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 ColmTóibín’s Long Island, the sequel to Brooklyn. I haven’t read this book, so this is the description on Amazon UK:
A man with an Irish accent knocks on Eilis Fiorello’s door on Long Island and in that moment everything changes. Eilis and Tony have built a secure, happy life here since leaving Brooklyn – perhaps a little stifled by the in-laws so close, but twenty years married and with two children looking towards a good future.
And yet this stranger will reveal something that will make Eilis question the life she has created. For the first time in years she suddenly feels very far from home and the revelation will see her turn towards Ireland once again. Back to her mother. Back to the town and the people she had chosen to leave behind. Did she make the wrong choice marrying Tony all those years ago? Is it too late now to take a different path?






My first link is from the word ‘Island‘ in 100 Days on Holy Island by Peter Mortimer. The island is also known as Lindisfarne. This sense of being an outsider pervades the book. He always felt an ‘outsider’, not accepted by the locals. He wasn’t there as a tourist, nor had he gone to settle there, but he went with the intention of seeing how he coped with living there for one hundred days and writing about it.
My second link is The Rising Tide by Ann Cleeves, the 10th Vera Stanhope mystery novel. It’s set on the Holy Island of Lindisfarne a tidal island just off the coast of Northumberland, only accessible across a causeway when the tide is out. DCI Vera Stanhope and her team investigate the death of Rick Kelsall who was discovered hanged from the rafters of his small bedroom on Holy Island. He is one of a group of friends who have met for a reunion each year on the island for the past fifty years
My third link is another book with the word ‘tide‘ in the title – A Dark and Twisted Tide by Sharon Bolton. This is such a terrifying novel, particularly if like me, you have a fear of drowning. Police Constable Lacey Flint thinks she’s safe. Living on the river, she’s never been happier. Until she finds a body floating on the surface, as she wild-swims in the Thames.
My fourth link is The Marlow Club Murder by Robert Thorogood a ‘cosy’ murder mystery. Seventy-seven year old Judith Potts is happy with her life, living in an Arts and Crafts mansion on the River Thames, although there are hints that there is something in her past she wants to forget. It’s the height of summer, in the grip of a heatwave, and Judith decides to take all her clothes off and go for swim in the Thames. She was enjoying herself when she hears a shout from her neighbour’s house on the opposite riverbank, followed by a gunshot. Later, when she goes to investigate, she finds him, dead in the river, with a bullet hole in the centre of his forehead. Judith is a crossword compiler, who writes cryptic clues.
So My fifth link is Puzzled: Secrets and Clues from a Life in Words by David Astle, a real life cryptic crossword compiler, a Melbourne-based writer of non-fiction, fiction and drama. He co-hosts Letters and Numbers (the Australian version of Countdown) as the dictionary expert, and his crosswords appear in Australian papers The Age and Sydney Morning Herald. Beginning with a Master Puzzle, he leads us through each of the clues, chapter by chapter, revealing the secrets of anagrams, double meanings, manipulations, spoonerisms and hybrid clues. More than a how-to manual and more than a memoir, Puzzled is a book for word junkies everywhere.
My final link is Last Seen Wearing by Colin Dexter the second book in the Inspector Morse books. Inspector Morse is perplexed when a letter of reassurance arrives from young Valerie Taylor, missing for more than two years and presumed dead, in a case that takes a bizarre turn when a mysterious body turns up. This book, like all of Dexter’s books, is a most complicated mystery, one of the ‘puzzle’ types. Dexter, himself, constructed crossword puzzles and made Morse a crossword aficionado. Morse is puzzled by this case, his brain seething in ceaseless turmoil, until he realised that if he shuffled the suspects and possibilities like the letters in an anagram the answer would come to him.
The books in my chain are a mix of crime fiction novels, and non fiction (Puzzled and 100 Days on Holy island). What is in your chain, I wonder?
Next month (November 2, 2024), we’ll start with Sally Rooney’s latest release, Intermezzo.
You always make such clever chains, Margaret, and this one works really well. You’ve included several authors whose work I like, too (e.g. Cleeves, Bolton, Dexter). I really enjoyed this post.
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Thanks Margot!
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Here’s a clever chain! And one in which I find I know the authors, but not the particular books you mention. So I’m encouraged to go and read them.
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Thanks, Margaret21!
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I’m just reading my first Ann Cleeves – it’s set in Devon and I think is the first book in a series. The TV series of Vera put me off reading those books – I just couldn’t buy into her character at all
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I haven’t read any of Ann Cleeves Devon Two Rivers series, hope you’re enjoying the first book. I do like her Vera books but the TV Vera is different and the story lines are changed, often the culprits are not the same as in the books. And the later episodes are just ‘based’ on the characters in the books and Ann Cleeves hasn’t written them.
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I loved A Dark and Twisted Tide – one of my favourites in the Lacey Flint series!
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It’s one of my favourites too. I also really enjoyed Blood Harvest!
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Very much like the sound of Puzzled. I’m not a crossword solver but I always liked that aspect of the Morse series.
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I always struggle to do the cryptic crosswords which is why I wanted this book. I’ve only read the first chapters though, so I’ll have to read the rest some time.
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Very nice. I hardly ever mix fiction and non-fiction – mostly because I don’t read a whole lot of non-fiction.
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I read mostly fiction, but I do enjoy non-fiction too.
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Good job! Puzzled sounds very good.
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Ooh, I loved A Dark and Twisted Tide! It must be time for a new Lacey Flint book, surely… especially after the cliffhanger at the end of the last one!
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As I’m not much of a murder mystery person but I am a crossword puzzle person, you can guess which book most interests me. I watched Letters and Numbers in its first iteration (not its newer Celebrity edition). I love doing Cryptic Crosswords, but I haven’t really cracked David Astle’s clue style – not did my Mum who got me into Cryptics. So, I think I really should read his book!
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My first link was to an island book as well, but a different one from yours!!
Fun chain!
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Oooh, I’ve read a few of the books on your list, and was just thinking how I cannot handle cryptic crosswords at all, for some reason. And I really want to see Lindisfarne before I leave the UK!
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