#6Degrees of Separation – A book chain from Butter to The Signature of All Things

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.


ButterThis month’s starting book is Butter by Asako Yuzuki. As usual, it’s a book I haven’t read but the blurb tells me it’s about a female gourmet cook and serial killer, and is inspired by a true story. Links from each title in the chain will take you to my review or the book description on Goodreads.

Picking up the dairy theme of the title, my first link is to Milkman by Anna Burns which is set in Belfast during the period in Northern Ireland’s history known as ‘The Troubles’.

These Days by Lucy Caldwell is also set in Belfast but during the Second World War and, in particular, on four days during which the heaviest bombardment by German aircraft took place.

Lucy Caldwell has recently published a short story collection, Openings, as has Kate Atkinson. Normal Rules Don’t Apply consists of eleven interconnected stories.

In North Woods by Daniel Mason the connection that runs through the book is with the woods of the title and the people, animals and insects that inhabit it over the centuries. One of the latter is a ‘lusty beetle’.

The search for a very special beetle is the subject of Miss Benson’s Beetle by Rachel Joyce in which spinster Margery Benson abandons her job as a schoolteacher and sets out on an expedition to prove the existence of the golden beetle of New Caledonia.

New Caledonia is an archipelago in the South Pacific and The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert also features an expedition to the South Pacific, this time to Tahiti by fictional nineteenth-century botanist, Alma Whittaker.

My chain has taken me from Japan to Tahiti. Where did your chain take you this month?
#6Degrees of Separation June 2024

#WWWWednesday – 29th May 2024

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 Comfort of GhostsThe Comfort of Ghosts (Maisie Dobbs #18) by Jacqueline Winspear (eARC, Allison & Busby via NetGalley) 

London, 1945: Four adolescent orphans with a dark wartime history are squatting in a vacant Belgravia mansion—the owners having fled London under heavy Luftwaffe bombing. Soon after a demobilized British soldier, ill and reeling from his experiences overseas, takes shelter with the group, Maisie Dobbs visits the mansion on behalf of the owners.

Maisie is deeply puzzled by the children’s reticence. Their stories are evasive and, more mysteriously, they appear to possess self-defense skills one might expect of trained adults in wartime. Her quest to bring comfort and the promise of a future to the youngsters and to the ailing soldier brings to light a decades-old mystery concerning Maisie’s first husband, James Compton, who was killed while piloting an experimental aircraft. As Maisie picks apart the threads of her dead husband’s life, she is forced to examine her own painful past and question beliefs she has always accepted as true.

Book cover A Beginner's Guide to Breaking and Entering by Andrew Hunter MurrayA Beginner’s Guide to Breaking and Entering by Andrew Hunter Murray (Hutchinson Heinemann)

Property might be theft. But the housing market is murder.

My name is Al. I live in wealthy people’s second homes while their real owners are away. I don’t rob them, I don’t damage anything. I’m more an unofficial house-sitter than an actual criminal.

Life is good. Or it was – until last night, when my friends and I broke into the wrong place, on the wrong day, and someone wound up dead.

And now … now we’re in a great deal of trouble.


Recently finished

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley (Sceptre)

Estella’s Revenge by Barbara Havelocke (Hera) 

The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis (Vintage)


What Cathy Will Read Next

The Heart in WinterThe Heart in Winter by Kevin Barry (eARC, Canongate via NetGalley)

October, 1891. Butte, Montana. A hard winter approaches across the Rocky Mountains. The city is rich on copper mines and rampant with vice and debauchery among a hard-living crowd of immigrant Irish workers.

Here we find Tom Rourke, a young poet and balladmaker, but also a doper, a drinker and a fearsome degenerate. Just as he feels his life is heading nowhere fast, Polly Gillespie arrives in town as the new bride of the devout mine captain Long Anthony Harrington.

A thunderbolt love affair takes spark between Tom and Polly and they strike out west on a stolen horse, moving through the badlands of Montana and Idaho. Briefly an idyll of wild romance perfects itself. But a posse of deranged Cornish gunsmen are soon in hot pursuit of the lovers, and closing in fast . . .