Hello my little book loving chums! We’ve made it to April (well done) so it’s time to look back over the books of March.
Not as many books read as in previous months, but it’s quality over quantity, innit?
Kicking things off with an advance copy of David Goodman’s Solitary Agents, which I reviewed here.

It’s really really good. Properly tense, fantastic characters, some absolutely superb action and a growing sense of dread that Jamie (who we met in book 1, A Reluctant Spy), whilst now trained up, is rapidly heading out of his depth, and the sharks are sensing blood and starting to circle.
I loved the first book a lot. And the second is even better. If you like spy thrillers, or just thrillers, or just damn good adventure stories, David Goodman needs to be firmly on your lists. This one is out in June from Headline – thanks to the publisher for an advance ebook copy!
A bit of a change of pace (hah!) for book two of the month. Jamie Doward’s And So I Run (from the lovely folk at Vertebrate Publishing).

I really enjoyed this. It’s about Jamie and how he uses running to get away from things. It’s in part funny, wise, moving, though with some very dark chapters.
I loved this line:
I was trashing my thirties with the demented determination of a bus shelter vandal.
Great book, highly recommended.
Sticking with the non-fiction theme, Edward Chisholm’s A Waiter in Paris had been on my NetGalley TBR pile for so long that I couldn’t find it on my kindle. I was in Harrogate with my daughter for a day out and spotted it on the shelf so bought a copy.

This is the story of how the author finds himself in Paris, left by his girlfriend and seeking a job. He finds employment at a restaurant as a runner, lower on the scale than a waiter, the job to which he aspires.
This is fascinating stuff – from his lowly start, scrounging coffees from the Tamils, run-ins with the director, badly fitting suits, cramped bedbug ridden accomodation through to becoming accepted by his colleagues (mostly). I loved it.
Last book of the month was a proof I’d picked up in Harrogate last year: A Murder At World’s End, by Ross Montgomery.

Unforgiveably, it had been sat in a pile on a table by the sofa for a while. I picked it up one Sunday and thought I’d read a bit. And a bit I did read. All of it, in fact. Gloriously entertaining, it’s like Downton Abbey crossed with Christie. A stately house cut off from the mainland by a storm. A young man turns up to be one of the staff. A devious locked-room impossible murder. And imagine Violet Crawley but with a LOT more swearing.
Huge fun, highly recommended. Don’t leave it as long as I did! Very much hoping for a sequel.
Currently reading
As it was a short month for reading, I thought I’d tell you what I’m currently working my way through.
Starting with RJ Barker’s Mortedant’s Peril (out in May from Tor, thanks for the ebook review copy!)

RJ writes some delightfully odd books, and this one is no exception.
admit it. And not that anyone actually likes the Mortedants, or Irody in particular. Nonetheless, Elbay is a city of tradition, and tradition calls for Mortedants to attend a death.
But when Irody reads the corpse of a low-level record-keeper, he’s dragged into a conspiracy that will see someone close to him murdered and Irody framed for the crime, the eyes of the city’s guilds, nobles and villains all fixed on him. With only days to prove his innocence before he is executed, Irody is forced to work with unlikely and unwanted allies: a street urchin and a hulking, inhuman mercenary from the sea people’s city of Oknusoka.
With danger and death lurking around every corner, and trust a luxury, Irody is running out of time. He must save himself and his friends, as well as Elbay – the magnificent, terrifying, complicated city that he loves. Or darkness will fall on them all.
Also reading and loving The Bone Door by Frances White (also out in May, thanks to Michael Joseph for the ebook review copy)
Hop peered into the darkness, and it peered back
I love this book so much already!

What lies beyond The Bone Door?
When Hop awakens in an ancient labyrinth, he has no memory of his life before, or how he got here.
He does not recognise the mysterious girl trapped with him.
And he certainly cannot identify the shadowy figure stalking him, whispering terrible things . . .
But there is one thing he is certain of.
He must escape.
The only way out of the labyrinth is through The Bone Door. But it lies behind a series of other locked doors hidden across an array of strange realms. To open the way, Hop must complete impossible tasks before his time runs out.
As Hop travels deeper, he discovers that he and his companions may be more connected to the place and its horrors than he could ever imagine.
Unless Hop is able to unravel the true mystery of the labyrinth, including his own role within it, the Bone Door and any hope of escape will be lost forever.
Finally (for now), I picked up a copy of Run Forever, by Damian Hall (also from the lovely folk at Vertebrate). As an ‘older’ runner (hmm), it looks really interesting.

‘We don’t stop running because we get old. We get old because we stop running.’
Is it inevitable that our running performance slides as we get into our forties and beyond? Or are there things we can do to slow or even pause the decline, master our midlife and use experience as a superpower and become an ageless ace?
In Run Forever, record-breaking GB ultrarunner Damian Hall, fifty, examines the reasons why our strength and speed might deteriorate, yet how it isn’t certain if we choose to do something about it. In running, like other sports, there have been phenomenal performances from masters athletes, and while ageing is unavoidable, how we age isn’t. Becoming an ageless ace has potentially extraordinary healthspan and longevity benefits away from running.
Featuring chapters on speed, strength, mindset, sleep and nutrition, Hall draws on the knowledge of experts and shares the stories of other runners – including five-time Olympian and European 10,000 metres champion Jo Pavey, and record-breaking ultrarunner Nicky Spinks – to provide advice for how we can keep running strong and enjoying it for as long as possible. World-renowned sports dietician, author and ultrarunner Renee McGregor explains how ageing affects female runners, especially around perimenopause and menopause, and leading strength and conditioning coach Pete Stables provides knowledge and exercises for the masters athlete.
Right, that’s my recap of March! Have you read any of these? Any catch your eye?
As ever, I’d love to know what you’ve been reading lately.










































