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What are you reading at the moment?

(138 Posts)
Knitter43 Mon 25-May-26 11:11:45

Several of you have said that you will be spending some of the Bank Holiday reading your book in the sunshine ( or the shade. ) So what are you all reading and enjoying at the moment? I am reading " This book made me think of you " by Libby Page and really enjoying it. I shall be sorry to come to the end of it.

Juliepat Wed 27-May-26 07:39:13

Whitewavemark2
Have you tried Abe Books? Online second hand book shop.

Elrel Wed 27-May-26 08:02:10

I find Abe Books and World of Books both very useful, books cheap, in good condition and quick delivery.

Whitewavemark2 Wed 27-May-26 08:07:52

Juliepat

Whitewavemark2
Have you tried Abe Books? Online second hand book shop.

Oh no I haven’t heard of them. I do try charity shops etc but I get addled looking at all the titles.

Thanks for that and for world of books elrel

I shall peruse forthwith😊

nanna8 Wed 27-May-26 08:10:03

Beautiful Family by Jennifer Trevelyan . It is set in New Zealand, easy to read and a good story.

Chocolatelovinggran Wed 27-May-26 09:36:58

I love CJ Samson's books, grannybuy.
Spec1alk, Remarkable Creatures -what an interesting read, and an insight into the lives if women at the time.

watertyger Wed 27-May-26 11:06:45

Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie. Not an easy read, but worth it. Lots of history and sometimes very funny.

bookaddict Wed 27-May-26 15:26:05

The Belle Fields and sequel Ashes of Roses by Lora Adams. Very descriptive of life above and below stairs in a "Big House" at the turn of the 19th/20th century. Plenty of twists and turns and not the ending I expected (or wished). Two very enjoyable reads.

seadragon Wed 27-May-26 17:48:13

James OBrien: "How they Broke Britain" www.google.com/search?sca_esv=4521476c5740f22a&rlz=1C5CHFA_enGB790GB790&q=How+They+Broke+Britain:+The+Instant+Sunday+Times+Bestseller&stick=H4sIAAAAAAAAAONgFuLUz9U3SDI2LClT4tVP1zc0LC7OyzYvzzDRkspOttJPys_P1k8sLcnIL7ICsYsV8vNyKhexWnvklyuEZKRWKjgV5WenAsnMksTMPCuQmIJnXnFJYl6JQnBpXkpipUJIZm5qsYJTanFJcWpOTmoRAHhILDl2AAAA&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjT__689dmUAxU4REEAHR2uANIQ9OUBegQIHxAD&biw=1440&bih=770&dpr=2 Would recommend...

Emerald888 Wed 27-May-26 23:08:48

A Jolly Cooper book Mount!
Used to read her earlier books back in the 1970s when commuting to work.

Grantanow Wed 27-May-26 23:41:51

The Ancient Near East by Amelie Kuhrt

monk08 Thu 28-May-26 17:48:48

calla15

monk08

Will be starting Married lies by Chris Collett no5 in the DI Mariner series read no4 yesterday.

Loved this series, shame there has been nothing since 2022 when we got No 9 in the series.

No 5 & 6 in the series just arrived so that's me sorted for the next few days, out this evening so will start them tomorrow.

Sasta Sun 31-May-26 11:47:51

ViceVersa

I've just started the next in the Slough House series (the books which the TV series Slow Horses is based on).

A brilliant series VisaVersa. Are the books as good, and are they following the theme of what was in the TV series or an are they new stories? Thank you!

Greyduster Tue 02-Jun-26 19:23:13

I’m currently reading an Anne Cleeves book “A Bird in the Hand”. I have enjoyed just about everything she wrote, but can’t believe that this is the same writer who was responsible for ‘Vera’ and ‘Shetland’. It plods appallingly and none of the characters are likeable. I have also downloaded the first in a series of Jimmy Perez novels by her - based not in Shetland but Orkney.

ViceVersa Tue 02-Jun-26 21:35:36

Sasta

ViceVersa

I've just started the next in the Slough House series (the books which the TV series Slow Horses is based on).

A brilliant series VisaVersa. Are the books as good, and are they following the theme of what was in the TV series or an are they new stories? Thank you!

Yes, they pretty much do. I really like the books.

Tenko Tue 02-Jun-26 21:43:56

I’m currently reading The facts of Life by Patrick Gale.
And I loved The Names . I didn’t want it to end .

Llamas99 Wed 03-Jun-26 03:58:51

I'm rereading The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson. The gilded age and the 1893 Chicago World's Fair is the era and also tells the tale of the most evil serial killer. It's chilling but informative!

grandMattie Wed 03-Jun-26 05:04:29

Here One Moment - Liane Moriarty. I’d never heard of her, although “Big Little Lies” has been televised and unwatched by me. Enjoying it very much.
I love Patrick Gale and have read most of his books.

Bridey Wed 03-Jun-26 07:37:48

The Midnight Train by Matt Haig, enjoying it.

watermeadow Thu 04-Jun-26 15:28:23

The Old Curiosity Shop, not my favourite Dickens but it’s a long time since I last read it. I’ve got bad eye strain and can only read a little at a time as the print is very small.
When I have nothing to read I usually go back to the good old classics but they all have small print.

hollysteers Thu 04-Jun-26 18:52:42

watermeadow

The Old Curiosity Shop, not my favourite Dickens but it’s a long time since I last read it. I’ve got bad eye strain and can only read a little at a time as the print is very small.
When I have nothing to read I usually go back to the good old classics but they all have small print.

If you read it on a kindle, you could enlarge the print.

I’m not mad on kindles myself, but I agree the print is often too small when reading a classic and this could solve the problem for you as it did for a friend.

Witzend Fri 05-Jun-26 08:58:33

watermeadow

The Old Curiosity Shop, not my favourite Dickens but it’s a long time since I last read it. I’ve got bad eye strain and can only read a little at a time as the print is very small.
When I have nothing to read I usually go back to the good old classics but they all have small print.

‘Small print’ and fat, heavy books, inc. hardbacks, are the reasons I love my Kindle!
TBH there are some fat classics I’d never have read if I couldn’t have read them on my Kindle. Some more recent books, too. I’d never have read ‘A Suitable Boy’ if not for my Kindle.

I do a lot of my reading in bed, so anything heavy (in the weight sense) is a non starter.

Magenta8 Fri 05-Jun-26 09:18:28

I am reading 'The Prisoner' by Sally Carson. It is a novel, published in 1936, about a Bavarian family in Nazi Germany.

I had read her first book 'The Crooked Cross', published in 1934, which is about the same family.

Patsy70 Fri 05-Jun-26 09:26:04

Just finished reading ‘The Other Half of Augusta Hope’ by Joanna Glen. I found it very sad, but I liked the ending.
Has anyone else read it?

Basgetti Fri 05-Jun-26 09:53:28

Just joined our local library and taken out Alexi Sayle’s autobiography.
Will give it a whirl.

Elrel Tue 09-Jun-26 14:07:31

Grandson asked whether I read ‘romantasy’ and I thought I should explore the genre. So the excellent World of Books provided pristine copies of ‘The Midnight Market’ by Joanne Harris and ‘The Court of Thorns and Roses’ by Sarah J Maas. I’ve read the first few pages of each and they look promising.