My Week in Books – 2nd July 2023

MyWeekinBooksOn What Cathy Read Next last week

Monday – I published my review of The Square of Sevens by Laura Shepherd-Robinson.

Tuesday – This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the Second Half of 2023.

Wednesday – 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. 

Friday – I published my review of Banyan Moon by Thao Thai. 

Saturday – The first Saturday of the month (and can you believe we’re already halfway through the year?) means it’s time for the #6Degrees of Separation meme. This month’s starting book was winner of the International Book Prize, Time Shelter by Georgi Gospodinov.


New arrivals

A Day of ReckoningA Day of Reckoning (A Time of Swords #3) by Matthew Harffy (eARC, Head of Zeus via NetGalley)

AD 796. Sailing in search of an object of great power, Hunlaf and his comrades are far from home when they are caught up in a violent skirmish against pirates.

After the bloody onslaught, an encounter with ships from Islamic Spain soon sees them escorted under guard to the city of Qadis, one of the jewels of the Emirate of Al-Andalus and the true destination of their voyage.

Hunlaf believes the Emir’s lands hold the key to his search, but there are dangerous games at play. To achieve his goal, Hunlaf and his allies must walk a difficult path where friends and enemies alike are not always what they seem – and where a weapon deadlier than any yet seen could change the future of all the kingdoms in Europe.

Byron and ShelleyByron and Shelley by Glenn Haybittle (eARC, Cheyne Walk via NetGalley)

The characters in Glenn Haybittle’s first collection of short stories are all caught in moments of life that bring about a revelation of identity.

A young woman who, after the war, catches sight of the guard who knocked to the ground her blind grandfather on the platform at Auschwitz. The backstory of the man accused of murdering Martin Luther King. The experience of a young girl on Kristallnacht and the subsequent tragic upheavals in her life. A dance teacher accused of sexually abusing one of his young students. A man constrained to return to his mother and look after her while she goes through dementia. A CIA operative grooming a patsy to take the blame for an assassination.

Beautiful, moving and humorous, the stories are set all around the globe – spinning from Kansas City, Jerusalem, London, Venice, Prague and Hamburg to Florence, Memphis, Rome, Paris and Provence.

The Socialite SpyThe Socialite Spy by Sarah Sigal (eARC, Lume Books via NetGalley)

London, 1936. Socialite and journalist Lady Pamela More pens the popular ‘Agent of Influence’ column, writing wittily about fashion and high society. For her latest piece, she interviews Wallis Simpson, the newly crowned king’s American mistress. That’s when she’s approached by MI5. Her mission: spy on the royal couple and report on their connections with Nazi Germany.

As she navigates the treacherous world of international espionage, Pamela uses her skills of observation and intuition to infiltrate Wallis’ inner circle. But Europe is unstable, and international spies lurk on every corner.

Does Pamela have what it takes to survive the currents of espionage? Or is she in over her head?


On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading


Planned posts

  • My Five Favourite June 2023 Reads
  • Blog Tour/Book Review: The Blood of Others by Graham Hurley
  • Book Review: The Painter of Souls by Philip Kazan
  • Blog Tour/Book Review: Before the Swallows Come Back by Fiona Curnow 

#BookReview Banyan Moon by Thao Thai @QuercusBooks #BanyanMoon

About the Book

Ann Tran is already at a crossroads when she gets the call that her beloved grandmother, Minh, has died. Ann has built a seemingly perfect life. She lives in a beautiful lake house and has a charming professor boyfriend, but it all crumbles away with one positive pregnancy test.

With both her relationship and her carefully planned future now in question, Ann returns home to Florida to face her estranged mother, Hu’o’ng. Under the same roof for the first time in years, mother and daughter must face the simmering questions of their past, while trying to rebuild their relationship without the one person who’s always held them together.

Running parallel to this is Minh’s story, as she goes from a lovestruck teenager living in the shadow of the Vietnam War to a determined young mother immigrating to America in search of a better life. And when Ann makes a shocking discovery in the Banyan House’s attic, long-buried secrets come to light, revealing how decisions Minh made in her youth affected the rest of her life.

Format: Hardback (336 pages) Publisher: Quercus
Publication date: 27th June 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Banyan Moon on Goodreads

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My Review

The story is told from the point of view of three Vietnamese American women – Minh, her daughter Hu’o’ng and Hu’o’ng’s daughter, Ann. Ann’s story is set in the present day but Hu’o’ng’s moves back and forth in time between her childhood in Vietnam and her life in America. Minh’s story is told through an unique perspective: from beyond the grave where she exists in a kind of limbo, able to observe Ann and Hu’o’ng’s grief at her death but also to relive memories of her early life in Vietnam before she was forced to flee to America because of the Vietnam War.

The mysterious, rambling and now rather dilapidated Banyan House has played an important part in all three women’s lives. For Minh it was a tangible sign of of her entrepreneurial spirit and determination to provide a secure home for her children. For Hu’o’ng and Ann it has acted at various times as a place of sanctuary. It has also witnessed dramatic events, as the reader will discover.

Minh’s death brings Ann and Hu’o’ng back to Banyan House after a period of estrangement. Initially, their grief is the only thing that seems to connect them. ‘We’re lost without her, our faithful interpreter.’ Gradually the author allows the reader to unpick the complex reasons for their estrangement – feelings of being abandoned, of being displaced or being misunderstood. The process of repairing their relationship is made up of tentative steps: small acts of kindness, unexpected discoveries, reassurance and ultimately a shared stake in the future.

All three women are believable characters, each having endured heartbreak and struggled with the realities of motherhood. None of them are infallible and all have made mistakes, saying things in anger or frustration that can’t be unsaid. What draws one into the story is seeing how they move on from this. I enjoyed Ann’s spiky, sarcastic humour, which you suspect is something of a protective carapace, and her growing determination to make an independent life for herself. Learning more of Hu’o’ng’s back story made me admire her strength, something obviously inherited from her mother who, even when dying, refused to go quietly. The author resists the temptation to make the male characters either wholly good or bad although some definitely tend more towards the latter.

There are subtle references to the prejudice faced by immigrants – for example, Ann being described as ‘exotic’ by her boyfriend’s mother and Hu’o’ng’s experiences on her honeymoon. It’s notable that, in contrast to other family members, Minh, Hu’o’ng and Ann nurture their Vietnamese heritage whether that’s through the food, religious practices or inherited stories of their culture.

Ann and Hu’o’ng’s quiet journey to reconciliation threatens to be derailed by Ann’s discovery of a secret that Minh has kept from her daughter. Should she tell Hu’o’ng, possibly tainting her memories of her mother or keep it to herself? As Minh warns from beyond the grave, secrets are a menace. ‘They will spill from your mouth like angry, writhing eels, or they will fill you up until you combust. There is no escaping them.’

I thoroughly enjoyed this absorbing multi-generational story about love, loss, motherhood and the healing of fractured family relationships. It’s an impressive debut.

My thanks to Patrice at Quercus for my review copy.

In three words: Intimate, insightful, emotional

Try something similarPeach Blossom Spring by Melissa Fu


About the Author

Thao Thai is a writer living in Ohio with her husband and daughter. Her work engages with tangled family relationships and the intersections of motherhood and identity. She’s been published in Cup of Jo, Eater, Catapult, Sunday Long Read, and more. A recipient of the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund, she has also been nominated for multiple Pushcart Prizes and earned fellowships in creative writing. She received her MFA from The Ohio State University and her MA from the University of Chicago.

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