In 2024… My Life in Books

My Life in Books 2024

There are a few versions of this tag circulating on social media but I thought I’d stick with the one I did last year created by Shelleyrae of Book’d Out. Links from each title will take you to my book review.

If you want to join in, just complete the prompts using titles from books you read in 2024. Be sure to include a link back to Book’d Out in your blog post and add a link to your post in the comments on Shellyrae’s post.

2024 was the year of: A Better Place

In 2024 I wanted to be: In This Ravishing World

In 2024 I was: The Instrumentalist

In 2024 I gained: Girl Friends

In 2024 I lost: The Wager

In 2024 I loved: Shy Creatures

In 2024 I hated: The Coming Storm

In 2024 I learned: normal rules don’t apply

In 2024 I was surprised by: A Plague of Serpents

In 2024 I went to: The Land in Winter

In 2024 I missed out on: All Day at the Movies 

In 2024 my family were: Sweetness in the Skin

In 2025 I hope (for): Possible Happiness

#WWWWednesday – 25th December 2024

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!


Currently reading

The Silence of ScherazadeThe Silence of Scheherazade by Defne Suman, trans. by Betsy Göksel (Apollo via NetGalley) 

On an orange-tinted evening in September 1905, Scheherazade is born to an opium-dazed mother in the ancient city of Smyrna.

At the very same moment, a dashing Indian spy arrives in the harbour with a secret mission from the British Empire. He sails in to golden-hued spires and minarets, scents of fig and sycamore, and the cries of street hawkers selling their wares. When he leaves, seventeen years later, it will be to the heavy smell of kerosene and smoke as the city, and its people, are engulfed in flames.

But let us not rush, for much will happen between then and now. Birth, death, romance and grief are all to come as these peaceful, cosmopolitan streets are used as bargaining chips in the wake of the First World War.

Told through the intertwining fates of a Levantine, a Greek, a Turkish and an Armenian family, this unforgettable novel reveals a city, and a culture, now lost to time.

The Second SleepThe Second Sleep by Robert Harris (Cornerstone)

Dusk is gathering as a young priest, Christopher Fairfax, rides across a silent land.

It’s a crime to be out after dark, and Fairfax knows he must arrive at his destination – a remote village in the wilds of Exmoor – before night falls and curfew is imposed.

He’s lost and he’s becoming anxious as he slowly picks his way across a countryside strewn with the ancient artefacts of a civilisation that seems to have ended in cataclysm.

What Fairfax cannot know is that, in the days and weeks to come, everything he believes in will be tested to destruction, as he uncovers a secret that is as dangerous as it is terrifying …


Recently finished

The DraughtsmanThe Draughtsman by Robert Lautner (The Borough Press)


What Cathy Will Read Next

The Ghosts of ParisThe Ghosts of Paris (Billie Walker Mystery #2) by Tara Moss (Verve Books) 

It’s 1947. The world continues to grapple with the fallout of the Second World War, and former war reporter Billie Walker is finding her feet as an investigator. When a wealthy client hires Billie and her assistant Sam to track down her missing husband, the trail leads Billie back to London and Paris, where Billie’s own painful memories also lurk. Jack Rake, Billie’s wartime lover and, briefly, husband, is just one of the millions of people who went missing in Europe during the war. What was his fate after they left Paris together?

As Billie’s search for her client’s husband takes her to both the swanky bars at Paris’s famous Ritz hotel and to the dank basements of the infamous Paris morgue, she’ll need to keep her gun at the ready, because something even more terrible than a few painful memories might be following her around the city of lights . . .