Historical Fiction Reading Challenge 2025

There are just a few days left in the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge 2025 hosted by Marg at The Intrepid Reader & Baker. These are the books I’ve read including those I haven’t reviewed:

  1. Signal Moon by Kate Quinn
  2. The Frozen People by Elly Griffiths
  3. Only Murders in the Abbey by Beth Cowan-Erskine
  4. Murder at Gull’s Nest by Jess Kidd
  5. Resistance by Owen Sheers
  6. My Beautiful Imperial by Rhiannon Lewis
  7. The House of Lost Whispers by Jenni Keer
  8. The Curious Case of the Village in the Moonlight by Steve Wiley
  9. Gabriel’s Moon by William Boyd
  10. The Elopement by Gill Hornby
  11. The Librarian by Salley Vickers
  12. The House of Seymour by Joanna Hickson
  13. Small Wars by Sadie Jones
  14. The Death of Shame by Ambrose Parry
  15. The Predicament by William Boyd
  16. The Seeker of Lost Paintings by Sarah Freethy
  17. The Ghost Cat by Alex Howard
  18. A Legacy of Secrets by Lulu Taylor
  19. Christine Falls by Benjamin Black
  20. Circe by Madeleine Miller
  21. West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge
  22. 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World by Elif Shafak
  23. Fire from Heaven by Mary Renault

I was aiming to reach the Medieval Level – 15 books, but exceeded that so next year I’ll be aiming to reach the Ancient History Level – 25 books – and to review all of them!

In 2025 … My Life in Books

Over the years I’ve done several versions of this tag. This one was created by Shelleyrae of Book’d Out. Links from each title will take you to my book review.

Complete the prompts using titles from the books you have read in 2025 to complete the sentence to describe your life in the past year.

2025 was the year ofSense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

In 2025 I wanted to be: By Your Side by Ruth Jones

In 2025 I wasThe Librarian by Salley Vickers (I was a librarian)

In 2025 I gainedResistance by Owen Sheers

In 2025 I lostMy Beautiful Imperial by Rhiannon Lewis

In 2025 I lovedThe Boy With No Shoes: a Memoir by William Horwood

In 2025 I hatedThe Yellow Dog by Georges Simenon (I didn’t hate this book!)

In 2025 I learnedThere’s a Reason for Everything by E R Punshon

In 2025 I was surprised byThe Singing Sands by Josephine Tey

In 2025 I went to: The House of Lost Whispers by Jenni Keer

In 2025 I missed out on (going)West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge

In 2025 my family were: The Frozen People by Elly Griffiths

In 2026 I hope (for)Gabriel’s Moon by William Boyd

Top Ten Tuesday: The Ten Most Recent Additions To My Wishlist

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl. For the rules see her blog.

The topic today is Books I Hope Santa Brings/Bookish Wishes, I’ve picked the Ten Most Recent Additions To My Wishlist.

  • The Eye in the Door by Pat Barker – the 2nd book in her World War One trilogy (Regeneration Trilogy Book 2).
  • Quartet in Autumn by Barbara Pym, a funny, poignant and hopeful story of human connection.
  • Venetian Vespers by John Banville, an eerie, Venice-set novel.
  • Victim of the Aurora by Thomas Keneally. In the waning years of the Edwardian era, a group of gentlemen wait out a raging blizzard in the perpetual darkness of the Antarctic winter, poised for a strike at the South Pole.
  •  Tolstoy: A Russian Life by Rosamund Bartlett, a biography of Count Lev Tolstoy.
  • Voices of the Dead (A Raven and Fisher Mystery Book 4) by Ambrose Parry.
  • The Ghost Ship (The Joubert Family Chronicles Book 3) by Kate Moss, a swashbuckling tale of adventure and buccaneering, love and revenge, stolen fortunes and hidden secrets on the high seas.
  • Green for Danger by Christianna Brand, book 7 of the Inspector Cockerill Mysteries.
  • Normal Women: 900 Years of Women Making History by Philippa Gregory
  • Unfinished Portrait by Agatha Christie writing as Mary Westmacott. Agatha Christie also wrote about crimes of the heart, six bittersweet and very personal novels, as compelling and memorable as the best of her work.

The Crow’s Inn Tragedy by Annie Haynes

Rating: 3 out of 5.

I have just finished reading is The Crow’s Inn Tragedy by Annie Haynes, originally published in 1927 and republished by Dean Street Press in 2015. I read this for the 2025 Dean Street December challenge hosted by Liz @ Adventures in Running, Reading and Working from Home.

Description from Amazon UK:

“I cannot understand why Mr. Bechcombe apparently offered no resistance. His hand-bell, his speaking-tube, the telephone—all were close at hand. It looks as though he had recognized his assassin and had no fear of him.”

The corner house of Crow’s Inn Square was the most dignified set of solicitors’ chambers imaginable. But this monument to law and order nonetheless becomes the scene of murder – when the distinguished lawyer Mr. Bechcombe, despite giving strict instructions not to be disturbed, is strangled in his own office.

Inspector Furnival of Scotland Yard has to wrestle with fiendish clues, unearth priceless gems and tangle with a dangerous gang before he can solve this case, his third and final golden age mystery. Originally published in 1927, this new edition is the first printed in over 80 years, and features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.

My thoughts:

I hadn’t heard of Annie Haynes (1865 – 1929), but she was a contemporary of Agatha Christie and wrote a series of detective novels between 1923 and 1930. She was born in Ashby de-la-Zouch in Leicestershire, growing up with her mother and younger brother when her parents separated, in her grandparents’ cottage at Coleorton Hall, the seat of the Beaumont baronets. After her mother’s death in 1905, she moved to London and lived with her friend Ada Heather-Bigg, a journalist, philanthropist and feminist. In 1914, at the age of 50, she began suffering from debilitating rheumatoid arthritis that left her in constant pain. She died of heart failure, aged 64, on 30 March 1929. According to crime fiction historian Curtis Evans in his Introduction, it was reported in the press that ‘many people well-known in the literary world’ attended her funeral at St Michael and All Angels in Paddington‘. But by the time Ada Heather-Bigg died in 1944 her mysteries were forgotten until the Dean Street Press republished them.

The Crow’s Inn Tragedy was her third Inspector Furnival Mystery. As you can tell from the description above this is a complicated murder mystery. When solicitor Luke Bechombe is found murdered in his office Inspector Furnival is called in. With the help of Mr Steadman, a barrister and cousin of Luke’s wife they investigate his death. It is far from simple. The Reverend James Collyer, Luke’s brother-in-law, had called to see him about his son, Tony, wanting to raise money to pay his debts. Luke tells him that the emeralds on the family heirloom, the Collyer cross are fake and that there is a regular gang in London stealing jewels, known as the Yellow Gang, under the leadership of the Yellow Dog. Luke’s chief clerk, Amos Thompson, and a mysterious visitor to the office are the chief suspects. Also involved in the mystery are Luke’s secretary Cecily Hoyle, who is in love with Tony and who is obviously hiding some secret, an American couple, Cyril B Carnthwaite and his wife, Luke’s nephew Aubrey Todmarsh, who is a conscientious objector, and who runs a settlement for ex-prisoners called the Community of St Philip .

I thought the setting in the aftermath of the First World War was well done, with details of the hardships and poverty of the returning service men. Tony, for example, who was gassed and wounded during the War had not been able to find a job, and the League of Nations is mentioned scathingly by Luke Bechombe:

“Damn the League of Nations!’ uttered the solicitor, banging his fist upon the writing-pad with an energy that rattled his inkstand. … I look to a largely augmented Air force with plenty of practice in bomb-throwing as my hope for the future. It will be worth fifty of that rotten League of Nations. (page 7)

I enjoyed it for the most part but I think the ending was a bit of a let down becoming too melodramatic and far-fetched for my liking. It reminded me of Agatha Christie’s The Big Four, (also published in 1927) in that it involves a gang of international criminals, and brings in some of the elements of the sensation novel. Inspector Furnival and  Mr Steadman find themselves in danger of certain death as they try to track down the Yellow Gang in an unconvincing twist (to me at any rate) as the book comes to a fast paced conclusion.

Top Ten Tuesday: Books On My Winter 2025-2026 to-Read List

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl. For the rules see her blog.

The topic today is Books On My Winter 2025-2026 to-Read List. The first three are books on my NetGalley shelf and will be published early in the New Year. The rest are books from my TBR lists. I do enjoy making lists and sometimes I stick to them!

  1. The Fox of Kensal Green by Richard Tyrrell – a quiet neighbourhood of London is about to be shattered.
  2. The Living and the Dead by Christoffer Carlsson – a haunting murder mystery, set in a rural Swedish town, where one community’s secrets will be laid bare over the next twenty years
  3. Warning Signs by Tracy Sierra – a thriller set in the Colorado mountains during a ski-weekend.
  4. The Vanishing of Margaret Small by Neil Alexander – a mystery that takes readers into a fascinating past, and introduces an unforgettable literary heroine.
  5.  Goodbye Mr Chips by James Hilton – the classic story of a quiet, unassuming man and the many lives he touches.
  6. Exiles by Jane Harper – Investigator Aaron Falk finds himself drawn into a complex web of tightly held secrets in South Australia’s wine country.
  7. The Christmas Clue by Nicola Upson – a Christmas murder mystery featuring the real-life couple who invented Cluedo.
  8. Marble Hall Murders by Anthony Horowitz – Susan Ryeland has had enough of murder.
  9. Miss Willmott’s Ghosts: the extraordinary life and gardens of a forgotten genius: by Sandra Lawrence – a biography.
  10. Tyrant: The Ruthless Rise of Roman Emperor Nero by Conn Iggulden – the second book in the Nero Trilogy. I’ve read the first book, which I thought was excellent.