On the first Saturday of every month, a book is chosen as a starting point and linked to six other books to form a chain. Readers and bloggers are invited to join in by creating their own ‘chain’ leading from the selected book.
Kate: Books are my Favourite and Best

I haven’t managed to read this month’s choice yet: Long Island by Colm Tóibín. I want to, because I loved its precursor, Brooklyn.


It’s about a young Irish woman who leaves Ireland to have a fresh start in America. I’ll begin my chain with a young Irish woman who leaves Ireland to have a fresh start in London. As told in Christine Dwyer Hickey‘s Our London Lives. This could easily turn out to be my Book of the Year. It features three main characters: Millie, who’s run away from Ireland; Pip, an aspiring boxer who drinks at the pub where Millie finds work; and London itself, seen at its best and its worst – its vibrancy, its diversity, but also its expense, its violence and its diminution as a community in the face of capitalist redevelopment.The chapters pass between Millie and Pip. Millie’s story begins in 1979; Pip’s not until 2017 when, a recovering alcoholic, he’s just been released from prison. We don’t read a continuous narrative. Rather it’s a series of vignettes, from which we are able to work out the un-narrated years for ourselves. Real events pepper the narrative: the release of the Guildford Four; the Grenfell Tower disaster, and this contrubutes to the novel’s very real sense of place. Here is a story of flawed individuals who make, and fail to make choices; who miss opportunities and fall through the cracks, but about whom we come to care. I was involved for every one of the book’s 500 pages.


My next book starts with a young girl born in London, Frida -in Flatlands, by Sue Hubbard. A quietly powerful piece of storytelling, set in the flatlands of Lincolnshire near the Wash during WWII. The narrative is divided between 12 year old Frida, evacuated to an impoverished and unfriendly farming couple whose house is also remote: and the more privileged young adult Philip, who as a consciencious objector is working as a farm labourer while developing his painting skills in his spare time. Despite their differences, the two have much in common – their loneliness, their apparent abandonment by those who should love them, their poverty. The wetlands which are their temporary home is also a character: their savage beauty, their harshness. A moving tale, well told.


My next book is also deeply rooted in the landscape, whose main character, the author, has barely moved at all. This is an intensely personal and lyrical memoir from poet Wendy Pratt. The Ghost Lake is embedded in two things: her deep connection to the part of East Yorkshire where she has lived her entire life; and the death, at the moment of her birth, of her much-wanted daughter. She focuses each chapter on a different community surrounding the Paleolake Flixton. This now-vanished lake provides an epicentre to her story. Throughout the book she dwells on its own history; and her own – though not in order. Her father’s decision not to continue the family tradition of farming; her own ‘oddity’ and inability to mix, to shine – despite her intelligence – at school; her chequered job and personal life; her conversion from working class girl to educated and successful – though always working class – career as a facilitator and poet. And always, threaded through the narrative, the much mourned dead baby daughter. A haunting, powerful and poetic memoir, bringing to life the natural world and landscape of her home patch, as well as exploring belonging, and loss.


Death is central to The World After Alice, by Lauren Aliza Green. On page one of this book, teenage Alice stands on a bridge … jumps … and dies. Then the story proper starts, 12 years later. Morgan, once Alice’s best friend is to marry Benji, Alice’s brother, after a courtship long kept secret. In a series of visits to the present day and flashbacks to the period both before and after Alice’s death, we gradually build up a picture of the turmoil her death effects in two increasingly disfunctional families and those who are closest to them – that of Alice, and that of Morgan. This is a story of family dynamics, of love, of loss, of secrets, of individuals who have lost their ability to trust, to communicate. A deftly written and immersive book, and not at all as irredeemably depressing as I have undoubtedly made it sound.


Another story about how life is complicated, and about how past events can cast a long shadow. John Boyne‘s Earth. ‘I became a different boy than the one I was supposed to be. I wanted to be a painter. I wanted to be good. I wanted to love someone, and to be loved in return. But none of those ambitions came to be.’
This is Evan, a young Irish would-be abstract painter – only he wasn’t good enough; impossibly handsome; gay. He’s a top-class football player, against his inclinations – but it brings him money and lots of it. One of his (sort of) friends in the team is Robbie, an arrogant young man whom Evan can’t take his eyes from, as heterosexual Robie is well aware of. After a party in Robbie’s flat, Evan is accused of filming his friend’s rape of a young woman. This is far from a simple narrative. It explores several themes: the long shadow of upbringing; class; homophobia; moral corruption; the way the legal system treats alleged sexual offences. In doing so, it drops several bombshells into the narrative, none more shocking than the one revealed in the last pages of the book. A thought-provoking and well-turned out read.


I’m choosing my final book, because perhaps we need to lighten up a bit. Life doesn’t always turn out as expected, but it doesn’t have to be awful. A Girl’s Guide to Winning the War, by Annie Lyons. This was an entertaining read, and the pages turned themselves easily enough. It’s about how clever, bookish but working class Peggy, and her titled side-kick Marigold become the darlings of the Ministry of Information with their writing and photographic skills, producing heart-warming books about aspects of the war as experienced by ordinary peple, whether serving in the forces or on the home front. Although I enjoyed it, I found the characterisation a bit stereotypical. Warm, loving working class family. Formal, buttoned up, emotionless public school types. Everyone however, if you look hard enough, has a Heart of Gold. A book to curl up with and race through on a foggy winter evening. And to bring us back to London, where I began my chain.
We’ve had a bit of a gallop through a series of books that in different ways touch the heart strings. Next month the chosen book is Intermezzo by Sally Rooney.
I do love your book reviews. It’s not something that I do well and I don’t have a lot of patience with others, but you seem to get to the crux of the thing really well and I find myself nodding and thinking…if I kept a list I’d put this on it. Or not this! But, as you know, I stumble along on cast offs from the charity shop. Some gems, some others! Have a good weekend, Margaret.
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A busy one, but good I hope. Yes, successful book-finding when we lived in France was one of the few downsides of being there.
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Oh, and thank you!
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Delighted to see you starting with the Hickey which is on my books of the year list, too. Of the ones I’ve not read, I like the sound of Flatlands. Great cover, too,
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Great cover for a book which will easily make it into my Top Ten this year.
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I love John Boyne’s books – Earth was a good one and I’m looking forward to his new one, Fire, which is out next month. I haven’t read anything else from your chain, but Flatlands and A Girl’s Guide to Winning the War both sound appealing.
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I’m looking forward to Fire too. Flatlands? Highly recommended. A Girls’ Guide is also good, despite my lesser enthusiasm for it.
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Some interesting links, I haven’t heard of any of the books but the last one.
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Not a bad one to have heard of, despite my slightly dismissive tone.
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You”re so good at these reviews. You tell us just enough of the plot for us to be able to decide if it’s our sort of book, but never too much, and your literary critique is always on point! I loved Brooklyn but somehow had missed hearing about Long Island so that’s a must for my list, also Flatlands for sure
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Great to hear you lived the Dwyer-Hickey. I love her work but am yet to read this one.
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PLease do then!
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Interesting chain. Too bad that last one wasn’t as good as it sounds.
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I was probably a bit harsh. The pages turn very easily.
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I’m admiring of the six books each month and your wonderful way of describing them. A Girl’s Guide to Winning the War sounds fun, I like the idea of a female perspective on the war.
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It was a fun and generally light hearted read. Ignore my sniffy review. I DID enjoy it really!
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Excellent chain! I like John Boyne but haven’t read any of this now series.
Here’s mine for this month https://portobellobookblog.com/2024/10/05/6degrees-of-separation-for-october-2024-from-long-island-by-colm-toibin-to-swimming-to-lundy-by-amanda-prowse/
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Recommended, Joanne, the John Boynes. I’ll be overr to see yours later – possibly even tomorrow, But I’m looking forward to it.
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I haven’t read Long Island either, though undoubtedly will because I enjoyed Brooklyn. The rest of your choices all sound as though I would enjoy them, but I don’t think I’ll be reading next month’s choice, Intermezzo. The lack is possibly in me, but Sally Rooney’s books don’t enthuse me.
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You and me both, Anabel. I won’t be bringing it down to Wiltshire with a view to a book-swap.
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I’ll be making sure my personal tour of BOA includes both the library and the book barn to give you a chance to create more interesting chains!
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Ah, Becky – you spoil us!
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i know your weaknesses!
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Don’t you just, Becky? Looking forward to sharing your discoveries.
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“A Girl’s Guide to Winning the War” looks like an entertaining reading.
Wonderful book reviews, Margaret. Love how you describe these books.
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Thanks Amy. Hope you get to read A Girl’s Guide!
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Great connections!
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Thanks Emma.
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Every book you have listed I could imagine reading. What a great chain. I like your first link, because I wondered about such a link myself, that is of a young woman (not necessarily Irish) moving to live in another place, but I didn’t put a lot of thought into following up that idea. In some ways I rather wish I had because it’s a good topic, for a start!
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Yes, but you had a good chain too. It’s great the way we all deliver up such different menus. Less great is the length of the resulting TBR …
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Thanks Marg … and yes you are right about all that. Haha!
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I’d like to read the Annie Lyons book at some point!
Fun chain again this month!
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Thanks. And yes, a fun read too, the Lyons book.
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As ever, a fascinating chain. You bring such interesting books to the table, Margaret. I was delighted to read your thoughts on The Ghost Lake. I have that on my tbr already and you’ve reinforced my desire to get to it soon.
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I really hope you enjoy it Sandra. It really brings her home patch to life, and though in many ways a sad book, it’s not bleak.
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I just said to Emma that I haven’t read any of her books and that’s the same for yours. Just tooooo many books. LOL
But I love your list, even though I really disliked Brooklyn, unlike you.
Here is my list:
https://momobookblog.blogspot.com/2024/10/six-degrees-of-separation-long-island.html
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Just off to read yours in a minute!
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We’ll see if you can comment this time.
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I’ve said this before, but you increase the height of my to-be-read pile at a tremendous clip. The positive way of looking at it is that I will never run out of interesting books to read
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Thanks IJ. Nope, there’s never a shortage of books, is there?
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At best remporarily
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What a great list, Margaret. Boyne’s book sounds especially good. I have 2 other of his novels on my TBR and am embarrassed to admit that I haven’t yet read either of them.
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Embarrassed? You know a long TBR list comes as standard. So much to read … so little time.
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