It’s a new month which means I’m sharing what I read in the old month. In October I managed 10 books, with half being new purchases and the other half from my to-read pile which I had hoped to reduce significantly in 2024. It is a wee bit smaller, but with two months to go, I know I won’t be getting that extra shelf back any time soon. So many books so little time! But what a lovely problem to have – too many books. Is that even a thing?
Anyway, here’s what I did manage to finish in October.
Books for Children
Hester Hitchins and the Falling Stars, by Catherine Norton (Angus & Robertson, 2024). One look at the cover of this delightful hardcover offering and I knew I had to buy it. And I wasn’t disappointed – an adventurous story of girl-power set in England in 1866 and following the adventures of Hester Hitchins as she tries to take up a place at a Nautical navigation Academy usually only open to boys.
Mouse and His Dog: A Dogtown Book, by Katherine Applegate & Gennifer Choldenko, illustrated by Wallace West (Welbeck, 2024). I hadn’t read the previous Dogtown book, but this one sat alone pretty comfortably. Set in a dog shelter and told from the perspective of a mouse called Mouse who is determined to help the dogs who, it seems, may never find homes of their own. Really cute.
The Long Walk, by Kerry Greenwood (Hachette, 2004). This one has been in my to-read pile for quite a while after I bought it from a library discard trolley. Set during the Great Depression, and against the backdrop of the building of the Great Ocean Road, it is the story of Isa Wyatt who, left alone with her three younger siblings, sets off on a journey from Melbourne to Apollo Bay, looking for their father.
Heroes of the Secret Underground, by Susanne Gervay (Angus & Robertson, 2021). More historical fiction – this one a time slip between Sydney in the year 2000 and Budapest in 1944, during the German occupation of Hungary. As such it deals with some really challenging times, but does so in a way with which young people can connect.
Leo and Ralph by Peter Carnavas (UQP, 2024). It’s a Peter Carnavas book so I knew before I opened it that I would love it. About imaginary friends, real friends and being true to both.
Hey, Kid, by Rita Golden Gelman, illustrated by Carol Nicklaus (Franklin Watts, 1977). Another from my to-read pile. This caught my eye on a library discard trolley ages ago, and has lived in my to-read pile ever since – even though it is a quick read. It’s quirky – and, if Google is to be believed, a bit of a collectible, selling on Abe Books for $32 US. Maybe I should sell my copy?The King and the Sea, by Heinz Janisch & Wolf Erlbruch (Gecko Press, 2015). Another quirky offering from my to-read pile. 21 extremely short stories about a little king – some funny, some to leave you thinking. I loved it.
Books for Young Adults
The Happiness Quest, by Richard Yaxley (Scholastic, 2018). Another from my to-read pile, and glad I finally got to it. As Tillie tries to understand why she is sad, her counsellor suggests she try to find out what happiness is – leading to a lot of realisations not just about herself, but also about her family and friends.
Books for Adults
How to Not Work Forever: Start Investing and Build a Life You Love, by Natasha Etschmann & Ana Kresina (Wiley, 2024). Not my usual type of read, but that’s the point, I think. A really clear guide to the how and why of investment. Inspired me to make some changes to my finances.
A Girls’ Guide to Winning the War, Annie Lyons (Honeysett Books, 2024). I’ve spent much of this year delving into the role of women in WW2, so I couldn’t not read this novel, set in London where librarian Peggy Sparks joins the wat workforce for the Ministry of Information. A pleasing blend of history, friendship and romance.
That brings my total for the year to a respectable 100 books read. Happy with that. What have you been reading?
Little Tales of Hedgehog and Goat,
All Four Quarters of the Moon
How to Be a Wonder Hunter
The Travelling Bookshop: Mim and the Woeful Wedding
All the Best Liars
The Brink,
Batavia
Follow the Rabbit Proof Fence
The Hitchhiker
Alex and the Alpacas Ride Again,
Zadie Ma and the dog who chased the moon
The Lost Child of Chernobyl
Cat Problems
The Way of Dog
August and Jones
Across the Risen Sea
A Clue for Clara
Tilda
Rita’s Revenge
Ella and the Useless Day
I am Susannah
Miss Penny Dreadful & the Midnight Kittens
Dreaming by Starlight
The Boy Who Met a Whale
Rabbit, Soldier, Angel, Thief
The Hidden Girl,
Cotillion
The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes
Benang,
Adultolescence
Bedtime Story
What Snail Knows
Like Pickle Juice on a Cookie
10.10 Poetry Anthology
Winnie-the-Pooh
Birdie
When We Were Very Young
The Ghost Locket
Tasmanian Devil
Eleanor, Elizabeth
Red
Spi-ku: A Clutter of Short verse on Eight Legs
Blubber
At the Pond,
The Black Flamingo
Roxy
Finding Jupiter,
Came Back to Show You I Could Fly
His Last Bow
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo
Ten Steps to Nanette
Let Go
Fathoms: The World in the Whale
My Brother Ben
Wandi
Listen to the Moon
We Are Inevitable
Beautiful Broken Things
A Fairy Tale,
Booked for Murder,
Last Night
At Home With the Templetons,
Cuckoo’s Flight
Mina and the Whole Wide World,
Are You There, Buddha
Leilong the Library Bus
The Elephant
Exit Through the Gift Shop
The Outlaws
Find Us
Love Objects,
After Story
The Midnight Library