#WWWWednesday – 21st May 2025

Hosted by Taking on a World of Words, this meme is all about the three Ws:

  • What are you currently reading?
  • What did you recently finish reading?
  • What do you think you’ll read next?

Why not join in too?  Leave a comment with your link at Taking on a World of Words and then go blog hopping!


Because of distractions – a bathroom refurbishment, an upcoming family wedding & gardening projects – my reading is time is limited. When I get a moment I’m slowly making my way through two of the books on the shortlist for the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction and a review copy.

Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon (Fig Tree)

Ancient Sicily. Enter GELON: visionary, dreamer, theatre lover. Enter LAMPO: feckless, jobless, in need of a distraction.

Imprisoned in the quarries of Syracuse, thousands of defeated Athenians hang on by the thinnest of threads. They’re fading in the baking heat, but not everything is lost: they can still recite lines from Greek tragedy when tempted by Lampo and Gelon with goatskins of wine and scraps of food.

And so an idea is born. Because, after all, you can hate the invaders but still love their poetry.

It’s audacious. It might even be dangerous. But like all the best things in life – love, friendship, art itself – it will reveal the very worst, and the very best, of what humans are capable of. What could possibly go wrong?

The Book of Days by Francesca Kay (Swift Press)

Anno Domini 1546. In a manor house in England a young woman feels the walls are closing round her, while her dying husband is obsessed by his vision of a chapel where prayers will be said for his immortal soul.

As the days go by and the chapel takes shape, the outside world starts to intrude. And as the old ways are replaced by the new, the people of the village sense a dangerous freedom.

The Night Swimmer by Simon J Houlton

A haunting literary novel of isolation, addiction, and the search for meaning — set against the grey tides of Hastings Old Town.

William “Bill” Eckersley is an unemployed writer, a night swimmer, and a man drowning in alcohol and self-doubt. Trapped in a crumbling seaside town — and within his own mind — he spirals as he searches for creative inspiration and a way out of his own inertia.

His solitary existence begins to unravel, pulling him into an increasingly disorienting world shaped as much by memory and imagination as reality.

Traitor’s Legacy by S. J. Parris (Hemlock Press via NetGalley)

England, 1598. Queen Elizabeth’s successor remains unnamed. The country teeters on a knife edge.

When a young heiress is found murdered at the theatre, the Queen’s spymaster Robert Cecil calls upon former agent Sophia de Wolfe to investigate.

A cryptic note found on the dead girl’s body connects to Sophia’s previous life as a spy, and her quest soon takes her into dangerous waters. Powerful enemies emerge, among them the Earl of Essex: the Queen’s favourite courtier and a man of ruthless ambition.

This is a murder that reaches directly into the heart of the court. And Sophia is concealing a deep-buried secret of her own. She must uncover the truth before her past threatens to destroy her. (Review to follow)

A Beautiful Way to Die by Eleni Kyriacou (Aries via NetGalley)

PLAY THEIR GAME
Hollywood, 1953. Young actress Ginny Watkins is turning heads. Even the legendary – and married – actor Max Whitman can’t resist the allure of the hottest new starlet. He promises Ginny the world, in return for the right favour.

DO WHAT THEY SAY
London, 1954. Stella Hope, once the most famous actress in Hollywood, has been ousted to Ealing Studios after her divorce from the powerful Max. Just as she accepts her fate, she receives a letter, blackmailing her for a mistake she made many years ago.

OR THEY’LL BURY YOU
Two women on either side of stardom find themselves in the orbit of the same beguiling man. And one night, in the shadows of a glamorous Oscars afterparty, their lives are changed forever.

Book Review – Days of Light by Megan Hunter

About the Book

Easter Sunday, 1938. Ivy is nineteen and ready for her life to finally begin. In the idyllic Sussex countryside, her sprawling, bohemian family and their friends gather for lunch, awaiting the arrival of a longed-for guest. It is a single, enchanted afternoon that ends in tragedy.

Days later, at a funeral, Ivy is kissed by the man she will marry, and grieves with the woman who will become the love of her life. And this is only the beginning . . .

Chronicling six pivotal days across six decades, Days of Light moves through the Second World War and the twentieth century on a radiant journey through a life lived in pursuit of love and in search of an answer.

Format: Hardcover (288 pages) Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 17th April 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Days of Light on Goodreads

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My Review

The tragedy that occurs on Easter Sunday 1938 affects many lives. For Ivy, what promised to be a day of celebration is now associated with loss and guilt. But also incomprehension because she experienced something that day she can’t explain: a sudden burst of light that mesmerised her. Was its source something prosaic or more profound, divine in nature even?

For her whole life, she would wonder how to describe the light. It was not like a torch beam or a lantern. It had neither the gentleness of fire nor the simple glow of electricity.

We revisit Ivy on five other days over the course of the next six decades exploring how that single event influences her life, her relationships and even her faith. (The fact each of the six days are at Easter seems significant, evoking the idea of sacrifice but also resurrection.) We learn not just about the events of that particular day but what has happened in the intervening years. In many cases, the changes in her life – marriage, motherhood, emotional awakening – have come about not through conscious decisions but in response to others.

Ivy is someone who seems to be on a perpetual quest for fulfilment but unsure of where to find it. And she cannot let go of the mystery surrounding the tragedy or her own misgivings about her role in it, searching for answers (or a revelation) in all sorts of different ways.

The word I most often associated with Ivy was unmoored. ‘This is how life happens, Ivy realized, like a crowd of things and houses and people pushed by a tidal wave, moving towards her, over her. Life took place, and she was within it, but there seemed to be no control, no choice.’ At times Ivy seems to welcome the act of submission, the removal of personal choice.

She experiences a betrayal that I found particularly cruel and difficult to forgive. Only later in life does she take events into her own hands with an act that requires courage and a belief in the future.

Days of Light is a beautifully written story of love and loss, with a strong spiritual element and in which light is a recurring motif. It’s one of those books that reveals its many layers in a quiet, insightful way.

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of Picador via NetGalley.

In three words: Intimate, intense, emotional
Try something similar: The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden

About the Author

Megan Hunter is a prizewinning novelist, dramatist and screenwriter. Her first novel, The End We Start From (2017) was shortlisted for Novel of the Year at the Books Are My Bag Awards, longlisted for the Aspen Words Prize, was a Barnes and Noble Discover Awards finalist and won the Foreword Reviews Editor’s Choice Award. It was adapted into a major motion picture by Alice Birch, starring Jodie Comer and directed by Mahalia Belo. Her second novel, The Harpy (2020), was Indie Book of the Month; she is currently adapting it for television with Red Planet Pictures. In 2024 her dramatic monologue Salt of the Earth premiered at Venice Film Festival. Megan’s other writing has appeared in the White Review, the TLSLiterary HubVogueElleBOMB, and elsewhere. She lives in Cambridge, UK. (Photo: Goodreads)

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