20 Books of Summer 2026

The 20 Books of Summer challenge is back again this year hosted by Annabelle at AnnaBookBel.

  • The challenge runs from Monday June 1st to Monday August 31st
  • The first rule of 20 Books is that there are no real rules, other than signing up for 10, 15 or 20 books and trying to read from your TBR. (If you think you’ll only manage 5, that’s fine too.)
  • Pick your list in advance, or nominate a bookcase to read from, or pick just at whim from your TBR.
  • If you do pick a list, you can change it at any time – swap books in/out.
  • Don’t get panicked at not reaching your target, it’s not really a challenge as such.
  • Just enjoy a summer of great reading and make a bit of space on your shelves!
  • Don’t forget to add your posts to the monthly linkys. The final one will stay open till for a week into September to catch the last reviews.

I’ve taken part most years but usually never manage to read all the books I’ve listed, so this year I’m not listing any in advance, apart from the four books on my NetGalley shelf, all due to be published between now and the end of July.

  • The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett, because I enjoyed her book The Help.
  • Love Lane by Patrick Gale, because I enjoyed his book A Perfectly Good Man.
  • The Recruit by L D Sharpe, because I like spy thrillers.
  • This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint, because I enjoy Greek Mythology.

Apart from that they’ll all be books I pick as the fancy takes me from my TBRs in my ‘real’ bookcases and on my Kindle. The photo below shows some of my shelves.

Spell the Month in Books May 2026

Spell the Month in Books is a linkup hosted by Jana on Reviews From the Stacks on the first Saturday of each month. The goal is to spell the current month with the first letter of book titles, excluding articles such as ‘the’ and ‘a’ as needed. That’s all there is to it! Some months there are optional theme challenges, such as “books with an orange cover” or books of a particular genre, but for the most part, any book you want to use is fair game!

Jana hasn’t added anything to her blog since January and as she was expecting a baby I’m thinking she’s been busy since then! So, for May I’m featuring books I’ve read in the past two years to spell the word May using the first letters of the book titles. The first two are nonfiction and the last one is a Maigret murder mystery.

M is for Maiden Voyages by Sian Evans

This book covers a wide range of topics that fascinate me – not just travel, but also social history, both World Wars, the sinking of the Titanic, emigration, the impact that the ocean liners had on the economy. and on women’s working lives and independence, adventure and so much more besides.

It is a ‘collection of selected biographical tales, both cautionary and life-affirming, about dynamic women on the move, set primarily between the two World Wars, during the golden age of transatlantic travel.‘ (page 25)

A is for Appointment in Arezzo: A Friendship with Muriel Spark by Alan Taylor

In July 1990 Alan Taylor first met Muriel Spark and her friend Penelope (Penny) Jardine. Their meeting led to a friendship and since then they met frequently during the last fifteen years of her life. With sources ranging from notebooks kept from his very first encounter with Muriel and the hundreds of letters they exchanged over the years, this is an invaluable portrait of one of Edinburgh’s premiere novelists. 

Y is for The Yellow Dog by Georges Simenon

This begins with the shooting of Monsieur Mostaguen, a local wine merchant, followed by the appearance of the yellow dog, a big, snarling yellow animal, and then an attempt at poisoning for Inspector Maigret to investigate. No one knows who the owner of the yellow dog is. The locals had never seen it before and they all viewed it with fear and suspicion. Maigret keeps his thoughts to himself until the end of the book, when like Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot, he explains it all.

Six Degrees of Separation from to Wild Dark Shore to Dear Dodie

This is a monthly link-up hosted by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best. On the first Saturday of every month, a book is chosen as a starting point and linked to six other books to form a chain. Readers and bloggers are invited to join in by creating their own ‘chain’ leading from the selected book.

Books can be linked in obvious ways – for example, books by the same authors, from the same era or genre, or books with similar themes or settings. Or, you may choose to link them in more personal ways: books you read on the same holiday, books given to you by a particular friend, books that remind you of a particular time in your life, or books you read for an online challenge.

A book doesn’t need to be connected to all the other books on the list, only to the ones next to them in the chain.

This month we are starting with Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy. It was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2026. As it’s a book I’ve not read this is the description from Goodreads:

A family on a remote island. A mysterious woman washed ashore. A storm gathering force.

Dominic Salt and his three children are caretakers of Shearwater, a tiny weather-lashed island that is home to the world’s largest seed bank. As Shearwater risks being lost to rising sea levels, the island’s researchers have fled, and only the Salts remain.

Until, during the worst storm in living memory, a stranger washes ashore. The family nurse the woman, Rowan, back to strength, but it seems she isn’t telling the whole truth about why she’s there. And when Rowan stumbles upon sabotaged radios and a recently dug grave, she realises that she’s not the only one on the island with a secret.

A novel of breathtaking twists, dizzying beauty and ferocious love, Wild Dark Shore is about the impossible choices we make to protect the people we love.

I think I may like to read this book.

My first link is Wild Mary by Patrick Marnham, a biography of Mary Wesley, the author of The Camomile Lawn (I remember watching the TV adaptation) and other books. It’s based on her personal papers, and conversations between Mary and Patrick Marnham in 2002. One of the most fascinating things about Mary’s life for me was her wartime experiences, working for MI5 in the decoding unit. 

My second link is another biography Daphne du Maurier by Margaret Forster, a candid account of her relationships, eg her troubled married life; wartime love affair; and friendships with Gertrude Lawrence and Ellen Doubleday, as well as an excellent source of information on Du Maurier’s method of writing and views on life. 

My third link is The End of the Affair by Graham Greene, a novel about the end of the affair between Maurice Bendrix and his friend’s wife, Sarah. Their affair had begun in 1944 during the London Blitz. It’s a study of love and hate, of desire, of jealousy, of pain, of faithfulness, and of the interaction between God and people.

The fourth book in my chain is The Death of Shame by Ambrose Parry and another character called Sarah. It’s the 5th and final Raven and Fisher book, set in Edinburgh in 1854 . It’s a combination of historical fact and fiction, a tale of murder and medical matters, with the social scene, historical and medical facts slotting perfectly into an intricate murder mystery.

My fifth link is another book on the history of medicine. It’s the The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot, a biography of Henrietta’s life and death. She died of cervical cancer in 1951. Her cancer cells became known as HeLa cells and have formed the basis for much medical research and drug development ever since. It is also a history of the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and considers the ethical issues around ownership of her cells and the distress, anger and confusion this caused her family.

My final link is linked by the title – Dear Dodie: The Life of Dodie Smith by Valerie Grove. Dodie wrote  I Capture the Castle and The Hundred and One Dalmatians amongst many other books and plays. She was born in 1896 and died in 1990. During her lifetime the world went through enormous changes and numerous wars. This biography not only relates Dodie’s life, but is also a record of those years, containing so much about the changing society, culture, values and recalling an unknown (to me at any rate) theatrical age.

The links in my chain are words in the titles, biographies, books about love affairs, characters called Sarah, and books about the history of medicine. Four of the books are biographies and only one is crime fiction.

Next month (June 2, 2026) we’ll start with book by Austrian author Stefan Zweig – The Post Office Girl. Kate has chosen this book in honour of Eurovision being held in Vienna.

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I’ve Recently Added to My TBR List

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by Jana @ That Artsy Reader Girl.

The topic this week is a Freebie. I decided to choose: Books I’ve Recently Added to My TBR List.

  1. These Dark Places by Hilary Tailor – Some secrets should stay buried. Her husband’s won’t.
  2. The Death Lesson by Sarah Ward – A taut and twisty crime thriller set in the wilds of West Wales.
  3. The Dark Wives by Ann Cleeves – the 11th Vera Stanhope murder mystery.
  4. Shy Creatures by Clare Chambers – a story of love, family and the joy of freedom.
  5. Quartet in Autumn by Barbara Pym – Darkly funny and full of stubborn optimism.
  6. Good Days by Michael Rosen – An A-Z of hope and happiness with 26 ideas for bringing joy into every day.
  7. Maigret and the Old People by Georges Simenon – The death of a beloved former ambassador unearths disturbing truths.
  8. Tai-Pan by James Clavell – historical fiction set in Hong Kong in the 1840s.
  9. Where the Sea Lavender Grows by Kitty Johnson – historical fiction with dual timelines in the present day and the 1940s.
  10. Diddly Squat: a Year on the Farm by Jeremy Clarkson – a behind-the-scenes look at the infamous Diddly Squat Farm in Oxfordshire.

Top Ten Tuesday: Books with Rain/Umbrellas on the Covers

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by Jana @ That Artsy Reader Girl.

The topic this week is April Showers (Interpret this however you’d like: rainy day reads, books that make you cry, books that give you happy tears, books to wash away a bad reading experience, books set in rainy places, books with rain/raindrops/umbrellas on the cover, blue book covers, etc.)

These books all have rain/and or an umbrella on the covers:

  1. The Right Attitude to Rain by Alexander McCall Smith
  2. The Silence Between Breaths by Cath Staincliffe
  3. The Children Act by Ian McEwan
  4. I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh
  5. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  6. The Weather in the Streets by Rosamund Lehrmann
  7. Persuasion by Jane Austen
  8. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
  9. The Killing Kind by Jane Casey
  10. The Rain Before it Falls by Jonathan Coe

The Keeper by Tana French

Penguin| 2 April 2026| 524 pages| e-book| Review copy|5*

Description from Amazon

On a cold night in a remote Irish village, a girl goes missing.

Sweet, loving Rachel Holohan was about to be engaged to the son of the local big shot. Instead, she’s dead in the river.

In a place like this, her death isn’t simple. It comes wrapped in generations-old grudges and power struggles, and it splits the townland in two. Retired Chicago detective Cal Hooper has friends here now and he owes them loyalty, but his fiancée Lena wants nothing to do with Ardnakelty’s tangles. As the feud becomes more vicious, their settled peace starts to crack apart. And when they uncover a scheme that casts a new light on Rachel’s death and threatens the whole village, they find themselves in the firing line.

I’ve read the first two in Tana French’s Cal Hooper series, The Searcher and The Hunter, so I was really keen to read her third, The Keeper. They are all excellent books.

This one completes the Cal Hooper trilogy continuing the story of retired Chicago police officer Cal, his fiancée Lena, teenager Trey Reddy, who is now sixteen, and the rest of the people living in Ardnakelty, a fictional, remote village in Western Ireland. Like the first two books The Keeper begins slowly, but I like the slow build up to the mystery, and I love Tana French’s beautiful descriptions of the Irish rural landscape and her characterisation. I really felt that over the course of the trilogy I have got to know the characters – they come over as real people and I felt for all of them as this story developed.

It’s focused on the death of Rachel Holohan, was it murder or suicide, as her fiancé’s father would have us believe? I’m not going to write in any more detail about the plot other than to say that from the slow start the pace picks up, the tension rises and the twists and turns all make this an impressive and convincing murder mystery. I loved it and only hope that Tana French will write more books about Cal and the others as I’d love to know what happens next.

Tana French has won several awards including the Edgar, Anthony, Macavity and Barry Awards, the Los Angeles Times Award for Best Mystery/Thriller, and the Irish Book Award for Crime Fiction.

As well as the Cal Hooper trilogy, she has written a standalone novel, The Wych Elm and six books that form The Dublin Squad series:

In the Woods (2006)
The Likeness (2008)
Faithful Place (2010)
Broken Harbour (2012)
The Secret Place (2014)
The Trespasser (2016

Many thanks to the author and Penguin for a review copy via NetGalley.