My Week in Books – 3rd November 2024

My Week in Books

On What Cathy Read Next last week

Tuesday – This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was a freebie on the theme of Hallowe’en. My take was A Warning to the Curious: Ghost Stories by M. R. James 

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 published my review of Gabriel’s Moon by William Boyd.

Saturday – I took part in the #6Degrees of Separation meme forging a book chain from Intermezzo by Sally Rooney to Killing Thatcher by Rory Carroll.


New arrivals

A book club pick and a NetGalley ARC

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How to Solve Your Own Murder by Kristen Perrin (audiobook)

Frances Adams always said she’d be murdered. She was right.

It’s 1965 and teenage Frances Adams is at an English country fair with her two best friends. But Frances’s life takes a hairpin turn when a fortune-teller makes a bone-chilling prediction: One day, Frances will be murdered. Frances spends a lifetime trying to solve a crime that hasn’t happened yet, compiling dirt on every person who crosses her path in an effort to prevent her own demise. For decades, no one takes Frances seriously. Until that is, nearly sixty years later, when Frances is found murdered.

In the present day, Annie Adams has been summoned to a meeting at the sprawling country estate of her wealthy and reclusive great aunt Frances. But by the time Annie arrives in the quaint English village of Castle Knoll, Frances is already dead. Annie is determined to catch the killer, but thanks to Frances’s lifelong habit of digging up secrets, it seems every endearing and eccentric villager might just have a motive for her murder.

Can Annie safely unravel the dark mystery at the heart of Castle Knoll, or will dredging up the past throw her into the path of a killer? As Annie gets closer to the truth, and closer to the danger, she starts to fear she might inherit her great aunt’s fate instead of her fortune.

The BooksellerThe Bookseller (DS Cross #7) by Tim Sullivan (eARC, Head of Zeus via NetGalley)

Someone’s about to turn their last page…

THE SETTING – When the body of a bookseller is discovered, collapsed in a pool of blood in his Bristolian bookshop, it is immediately clear that he has been murdered. What is unclear is how someone could have met such a violent end in this quiet, peaceful place.

THE CONFLICT – DS Cross is adept at dismissing red-herrings but a worrying development in his personal life has left him hopelessly distracted, leaving his usual means of deciphering evidence challenged.

THE MURDER PLOT – The world of bookselling is a quiet one, but it is full of passionate and ambitious characters. They know a rare book equals a big payoff – and their extensive reading means they also know the best ways to get away with murder…


On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading


Planned posts

  • Blog Tour/Book Review: Revenge of Rome (Eagles of the Empire #23) by Simon Scarrow
  • Book Review: Killing Thatcher by Rory Carroll
  • Book Review: The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller
  • My Five Favourite October 2024 Reads

#6Degrees of Separation – A book chain from Intermezzo by Sally Rooney to Killing Thatcher by Rory Carroll

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.


IntermezzoThis month’s starting book is Intermezzo by Sally Rooney. Can there be anyone in the book world who hasn’t seen the publicity blitz for this, the author’s second novel?

Links from each title in the chain will take you to my review or the book description on Goodreads.


Intermezzo is a musical term applied to a short piece serving as an interlude between two larger sections of a work. Staying with the musical theme, a key (excuse the pun) – or even a major (excuse another pun) – character in The Instrumentalist by Harriet Constable is violinist and composer Antonio Vivaldi, probably most famous for The Four Seasons. The book suggests he had a little a help with it…

Continuing the musical theme, Notes of Change by Susan Grossey is the seventh in her historical crime series featuring Constable Sam Plank. (Have a bonus link to the previous author’s surname.) The plot of Notes of Change centres on the ‘uttering’ [the putting into circulation] of counterfeit notes, a capital offence at the time.

Another illegal practice associated with currency is central to The Gallows Pole by Benjamin Myers, which won The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction in 2018.  Set in Calderdale, West Yorkshire in the 1760s it tells the story of a gang known as the ‘Cragg Vale Coiners’. ‘Coining’ was the illegal practice of removing shavings of gold from the edges of genuine coins, milling the edges of those coins smooth again and then using the shavings to produce counterfeit coins. Like uttering, it was a capital offence.

Linda Green, the author of In Little Stars, taught creative writing classes for the Workers Educational Association in Calderdale, the setting for The Gallows Pole. In Little Stars involves two women whose families are on different sides of the bitter Brexit debate. Unbeknown to them, their children (echoing Romeo and Juliet) are destined to fall in love.

Another novel which tackles the divisions caused by the Brexit referendum is Middle England by Jonathan Coe. One of Coe’s previous novels, What A Carve-Up!, is a satire on life under the government of Margaret Thatcher.

Killing Thatcher by Rory Carroll describes the background to the IRA’s attempt to assassinate Margaret Thatcher during the Conservative Party Conference in Brighton in 1984, and the manhunt for the bomber that followed.

My chain has taken me from a musical interlude to political division. Where did your chain take you this month?