Looking at last month’s picture, I haven’t done too badly or too well – it’s slightly fuller than it was last month but a few more have disappeared from the oldest part, top left and there is now NO PILE in front of the shelves! My Three Investigators Mysteries pile is still tucked in, albeit turned around.

I completed 11 books in September, and am part-way through three more. I finished NONE of my ebook TBR books for September, although I did DNS one as I couldn’t get the file to work. I read or abandoned eight of my print TBR books and am in the middle of my ninth. Those were all also mainly from my TBR challenge – I now have 3 whole books and several to finish to go on that from now until 05 October, the good news being that Matthew won’t be ready to start the Dave Grohl book that initiated the challenge until a few days after that. I am now still on books that came in in September 2021 but should be “just” a year behind again soon.
Incomings
I was NOT restrained with print books in this last month. This is probably down to my lack of self control as the new bookshop opened in Kings Heath, where I live – I reported on the opening weekend and the books I bought there here.

As well as those on the top row that came then, Meg passed me Ali’s copy of “Sankofa” by Chibundu Onuzo, about family secrets and a return to Africa to read, I bought Rob Beckett’s memoir / consideration of British class systems “Class Act” very cheap in The Works, I introduced Matthew to the Heath Bookshop and how wonderful to just browse and not just have to search for books on my wishlist, so I went for Eniola Aluko’s “They Don’t Teach This” about her career in British football, and Robert Twigger’s “Walking the Great North Line” about a walk through the middle of Britain. Claire kindly picked up our mutual friend Sally Brooks’ novel “Four Movements” (50 years, four people, one piano) for me at her book signing. Two review books arrived, from the British Library in their Women Writers series, “War Among Ladies” by Eleanor Scott (about teachers at a girls’ school!) and “Chase of the Wild Goose” by Mary Gordon is a novelisation of the Ladies of Llangollen from new publisher Lurid Editions (not out till Feb so reading in November). Finally, my pre-order of Damian Hall’s important book about the carbon/climate effect of running, “We Can’t Run Away from This”, popped through the letterbox.
I won just the four NetGalley books this month:

I went looking for “Pineapple Street” by Jenny Jackson after seeing it mentioned by another blogger (who?) – it’s a saga about monied folk in Brooklyn Heights (pub April 2023). Susan Rogers and Ogi Ogos’ “This is What It Sounds Like” (Oct 2022) is about why we like the music we like. “The Things That We Lost” by Jyoti Patel (Jan 2023), winner of the 2021 #Merky Books New Writers’ Prize is about the secrets that lie in family histories, and Jessica George’s “Maame” (Jan 2023) is a debut following a young woman’s journey to independence.
So that was 11 read and 17 coming in in September – even if I have read the two short story collections, going very much in the wrong direction!
Currently reading

As well as my readalong with Emma, “Square Haunting”, I’m still reading “The Adventures of Miss Barbara Pym” and picking away at those Icelandic sagas (Matthew has granted me that I’m reading them so they are off the TBR challenge even if not finished) and Stacey Dooley’s “Women Who Fight Back”, a very engaging but often shocking read about some of the subjects of her documentaries.
Coming up

As well as the Larry McMurtry for this month, these books take me up to and through Dave Grohl’s “The Storyteller” while covering the three review books I must get to in print.
My NetGalley TBR for October covers Africans in London, why we like the music we like, a Christmas novel I might read later, a book about healing through nature and edited primary sources on Black people in Britain:

All very achievable if I didn’t have the EIGHT books from NetGalley published in September that I have yet to read! And I think there’s a Kaggsy and Stuck in a Book Year read coming up, too, for which I have an e-book languishing somewhere.
With the ones I’m currently reading (not including my readalong which will take a while), that’s 3 books to finish and 21 to read, minimum. Can I do that? Hm: no!
How was your September reading? What are you reading this month? Have you read or picked up any of my selection?
Oct 01, 2022 @ 15:53:04
What lovely, lovely books and what a wonderful TBR! Will look forward to your thoughts on the Pym biog, as I’ve seen differing opinions on it. I’m currently reading Orwell and Empire which is really fascinating!
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 16:24:59
Thank you! I’m actually really enjoying the Pym book – it’s not as twee as I thought it would be based on some of the reviews, and the stuff about her Nazi boyfriend is factual and clear and nothing gratuitous (it’s all referenced carefully).
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 17:20:25
The grohl book is one I may pick up at some point the wartime shop assistant I may get for my wife think that could be one for her she likes to read true stories
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:17:28
The shop assistant one is very interesting so far, a real flavour of the times.
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 18:18:36
As usual an interesting selection Liz of which I haven’t read any, but I am interested in Why Women Read Fiction and wonder what you made of that? I could probably write the male version!!
This month I have been reading Bitter Orange by Claire Fuller which took me ages to finish and three of the Booker Shortlist, Small Things Like These, Oh William and Glory. I liked the first and third and noticed that there is yet another book out about Lucy Barton, reviewed today.
My next AuthorsElectric is out tomorrow about books I have received through Twitter…
All best
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:19:02
Not sure when I’ll get to Why Women Read Fiction but you’ll see the review pop up. I haven’t been through my blog feed yet but will look out for that one. I want to read Small Things Like These; I’m not a big fan of Booker shortlisted books normally for some reason!
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 19:50:27
Hope you enjoy the storyteller as much as I did!
Great selection here x
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:19:30
I’m looking forward to it, will dip into the audiobook too I’m sure which my husband has.
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 19:54:48
You’re finally getting to Dave Grohl!!! Yay! I am also very interested in This Is What It Sounds Like! I have a read a few scientific (for lack of a better word) books that deal with music one way or another and it’s a subject I absolutely love.
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:21:02
It is fascinating, isn’t it. Have you read Jude Rogers’ “The Sound of Being Human”? I read it for Shiny New Books a few months ago https://shinynewbooks.co.uk/the-sound-of-being-human-how-music-shapes-our-lives-by-jude-rogers
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Oct 04, 2022 @ 14:41:22
No! I haven’t heard of that one! I love your review, so it made me add it to my TBR… Of course it did… 😋
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 22:06:52
It’s quite an assortment! I am adding War Among Ladies (which might be good for my book group) and The View From the Corner Shop to my list. I had a four hour train ride from NY to Boston last night and thought I would finish the first Donna Leon mystery but it was an ebook from the library and it must have been due Thursday – it had been reclaimed by the library, to my annoyance. That is my problem with ebooks: it is easy to forget they are there! I put a physical copy on hold instead.
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:22:18
Oh that is annoying! Yes, War Among Ladies looks great and Heaven-Ali has just very much enjoyed it. I didn’t get to read on my long coach journeys yesterday as it was dark both ways and they turned the lights out in the coach! Unfortunately I don’t have the kind of Kindle that lights up in the dark so I was scuppered …
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Oct 01, 2022 @ 23:48:15
I love the support your have shown your new local bookshop. What a beautiful collection of books!
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:22:54
Thank you! I am so delighted to have the bookshop there and very happy to support them – still have to do my book token splurge, too!
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Oct 02, 2022 @ 07:30:17
I’ve started Square Haunting which I got from the library and have about 9 days left to read it in. The background to women’s struggles at the time is both interesting and frustrating. I can’t wait to read the individual stories.
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 08:58:46
It’s really good, we’re thoroughly enjoying it – hope you get to finish it!
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Oct 02, 2022 @ 11:19:57
Oooooh intriguing book selection here, I just added Pineapple Street and The Things That We Lost to my tbr shelf! Omg reading your post makes me desire the day when 1) I eventually settle down somewhere post-residency where I can put up a legit bookshelf/case again and 2) when I can buy more books. September reading was alright, I recently finished a pretty amazing memoir titled Stay True by Hua Hsu, and I’m looking forward to my October reading – I’m getting a lot of books from the library lately so I feel a healthy pressure to finish them by their due date. Yayyy I’m always glad to see these bookish update posts from you, they’re a nice source of consistency in my life.
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 07:33:58
Oh the Hua Hsu book looks amazing but is very expensive here annoyingly; I will watch out for it though. You will get there. I did quite a lot of reading when I was doing my Master’s because I lived an hour’s bus ride from my college and worked part-time another bus ride from home and college! But we all have phases where we read less and you will have that book-lined study where you practise one day!
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Oct 02, 2022 @ 20:39:10
Sounds like a good month all in all. Some good incomings there too, I hope you enjoy Sankofa, it’s a good read. I am sure you’ll like War Among Ladies too, it was my favourite read of September.
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 08:54:57
I’m looking forward to both Sankofa and War Among Ladies, I’ll definitely start both soon!
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Oct 02, 2022 @ 22:28:47
If only you had as much willpower as me… 😉 Still, a brand new bookshop is a great excuse for stocking up!
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 08:55:28
Noble of me to support it so fully, right?!!
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Oct 02, 2022 @ 23:11:14
I’ve got a few NetGalley books to read before I request more. interesting that you only had 4–I’ve been rejected for all the fiction books I’ve requested lately!
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 08:56:08
I wish I had that habit! I get rejected for both fiction and non-fiction equally, I think.
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Oct 03, 2022 @ 11:50:14
Looks good to me. I am amazed that you only have TBR books from one year back. I think some of my books are from 30 years back. Just have to do something about them, I guess.
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Oct 04, 2022 @ 07:28:06
Well the Tolkien one dates from around 2016, but I’ve always had a policy that I read my incoming books in acquisition order, so it does mean I almost always lag a year behind (not review copies, obviously). I try to do challenges from the TBR rather than picking up extras for them, which helps, too.
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State of the TBR – November 2022 | Adventures in reading, running and working from home
Nov 01, 2022 @ 08:23:49
Nonfiction November Week 4: Worldview Changers | Adventures in reading, running and working from home
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