#TopTenTuesday Reasons Why I Love Reading

Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl.

The rules are simple:

Each Tuesday, Jana assigns a new topic. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post. Add your name to the Linky widget on that day’s post so that everyone can check out other bloggers’ lists. Or if you don’t have a blog, just post your answers as a comment.

favouriteThis week’s topic is Reasons Why I Love Reading. And we’re supposed to limit ourselves to just ten reasons?

  1. It supports a creative industry
  2. It’s a way of helping small businesses, like my nearest independent bookshop Fourbears Books, or maintaining valuable public institutions, like libraries
  3. Because books can be now consumed in a variety of formats – phyical, digital, audio – depending on preference or circumstances. For example, I’m currently listening to the audiobook version of A Long Petal of the Sea by Isabel Allende, have just finished a paperback copy of Business As Usual by Jane Oliver & Ann Stafford, and am reading an eARC of For Lord & Land by Matthew Harffy.
  4. Because reading is a great way to pass the time on long journeys
  5. Because books can transport you to different parts of the world, such as to India in my recent read The Secret Keeper of Jaipur
  6. Because books can give you an insight into events you’d otherwise not – or perhaps rather not – experience, such as the evacuation of Dunkirk in Sword of Bone by Anthony Rhodes
  7. You can learn things you didn’t know, and not only from non-fiction.  For instance, as I learned from the introduction to The Penguin Book of Spanish Short Stories, Spain has four recognised languages
  8. Reading opens up the possibility of being part of a wider community of fellow readers
  9. Picking up a book can help to lift your spirits just when you need it most
  10. If you don’t believe me about the value of reading, then listen to the wise words of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, as imagined by Alan Bennett in The Uncommon Reader – “A book is a device to ignite the imagination.”

What are some of the reasons you love reading?

#6Degrees of Separation: From Eats, Shoots & Leaves to The Wanderers

It’s the first Saturday of the month which means it’s time for 6 Degrees of Separation!

Here’s how it works: a book is chosen as a starting point by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best and linked to six other books to form a chain. Readers and bloggers are invited to join in by creating their own ‘chain’ leading from the selected book.

Kate says: Books can be linked in obvious ways – for example, books by the same authors, from the same era or genre, or books with similar themes or settings. Or, you may choose to link them in more personal or esoteric ways: books you read on the same holiday, books given to you by a particular friend, books that remind you of a particular time in your life, or books you read for an online challenge. Join in by posting your own six degrees chain on your blog and adding the link in the comments section of each month’s post.   You can also check out links to posts on Twitter using the hashtag #6Degrees


This month’s starting book is Eats, Shoots & Leaves by Lynne Truss. Subtitled ‘The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation’, in the book the author argues that it is time to look at commas and semicolons and see them for the wonderful and necessary things they are.

Gyles Brandreth takes a similarly non-nonsense attitude in his book Have You Eaten Grandma? which is described as a ‘brilliantly funny tirade on grammar…[and] the linguistic horrors of our times’.

Gyles’ son, Benet Brandreth, as well as being an authority on Shakespeare is also a novelist. His series of historical novels that started with The Spy of Venice and continued with The Assassin of Verona imagine what William Shakespeare might have got up to in his so-called “lost years”.

I’m not going to go for the obvious link to Hamnet as I used that last month. Instead, my next link is to another book set in Venice, Death in Venice by Thomas Mann. The film version starred Dirk Bogarde (as pictured below on the cover of the Penguin edition). Bogarde, as well as being an award-winning actor, was an accomplished author and in his book, Great Meadow, he recalls his idyllic childhood in Sussex in the late 1920s and 1930s.

Also set in the years before the Second World War is All Among the Barley by Melissa Harrison. Set on a farm in Suffolk it features a girl on the cusp of adulthood. It made the ‘Academy Recommends’ list but not the longlist for The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2019.

A book that did make the longlist was The Wanderers by Tim Pears, the second book in his West Country trilogy featuring young Leo Sercombe who falls in with a band of gypsies and travels the countryside with them, and then later on his own.

My chain has taken me from proponents of precision in punctuation to a book featuring a much less rules-based way of life. Where did your chain take you?