This week’s theme from Top Ten Tuesday is “Books with honorifics in the title”, which I’m really not sure I can actually get a total of ten for. I guess this might be pretty dependent on genre! Anyway, let’s see how I do…
- The Dress Diary of Mrs Anne Sykes, by Kate Strasdin. A non-fiction which discusses a Victorian woman’s “dress diary”, containing snippets of cloth from her clothes (and sometimes clothes worn by her friends and family). I found it a really fascinating delve into fabric and social history.
- The Doctor who Fooled the World, by Brian Deer. I know, this sits kind of oddly with other books from the list, but it’s a really good takedown of the lies spread by Andrew Wakefield, and highly recommended if you’re on the fence about whether his allegations about the MMR vaccine (or vaccination in general) actually hold any truth. I consider Andrew Wakefield a mass murderer, to be clear, a man so blinded in his own search for fame and profit that he endangered the whole world — but I don’t blame people who were led astray by a man who used his position as a scientist to inspire false confidence. I feel so sorry for people who believed in what he had to offer.
- Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, by Susanna Clarke. This is a book I’ve reread a couple of times, despite being huge. I know that not everyone enjoys it, and I honestly wouldn’t even have predicted that I would, but there’s such dense world-building and some really fun ideas about magic.
- The Magpie Lord, by KJ Charles. I’ve read this a number of times, and it remains fun. Lord Lucien Crane isn’t entirely a good person, but he seeks his own kind of justice and fairness, and I love the way that he and Stephen Day are drawn together.
- Siren Queen, by Nghi Vo. I really loved this slightly fantastical, dark Hollywood. It was completely enchanting. I actually might give it another read at some point.
- The Mysterious Mr. Badman, by W.F. Harvey. I’ve more or less forgotten the plot of this one, I must admit, but I gave it 4/5 stars at the time! It’s a classic mystery, and a fairly conventional one, according to my review, which explains the rating. I really love classic mysteries, but not so much because they’re innovative or unusual — usually, more because they’re not. They’re very comforting in their predictability.
- Mr. Pottermack’s Oversight, by R. Austin Freeman. This is also a pretty classic mystery, but an unusual one in that it shows us the commission of the crime to begin with, and then the efforts at covering it up. It’s quite slow-paced, and I did find that it dragged a bit, but I ultimately gave it four stars for making me care about the criminal. It’s very carefully written, and I did enjoy it.
- Miss Phryne Fisher Investigates, by Kerry Greenwood. Also known as Cocaine Blues, this is the first book of the Phryne Fisher series, and it’s so much fun. For some reason, I didn’t love it when I first tried it, but when I gave it another go, Phryne won my heart. A reread is tempting…
- Miss Jacobson’s Journey, by Carola Dunn. I read this series out of sequence, but had a lot of fun going backwards to read this one: Miriam is a great romance protagonist, and I did get fond of her two potential suitors as well — perhaps somewhat helped by the fact that I already knew one of them from the second book. I’m getting tempted to reread the whole trilogy!
- The Duke Heist, by Erica Ridley. Putting this book here has reminded me there’s a couple of books in this series I haven’t read yet! They’re somewhere in my boxes of books in the storage unit, but perhaps once I dig them out, it’ll be time to pick them up. I’ve found all the books in the series so far really fun, and The Duke Heist is no exception. Lawrence takes a while to sort out his behaviour totally, but the way he interacts and becomes playful with Chloe is adorable.
Look at that, I made it! Maybe a couple of these are kinda cheating, but we’re gonna call it good anyway.
The Dress Diary of Mrs. Ann Sykes sounds good.
I liked it a lot! A fascinating idea for a book.
Great list! And it’s fun to see someone else use a nonfiction book on their list this week. (I have a memoir on my list.) There are so many historical fantasy / romance books showcased this week!
Nicole @ BookWyrm Knits recently posted…Top Ten Tuesday ~ Books with Honorifics in the Title
I basically ended up just searching my read books on StoryGraph, ahaha. Romance and mystery titles seem to be quite fertile for honorifics!
You are right on the genre. My list has mostly mysteries: https://wordsandpeace.com/2025/07/15/top-ten-books-with-honorifics-in-the-title/
Emma @ Words And Peace recently posted…Top Ten Books with Honorifics in the Title
Yes, a number of my picks were mysteries — there were a couple of other mysteries I could’ve highlighted too, but I didn’t like those so much.
It was my suggestion for the topic this week and I’m loving all these choices! I don’t think you cheated at all!
Here’s my list: https://portobellobookblog.com/2025/07/15/top-ten-tuesday-15th-july-2025-books-with-honorifics-in-the-title-toptentuesday-amreading-bookrecommendations-tuesdaybookblog/
Haha, glad you’ve been enjoying seeing the results!
I also loved The Siren Queen!
I loved that it didn’t over-explain its own magic. 😀 I really might reread it soon.
I didn’t even think of looking for Doctor. Not sure how many I would have on my list anyway.
Marg @ The Intrepid Reader recently posted…Top Ten Tuesday: Honorifics
I think I only had one or two, which kind of surprised me!
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell is one of my favorites. Have you watched the miniseries adaptation? It’s just as amazing as far as I’m concerned.
Lauren @ Always Me recently posted…Top Ten Tuesday: Books With Honorifics In The Title
I haven’t, I’m really bad at ever watching TV… Can’t sit still long enough, ahaha.
The only book I’ve heard of is Siren Queen, though I haven’t read it.
Pam @ Read! Bake! Create!
https://readbakecreate.com/a-royal-family-found-in-book-titles/
I definitely need to read that Andrew Wakefield book. Some of my family members are anti-vax and I must admit they scared me too as I didn’t know much about anything at the time. It’s impossible to talk sense with them so I’m low contact now, but I still wanna learn more for myself!
Haze @ The Book Haze recently posted…Top Ten Tuesday | Books on My Summer 2025 TBR