Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Eva and Alessandra that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library.
I haven’t written about my Library Loot for a few weeks as I’ve been trying to catch up on reading my ever-growing piles of books. I have of course been visiting the library but not adding much to their issue figures. In fact I’ve returned more recently than I’ve borrowed.
But here are four more library books I’ve acquired in the last few weeks, none of which I’ve started to read (descriptions from the library on-line catalogue):
- The Island That Wasn’t There by Rita Snowden. “One day, Rosie finds a mermaid, Anemone, tangled in the seaweed. The mermaid is too scared to swim back. But when Rosie tries to get help, no one believes her – except for an old man called Yan Eye.” This children’s book is Rita Snowden’s first novel. So far I’ve only looked at a few pages but it is obviously drawn from folk-lore and myths.
- Doctored Evidence by Donna Leon. When the body of a wealthy elderly woman is found, brutally murdered in her Venetian flat, Commissario Brunetti decides – unofficially – to take the case on himself. I keep reading about Donna Leon’s books – how good they are etc, but I’ve never read one. I like the map of Venice on the inside covers of the book.
- Plum Spooky by Janet Evanovitch. Stephanie Plum is back in town, along with her sidekick Lula, her Grandma Mazur, and an ever-widening cast of freaks, criminals, deranged felons, and lunatics looking for love. And just when Stephanie thinks her life can’t get any more complicated, in walks the mysterious Diesel. Janet Evanovich is another author I’ve never read, but seen reviews on some blogs. I thought I’d try this one.
- The Body in the Library by Agatha Christie. No library description, but then the title says it all. From the back cover – “The Bantrys have awoken to find the body of a young woman in their library. … But who is she? How did she get there? And what’s the connection with another dead girl, whose charred remains are later discovered in an abandoned quarry?” I must have read this years ago, but as I’m taking part in the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge I decided to read it again. Have a look at the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge Carnival for reviews of Christie’s books.
Here are two more phtos of my library – the Children’s Section and the little reading area where my husband sits and reads the paper whilst waiting for me to choose books – he chooses his much more quickly than I do.



I’ve been returning more often, too! I would have wanted to read through all of what I check out, but then usually I couldn’t read them in time for my mood, before they are non-renewable. Good luck!
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You have a very nice looking library.
I hope you like Plum Spooky, but if you don’t, try #1, One For the Money. I think the earliest ones were best.
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Your library could so easily be ours… it’s so similar. My husband loves the Stephanie Plum books and I’ve been meaning to try them myself, so I’ll be interested to hear what you think if you get around to it.
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I hope you enjoy the Donna Leon book. I didn’t “discover” her until she’d already written 10+ of the Inspector Brunetti mysteries, so I had the delightful experience of loving the first one I read, and then having several weeks’ worth of reading ahead as I gobbled the rest of them up! Although not absolutely necessary, I would recommend that you read them in order, as much of their charm comes from the depiction of Brunetti’s home life with his university professor wife. The series starts when their children are quite small, and in the latest books they’re teenagers.
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Margaret, thanks for sharing so many pictures of your library through these posts. I have enjoyed a birds-eye view of it. One comment I will make is that it is so very tidy. Ours looks like the mongrol hordes have run through most of the time. The perils of being the busiest branch in our city! We’re constanting picking up after our patrons. Anyway, it is lovely and so colorful and cheerful.
Enjoy your books!
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