Wooo, it’s the weekend. It’s been a long week, but I think I’m starting to be caught up with everything. Let’s talk books!
Books acquired this week
Technically this is actually part #2 of my London book haul (part one covers my purchases from museum bookshops and indies). This time we’re going through my haul from Waterstones Piccadilly, which was actually the last destination after the Forbidden Planet Megastore. The SF/F floor was closed, so I spent all the time on the non-fiction floor… which probably saved my wallet somewhat, it must be admitted.
First, let’s have some science!
I did see a potentially interesting book about infectious diseases, but I’ve got so picky about that topic now — I no longer find it as soothing to read, at least for now. So I gave that a miss.
Next up, let’s have the Egyptology books I found, a significant subset of what I got. I’d probably have got them even if I hadn’t gone to the Petrie museum recently, as I have always been fascinated by Ancient Egypt, but it had certainly put me in the mood for them.
I already tore through Ramesses the Great and loved it, but I’m looking forward to the others, too! I imagine there won’t be as much new to me in Egypt’s Golden Couple, because I’ve always been fascinated by the Amarna period, but I don’t mind the refresher.
Finally, a more miscellaneous bunch:
I’d seen Threads of Empire on someone else’s post a couple of weeks ago and added it to my wishlist, so I was pleased to spot it in person, and I’d heard about Queen James somewhere or other, probably from KJ Charles. The title made a couple of people to whom I mentioned it wince, so I’d note that it’s presumably based on the contemporary saying Rex fuit Elizabeth, nunc est regina Iacobus (“Elizabeth was king, now James is queen”), and it does seem to be a serious examination of James’ relationships with men. If it turns out weird and homophobic/biphobic, I promise there will be a scathing review, but I’m pretty sure KJ Charles would’ve said something already if so.
As for A Woman’s Work, I remembered liking Cleghorn’s Unwell Women… while Rummage was a completely random choice just out of interest.
Almost-finally, I have a manga I got this week on a whim, and the single manhwa I got in Forbidden Planet, since it seems appropriate to put them in the same post:
I was not a huge fan of Cat + Crazy, sadly; I tried it because I liked Cat + Gamer, but I think it’s too goofy and “out there”. I’m excited for volume 9 of Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint, though!
And finally-finally, here’s my library hold of the week, which came in way sooner than I’d been expecting:
I wasn’t sure if I wanted to give this a try, but the sheer market saturation of it has finally needled me into giving it a shot. Thank goodness for libraries, which let us take a chance on things sometimes.
Posts from this week
Let’s start with the reviews, as ever:
- Non-fiction: A History of England in 25 Poems, by Catherine Clarke (5/5 stars, “loved it”)
- Horror graphic novel: Home Sick Pilots: Teenage Haunts, by Dan Watters et al (4/5 stars, “really liked it”)
- Fantasy novella: A Long and Speaking Silence, by Nghi Vo (4/5 stars, “really liked it”)
- Travel and folklore: Monsterland: A Journey Around the World’s Dark Imagination, by Nicholas Jubber (3/5 stars, “liked it”)
- Poetry: Southernmost: Sonnets, by Leo Boix (1/5 stars, “didn’t like it”)
- Horror manga: Sailor Zombie, by Jiji, Pinch and Isshin Inudo (1/5 stars, “didn’t like it”)
As ever, most of those aren’t recent reads, I just have a huge review backlog written but not yet posted, in my efforts to post a mixed selection of reviews.
And the other posts:
- Fantasy with Friends: Underrated Fantasy Books
- Top Ten Tuesday: Surefire Tropes
- What Are You Reading Wednesday
- March Reading Wrap-Up
- Let’s Talk Bookish: Novels in Verse
I’m steadily getting to the point of doing a bunch of non-review features again after a long drought where I really just posted STS posts and reviews, which is nice. Actually having people visit my blog and having people whose blogs I read, and having time for all that… magical!
What I’m reading
I’m not sure how much I’ve actually read this week, because it’s felt like I’ve been too busy. Let’s have a look — here are some previews of covers of the books I finished this week which I will review on here soon(ish):
Not bad, really!
As for this weekend, I hope to finish Amal El-Mohtar’s Seasons of Glass and Iron, for a start, and maybe start my BookSpin book for the month, which is actually Gareth Russell’s Queen James (featured above). Or maybe I’ll go with some of the fiction I’ve just barely got started, like Stephanie Burgis’ Wooing the Witch Queen.
Whatever I read, I’m hoping to do more of it this weekend, and charge up my batteries for the week ahead.
Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, and It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? at The Book Date.




































