My Week in Books – 1st October 2023

MyWeekinBooksOn What Cathy Read Next last week

Monday – I shared five books I’ve read that were shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction.

Tuesday – This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was Secondary Characters Who Deserve Their Own Book. My ten have already had theirs.

Wednesday – I published my review of the brilliant North Woods by Daniel Mason. And as always WWW Wednesday is a weekly opportunity to share what I’ve just read, what I’m currently reading and what I plan to read next… and to take a peek at what others are reading. 

Thursday – I shared my publication day review of action-packed historical novel, A Day of Reckoning by Matthew Harffy.

Saturday – I published my review of The Merchant’s Dilemma by Carolyn Hughes.


New arrivals

Everything Is EverythingEverything is Everything: A Memoir of Love, Hate & Hope by Clive Myrie (Hodder & Stoughton)

As a Bolton teenager with a paper round, Clive Myrie read all the newspapers he delivered from cover to cover and dreamed of becoming a journalist. In this deeply personal memoir, he tells how his family history has influenced his view of the world, introducing us to his Windrush generation parents, a great grandfather who helped build the Panama Canal, and a great uncle who fought in the First World War, later to become a prominent police detective in Jamaica.

He reflects on how being black has affected his perspective on issues he’s encountered in thirty years reporting some of the biggest stories of our time (most recently from Ukraine), showing us how those experiences gave him a better idea of what it means to be an outsider. He tells of his pride in his roots, but his determination not to be defined by his background in dealing with the challenges of race and class to succeed at the highest level.

Moving, engaging, revealing, Everything is Everything is a story of love and hate – but also hope.


On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading


Planned posts

  • Book Review: Adama by Lavie Tidhar
  • Book Review: Byron and Shelley: Stories by Glenn Haybittle

#BookReview The Merchant’s Dilemma by Carolyn Hughes @writingcalliope

About the Book

Winchester, 1362. Seven months ago, accused of bringing plague and death from Winchester, Bea Ward was hounded out of Meonbridge by her former friends and neighbours. Finding food and shelter where she could, she struggled to make her way back to Winchester again.

Yet, once she arrived, she wondered why she’d come.

For her former lover – the love of her life – Riccardo Marchaunt, had married a year ago. And she no longer had the strength to go back to her old life on the streets. Frail, destitute and homeless, she was reduced to begging. Then, in January, during a tumultuous and destructive storm, she found herself on Riccardo’s doorstep. She had no plan, beyond hoping he might help her, or at least provide a final resting place for her poor body.

When Bea awakes to find she’s lying in Riccardo’s bed once more, she’s thankful, thrilled, but mystified. But she soon learns that his wife died four months ago, along with their newborn son, and finds too that Riccardo loves her now as much as he ever did, and wants to make her his wife. But can he? And, even if he can, could she ever really be a proper merchant’s wife?

Riccardo could not have been more relieved to find Bea still alive, when he thought he had lost her forever. She had been close to death, but is now recovering her health. He adores her and wants her to be his wife. But how? His father would forbid such an “unfitting” match, on pain of denying him his inheritance. And what would his fellow merchants think of it? And their haughty wives?

Yet, Riccardo is determined that Bea will be his wife. He has to find a solution to his dilemma… With the help of his beloved mother, Emilia, and her close friend, Cecily, he hatches a plan to make it happen.

But even the best laid plans sometimes go awry. And the path of love never did run smooth…

Format: ebook (232 pages) Publisher: Riverdown Books
Publication date: 21st September 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance

Find The Merchant’s Dilemma on Goodreads

Purchase link 
Amazon UK 
Link provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

Carolyn Hughes describes The Merchant’s Dilemma as a ‘companion novel’ to her historical fiction series, ‘The Meonbridge Chronicles’, set in a small village in 14th century Hampshire. For those who’ve read previous books in the series, The Merchant’s Dilemma continues the story of two characters, Beatrix and Riccardo, who featured in the fourth book, Children’s Fate. However, it can easily be read as a standalone as there are plenty of references to prior events in the lives of Beatrix and Riccardo, meaning it would also be the ideal introduction to the author’s books.

As Carolyn admits, The Merchant’s Dilemma is a little more romantic and light-hearted than other books in the series and, being set in Winchester, it doesn’t immerse you in medieval life in quite the same way as the books set in Meonbridge so wonderfully do. In fact, its storyline involving romance between people of different classes could have come right out of Jane Austen.

Although Riccardo’s dilemma is understandable given his position in society and Bea’s past, it was Bea’s patience that I admired most. At every turn a new obstacle seems to be placed in the way of her becoming Riccardo’s wife, and even when one is removed another seemingly takes its place. Enter two brilliant characters: Riccardo’s mother, Emilia, and Emilia’s friend, Cecily. Together they embark on a plan to convince Winchester society that Beatrix is a suitable potential wife for Riccardo, training her on how to behave. With shades of Pygmalion, Beatrix must become Beatrice, learning to appear demure in public and only able to let her hair down – literally – in private.

I never doubted Riccardo’s love for Beatrix, even if he does appear obstinate and overly timid, testing her patience to the limit. The reader’s too, I suspect.

Luckily for Riccardo, Emilia and Cecily take charge of the situation given that he, his brother Giacomo and their former drinking buddies are making a right old mess of things with rumours starting to spread about the true nature of Beatrix’s past. The flames are fanned by Sarah, Giacomo’s harridan of a wife, who likes to think herself superior to everyone else but enjoys nothing better than trading the latest scurrilous gossip. Eventually even Riccardo is the subject of a dangerous slander.

After many trials and tribulations, The Merchant’s Dilemma concludes in the way all romances should, leaving the reader with a smile and a warm feeling inside.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of the author.

In three words: Engaging, lively, romantic


About the Author

Carolyn Hughes has lived much of her life in Hampshire. With a first degree in Classics and English, she started working life as a computer programmer, then a very new profession. But it was technical authoring that later proved her vocation, word-smithing for many different clients, including banks, an international hotel group and medical instrument manufacturers.

Although she wrote creatively on and off for most of her adult life, it was not until her children flew the nest that writing historical fiction took centre stage.

Carolyn has a Masters in Creative Writing from Portsmouth University and a PhD from the University of Southampton. 

Connect with Carolyn
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