#TopTenTuesday A Spring Clean in Books

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.

This week’s topic is a freebie on the theme of Spring Cleaning which we are invited to interpret in any way we like. My list is a combination of books in which cleaners turn detective and books in which characters get an opportunity for a metaphorical ‘spring clean’ of their lives.


In Strangers’ Houses by Elizabeth Mundy – Hungarian cleaner, Lena Szarka, suspects one of her clients is to blame when her friend Timea disappears but with the police unwilling to share her suspicions it’s left to Lena to turn sleuth and find her friend.
A Clean Canvas by Elizabeth Mundy – when a valuable painting goes missing, Lena becomes embroiled in the art world which turns out to be a place of thwarted talents, unpaid debts and elegant fraudsters
A Messy Affair by Elizabeth Mundy – when Lena’s cousin Sarika and Sarika’s reality TV star boyfriend Terry receive threatening notes Lena is forced to explore the grubby world of reality television, and online dating.  
The Playground Murders (The Detective’s Daughter #7) by Lesley Thomson – When cleaner, Stella Darnell, isn’t tackling dust and dirt, and restoring order to chaos, she’s solving murders.

The  Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Armin – Four very different women respond to an advertisement in The Times appealing to ‘those who appreciate wisteria and sunshine’ to rent a small medieval Italian castle for a month. The climate and the castle eventually start to have an effect on the four women, shifting their perceptions shift and waking them up to the love in their lives.
Summer  in Provence by Lucy Coleman – Married couple Fern and Aiden embark on a ‘marriage gap year’ but is a change as good as a rest, and will their time apart transform their marriage or drive them further apart?
The House That Alice Built by Chris Penhall – A postcard from Buenos Aires turns Alice’s life upside down and, before she knows it, she’s in Cascais, Portugal beginning to learn how to ‘go with the flow’.
A Wedding in the Olive Garden by Leah Fleming – Sara Loveday flees to the beautiful island of Santaniki vowing to change her life. Spotting a gap in the local tourist market, she sets up a wedding plan business specialising in ‘second time around’ couples.
The Cleaner of Chartres by Salley Vickers – No one quite knows where Agnès Morel, the woman who cleans the cathedral of Chartres each morning, came from. And yet everyone she encounters agrees she is subtly transforming their lives, even if they can’t quite say how. 
Three Women and a Boat by Anne Youngson – Three women thrown together by chance discover a sense of purpose they hadn’t possessed before during a canal journey on a narrowboat.

#WWWWednesday – 3rd March 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

StellaStella by Takis Würger, translated by Liesl Schillinger (ARC, courtesy of Grove Press and Readers First)

In 1942, Friedrich, an even-keeled but unworldly young man, arrives in Berlin from bucolic Switzerland with dreams of becoming an artist. At a life drawing class, he is hypnotized by the beautiful model, Kristin, who soon becomes his energetic yet enigmatic guide to the bustling and cosmopolitan city. Kristin teaches the naïve Friedrich how to take care of himself in a city filled with danger, and brings him to an underground jazz club where they drink cognac, dance, and kiss. The war feels far away to Friedrich as he falls in love with Kristin, the pair cocooned inside their palatial rooms at the Grand Hotel, where even champagne and fresh fruit can be obtained thanks to the black market.

But as the months pass, the mood in the city darkens yet further, with the Nazi Party tightening their hold on everyday life of all Berliners, terrorizing anyone who might be disloyal to the Reich. Kristin’s loyalties are unclear, and she is not everything she seems, as his realizes when one frightening day she comes back to Friedrich’s hotel suite in tears, battered and bruised. She tells him an astonishing secret: that her real name is Stella, and that she is Jewish, passing for Aryan. Fritz comforts her, but he soon realizes that Stella’s control of the situation is rapidly slipping out of her grasp, and that the Gestapo have an impossible power over her.

As Friedrich confronts Stella’s unimaginable choices, he finds himself woefully unprepared for the history he is living through. Based in part on a real historical character, Stella sets a tortured love story against the backdrop of wartime Berlin, and powerfully explores questions of naiveté, young love, betrayal, and the horrors of history.

The High-Rise DiverThe High-Rise Diver by Julia von Lucadou, translated by Sharmila Cohen (eARC, courtesy of World Editions via NetGalley)

Big Sister is watching you.

Riva is a “high-rise diver,” a top athlete with millions of fans, and a perfectly functioning human on all levels. Suddenly she rebels, breaking her contract and refusing to train. Cameras are everywhere in her world, but she doesn’t know her every move is being watched by Hitomi, the psychologist tasked with reining Riva back in. Unquestionably loyal to the system, Hitomi’s own life is at stake: should she fail to deliver, she will be banned to the “peripheries,” the filthy outskirts of society.

For readers of The Handmaid’s Tale, The Circle and Brave New World, this chilling dystopia constructs a world uncomfortably close to our own, in which performance is everything. 


Recently finished

Links from the titles will take you to my reviews

The Northern Reach by W.S. Winslow 

Nick by Michael Farris Smith

The Garden of Angels by David Hewson 

Dangerous Women by Hope Adams

London, 1841. Two hundred Englishwomen file aboard the Rajah, the ship that will take them on a three-month voyage to the other side of the world. They’re daughters, sisters, mothers – and convicts. Transported for petty crimes. Except one of their number is a secret killer, fleeing justice. When a woman is mortally wounded, the hunt is on for the culprit. But who would attack one of their own, and why? Based on a true story, Dangerous Women is a sweeping tale of confinement, loss, love and, above all, hope in the unlikeliest of places. (Review to follow 4th March)

Masters of Rome (Rise of Emperor’s #2) by Gordon Doherty & Simon Turney 

Their rivalry will change the world forever.

As competition for the imperial throne intensifies, Constantine and Maxentius realise their childhood friendship cannot last. Each man struggles to control their respective quadrant of empire, battered by currents of politics, religion and personal tragedy, threatened by barbarian forces and enemies within.

With their positions becoming at once stronger and more troubled, the strained threads of their friendship begin to unravel. Unfortunate words and misunderstandings finally sever their ties, leaving them as bitter opponents in the greatest game of all, with the throne of Rome the prize.

It is a matter that can only be settled by outright war… (Review to follow 4th March for blog tour)


What Cathy (will) Read Next

A Lifetime of MenA Lifetime of Men by Ciahnan Darrell (ebook, courtesy of the author)

Tolan has always let her mother have one secret – how she got that scar on her face – playing along with her mother’s game of inventing outlandish tales to explain the wound away. But when she finds a manuscript on her mother’s computer that promises to reveal the true story, Tolan only hesitates for a moment before curiosity compels her to read on.

She’s hoping for answers, but instead, she finds more mysteries tucked away in her mother’s past. Her mother appears to be associated with Bo, a feisty photojournalist who flies to Cuba in pursuit of a story and becomes embedded with Castro’s rebels, but Tolan can’t quite work out their connection. She’s more clear about the relationship between her mother and Michael, a man twelve years her senior. They bond over their shared outcast status, and their friendship quickly becomes intimate, but the relationship antagonizes the self-appointed moral watchdogs in their small town, who start to convert their threats into action. Tolan is pretty sure that Michael is her father. Her mother told her he died years ago, but the book suggests their story had a different ending.

Almost overnight, everything Tolan thought she knew about herself and her family has changed. She wants answers, but to find them, she risks destroying her closest relationships.