The Lucky Books

Books, Reading By Aug 10, 2010 13 Comments

As you’ll have noticed from the dates of this blog post and its predecessor, I’ve had an extended break from blogging. First, I was on holiday in Scotland for a fortnight and then I returned home, refreshed, reinvigorated and ready to concentrate on little else but my current WiP. So, yes, I’ve been writing and not much else over the last few weeks. Okay, okay, I may have been tweeting and reading, as well. But only a little bit, honest.

I imagine that, for those of you anxiously waiting to find out which books I took away with me on holiday, the past few weeks have been torture. Sleepless nights and anxious days rather like the time(s) when you’ve been expecting to hear from a loved one, or about a job interview, or for exam results… No? Oh, okay then. No matter. But here are the books that were fortunate enough to make it into the book bag and come away on holiday with me. The lucky winners! I’m going to be doing reviews of some of these on the blog but, in the meantime, here are the titles and authors, together with how and why they made the cut:

  • Not So Perfect by Nik Perring (Roastbooks Ltd) – I love reading short stories and cannot go anywhere without taking some with me. This is a brilliant collection of short stories and came in a very handy travel size.
  • Only Forward by Michael Marshall Smith (Voyager Classics) – An online pal kept quoting MMS in emails and chats, and recommended this book as a good introduction to the author. I promised him that I’d read it when I had some time on holiday. I am so glad I made that promise and now intend to track down MMS’ entire back catalogue. Yes, it was that good!
  • Peaceweaver by Judith Arnopp (YouWriteOn.com) – I was fortunate enough to listen to a reading from this book and meet the author at a Writers’ Day in west Wales. Either of those alone would have been enough to make me want to read the book. The two combined meant that I absolutely had to.
  • Like Bees to Honey by Caroline Smailes (The Friday Project, an Imprint of Harper Collins) – I met (twet?) Caroline on Twitter and went to the London launch of this book where we met IRL. It seemed the perfect book to take on holiday as it’s set on the island of Malta. (I know I went to Scotland but still, this felt like it would be an ideal holiday read…)
  • Eva Shell by Kate North (Cinnamon Press) – This is the book that I ran back into the house and grabbed (refer to previous post for my book selection process). I’ve been meaning to get to it for some time now and simply hadn’t got around to it. Kate North was the tutor of the very first writing group I went to in 2003. I’d read some of her poetry before but have wanted to read this, her debut novel, since I bought it.
  • The Schoolboy by Holly Howitt (Cinnamon Press) – I was asked to read this book in order to compare it to TAG (see below).
  • TAG by Stephen May (Cinnamon Press) – I had to read this and wanted to read it. I was asked to review it for Square magazine (my review is in Issue 8 of the magazine which is now on sale and available here) but I also wanted to read it because I had met Stephen while on a Writer’s Retreat at Moniack Mhor in Scotland. He read the first chapter of this book at the end of that week and I knew back then that I wanted to read the finished book when it came out.

So there you have them. My rather wonderful travelling companions. Have you read any of them? If not, which books did you whisk away from the bookshelf this summer?

Author

13 Comments

  1. DJ Kirkby says:

    I took Like Bees to Honey to LA with me and also read Not So Perfect. Both were divine.

    1. kath says:

      Love it, Denyse. It’s very LA but perfect for both books. They are definitely divine, darling!

  2. You did well. I make that a book every two days!
    I love when other people blog about their reading. It’s so much better than trying to figure out what to read/buy from a seller’s site.

    1. kath says:

      That’s the wonder of being somewhere that has no Internet! It’s amazing how much reading you can get done when there are no other distractions around like Twitter. 🙂

      I agree with you about book recommendations. I rarely buy on the basis of a seller’s site anymore. I think the majority of the books I’ve read this year have come through word-of-mouth or by hearing about or meeting the author on Twitter.

  3. Marsha says:

    What a great collection, Kath! I’m dying to read Nik’s book.

    1. kath says:

      It’s wonderful, you’ll love it. I keep dipping back in and re-reading a story every now and again and I think I’ll be doing that for a good while yet.

  4. If you read that many books in a fortnight, you really do need an eReader! A couple of these are on my TBR list as well.

    1. kath says:

      Thanks, I am showing your comment to Gareth as proof that I need one, too!

  5. Nik Perring says:

    Thanks so much for the mention, Kath! I was in Very Good company it would seem!

    Nik

    1. kath says:

      You were but you definitely managed to hold your own, Nik!

  6. Nik Perring says:

    That’s very good to hear!

  7. B Jas says:

    Nice collection, and hey, great site …. and who doesn’t love chocolate, squirrels, tea, and cats! Noticed you’re reading Bird by Bird, we have that book listed in our resources on the Restless Writers’ website, check it out for more great books on writing….www.restlesswriters.ca

    1. kath says:

      Thanks for dropping by to The Nut Press. I’ll drop over and find out what restless writers get up very soon.

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