#WWWWednesday – 26th May 2021

WWWWednesdays

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 Baby Is Mine by Oyinkan Braithwaite (advance review copy, courtesy of Midas PR and The Reading Agency)

When his girlfriend throws him out during the pandemic, Bambi has to go to his Uncle’s house in lock-down Lagos. He arrives during a blackout, and is surprised to find his Aunty Bidemi sitting in a candlelit room with another woman. They both claim to be the mother of the baby boy, fast asleep in his crib.

At night Bambi is kept awake by the baby’s cries, and during the days he is disturbed by a cockerel that stalks the garden. There is sand in the rice. A blood stain appears on the wall. Someone scores tribal markings into the baby’s cheeks. Who is lying and who is telling the truth?

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson (paperback)

Miss Pettigrew, an approaching-middle-age governess, was accustomed to a household of unruly English children. When her employment agency sends her to the wrong address, her life takes an unexpected turn. The alluring nightclub singer, Delysia LaFosse, becomes her new employer, and Miss Pettigrew encounters a kind of glamour that she had only met before at the movies. Over the course of a single day, both women are changed forever.

The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams (audiobook)

Esme is born into a world of words. Motherless and irrepressibly curious, she spends her childhood in the Scriptorium, a garden shed in Oxford where her father and a team of dedicated lexicographers are collecting words for the very first Oxford English Dictionary. Young Esme’s place is beneath the sorting table, unseen and unheard. One day a slip of paper containing the word bondmaid flutters beneath the table. She rescues the slip, and when she learns that the word means “slave girl,” she begins to collect other words that have been discarded or neglected by the dictionary men.

As she grows up, Esme realizes that words and meanings relating to women’s and common folks’ experiences often go unrecorded. And so she begins in earnest to search out words for her own dictionary: the Dictionary of Lost Words. To do so she must leave the sheltered world of the university and venture out to meet the people whose words will fill those pages.


Recently finished

Links from the titles will take you to my review.

Pathfinders by Cecil Lewis

This Other Island by Steffanie Edward

A Room Made of Leaves by Kate Grenville (audiobook)

Love and Miss Harris by Peter Maughan


What Cathy (will) Read Next

Sword of Bone CoverSword of Bone by Anthony Rhodes (eARC, courtesy of the Imperial War Museum and Random Things Tours)

It is September 1939. Shortly after World War II is declared, Anthony Rhodes is sent to France, serving with the British Army. His days are filled with the minutiae and mundanities of army life—friendships, billeting, administration—as the months of the “Phoney War” quickly pass and the conflict seems a distant prospect. 

It is only in the spring of 1940 that the true situation becomes clear. The men are ordered to retreat to the coast and the beaches of Dunkirk, where they face a desperate and terrifying wait for evacuation.

My Week in Books – 23rd May 2021

MyWeekinBooks

On What Cathy Read Next last week

Blog posts

Monday – I shared an update on my progress with the Bookbloggers 2021 Fiction Reading Challenge hosted by Lynne at Fictionophile. 

Tuesday This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was Book Titles That Are Complete Sentences

WednesdayWWW Wednesday is the opportunity to share what I’ve just read, what I’m currently reading and what I plan to read next… and to have a good nose around what others are reading. 

Thursday – I shared my review of crime mystery set in Bologna, The Hunting Season (Daniel Leicester #2) by Tom Benjamin as part of the blog tour.

Saturday – As part of the blog tour, I published my review of Pathfinders by Cecil Lewis, one of the latest additions to the Imperial War Museum’s terrific ‘Wartime Classics’ series. 

As always, thanks to everyone who has liked, commented on or shared my blog posts on social media.


New arrivals

I dropped off some unwanted books at my local Oxfam bookshop so of course this happened. I blame their one way system that took me past some bargains I just couldn’t resist.

A Legacy of SpiesA Legacy of Spies by John le Carré

Peter Guillam, staunch colleague and disciple of George Smiley of the British Secret Service, otherwise known as the Circus, is living out his old age on the family farmstead on the south coast of Brittany when a letter from his old Service summons him to London. The reason? His Cold War past has come back to claim him.

Intelligence operations that were once the toast of secret London, and involved such characters as Alec Leamas, Jim Prideaux, George Smiley and Peter Guillam himself, are to be scrutinized by a generation with no memory of the Cold War and no patience with its justifications.

Girl Woman OtherGirl, Woman, Other by Bernadine Evaristo

This is Britain as you’ve never seen it. This is Britain as it has never been told.

From Newcastle to Cornwall, from the birth of the twentieth century to the teens of the twenty-first, Girl Woman Other follows a cast of twelve characters on their personal journeys through this country and the last hundred years.

They’re each looking for something – a shared past, an unexpected future, a place to call home, somewhere to fit in, a lover, a missed mother, a lost father, even just a touch of hope…

I also joined a Waterstones online event with Brit Bennett, author of The Vanishing Half, the ticket for which included a copy of the book. Okay, I could have purchased a ticket without the book but what would have been the joy in that?

The Vanishing HalfThe Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

The Vignes twin sisters will always be identical. But after growing up together in a small, southern black community and running away at age sixteen, it’s not just the shape of their daily lives that is different as adults, it’s everything: their families, their communities, their racial identities. Ten years later, one sister lives with her black daughter in the same southern town she once tried to escape. The other secretly passes for white, and her white husband knows nothing of her past. Still, even separated by so many miles and just as many lies, the fates of the twins remain intertwined. What will happen to the next generation, when their own daughters’ storylines intersect?


On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading

Planned posts

  • Down the TBR Hole #15
  • Blog Tour/Book Review: This Other Island by Steffanie Edward
  • Top Ten Tuesday: Book Titles – Do Quote Me 
  • Waiting on Wednesday
  • Blog Tour/Book Review: Love and Miss Harris by Peter Maughan
  • Book Review: The Baby Is Mine by Oyinkan Braithwaite