My Week in Books – 7th December 2025

Monday – I shared a progress update on my Bookish Goals for 2025.

Tuesday – My take on this week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was Books Featuring Characters in Holy Orders.

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 shared my Top 3 November 2025 Reads.

Saturday – I took part in the #6Degrees of Separation meme forging a book chain from Seascraper by Benjamin Wood to The French Lieutenant’s Woman by John Fowles. I also published my review of Small Acts of Resistance by Anita Frank.

An audiobook, a book club pick and a book received as a prize to mark achieving Diamond level of Penguin’s Bookmarks community.

Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid (Penguin Audio)

In the summer of 1980, astrophysics professor Joan Goodwin begins training to be an astronaut at Houston’s Johnson Space Center, alongside an exceptional group of fellow Top Gun pilot Hank Redmond; mission specialists John Griffin and Lydia Danes; warmhearted Donna Fitzgerald; and Vanessa Ford, the magnetic and mysterious aeronautical engineer.

As the new astronauts prepare for their first flights, Joan finds a passion and a love she never imagined and begins to question everything she believes about her place in the observable universe.

Then, in December of 1984, on mission STS-LR9, everything changes in an instant.

Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT and the Race That Will Change the World by Parmy Olson (Macmillan Business)

When ChatGPT was released, the world changed overnight. Even as we all played with the new toy, a very real danger was quickly coming to that untested automations would undermine our way of life insidiously, sucking value out of our economy, replacing high-level creative jobs and enabling a new, terrifying era of disinformation.

It was never meant to be this way. The founders of the two companies behind the most advanced AIs in existence – Open AI (ChatGPT) and DeepMind (Bard) – started their journeys determined to solve humanity’s greatest problems. But they couldn’t develop their technologies without huge amounts of money – money that Microsoft and Google were more than happy to give them, in exchange for the most powerful seats at the table.

From award-winning journalist Parmy Olson, Supremacy is the astonishing, untold, behind-the-scenes story of the battle between two AI companies, their struggles to use their tech for good, and the dangerous direction that they’re now going in. Featuring a cast of larger-than-life characters, including Elon Musk, Larry Page, Sergey Brin and Peter Thiel, Supremacy is a story of manipulation, exploitation, secrecy and of ruthless, relentless human progress – progress that will impact all of us for years to come.

Whale Fall by Elizabeth O’Connor (Picador)

It is 1938 and for Manod, a young woman living on a remote island off the coast of Wales, the world looks ready to end just as she is trying to imagine a future for herself.

The ominous appearance of a beached whale on the island’s shore, and rumours of submarines circling beneath the waves, have villagers steeling themselves for what’s to come. Empty houses remind them of the men taken by the Great War, and of the difficulty of building a life in the island’s harsh, salt-stung landscape.

When two anthropologists from the mainland arrive, keen to study the island’s people, Manod sees in them a rare moment of opportunity to leave the island and discover the life she has been searching for. But, as she guides them across the island’s cliffs, she becomes entangled in their relationship, and her imagined future begins to seem desperately out of reach.

I’m reading Ravenglass from my TBR pile, a digital review copy of thriller Then He Was Gone and I’m listening to the audiobook of Atmosphere (set in the final time period I need for the When Are You Reading? 2025 Challenge)


  • Book Review: Seascraper by Benjamin Wood
  • Book Review: Then He Was Gone by Isabel Booth
  • Book Review: Ravenglass by Carolyn Kirby

My Week in Books – 30th November 2025

Monday – I published my review of Agricola: Commander by Simon Turney.

Tuesday – My take on this week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was Things You Might Be Thankful For.

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 shared my review of The Cracked Mirror by Christopher Brookmyre.

Saturday – I published my review of Our London Lives by Christine Dwyer Hickey

Sunday – I shared my review of Divination: A Conspiracy of Blood by J. A. Downes.

Fly, Wild Swans: My Mother, Myself and China by Jung Chang (William Collins)

Jung Chang’s Wild Swans was a book that defined a generation – the story of ‘three daughters of China’: Jung, her mother and her grandmother and their lives during a century of revolution. Fly, Wild Swans is, quite simply, what happened next.

Jung Chang arrived in the UK in 1978 aged 26, part of a Chinese scholarship programme for study abroad. Finding herself in the London of punk, political protests and Ziggy Stardust, she felt as if she’d landed on the moon. She and her fellow students had all grown up in complete isolation from the west, living in fear as to what might happen if they broke any of the strict rules imposed upon them by their government. It was an invaluable opportunity but came at a cost of long-term separation from her mother and family in China.

As Jung began to adjust to life in the West, she warmed to the fashion scene, rebelled and thrived. Her studies took off and she became the first person from the People’s Republic of China to be awarded a doctorate from a British university.

Fly, Wild Swans is, in many ways, Jung’s love letter to her mother set against China’s development from the relative freedoms of the late-1970s and untrammelled capitalism of the 1990s to the current authoritarian repressive rule of Xi-Jinping. With vivid flashbacks to her family’s experience in communist China, the book offers an extraordinary account of Jung’s research into the genocidal regime of Mao Tse-Tung, the many fictions she uncovered and the political consequences of publishing her subsequent biography.

As Jung becomes a successful academic and writer in the West, Fly, Wild Swans demonstrates how much she relies on her mother still living in China and the painful years in which politics has prevented them meeting. Through the arc of their respective lives, she gives an immersive, deeply moving and unforgettable account of what it is like to live in a communist dictatorship and the threats modern China poses to the international world order. It is family history at its best.

I’m reading Ravenglass from my TBR pile, Small Acts of Resistance from my NetGalley shelf and listening to the audiobook of Atmosphere (set in the final time period I need for the When Are You Reading? 2025 Challenge)


  • Book Review: Seascraper by Benjamin Wood
  • My Top 3 November 2025 Reads
  • #6Degrees of Separation