10 Regeneration - Pat Barker seemed a timely read given the times we are living in. The year is 1917 and war poet Siegfried Sassoon has been sent to Craiglockhart War Hospital, a mental facility in Scotland rather than being court marshalled in the aftermath of his open letter to The Times blowing the lid off the futility of the war effort. Much of the dialogue takes place between Sassoon and his psychiatrist, his friendship with another patient, Wilfrid Owen and the horrors of fellow inmates suffering. Thought provoking.
11 The Couple at Number 9 - Claire Douglas Young couple inherit her grandmother's house, remains of two bodies under the patio discovered during building work which are found to date from the time of grandmother's occupation. Grandmother now in a home suffering from an advanced state of dementia. Pretty Good.
12 His Bloody Project - Graeme Macrae Burnett. (Audio) Glad I picked this up at my library, I needed something to listen to when I was lying on my Covid sickbed during what were the worst two days. Much lauded on MN and I agree with the praise heaped on it. Shortlisted for the Booker Prize back in 2016, sadly didn't win, having read a few winning novels I often think a prerequisite for such an accolade is to produce a boring load of drivel, which is probably why this excellent book didn't win! Set in a crofting community in the Scottish Highlands of the late 1860s It tells the tale of the young 17 year old protagonist awaiting trial for committing a triple murder within his community and what lead him to carry out these atrocities. Whilst the author paints a very bleak picture of the life and hardships of a crofter at that time, I found this book both compelling and riveting. At times strands of it reminded me of both "Burial Rites" and "Alias Grace" Albeit a miserable tale, definitely a 5 star book for me.
13 It Ends With Us - Colleen Hoover. On scanning the best sellers of late couldn't help noticing this author has 3 or more of her works in the top ten, which led me to question "who the hell is Colleen Hoover and where did she come from?" From the blurb I've discovered she is allegedly a Tik Tok sensation, which means little to me a social media site I understood to be aimed at adolescents. Must be more to it this book would not appeal to that age demographic dealing with the adult theme of domestic violence. In a nutshell young woman meets who she thinks is the perfect man, cracks in their relationship appear when her first teenage love reappears in her life. Loads of five star reviews on Amazon. Reasonable but certainly not a 5 star read for me, I enjoyed it without giving me the impetus to rush out and read another of her books right away, but in time maybe.
14 The Lying Room - Nicci French (Audio) Undemanding crime genre, whiles away the time when I'm doing the ironing or cooking. Absorbing whilst I'm listening but once it's over and passed out of my consciousness I've completely forgotten what it's about.
15. The Locked Room - Elly Griffiths.. I just love the Ruth Galloways, as much for the cast of characters, than the actual crimes committed. Ruth's rather messy on off love life with married DCI Nelson father of her daughter Kate and the evocative mind's eye picture I have of her cottage on the edge of the Norfolk saltmarshes where she, Kate and Flint the cat live are a very enjoyable part of these books for me. Happy to see a picture of said cottage on the cover which is just how I imagine it. Set against the sudden lockdown of 2020, we find Ruth grappling with Zoom tutorials for her students at the university where she is a lecturer in forensic archaeology whilst simultaneously home educating her daughter. A series of unexplained suicides has Nelson and DS Judy Johnson investigating. In the meantime a much favoured character has succumbed to Covid, very much touch and go as to whether they survive, but I'll say no more on that score. Ruth has an interesting new neighbour in the cottage next door, therein hangs a bombshell subplot. For cat lovers like me the neighbour owns a rare breed of cat a "Maine Coon" which I'd only heard of whilst playing Cat Bingo with my grandchildren. Googled the breed, huge! practically the size of a lion, (small) Derek the large feline is thankfully timid so not threat to Flint who remains suitably socially distanced when he first eyeballs him. Great loved it one of the best in the series.