
Normal service will be resumed after the general election in the UK. I’m likely to be asleep as this publishes because I’m working the overnight tonight to cover the results…
In which our heroine attempts to tame the to-read pile

Normal service will be resumed after the general election in the UK. I’m likely to be asleep as this publishes because I’m working the overnight tonight to cover the results…
Only three things to tell you about today, and one of them is a check in on something I mentioned on release day, but hey, here we go:
One Last Summer by Kate Spencer*
I read Kate Spencer’s In A New York Minute back in 2022 and enjoyed it so I was really excited to see what she had written next. This is about a group of friends who met at summer camp and have kept a tradition going of meeting up at that camp again into adulthood. But this summer is the last hurrah – because the camp is being sold. Clara our heroine hasn’t been on the last few reunions – but her boss has forced her to take time off so she’s back – and now has to deal with her former camp crush Mack. I really liked the premise, but I found Clara really hard to like and the one-upmanship vibe that her relationship with Mack has is just not my thing. It will be for some people – but it veered to close to the “I’m pranking you to show you I like you” vibe that can really get on my last nerve. It was also much closer to New Adult in feel than I was expecting. Not for me – but never mind, I know other people will really like it, which is why I’m including it here.
Truly, Madly, Deeply by Alexandria Bellefleur

I mentioned this when it came out, so now I’ve read it, it’s only fair I come back to report. I’ve got a longer summary of the plot in that last post – but it’s a jaded romance author and a family lawyer at the centre of it and a enemies to lovers plot. I’m sad to report that it didn’t really work for me – mainly because of some issues with the subplots that I can’t really explain without spoiling them completely. But I am finding a theme with the Alexandria Bellefleurs that I’ve read that I like the idea of them or the plot description more than I like the actual execution. Count Your Lucky Stars was a BotW – but I had an issue with the final act. I don’t ever hate them – because I keep coming back for more – I just don’t ever love them-love them if that makes sense!
Career Books for Girls by Kay Clifford
It’s only a month to go before Book Con 2024, so I’m having a quick check that I’ve read everything I bought home from Bristol two years ago (yes, I know, I know) and this was one of the ones I found. As the title suggests, this is basically an encyclopaedia of books aimed at encouraging girls into careers, or informing them about what was actually involved in careers, in the long first half of the twentieth century. I had read more of them than I was expecting – and I really liked Kay’s writing which wryly points out the issues with the world view of these books as well as telling you about them. It’s not meant to be read all at once, more a dip into type thing, but that didn’t stop me!
And that’s it for this month, a reminder of the Books of Week in June were: Summer Fridays, Summer Romance, The Formula and A Nobleman’s Guide for Seducing a Scoundrel.
Happy Humpday!
For the second week in a row, I’m writing about a book that I finished on Monday. But it was one of two books I finished on Monday, so that gives a bit of a sense of how close to the end I was, and how hopping around my reading was last week. It’s also out this very day in the US (it came out here last month) so it’s also relatively well timed. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it!

Tuga is a remote island in the South Atlantic, only accessible by boat at certain times of year. On the last boat in this season are Charlotte Walker, on her way to study the island’s tortoises, and Dan Zekri, on his was home to take over from his uncle as the island’s chief medical officer. What follows is a year in the life of the key characters on the island – full of ups and downs and a huge learning experience for Charlotte.
I really enjoyed this – it’s gentler than I expected but also all the characters felt very well rounded and fully formed, not just Charlotte and Dan. And this is also the first in a trilogy, which I only realised after I finished it and is good news because I wanted more! I’m trying to think of comparison books – but struggling a lot. It may yet come to me, but everything I’ve thought of so far had a lot of “it’s like one thing that this book does, but not like any of the rest of it” so I don’t think they work! And it’s so new that the Good Reads suggestions are still other new releases which doesn’t help either!
I mentioned Welcome to Glorious Tuga in my Summer of Not Sequels post and as I predicted in that I have already seen it about a lot this summer – at the airports and in the bookshops. My copy came from NetGalley, but you can buy it now in all the usual formats like Kindle and Kobo as well.
Happy Reading!
Not the longest list this week – but some of the stuff I didn’t finish is quite long. Also the Euros are on and there was Formula One and MotoGP at the weekend. And the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders documentary on Netflix… and that’s all before you get to the wonderful weather!
Read:
A Nobleman’s Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by K J Charles
A Murder at the Movies by Ellie Alexander
Spicy Lasagne Murder by Patti Benning
Men at Arms by Terry Pratchett
Garden Vegetable Murder by Patti Benning
Career Novels for Girls by Kay Clifford
Started:
Jackie by Dawn Tripp*
Still reading:
Welcome to Glorious Tuga by Francesca Segal*
The Unforgettable Loretta, Darling by Katherine Blake*
No books bought!
Bonus picture: London in the sunshine.

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

This is a fresh version of the Frances Hodgson Burnett classic children’s story that is on at the Open Air Theatre in Regent’s Park for the start of the summer. The core story – about newly orphaned Mary Lennox being sent to live at Misselthwaite Manor after the deaths of her parents and uncovering the many secrets that the house is hiding remains the same – but there has been some sensitive updating done which makes it work a bit better for today’s audiences as well as providing a beautiful inspiration for the stage design and music concepts.
I really, really enjoyed myself watching this – with the trees all around you and birds flying overhead as the sun went down, the setting is absolutely perfect for a play about the healing power and magic of nature. I saw the fourth preview – so there were still a few technical gremlins to sort out (mostly mic cues) but the show itself and the performances were wonderful. In fact my only real grip was that my feet got cold, but that was my own fault for wearing canvas shoes with no socks!
This would make a great show for the kids this summer – but sadly it’s only on until July 20th, which is just as the schools are breaking up in most places, then Fiddler on the Roof takes over in the theatre for the rest of the summer. You can find more details here.
Have a great Sunday
Mixing it up a little bit this weekend, but as well as looking at the book selections at the airport and the English language offers in any bookshops I encounter I also take a look at the books I can spot in translation – and the different covers they get… or otherwise. So here are a few that I’ve spotted on the last few trips.

Lets start with some Italian Julia Quinn! These are non-Bridgertons including some of my favourites – like What Happens in London and The Secret Diaries of Miss Miranda Cheever. I’m always interested to see historical romance covers because they are so wildly different between the UK and the US even before you get to translated versions. In the UK these originally had line-drawn almost cartoon-y covers and now have been repackaged with headless torso photographs of men and or women to match the reissued Bridgerton books which are now getting the couples from the show on the cover as their series happens.

I thought this was really interesting – as well as the artwork on Husband Material, Love, Theoretically and the Ana Huangs, they’ve also kept the English titles. Now with Husband Material I can sort of understand that, because it’s so built in, but the others you could have changed it surely? All of these have the same cover design in the US and the UK so I’m wondering if this is a TikTok influenced thing: Have they kept the titles that people might have seen on English language BookTok? I don’t know, but I find it very, very interesting.

From Italy to Spain now, and next up is a previous Book of the Week – Jenny Jackson’s Pineapple Street, which has got the US cover, which I just think is too lairy compared to the UK one. I like the idea of the formal and fancy room, because it is a rich people problems book, I just think this is an ugly set of colours!

And finally here we have Spanish Sally Rooneys, which have got the English language cover concepts, but the titles translated and a few tweaks. Some of these have the same editions in the UK and the US and some don’t – I’m not sure which came first or whether it’s changed as she’s grown in popularity, but I do really love the covers her books get – they’re so distinctive and eye-catching.
Here endeth this Saturday’s trip through cover design, I hope you’ve enjoyed it – it may make a reappearance at some point in the future you never know…
I was thinking when I was writing this that it doesn’t seem like that long since I last read a Lady Sherlock book, so I had a little look back – and I realised that although I wrote my original Series I Love post for Lady Sherlock as the last one came out in early 2023, I actually didn’t read it until the autumn – which probably explains why my brain was confused.

Anyway the eighth book in the series is out this week, and A Ruse of Shadows seems to be once again building on the events of some of the previous books in the series, so I’m going to say again, that this is a series that repays reading in order. In the previous book, A Tempest at Sea, Charlotte was on board ship trying to keep a low profile, in this new instalment we have someone that Charlotte’s investigations have put in prison asking for her help, so I’m intrigued to see how that works out and how it fits into the various running plot strands that we already have going on.
I’m also intrigued to see if my pre-ordered copy turns up and when – because the last few times it… has been erratic, so we’ll see what happens there! If you want to read the Lady Sherlock series, I do advise you to start with A Study in Scarlet Women, which is available in Kindle in the UK – which for some reason the latest one isn’t (yet). You can find a link to the whole series on Amazon here.

The rush of summer releases continues and this week it’s Ashley Poston’s new book A Novel Love Story. The blurb tells me that our heroine is Eileen, a romance novel lover who breaks down on her way to her annual book club retreat and finds herself in Eloraton – a small town which seems too good to be true, which may be because it’s also the setting of her favourite book series. Eileen is sure that she’s been sent to give the town a story book ending – except that there’s one character who doesn’t want her to finish the story – the grumpy bookshop owner who she just can’t place…
She’s done ghosts, last year it was time travel, and it looks like she’s doing magic – well sort of anyway. I would say I’m sceptical about it, but I was sceptical about the last two and I liked them both, so I’m actually optimistic this is going to be right up my street when I get my hands on it.
It’s the final Wednesday in June, so for the last Recommendsday of the month I’m following on from last weeks’ fiction picks for Pride Month, with some non-fiction option.
Young Bloomsbury by Nino Strachey

Let’s start with something that I finished last week.This is a group biography of the second generation of the Bloomsbury Group, who joined in with the first wave in the 1920s when people like Virginia Woolf and Lytton Strachey were at the height of their powers and influence. There are a lot of people in this – many of them named Strachey – so it can some times get a little confusing, but it’s a very readable look at some of the lesser-spotted Bloomsburies and what they got up to. Very much an overview, and so I’m now off to see what there is on some of the more interesting figures in this that I didn’t already know about!
Wild Dances by William Lee Adams

This is a slightly strange one to write about – because William is actually a work colleague! As well as working with me, William is a massively popular Eurovision expert who runs a YouTube channel and blog. How did he get from small town Georgia (the US state, not the country) to here? His memoir will tell you and it’s quite the journey. Reading this was the first time I read a memoir written by someone who I know in real life, so that was slightly disconcerting experience. But the book is really powerful and worth reading even if you don’t like Eurovision.
I’ve already recommended a load of really good non-fiction that fits into their category too – like The Art of Drag – which you can see in the photo behind William’s book; Legendary Children – about RuPaul’s Drag Race’s first decade; Fabulosa – about the secret gay language Polari; and Harvey Fierstein’s memoir I Was Better Last Night. And currently on the pile waiting to be read, I have Queer City – about the history of gay London, The Crichel Boys – about a literary salon adjacent to the Bloomsbury group; and RuPaul’s memoir The House of Hidden Meanings. I’m also looking out for Bad Gays – looking at overlooked gay figures in history, and Hi Honey, I’m Homo – about queer comedy and the American sitcom.
Happy Wednesday!
Yes, yes, I finished this on Monday, but I finished it on the train to work, before 8am and Goodreads still thinks that’s Sunday so it’s all fine right? Not cheating at all.

Anyway, Major Rufus D’Aunstey is the new Earl of Oxney and owner of a remote and ancient Manor House in the vicinity of Romney Marsh. He’s already been through a months long battle in the court with his uncle about his inheritance, and now Luke Doomsday, the son of a local smuggling clan has turned up with another claim against the title. But Luke is also a secretary, and Rufus needs a secretary to help him untangle the mess that his predecessor left behind him. Soon the two of them are allies, except Luke has a reason he wanted to come to the manor and it wasn’t to do with being a secretary and it’s all about to get a bit complicated.
This is the second in K J Charles’s Doomsday books set in the same area and with the same smuggling family on the one side, but some years later and a different family on the other side. You don’t need to have read the first one, although it may enhance the experience, this is standalone. This has got smugglers and terrible relatives and a happy ending after a certain amount of adventure. I also really like the setting – The Unknown Ajax is one of my favourite Georgette Heyers and this has a lot of the smuggling themes from that plus the tension between a military hero and the people who have turned to smuggling to get by but dialled up to 11 and with more normal people. All in all it’s a really satisfying read.
As you can see, I have a physical copy and I’ve spotted it in a number of the larger bookshops, so you should be able to get hold if it if you want a paperback, or of course you can get it on Kindle and Kobo.
Happy Reading!