May Reads
19: Modern Baptists James Wilcox
May read for the in person book club. Small town soap opera that grew on me by the end. Excellent, if unlikeable in some cases, characters, and a wonderful turn of phrase.
20: Behold, here's poison Georgette Heyer [Kindle]
The April read for the Shedunnit book club. I had never read a Heyer book before, and I didn't even realise she had written murder mysteries. I enjoyed it, the characters were excellently written, and the mystery was pretty good too. Would definitely read another
21: Dark Aemilia Sally O'Reilly [Kindle]
This has been sitting around on my kindle waiting to be read for ages. I am glad I finally got round to reading it. Based on the 'Dark Lady' of Shakespeare's sonnets, it's a good novel set in the late Elizabethan, early Jacobean era.
22: An Ancient Evil Paul Doherty [Kindle]
The start of a re-read of this series, preferably in order this time. A kindle offer popped up and I remembered how much I had liked these books when I first read them whilst working in Bridlington Library (mumblemumble years ago)
23: The Nightingale Gallery Paul Doherty [Kindle]
So reading the other one reminded me of this series - so I'm re-reading them too.
May read for the in person book club. Small town soap opera that grew on me by the end. Excellent, if unlikeable in some cases, characters, and a wonderful turn of phrase.
20: Behold, here's poison Georgette Heyer [Kindle]
The April read for the Shedunnit book club. I had never read a Heyer book before, and I didn't even realise she had written murder mysteries. I enjoyed it, the characters were excellently written, and the mystery was pretty good too. Would definitely read another
21: Dark Aemilia Sally O'Reilly [Kindle]
This has been sitting around on my kindle waiting to be read for ages. I am glad I finally got round to reading it. Based on the 'Dark Lady' of Shakespeare's sonnets, it's a good novel set in the late Elizabethan, early Jacobean era.
22: An Ancient Evil Paul Doherty [Kindle]
The start of a re-read of this series, preferably in order this time. A kindle offer popped up and I remembered how much I had liked these books when I first read them whilst working in Bridlington Library (mumblemumble years ago)
23: The Nightingale Gallery Paul Doherty [Kindle]
So reading the other one reminded me of this series - so I'm re-reading them too.