Thursday, January 22, 2026

The Mysterious Disappearance of Marsha Boden by Rosy Gee -- BOOK BEGINNINGS


BOOK BEGINNINGS ON FRIDAYS

The Mysterious Disappearance of Marsha Boden by Rosy Gee

Thank you for joining me for Book Beginnings on Fridays. Please share the opening sentence (or so) of the book you are reading this week. You can also share from a book you feel like highlighting, even if you are not reading it right now.

MY BOOK BEGINNING
Little Twitchin is the kind of place where nothing much happens. A sleepy hamlet in Shropshire with an eclectic mix of residents.
-- from The Mysterious Disappearance of Marsha Boden by Rosy Gee.

Rosy Gee's new cosy mystery is set in the fictional English village of Little Twitchen. It gives strong Agatha Christie vibes and I am excited to read it! Pop down to the publisher's description below to read more about it. 

In addition to launching a new mystery series, Gee writes a blog on substack called Deadlines & Dead Bodies where she explores how to write crime fiction and what mystery books caught her fancy. 

YOUR BOOK BEGINNINGS

Please add the link to your Book Beginnings post in the box below. If you share on social media, please use the #bookbeginnings hashtag.

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THE FRIDAY 56

The Friday 56 is a natural tie-in with Book Beginnings. The idea is to share a two-sentence teaser from page 56 of your featured book. If you are reading an ebook or audiobook, find your teaser from the 56% mark.

Freda at Freda's Voice started and hosted The Friday 56 for a long, long time. She is taking a break and Anne at My Head is Full of Books has taken on hosting duties in her absence. Please visit Anne's blog and link to your Friday 56 post.

MY FRIDAY 56

-- from The Mysterious Disappearance of Marsha Boden:
As she headed up High Street in her Morris Minor Traveler, she spotted several police vans parked outside The Swan. Without checking her rear-view mirror or indicating, she swung a right into Mill Street so that she could try and see what was going on.
FROM THE PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION
In the quiet village of Little Twichen, nestled in the Shropshire countryside, life moves at a gentle pace, until the day Marsha Boden vanishes without a trace. Her husband returns from a fishing trip to an empty house... and waits two full days before reporting her missing.

As whispers ripple through the village, secrets start to surface. Marsha had been poking around a controversial new housing development and had stumbled upon something disturbing in a nearby Ludlow warehouse. Did she discover something alarming? And if so, who wanted her silenced?

When two more villagers die under suspicious circumstances, including the local GP, tension tightens like a noose. With no sign of Marsha’s body and a growing list of suspects, her close friends take matters into their own hands.

Driven by determination and dread, they uncover a web of corruption, deceit, and betrayal far darker than they imagined. But the biggest shock is yet to come…

Packed with suspense, red herrings, and a jaw-dropping twist you won't see coming, The Mysterious Disappearance of Marsha Boden is a masterfully written whodunit set in an idyllic English village where nothing, and no one, is quite as it seems.


Thursday, January 15, 2026

Hag-Seed by Margaret Atwood -- BOOK BEGINNINGS

 



BOOK BEGINNINGS ON FRIDAYS

Hag-Seed by Margaret Atwood

Thank you for joining me this week for Book Beginnings on Fridays where participants share the opening sentence (or two) from the book they are reading. You can also share from a book you want to feature, even if you are not reading it at the moment. 

MY BOOK BEGINNING

The house lights dim. The audience quiets.
-- from the Prologue to Hag-Seed by Margaret Atwood.

Hag-Seed is a novel by Margaret Atwood that retells (in prose) William Shakespeare's play The Tempest. It is part of of a series of Shakespeare retellings from Hogarth Press. "Hogarth Shakespeare" began in 2015 with Jeanette Winterson’s The Gap of Time (The Winter’s Tale) and now includes Howard Jacobson’s Shylock Is My Name (The Merchant of Venice), Anne Tyler’s Vinegar Girl (The Taming of the Shrew), Tracy Chevalier's New Boy (Othello), Edward St. Aubyn's Dunbar (King Lear), and Jo Nesbo's Macbeth (Macbeth, duh).

I read Shylock is My Name and loved it. It's one of my favorite books and one I am looking forward to rereading. I also liked Vinegar Girl a lot. I picked Hag-Seed for my book club's next read. We'll see what the other ladies think. I'd like to read all of the books in this series.  



YOUR BOOK BEGINNING

Please add the link to your book beginning post in the linky box below. If you participate or share on social media, please use the hashtag #bookbeginnings so other people can find your post.

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THE FRIDAY 56

The Friday 56 asks participants to share a two-sentence teaser from their book of the week. If your book is an ebook or audiobook, pick a teaser from the 56% point. 

Anna at My Head is Full of Books hosts The Friday 56, a natural tie-in with Book Beginnings on Fridays. Please visit My Head is Full of Books to leave the link to your post. 

MY FRIDAY 56

-- from Hag-Seed:
Leaving the Festival parking lot, Felix didn’t have the sensation of driving. Instead he felt he was being driven, as if blown by a high wind.
FROM THE PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION
Felix is at the top of his game as artistic director of the Makeshiweg Theatre Festival. Now he’s staging a Tempest like no other: not only will it boost his reputation, but it will also heal emotional wounds. Or that was the plan. Instead, after an act of unforeseen treachery, Felix is living in exile in a backwoods hovel, haunted by memories of his beloved lost daughter, Miranda. And also brewing revenge, which, after twelve years, arrives in the shape of a theatre course at a nearby prison.

Margaret Atwood’s novel take on Shakespeare’s play of enchantment, retribution, and second chances leads us on an interactive, illusion-ridden journey filled with new surprises and wonders of its own.


Saturday, January 10, 2026

Graham Greene Jewel -- BOOK THOUGHTS


BOOK THOUGHTS

Graham Greene Jewel


What a gem!

This little beauty is the jewel in the crown of my Graham Greene collection. See the little video reel I posted on Instagram walking through this adorable little book. 

A Weed Among the Flowers is an essay Greene wrote about a trip he made in 1957 to China. The essay was first published in The Times, London, in 1985. Sylvester & Orphanos, a tiny fine press in Los Angeles, worked with Greene to publish this miniature edition in 1990, with an afterword written by English poet Stephen Spender and illustrations by Vance Gerry. It is signed by Greene and Spender.

This little book is something of a publishing mystery. It is the second Greene book Sylvester & Orphanos published. In 1980, they published How Father Quixote Became a Monsignor, a limited edition novella that was a precursor to his novel 1982 novel Monsignor Quixote. That book was regular-sized and conventionally bound, not a little bon bon like this one.

When Sylvester & Orphanos produced A Weed Among the Flowers, they intended a limited run of 330 copies – 300 numbered, 26 lettered, and four with recipient names. However, it was the last book they published (there was another in production that was later published by a different art press) and rumor has it that far fewer were actually bound because of “material shortages.” That may explain why there are so few available and, like mine, copies are often missing their number (handwritten in in other copies) and do not have the decorative label on the cover of the book and spine of the box.

There is one notable errata. In the first paragraph of Greene’s essay, he refers to his monthlong visit to China in 1957, but Stephen Spender’s Afterword says the trip occurred in 1951.

The essay itself is a comic piece, focusing on Greene’s complaints about his traveling companions and over-consumption of the local liquor. It’s a charming bit of travelogue fluff.

As a historical footnote, Greene donated the manuscript of the essay to the Robert Louis Stevenson Trust to help fund a memorial to Stevenson, an author Greene admired and to whom he was distantly related on his mother’s side.




Thursday, January 8, 2026

The Eleventh Hour by Salman Rushdie -- BOOK BEGINNINGS

 


BOOK BEGINNINGS ON FRIDAYS

The Eleventh Hour by Salman Rushdie

Thank you for joining me this week for Book Beginnings on Fridays where participants share the opening sentence (or two) from the book they are reading. You can also share from a book you want to feature, even if you are not reading it at the moment. 

MY BOOK BEGINNING

The day Junior fell down began like any other day: the explosion of heat rippling the air, the trumpeting sunlight, the traffic's tidal surges, the prayer chant in the distance, the cheap film music rising up from the floor below, the pelvic thrusts of an "item number" dancing across a neighbor's TV; a child's cry, a mother's rebuke, unexplained laughter, scarlet expectorations, bicycles, the newly plaited hair of schoolgirls, the smell of strong coffee, a green wing flashing in a tree.

-- from the "In the south," the first of five stories in The Eleventh Hour by Salman Rushdie.

I joined a new book club in 2026* and this is our first book. I'm halfway through and can tell we will have a LOT to discuss. 

Are you a Rushdie fan? I loved Midnight's Children but really struggled to engage with The Satanic Verses and that's as far as I got. So far, I am loving the stories in this new collection so I am happy to read it. 


YOUR BOOK BEGINNING

Please add the link to your book beginning post in the linky box below. If you participate or share on social media, please use the hashtag #bookbeginnings so other people can find your post.

Mister Linky's Magical Widgets -- Thumb-Linky widget will appear right here!
This preview will disappear when the widget is displayed on your site.
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THE FRIDAY 56

The Friday 56 asks participants to share a two-sentence teaser from their book of the week. If your book is an ebook or audiobook, pick a teaser from the 56% point. 

Anna at My Head is Full of Books hosts The Friday 56, a natural tie-in with Book Beginnings on Fridays. Please visit My Head is Full of Books to leave the link to your post. 

MY FRIDAY 56

-- from "The Musician of Kahani," the second story, maybe even a novella, in The Eleventh Hour:
Jimmy was tall, thin, graying, a carefully spoken man, expressing himself softly (in a high tenor voice), with kindly eyes; and he ran his enormous empire without ever giving the impression of being busy, flustered, or in doubt. Dimmy was his perfect alternate self: the most glamorous grande dame in the city, extroverted, flamboyant, and given to talking nonstop in a low, cigarette-haunted voice.

FROM THE PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION
Rushdie turns his extraordinary imagination to life’s final act with a quintet of stories that span the three countries in which he has made his work—India, England, and America—and feature an unforgettable cast of characters.

“In the South” introduces a pair of quarrelsome old men—Junior and Senior—and their private tragedy at a moment of national calamity. In “The Musician of Kahani,” a musical prodigy from the Mumbai neighborhood featured in Midnight’s Children uses her magical gifts to wreak devastation on the wealthy family she marries into. In “Late,” the ghost of a Cambridge don enlists the help of a lonely student to enact revenge upon the tormentor of his lifetime. “Oklahoma” plunges a young writer into a web of deceit and lies as he tries to figure out whether his mentor killed himself or faked his own death. And “The Old Man in the Piazza” is a powerful parable for our times about freedom of speech.

* I now belong to three book clubs, which I think is insane. I've been in one for 19 years, the second for 12 years, and now this one. My problem is that I hate to miss out on book fun and I really like all the women in all three of the clubs. The original one is cool because (with a few exceptions here and there) we are friends through the book club. The second one is cool because we were a group of friends who started a book club. The third one hasn't met yet, but I think it will be a combination. Half the women are neighbors (and friends) and each of them invited a friend. Fortunately, each club meets every other month, otherwise I could not keep up! 

 



Tuesday, January 6, 2026

My Wrap Up Post -- 2025 EUROPEAN READING CHALLENGE


THE 2025 EUROPEAN READING CHALLENGE

My Wrap Up Post

This is my wrap up for the 2025 European Reading Challenge. To join the 2026 challenge (and I hope you do), go to the main challenge page, here.

Even though 2025 was the 13th year I hosted the challenge, I haven't been very good about my own participation. In 2024, I even forgot to do a sign up post! I resolved to do better in 2025 and I did, a bit. I read more books set in European countries and I read more books in translation, but I was still no good at reviewing the books I read. Maybe 2026 will be the year I hit my stride.

I didn't pick any particular books for the challenge. Those in the photo were possibilities, but I didn't read any of them. Here are the counties I visited in the books I did pick, in the order I visited them:

  • THE UK: Scoop by Evelyn Waugh. As always, I read many, many UK books, but this reread of an old favorite was the first UK book I read in 2025.
  • IRELAND: Strange Flowers by Donal Ryan. I also read quite a few books set in Ireland or by Irish authors. This was the first I read in 2025, but it wasn't my favorite. 
  • FRANCE: Maigret and the Spinster by Simenon, one of the translated books I read, by a Belgian author who wrote in French.
  • GREECE: Three Summers by Margarita Liberaki, a translated NYRB Classic.
  • SWITZERLAND: Above Suspicion by Helen MacInnes. Thank goodness for MacInnes -- she took me to several European countries. 
  • FINLAND: The Summer Book by Tove Jansson, author of the Moomin books, in translation. 

In all, I visited 20 countries for the 2025 European Reading Challenge and read eight books in translation, both persona bests. Let's see how far I can go in 2026!



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