It’s time again for Six Degrees of Separation, a monthly link-up hosted by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best. Each month a book is chosen as a starting point and linked to six other books to form a chain. A book doesn’t need to be connected to all the other books on the list, only to the one next to it in the chain.

This month starts with Tom Lake by Ann Patchett.






My first link is The Magician’s Assistant also by Ann Patchett, the first book of hers that I read. It’s about illusion – Parsifal was a magician and Sabine had been his assistant for twenty years. She and Parsifal had been married for less than a year when he died suddenly of an aneurysm, leaving her alone in their large house in Los Angeles, apart from a large white rabbit, called Rabbit, who was retired from the stage as he was too big to be pulled out of a hat.
My second link is Hemingway’s Chair by Michael Palin. Martin Sproale is an assistant postmaster obsessed with Ernest Hemingway. Martin lives in a small English village, where he studies his hero and potters about harmlessly–until an ambitious outsider, Nick Marshall, is appointed postmaster instead of Martin. I haven’t written a review of this yet so the link in the title takes you to Goodreads.
My third link is Nothing Ventured by Jeffrey Archer, in which there is another assistant, Beth Rainsford, a research assistant at the Fitzmolean Museum. It’s the first in a series of books following William Warwick’s progress from detective constable to the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. When William meets Beth they fall in love almost at first sight – but Beth has a secret that she keeps from him.
My fourth link is The Smiling Man by Joseph Knox in which Aidan Waits is a Detective Constable working night shifts with Detective Inspector Peter Sutcliffe, known as Sutty. They investigate the death of the ‘Smiling Man‘ at a disused hotel, The Palace, in Manchester. This is a fascinating and complex novel. Be aware though (if this bothers you), there are some violent scenes, and one strand of the story concerning a particularly loathsome and brutal character called Bateman and an eight year old boy and his little sister is very chilling.
My fifth link is The Clocks by Agatha Christie, which Detective Inspector Hardcastle and Colin Lamb investigate the murder of a dead man found in the sitting room at the home of Miss Pebmarsh at 19 Wilbraham Crescent. The strange thing was that there were five clocks in the sitting room and all, except for the cuckoo clock, which announced the time as 3 o’clock, had stopped at 4.13.
My final link is another book by Agatha Christie, but not a crime fiction novel. It’s Come Tell Me How You Live, an archaeological memoir. She wrote it in answer to her friends’ questions about what life was like when she accompanied her second husband, Max on his excavations in Syria and Iraq in the 1930s.
My chain is made up of the following links – assistants, detective inspectors, detective constables and books by Agatha Christie.
Next month (April 6, 2024), Kate is changing it up a little: look at your bookshelf – do you see a Lonely Planet title there? Or an Eyewitness Travel title? Or any other travel guide? That’s your starting book.
Interesting. I didn’t know that Christie wrote any non-fiction. Hm… maybe you can use that book as your starting book for next month!
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Yes maybe I could. The only other nonfiction she wrote, that I know of is her Autobiography, which I’ve read and loved. I’ve also got, but not read yet, The Grand Tour, a collection of photos and letters from her year-long round-the-world trip to South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and America as part of the British trade mission for the 1924 Empire Exhibition, edited by her nephew, Matthew Prichard. Perhaps I’ll start with that …
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I must catch up with Knox, I still have his latest to read.
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I haven’t read his first book, Sirens, but I loved both The Smiling Man and Sleepwalker. I wasn’t keen on True Crime Story and haven’t read any more of his.
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I haven’t read The Magician’s Assistant but I do like the sound of it.
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I read it a long time ago. It’s a moving story about love, and grief and family.
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I haven’t read any of the books in your chain, although I’m sure I’ll read The Clocks eventually as I’m trying to work through all of Christie’s novels. I also want to read The Magician’s Assistant.
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I enjoyed The Magician’s Assistant, there is a lot in it about identity, what and who a person actually is; about how the world is in fact illusory.
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The Magician’s Assistant was my first Patchett, too, but I’d forgotten all about Rabbit! Thanks for reminding me.
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Clever chain, Margaret, as always. And I like the way you wove in Agatha Christie’s work. I’m glad you’ve reminded me of Come Tell Me How You Live. Her non-fiction is so interesting, I think, and gives some real insights into her life.
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I remember reading The Magician’s Assistant a long time ago and also enjoying it. I also read Bel Canto by Patchett, but I think that might be all. Of course I’ve read The Clocks by Agatha Christie. Nice chain, Margaret! Hope you have a good March!
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Now this was a very interesting chain! What a great way to link!
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