Saturday, 31 January 2026

January Round Up

A slight improvement this month because I've managed to read five books. I'm still not sure why I'm not reading as much as I usually do. It shouldn't matter. It doesn't matter. But somehow it seems to bother me.



First up is a library book. The Girl With Ice In Her Veins by Karin Smirnoff. I have a compulsion to read these books which feature Liesbeth Salander. She was my heroine back in 2009. And although Stieg Larsson is long dead, RIP, his character lives on in the hands of two different writers so far, David Lagercrantz and Karen Smirnoff. Both are Swedish authors which is obviously quite fitting so the books are in translation. I enjoy them but they'll never match the first three books by Larsson. This story again re-introduces us to Lizesbeth's niece Svala caught up in some environmental activism and the disappearance of Salander's hacker friend Plague. Murders, hit lists and scandals investigated by Mikael Blomkvist are the recipe for a reasonably gripping tale. 



Next is a book that the good folks at HQ Stories sent me and I have blogged about it. 

https://bookphace.blogspot.com/2026/01/the-woman-before-me-ruth-dugdall.html






Father Christmas was kind to me. Well, actually, a friend of mine was kind to me! She sent me the newly published collection of short stories by Harper Lee called the Land of Sweet Forever. An absolutely delightful collection of short stories. Varied, witty and illuminating. You can't help thinking what a talent Lee was. And how we have so little of her writing to enjoy. There's also some non-fiction reflections of hers that encompass various themes that are just entertaining to read.


Next up is Tom Cox's Everything Will Swallow You. I feel like I've bought this book twice over. Because I pledged to his previous publishing company Unbound who went bust taking all of our pledges with them and I think Tom had quite a time trying to get the book ultimately published. I bought it again because I do believe in his writing. It's a quirky book, but I guess if you had to sum it up the central theme is friendship. Friendship and an appreciation of our natural world. It's something of a rambling tale featuring various characters including a bipedal dog who knits, enjoys curries and reads.. It is recognisable as Cox's writing. If you've read his work before that is. And it's enjoyable.




Finally this month, another book I managed to pick up at my local library, Michael Rosen's Good Days, an A-Z of Hope and Happiness. It's alphabetised ideas for trying to find some good every day.

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