Looking at last month’s picture, I’m pleased at how things are going. My little pile of Three Investigators Mysteries is safely tucked into the shelf now, and things have definitely moved on in the oldest part of the TBR (top left). Hooray!

I completed 16 books in August, and am part-way through two more. I finished two of my ebook TBR books and am part-way through a third, with one unread as yet. I read ten out of eleven of my print TBR books, not managing the Michael Walmer, which I’d warned him might happen. I completed my 20 Books Of Summer challenge! Those are all also from my TBR challenge – I now have 14 books to go on that from now until 05 October, which isn’t going to happen, see below.
Shiny New Books
Shiny has been having its August break so no books reviewed there.
Incomings
I was again restrained with print books in this last month.

Kaggsy of the Bookish Ramblings sent me “Country of Origin” by Dalia Azim, a novel about Egyptians in New York. I was reminded of the existence of “Life Among the Qallunaat” by Mini Aodla Freeman (an Inuit woman’s memoir of living among the non-Indigenous settlers) by The Australian Legend’s review and managed to find an OK-priced ex-library copy, and publishers Elliott & Thompson kindly sent me Aliya Whiteley’s “The Secret Life of Fungi” which I will review here on Fungus Day in October and also for Shiny.
I won just the five NetGalley books this month:

The nice folks at Faber offered me “Avalon” by Nell Zink (published January 2023), a novel about utopias and finding yourself, and then when we were discussing their non-fiction list, approved me for history of measurement, “Beyond Measure” by James Vincent (June 2022). I was also offered Julie Caplin’s “The Christmas Castle in Scotland” (October 2022) by its publisher, having enjoyed one of her novels before. “Fire Rush” by Jacqueline Crooks (March 2023) is a coming-of-age novel set in 1970s London and Crooks was named best debut Black female novelist by Bernardine Evaristo in theĀ Guardian, which is enough for me to request it from the tempting email, and Jimi Famurewa’s “Settlers: Journeys Through the Food, Faith and Culture of Black African London” (October 2022) looks very interesting and also pairs nicely with the novels I’ve read recently about British Nigerian Londoners.
So that was 16 read and 8 coming in in August – very much in the right direction!
Currently reading

Slightly oddly, I’m currently reading two books loaned to me by Heaven-Ali – “The Adventures of Miss Barbara Pym” by Paula Byrne, the biography of our beloved writer, and “Desert of the Heart” by Jane Rule, a 1960s lesbian classic about a woman staying in Reno to accomplish her divorce (I was attempting to include this in All August / All Virago and the Virago Groups’s travel theme for August but didn’t get it finished). Actually, I think this is Ali’s hard copy of Francesca Wade’s “Square Haunting” too – Emma and I started this as our readalong this month and are thoroughly enjoying it, as predicted. On the Kindle is Derek A Bardowell’s “Giving Back: How to Do Good, Better” which is an excellent and powerful book on the social sector and how we can all make our money and work go further and to the right people.
Coming up
Coming up next in print books, well, this isn’t going to happen. This is all the books that will get my TBR project finished, plus two review books, and doesn’t include my Larry McMurtry as I’d taken the picture and shelved the books before I thought about it. It also includes the first volume of David Lodge’s memoirs, as I have the second volume in the TBR project but need to read that first. Argh!

I’m not going to list them because it’s ridiculous, but basically I’m going to concentrate on the review books, of course, “Rock-Bound” and “The Secret Life of Fungi” and then try to eliminate those ‘extras’ that have been hanging around on the shelves, so the top row of light women’s novels and two Earlene Fowler quilting cosy mysteries and that massive Tolkien catalogue. Any others will be a bonus. Sensible, right?
My NetGalley TBR for September:

Well, there is a bit of diversity in the print TBR but I seem to be giving myself more of a course in Black British history and diverse people’s lives in America. Alternative history of the Middle Ages, “Femina” by Janina Ramirez, is still on there, and I’ve added “Beyond Measure” so it doesn’t get forgotten. Then I’ll be covering Black British Georgians (“Black England” by Gretchen Gerzina), Black British Victorians (“Black Victorians” by Keshia N. Abraham, John Woolf) and Black Britons in the whole of history (“African and Caribbean People in Britain” by Hakim Adi). Then Diya Abdo’s “American Refuge” covers stories of the refugee experience in the US and “Mika in Real Life” by Emiko Jean is the story of a Japanese woman in America. Kamila Shamsie’s “Best of Friends” travels from Pakistan to London, and “Inside Qatar” promises to show the real history of the place hosting the men’s football World Cup (people have had trouble downloading this one, so fingers crossed). So this time it’s mainly serious non-fiction on the Kindle and light fiction in print books!
With the ones I’m currently reading (not including my readalong which will take a while), that’s 3 books to finish and 17 to read, minimum. Can I do that? Hm, possibly not!
How was your August reading? What are you reading this month? Have you read or picked up any of my selection?
Sep 01, 2022 @ 08:45:42
The Tolkien book looks amazing – not sure how I missed knowing about this one. You’ve now bumped my tbr wishlist up by one!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:37:41
Oh I bought it aaaages ago – I don’t know when as I didn’t write in it or put a slip in it; in fact it’s still wrapped in plastic! I am going to read it over one weekend this month, though, promise!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 01, 2022 @ 09:07:56
I have Avalon to read, too, and the Wade found its way on to my list thanks to Jacqui at Jacqui Wine’s Journal. Looking forward to seeing what you think of Fire Rush.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:39:04
Nice bit of overlap there! I feel I’m late to the party with Square Haunting, as so many people I know have enjoyed it already. But once Emma and I had selected it, it had to wait to make it to the top of our pile! I hope you enjoy the ones we have in common and your other books this month.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 01, 2022 @ 12:02:25
I have Mika in Real Life in my library holds–stay tuned for that one in September! Fire Rush sounds intriguing–I’m a sucker for coming of age books!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:39:39
Oh, excellent, hope you enjoy it and look forward to discussing it with you!
LikeLike
Sep 01, 2022 @ 12:48:39
Congratulations on completing your summer TBR challenge! I love looking at your TBR, it’s so diverse and sends me down a research rabbit hole seeing what books I would like to read. Right now I am working on the Furrowed Middlebrow line, the British Library Crime Classics and a Short Classics Project. Happy reading!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:40:29
Hello and welcome to my blog! The Furrowed Middlebrow books are great, aren’t they, as you can see I have a few TBR. I’m glad you enjoyed the diversity of my shelf and hope I’ve inspired some interest in a few on there!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 01, 2022 @ 14:24:31
The only NetGalley crossover we have is Best of Friends! I was looking forward to it but have seen mixed reviews so will be proceeding with caution.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:40:54
Indeed, indeed! I’ll look forward to hearing how you get on with it and chatting about it!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 01, 2022 @ 15:55:58
What a mixture! Settlers looks very interesting and Desert of the Heart, hope you get some good reads!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:41:40
I’m not absolutely loving Desert of the Heart but it’s interesting to have a woman’s view of the desert and a gambling town after my Larry McMurtry Vegas reads.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 01, 2022 @ 17:41:24
Some lovely incomings there, and I’m so glad you’re enjoying the Wade – I loved it! August was a good reading month for me and I’m trying to keep it loose for September!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:42:43
I remember you loving Square Haunting – it just had to wait to get to the top of Emma and my reading pile. We’re making good progress, half a chapter a week is working really well, we’ve just finished the Sayers chapter and now want to read Gaudy Night! Have a good, loose, September. Mine feels rather tight!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 01, 2022 @ 23:23:46
Your shelves are definitely looking less overloaded – well done! Of course that probably means it’s time for an acquisition splurge… š
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 05:43:36
Well, this is it, isn’t it, and how well you know me. You might even have noticed there hasn’t been a Summer Book Token Splurge yet … But the new indie bookshop on my high street is about to open and I need to support them, obvs …
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 02, 2022 @ 11:27:38
A very productive month! Most of these are unfamiliar to me but Square Hunting is right up my alley and I will look forward to it when I am in a nonfiction mood. There seems to be a copy at my local library.
Constance
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 04, 2022 @ 07:21:02
Square Haunting is excellent, it’s not your dry non-fiction but really readable and engaging. I hope you get hold of the library copy and enjoy it.
LikeLike
Sep 03, 2022 @ 17:53:28
Thanks for commenting on my discussion post about commenting. I am always trying to strike a balance between reading and reviewing and blogging. I know if I don’t engage my efforts at reviewing will fall fairly flat. Unless I want to just write for myself I need to engage with others who have similar interests. When I look at your TBR books and upcoming titles I see a person like myself who reads very eclectically. I love that. I , etc.find myself visiting blogs where I can’t relate at all to people’s reading choices because they only read one type of book (mysteries, cozies, rom-coms, etc)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 04, 2022 @ 07:22:33
Yes, I like your blog for the same reason; there’s an overlap in interests and often actual books. I struggle with people who only read one genre; I follow some people who read a lot of fantasy and graphic novels and romance but are from different cultures to mine or in different countries, so I get the interest that way (e.g. finding out about the wealth of fantasy with a Black female central character which are coming up now).
LikeLike
Sep 03, 2022 @ 18:30:33
You had a brilliant month of reading. Mine has been a month of good books though not many of them (7 and a half I think). In blogging terms I appear to be broken. Maybe I can reboot myself soon. You may have finished those books I passed you now, I absolutely loved the Pym bio and Desert of the Heart.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 04, 2022 @ 07:24:10
For various reasons (work! plumbing!) I’ve had a slow start to my reading this month so have not got far into the Pym bio (which I am loving) and have only just almost finished Desert (which I haven’t absolutely loved but has grown on me). You did read some good ones, and I’m glad of that, and hopefully we can work out a way of doing your blogging.
LikeLike
Sep 04, 2022 @ 20:51:03
wow, that’s A LOT on your September plate. I hope it’s still enjoyable and not stressful
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 05, 2022 @ 17:44:55
I won’t let it stress me, I don’t mind losing a bet with my husband (ha, I do, but whatever; he isn’t going to start the Grohl book till a bit after my deadline anyway). And I’ve only just finished the first book I was still reading over the turn of the month, so it’s unlikely I will get all these read. I’ll just do my best while still enjoying them all.
LikeLike
Sep 05, 2022 @ 18:02:43
Reading bets with your husband? Sounds fun, BUT can be stressful, lol
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 05, 2022 @ 19:34:21
He challenged me a year ago on his birthday to read all my TBR, including the pile of books in series and random holiday reads, up to the Dave Grohl book, by his next birthday! I have a project page for it here https://librofulltime.wordpress.com/2021/10/07/my-2021-2022-tbr-project/ and it has meant I’ve caught up to being only a year behind my acquisitions as of now!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 22, 2022 @ 03:05:32
16 books in August, nice work! I checked and I managed to read 11 books in August which feels impressive to me though that was before my full clinical caseload emerged. I’m definitely getting through fewer books in September which I’m practicing self-compassion toward. Of these many books you mention here I think I’m most interested in Best of Friends and American Refuge. I’m appreciative of people who talk about friendship through novels or otherwise though I’ve seen mixed reviews of Best of Friends, and American Refuge looks altogether great. Happy reading!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sep 22, 2022 @ 11:08:43
That is a good total indeed for the life you’re living right now!! I haven’t got to Best of Friends yet, it has been a weird reading month (see the post with my reviews of three light novels). I’ve seen mixed reviews too but fortunately a blogger I trust has enjoyed it. If you’re right in the middle of clinical caseload you’re going to be reading in tiny scraps of time and should definitely not be beating yourself up about it!
LikeLiked by 1 person
State of the TBR – October 2022 | Adventures in reading, running and working from home
Oct 01, 2022 @ 13:29:49