Lexie Conyngham's Blog: writing, history and gardening.

Tuesday, 2 September 2025

July and August reading

 There, I was so excited at the idea of going on holiday in August that I completely forgot to post about July's reading! So (if No.3 Cat permits, since he's trying to sit on my lap and stop me) here, in no particular order, are the books I read over the two months.

Marti M. McNair, Island of Ruin: This is really a YA dystopian fiction and starts with the discovery of an old woman apparently dead on a beach. The setting is a strange community on an island after some disaster, and the world-building is swift but effective – decontamination, communal living, strict regimes to protect the community. The main character is tantalised by glimpses of what the world is like beyond their little community, and alarmed at the prospect of being drugged, like everyone else, to quell emotions once she reaches puberty. A rebel, she gets into plenty of trouble in the course of the book, and the ending is well set up to lead on to the next in the series.

Brian Bilston, Diary of a Somebody: This is a novel by the well-known social media poet (I suppose one could call him – I certainly first came across him on Facebook), though at first it does seem like the actual diary of a year he challenged himself to write a poem a day. How much this is really based on real life I’m not sure: the narrator is a divorced loser, failing in his relationship with his teenage son, overwhelmed by the positivity of his ex-wife’s new partner, fading out of his paid employment, not reading the books for his book club and in misery at his poetry club where his arch rival is striding towards literary stardom. As one would expect from his poetry, this is funny and witty, with all kinds of literary references and, it turns out in the end, an actual plot, when the arch rival vanishes and Brian is clearly up to something in his garden shed. A light read that’s great fun and can lead you down a few erudite rabbit holes.

Kate Ellis, The Burial Circle: I very much enjoy this series where there’s always an archaeological element and a double time line of some kind. In this one there’s the additional factor of an old case in the area, a body being found from a decade before. The way the various threads are woven together is very clever, and even though I picked up on a fair few of them the final solution was still a very interesting, character-driven conclusion. My only complaint was that the old letters represented in the text were in a font I found quite difficult to read, and I’m someone who will happily plunge into centuries-old manuscripts.

Marsali Taylor, Death in a Shetland Lane: I’m just trying to catch up on the ones I’ve missed in this series as I became confused when some of them changed their titles (thank you, www.fantasticfiction.com for getting me back on the right track!). Another excellent plot with engaging characters.

Barbara Erskine, The Story Spinner: I have loved this author for years and was delighted to find another book by her. She weaves history, thriller and the supernatural together in plots that seem totally grounded in the present day, and her writing is really compelling as she lures you in. Yes, there are some really rambling sentences, and yes, I did yell at the main character and the police now and again as she put herself in danger and they once more chased the baddie without catching him, but it’s a great yarn, all the same.

T.G. Reid, Dark is the Grave: I had started this some years ago but couldn’t get past the beginning which I found a bit much. However, this time I persevered, and enjoyed it – a good solid police procedural with a satisfying plot and a team it was interesting to spend time with. I hope to be back for another one.

Wes Markin, Forgotten Bones: Another policeman constrained to work with someone on the spectrum, and with domestic problems of his own. I haven’t quite warmed to Frank yet, though I might well give him another chance. The plot was reasonable enough, starting with the discovery of old bones in a suitcase in Whitby and working out from that several threads where different characters receive their come-uppance. I felt the setting didn’t get the outing it perhaps deserved and I was never quite sure where we were. Perhaps just me – I’ll try again. I disliked the chapter headings intensely, though.

J.D. Kirk, A Rock and a Hard Place: The suspense brought on by Logan’s incapacity at the beginning of this book is agonising! Will he come back to work at full strength, or won’t he? The team are as wonderful as ever and the plot is pleasantly convoluted, and there’s the usual out-loud laughter and terrible groans – excellent read.

Hilary Pugh, The Laird of Drumlychtoun: My first by this author and I might well go and look at another one. I couldn’t quite fathom the main character, but I quite enjoyed the plot – a missing ring supposed to affect the fate of a landed family near Dundee, resulting in various family relationships rearranging themselves. The whole thing was – I’m not sure – oddly paced? But it kept going and I did keep returning to it.

Val McDermid, The Torment of Others: This is my first Tony Hill / Carol Jordan book, and for some reason I'm approaching with care, perhaps because I'm never very happy with something that’s been televised (not that I watched it). As it turned out, while I found the relationship between Hill and Jordan a curious one, the plot itself was grim. I’m not sure I enjoyed it as such, though I’m pleased it was resolved in the end. I’d acquired a number of Val McDermids in one go and as a result of reading this, as it turned out, out of order, I’m going to give the previous one straight to the charity shop without reading it. I will, however, try another Hill / Jordan one – I just felt the plot of the previous one was touched on too much in this one for me to be able to read it with any kind of interest.

Alex Walters, Nothing Left of Me: Another intelligent standalone from this author, one of the few where I will pre-order a new book on sight, without reading the blurb! I love his Alec Mackay and Annie Delamere series, but his standalones are equally good. My favourite may be Winterman, set in the 1940s. Nothing Left of Me is the story of a newly-ex police officer retreating to the Highlands for a bit of peace and quiet, only to find that there are plenty of problems there, too – but are they local or have they followed him? I very much liked the main character, a narrator who is far from omniscient, and there are some nice little references to some current real-life situations as we go along – maybe even closer to the bone than the author expected.

Jodi Taylor, Killing Time: This Time Police episode, with Team Weird still very much dysfunctional, is based around the ‘true’ story of the Zanetti Train, which apparently vanished in a tunnel near Milan in 1911. This is quite traumatic and a very emotional read in places, and I really wasn’t sure how it would turn out, but as always there’s a laugh and a joke as we go – the rapid-hardening string was particularly amusing!

Alex Mackay, Late Checkout: My first in the Kenny Murrain series, avoided so far because I’m not so interested in the setting. It feels as if a number of Scottish crime writers depart from Scotland at points and gravitate towards Manchester, which does not appeal so much to me. However, this one, with its sympathetic main character and his strange second sight, is one I’ll come back to. A series of nasty murders in hotel rooms leads to extreme danger for Murrain's colleague, but what is the link between them?

Jason Vail, The Abbot’s Last Supper: Now, it’s unfortunate that the author mentions a spinning wheel in the first few pages, for it’s very unlikely that there was one in use in an ordinary house in 13th century England, and I’m the kind of pedant who would look that up. This author’s work can sometimes head too much into the politics of the time for me, but The Abbot’s Last Supper is one of the kind that suits me better, a more domestic murder.

Carmen Radtke, Axes and Alchemy: This series is getting into its stride already, and I’m beginning to feel I know the community in Willowmere rather better. The setting is delightfully cosy, despite its occasional murder. Cosmo is wonderful, very feline. I’ll maybe need a few more episodes if this is going to win my heart over from Genie and the Ghost, but it’s very charming!

Alison O’Leary, Home CatBlues: A nasty poison pen writer is making life miserable around Jeremy’s school, and then it goes too far. These are charming books where the very normal cats (not talking or magical, though that can be fun, too) lead the usual cat-lives, parallel to humans, and humans and cats see the plot unfold side by side.

Now, confession time: the new Hippolyta, The Shadowed Blade, is going incredibly slowly. Every time I think 'Oh! That's it, that's the solution!' it bounces along for about three chapters, then deflates again - or maybe it's me!

But I think it's time I got the message, and went to feed No.3 Cat. He has been remarkably patient while I've been doing this!

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