Tidied up the bookcases for the first time this year. Have got through the following so far in 2024;
Leila Slimani - Lullaby
Michael Hawley – JtR Suspect Dr Francis Tumblety
Marcus Aurelius – Meditations
Pamela West – Yours Truly, jack the Ripper (fiction, and not very good!)
Malcolm Gladwell – The Tipping Point (fascinating behavioural text)
Paul Auster – The New York trilogy (sadly passed away recently. Bizarre, but really good trilogy!)
Piper Kerman – Orange is the new Black
Jostein Gaarder – Vita Brevis
Mark Nicholls – Investigating Gunpowder Plot
Robert Galbraith – The Running Grave
James Shapiro – 1599
John Connolly – Every Dead Thing (Have become quite addicted to this series. This is the first book, and is amongst the best. There are almost 3 separate stories inter-twined in this novel, and it is properly gripping. I have since read several others in the series, and for winter have another 6/7 to get through in the dark evenings!)
Sarah Bax Horton – One Armed Jack
John Connolly – Dark Hollow
Naomi Klein – Doppelganger (possibly the best non-fiction book I have read recently. Investigating the impact of social media on identity. A joy to read, Naomi Kleins books tend to be excellent.)
Stephen King – Just After Sunset
Tim O’Neill – Chaos – The Truth Behind the Manson Murders (Thought this would be good, however it seems to be much more about one persons obsession, with a lot of confirmation bias. TL;DR, conspiracy theories can be found everywhere if you want them to).
John Connolly – The Killing Kind
The Chemical Brothers – Paused in Cosmic reflection
John Connolly – The White Road
Daniel Johnson – Jack The Ripper Truth, Lies, Conspiracy
Patrick Stewart – Make It So
Lauren Oyler – Fake Accounts
Robert Kershaw – 24 hours at Waterloo (really human look at people involved, taken from participants actual writings. Loved this.)
John Connolly – The Black angel
John Connolly – The unquiet
Dan Ariely – Misbelief (Similar to Naomi Kleins book, looking at peoples beliefs instead. Ariely, like Klein is a fantastic writer, and his research is always insightful and stimulating.)
J Hainsworth/C Ward-Argus – The Escape of Jack the Ripper
Katie Williams – Tell The Machine Goodnight
Paul Britton – The Jigsaw man
JP Delaney – The perfect Wife
Julian Bagginni – The Pig That Wants to be Eaten
Stephen King – Billy Summers (A surprising, and really enjoyable book. Loved the characters.)
P Evans/G Deehan – The descent of Mind
Jostein Gaarder – An Unreliable Man
Stephen King – Elevation
Elmore leonard – Out of Sight (proper good gangster caper)
Stephen King – Full dark No Stars (4 short stories, and to a really high standard)
Robert Pirsig – Zen and the art of Motorcycle Maintenance (not sure what all the fuss is about?)
Hallie Rubenhold – The Five (Not as bad as had been made out. Very readable, effectively a feminist critique of the Jack the Ripper crimes. Let down however by selective cherry picking and worse of “evidence”)
Greg Bear – The City at the End of Time (Mad sci-fi, that is rather complicated and confusing in equal measure)