger by the pool.
Love, Theoretically by Ali Hazelwood*
Elise is an adjunct professor with a secret second life as a fake girlfriend to make ends meet. Everything is going swimmingly – at least with regards to keeping her two lives separate – until the brother of one of her regular clients turns out to be one of the physicists on the panel for her dream job and also the man who ruined her mentor’s reputation. I read this really fast across about 36 hours. Yes, it’s another tiny heroine and Great Big Man (which I am getting a little fed up of in general as I said the other day) but I found the relationship between extreme people pleaser/adapts herself to fit who she thinks people want her to be Elsie and Jack to be interesting to watch, even though I wasn’t ever 100 percent sure why Jack had originally been attracted to her. I wanted a little more resolution to Elsie’s issues with her family, and I could see one of the plot twists coming a mile off – so this is probably more of a 3.5 star read – but I’m nice so I round up. If you’ve liked Hazelwood’s other stuff, you’ll probably like this although it is a little repetitive in terms of academic feuds, misunderstandings and the aforementioned tinyHUGE. Nice cameo from Adam and Olive though.
And as I mentioned at the top of the post, I’ve been reading summer romances for months, and a bunch more of them have already been BotW picks or otherwise recommended – so I’m going to leave some more links here too: Mrs Nash’s Ashes from last week, The True Love Experiment from the week before, Happy Place and Romantic Comedy from April – and those are just the new ones that I’ve been prepared to recommend!
It’s been a few weeks, so it’s about time we had another British Library Crime Classic to break up the summer romances, right? But don’t worry, if you want some more sun lounger recommendations, I have the very thing for you tomorrow never dear!
A reclusive scientist is found dead in his study during a storm, hours after a dinner to mark his daughter’s engagement. The dinner guests are stranded in the house because of the weather – and the telephone line has been cut. There are clues and motives a plenty, which of the closed group of suspects carried out the crime?
Twice Around the Clock is Billie Houston’s only novel – and it’s really quite impressive. She was an actress and singer who was part of a variety act with her sister in the 1920s until she retired because of ill health in the mid 1930s – as far as I can work out at a similar time to when she wrote this. The title comes from the amount of time that the novel covers – you start with the murder then the clock rewinds twelve hours to show you the lead up to the murder and then carries on until twelve hours after the death. It’s fast paced and has a bit of humour to it. It also has a murder victim who you are delighted to see dead after you see him alive and tormenting people and animals*. Basically it’s a good enough read that you wish Houston had written more!
*there is a scene featuring animal cruelty in this but it’s brief and also clear that everyone else in the book finds it abhorrent – it’s just the victim who thinks it’s ok