#WWWWednesday – 12th November 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!


I’m reading The Sea Road West and Seascraper for Novellas in November and The Assassin of Verona from my TBR pile.

The Sea Road West by Sally Rena (Endeavour Press)

The road from the Scottish mainland to Kintillo lies across a ridge of craggy and forbidding hills, a natural barrier isolating the peninsular from the rest of the world and making Kintillo a place of both refuge and solitude.

But trouble begins when Father Macabe dies, and Father James, a new, young man arrives. Handsome and full of ideals, Father James is totally unprepared for the spell-binding beauty of the lonely country, and for the irrelevance of his philanthropic fervour to the lives of its inhabitants. For company, there is only a retired doctor, a charming and alcoholic wreck, and the inhabitants of the Hall – the Laird and his two pretty daughters.

Meriel Finlay is one of these daughters – a captivating 19 year old yearning for love and adventure. As mutual desire slowly ripens, can Father James continue to keep focus on his profession when it denies him his basic instincts?

Passions hidden below the surface, maturing in loneliness, erupt in a violent upsurge of love, hatred and jealousy which sweep through Kintillo like a storm…

Seascraper by Benjamin Wood (Viking)

Thomas lives a slow, deliberate life with his mother in Longferry, working his grandpa’s trade as a shanker. He rises early to take his horse and cart to the grey, gloomy beach and scrape for shrimp, spending the afternoon selling his wares, trying to wash away the salt and scum, pining for Joan Wyeth down the street, and rehearsing songs on his guitar. At heart, he is a folk musician, but it remains a private dream.

When a striking visitor turns up, bringing the promise of Hollywood glamour, Thomas is shaken from the drudgery of his days and begins to see a different future. But how much of what the American claims is true, and how far can his inspiration carry Thomas?

Haunting and timeless, this is the story of a young man hemmed in by his circumstances, striving to achieve fulfilment far beyond the world he knows.

The Assassin of Verona by Benet Brandreth (Zaffre)

Venice, 1586. William Shakespeare is disguised as a steward to the English Ambassador. He and his friends Oldcastle and Hemminges possess a deadly secret: the names of the catholic spies in England who seek to destroy Queen Elizabeth. Before long the Pope’s agents will begin to close in on them and fleeing the city will be the players’ only option.

In Verona, Aemelia, the daughter of a Duke, is struggling to conceal her passionate affair with her cousin Valentine. But darker times lie ahead with the arrival of the sinister Father Thornhill who is determined to seek out any who don’t conform to the Pope’s ruthless agenda . . .

Events will converge in the forests around Verona as a multitude of plots are hatched and discovered, players fall in and out of love and disguises are adopted and then discarded. Will Shakespeare and his friends escape with their secrets – and their lives?

The Matchbox Girl by Alice Jolly (Bloomsbury via NetGalley)

Adelheid Brunner does not speak. She writes and draws instead and her ambition is to own one thousand matchboxes. Her grandmother cannot make sense of this, but Adelheid will stop at nothing to achieve her dream. She makes herself invisible, hiding in cupboards with her pet rat, Franz Joseph, listening in on conversations she can’t fully comprehend.

Then she meets Dr Asperger, a man who lets children play all day and who recognises the importance of matchboxes. He invites Adelheid to come and live at the Vienna paediatric clinic, where she and other children like herself will live under observation.

But the date is 1938 and the place is Vienna – a city of political instability, a place of increasing fear and violence. When the Nazis march into the city, a new world is created and difficult choices must be made.

Why are the clinic’s children disappearing, and where do they go? Adelheid starts to suspect that some of Dr Asperger’s games are played for the highest stakes. In order to survive, she must play a game whose rules she cannot yet understand. (Review to follow)

Rage of Swords by David Gilman (Head of Zeus via NetGalley)

1368. Amidst the Hundred Years’ War, alliances must be brokered. The Duke of Clarence, second son of King Edward III, journeys from Paris to marry the daughter of the powerful Lord of Milan. Little does he know that he is heading into a trap.

Luckily the Duke is preceded on the road to Milan by Sir Thomas Blackstone, Master of War, on an urgent mission of his own. Blackstone must get his hands on the gold the Prince of Wales needs to wage successful war in France.

But there is a price on Blackstone’s head, and assassins willing to risk everything to claim it before he even gets to Milan. He must outwit a succession of ever deadlier enemies, and the Master of War has other foes to the ambitions of his son Henry, who has inherited his father’s knack of getting into scrapes. Scrapes that could end in a hangman’s noose… (Review to follow)

Ravenglass by Carolyn Kirby (Northodox Press)

In 18th century Whitehaven, Kit Ravenglass grows up in a house of secrets. A shameful mystery surrounds his mother’s death, and his formidable, newly rich father is gambling everything on shipping ventures. Kit takes solace in his beloved sister Fliss, and her sumptuous silks, although he knows better than to reveal his delight in feminine fashion. As the family’s debts mount, Kit’s father turns to the transatlantic slave trade – a ruthless and bloody traffic to which more than a fortune might be lost.
 
Adventures will see Kit turn fugitive and begin living as ‘Stella,’ before being swept into the heady violence of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s rebellion. Driven by love, revenge and a desire to live truly and freely, Kit must find a way to survive these turbulent times – and to unravel the tragic secrets of the Ravenglass family.

Nonfiction November – Book Pairings #NonFicNov25

Nonfiction November 2025

Nonfiction November is an annual challenge hosted by bloggers Liz at Adventures in Reading, Frances at Volatile Rune, Heather at Based on a True Story, Rebekah at She Seeks Nonfiction and Deb at Readerbuzz designed to celebrate all things nonfiction. Helpfully, there are a series of weekly prompts to guide your posts.

This week’s prompt is hosted by Liz at Adventures in Reading who invites us to pair up a nonfiction book with a fiction title.  I’ve come up with three pairs and, for good measure, there’s a link between the final two pairs.

My first pairing is M. R. James: An Informal Portrait by Michael Cox, published by the Oxford University Press in 1983, and Collected Ghost Stories by M. R. James, published in 2011. Cox’s biography of Montague Rhodes James, the celebrated author of ghost stories, describes his early life and his time as dean and provost of King’s College, Cambridge, and later as provost of Eton College. It also provides a picture of society and especially the academic world of the time. Collected Ghost Stories contains all of James’s published ghost stories, including many that have been adapted for television. (In 2024 Mark Gatiss, who has been responsible for some of the recent adaptations, presented the BBC Four programme, M. R. James: Ghost Writer.)

My second pairing is Take Courage: Anne Brontë and the Art of Life by Samantha Ellis and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë. Take Courage is the author’s personal journey into the life and work of a woman she believes has been sidelined by history, overshadowed by her older siblings. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Anne’s second and final novel, is the story of Helen Graham, a mysterious woman who arrives at Wildfell Hall with her young son, seeking refuge from a dark and painful past. Helen’s secret diary reveals her struggles to break free from her destructive marriage to Arthur Huntingdon. Anne’s depiction of alcoholism and debauchery was considered shocking at the time but the novel is now considered to be one of the first feminist novels.

My final pairing is Daphne du Maurier’s nonfiction work, The Infernal World of Branwell Brontë and her most famous novel, Rebecca. In her biography of Branwell, du Maurier describes how, unable to deal with the failure to sell his paintings or get his books published, he retreated into alcohol and laudanum resulting in his early death. (It has been suggested that Arthur Huntingdon in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is loosely based on Branwell.) In Rebecca, a shy young woman (who is never named) falls in love with handsome widower Maxim de Winter and agrees to marry him. When they arrive at her husband’s home, Manderley, she feels overshadowed by his beautiful first wife, Rebecca, (perhaps in the same way Branwell felt overshadowed by his sisters) who died in mysterious circumstances, and is intimidated by Manderley’s sinister housekeeper, Mrs Danvers.