Tuesday, 31 March 2026

March Reading...

 


Having finished the previous book on the final day of February, March has started with a completely fresh one - but a rather familiar author! This is the point that some of my reading this month might actually get to be done outdoors - one of my chief joys as the weather warms up is being able to sit in the garden at weekends, or in the park near to work at lunchtime on working days, and enjoy the sunshine and a few chapters of whatever I'm reading at the time - an unseasonably warm day in February did give me one opportunity to enjoy the park, but I'm hopefully this month will allow plenty more of that!

The familiar author then...? Well if you guessed Lee Child, you would be spot on - TheMidnight Line being the book this time. Another classic Reacher adventure - with the usual amount of retribution delivered to the bad guys while our hero marches on turning bad into good. This was another find in my favourite local charity shop - the main reason it is my favourite is that their paperbacks are still 50p each and they always have masses of them! 

Relatively unusually for me my paper reading was augmented with a book on my tablet this month. I always have a few books lined up on there ready for reading when a real book isn’t practical, and the tube journey back from meeting my pal Max at the RAF Museum in Hendon at the start of the month was one of those occasions as the bag I wanted to take wasn’t big enough for my physical book. I generally prefer non fiction if I’m reading on a screen, and at the moment I’m working my way through Ben Carpenter’s Fat Loss Habits - which aims to debunk many of the various myths surrounding diets and diet culture, as well as addressing (as the title suggests) the habits which can actually help with intentional weight loss. Ben’s writing is good - I follow him on social media and he writes in much the same way as he speaks -  a dry wit, very matter of fact and with a fair spattering of Fs! It will probably take me a lot longer to finish this one than any of the paperbacks I more often read

Back to paper format and Paula Hawkins with Into The Water. She is the author of “The Girl on the Train” which I read years ago and enjoyed enough to keep even with our then “one in one out” policy on books thanks to the limited space in the flat. This was a little slower to get started, but by the time I was a few chapters in I’d got to grips with both characters and subject matter. Quite dark, quite intense, and a storyline that twisted and turned right to the final pages. A really good read but very much a book that once you know the story it probably isn’t one to read again, so this one will be heading back to the charity shop. 

Next up - another return to an old favourite author and lead character in the shape of the Rebus series from Ian Rankin, the book this time being A Heart Full of Headstones. Set immediately post-Covid and after Rebus' retirement from the Police, the book opens with him in court, accused of, well, that we are yet to find out! The book tells us the background to the court case, and is written with Rankin's usual pace and thoughtful linking together of aspects of the plot - weaving characters and plotlines throughout is his speciality. Absolutely no spoilers from me - but this didn't disappoint and will be joining the others on the shelf! 

Final book of the month was another from Richard Osman - We Solve Murders is another wittily written tale. Entertaining characters and a good, if rather far-fetched, storyline made this an easy read, although the short chapters mean that the oft-repeated phrase in my house "I'll just read a chapter then do X" has lead to less reading and more "doing"! Very similar to the Thursday Murder Club that I read a few months ago - a great fun, low effort read. I'll cheerfully seek out his books again! This one was devoured in a matter of days and will now wing its way back to the charity shop. 

Robyn 

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