
WWW Wednesday is run by Taking on a World of Words.
The Three Ws are:
What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?
I don’t take part in this every week, but try to do so once a month.

Currently I’m still reading The Inheritance of loss by Kiran Desai, the winner of several prizes including the 2006 Booker Prize. It’s a book I bought in 2007 and meant to read long before now. I’m reading this slowly but making good progress. It alternates between the characters in the Himalayas and their family members who are working in New York.

I’ve become engrossed in reading The Borders: A History of the Borders from Earliest Times by Alistair Moffat. My interest in this is that I live in the region and so is about places I know that covers the southern part of Scotland and the northern part of England. It is nonfiction but begins with an imaginary description of life in the most ancient times ‘where hunter-gatherers penetrated into the virgin interior‘, as it states in the synopsis. I particularly like the factual inserts in the text, commenting on historical details. I’ve read 34% on my Kindle, which may not sound very far into the book – but I’m now on page 289!

The last book I read was Keep Laughing: the Autobiography by Chris McCausland, a book I loved. For those who may not have heard of Chris, he is a stand- up comedian, who won BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing, with professional dancer Dianne Buswell, in 2024 and then a BAFTA award in 2025. He is blind due to retinitis pigmentosa. I’ll write more about later on. Here’s the description from Amazon:
Already one of the country’s best loved comedians, Chris McCausland’s participation on Strictly was a phenomenon. But how did the boy from Liverpool end up winning the hearts of the nation?
This is his remarkable story, of a twenty-five-year journey through sight loss to blindness. Of the highs, the lows and the downright hilarious along the way.
From being a lowlife conker dealer, and running his very own bootlegging empire (kind of) . . . to almost becoming a spy for MI5 (really) . . .
And of how he dared himself to try stand-up comedy, and ended up being brilliant on all your favourite TV shows.
Before, of course, he surprised himself, as well as everybody else, when he tried dancing on live TV in front of millions.
What will I read next? It could be one of these books because they are about some of the kings in the same area and period covered in Moffatt’s book.



Edwin: High King of Britain or Oswald: the Return of the King, both by Edoardo Albert, or The King in the North by Max Adams
But when the time comes to start another book it could be something completely different.
I like your choices, Margaret. I’m especially noticing the history of the Borders; I’ve read a few books set there, and it’s a fascinating place with a long history. I’ll be interested in what you think about it.
LikeLike