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 yet read this month’s choice: Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’ Dangerous Liaisons. I ordered it from the library and have only just collected it.


So … I’ll go with the fact that it’s a novel written in epistolary form, and choose another written in this way: Ann Youngson’s Meet Me at the Museum. A book of considerable charm. An English 60 year old farmer’s wife writes a letter to a museum curator & professor in Denmark about Tollund Man, a perfectly preserved man from about 300 BCE who is exhibited there. A correspondence begins. Initially formal, the letters become more intimate. This busy outdoorsy farmer’s wife with her chintzy house couldn’t be more different from austere Scandinavian Anders. But both are lonely and have gaping holes in their lives. With every letter they disclose more of their joys, disappointments and difficulties and draw inexorably closer. At the end is a revelation. What effect will this have on them, on their burgeoning relationship? We can only speculate. A touching and intimate book.


Archaeology and paleontology are not the same, but perhaps it’s not too big a leap to go to southern England in the early 19th century for Tracy Chevalier’s Remarkable Creatures.This book is a fictional account, almost certainly not too far from the truth, about the geological work of middle-class-but-in-reduced-circumstances Elizabeth Philpott, and definitely working class Mary Anning. Both live in one of the fossil capitals of England, Lyme Regis. Both spend hours on the beach fossil hunting – Elizabeth for her own interest and as a pastime, Mary for an income, selling them. It’s inevitable that they should meet, less inevitable that Elizabeth should become Mary’s friend and champion, encouraging her to learn to read and write.This is their story. And it takes a very long time for it to end well for Mary. An enjoyable, and – yes – an informative read, if not Tracy Chevalier at her best.


Reading this may whet your appetite for a spot of non-fiction: Helen Gordon’s Notes from Deep Time: an engaging and thought-provoking account of geological time. As a non-scientist, I often find such accounts dry or inaccessible, but this is a highly readable book attempting with some success to engage our brains in comprehending the vastness of time, and the difference between the various eons that constitute the time that the earth has been in being. Who knew for instance that triceratops and tyrannosaurus rex not only didn’t appear on earth at the same time, but in fact were separated from each other by an infinitely longer time span than humankind from tyrannosaurus? From discussions about the physical appearance of the earth in previous periods, to ongoing research about dinosaurs (what colour were they?) to urban geology, and laying up problems for the future, this is a wide ranging book to which I shall return.


I’m making a great job of mixing archaeology and paleontology, because my next book, The Crossing Places involves a professional archaeologist, Dr. Ruth Galloway, in the first of the popular series about her by Ellie Griffiths. An involving story, with well-developed, believable characters and a sense of place: the flat Norfolk landscape is well described. I bought into the plot, with Ruth Galloway, young academic archeologist brought into a police investigation to uncover a mystery about a disappeared child whose bones might, just might, be buried on her ‘patch’. The series is some 15 books long and I’ve by no means read them all. But they’re good for those moments when you haven’t got much bandwidth for anything too demanding.


Let’s stay in Norfolk, but delve once more into the past. Victoria Mackenzie’s For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain. Two female medieval mystics, Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe tell their stories in alternating short chapters. Julian is the better known figure, for her ‘Revelations of Divine Love‘, written when she was an anchoress, enclosed in a tiny windowed cell abutting a Norwich church. Both she and the other figure in the book, Marjorie Kent, had visions. Whereas Julian chooses to see little, but see it intensely, Marjorie is very different. Illiterate and rambunctious, with little time for her husband and children, she loudly proclaims her visions of Christ to anyone who will listen, and indeed these who do not wish to listen. Both took risks. To go against current Christian orthodoxy, especially as a woman, risked excommunication and a painful death. In the book, and we cannot know if this happened, the two meet, and this unlikely pair make a genuine connection. Beautifully written, and quickly read, this is a book that will stay with me for a long time.


Finally, a book I haven’t read, but intend to because I heard snatches of it being read as BBC’s Book of the Week. Catherine Coldstream’s Cloistered tells the story of her years as a nun in the 1990s, and her eventual flight from the convent – I didn’t hear that bit. And how did I get from a story about two amoral lovers-turned-rivals to the story of women who’ve taken vows of chastity? Ah well. That’s Six Degrees for you!
Next month’s starter is Paul Lynch‘s Prophet Song: a book I very much ejoyed reading last year.
🙌
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Lovely to see the Youngson and Mackenzie in your chain. Cloistered sounds well worth a look.
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I thought so. R4 often has interesting choices that wouldn’t normally cross my radar.
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This is always an interesting read, Margaret, and I like the sound of the first and the dinosaur etc saga sounds like a must read. I have only the woolliest understanding of all that. Thanks, hon! Happy Saturday! Washing and catching up? I expect you did most while you were away. Off I dash to sunny but cool t’ai chi. Catch you later!
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Thanks Jo. Still knee-deep in washing because of our travelling for a week before landing home. Luckily, the weather is dry.
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Pretty interesting mix
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Thanks Sheree.
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I’ve read two books from your chain this month – Remarkable Creatures and For Thy Great Pain – and enjoyed both. Cloistered does sound interesting!
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I thought so. First – find a copy!
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Your post reminded me that I haven’t fi ished a single book this month
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Ooops! You have more than one on the go at once?
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Yes, and that is perhaps the trouble
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Ooh some interesting books there. I loved Deep Time and the others sound great. I’ll be watching to see how you get onwith the nuns.
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Haha! Not even got a copy yet. Being one was never a career choice.
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Well it was certainly an interesting pathway from dangerous liaisons to cloistered nuns 😉
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😉
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I loved both your first choices. The rest sound interesting too!!!
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Thanks Annabel. I’ll be over to yours in a bit.
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Notes from Deep Time sounds like a book for me. Geology, dinosaurs, evolution… Right up my street. I’ve read a number of Ruth Galloway novels, but I always reach a point, where I’ve had enough and never manage to finish a series.
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I know what you mean about RG. But I wholeheartedly recommend Deep Time. Packed with interest and readable too.
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Thank you as always for suggesting some interesting reads 🙂 Of this month’s batch, Meet Me at the Museum sounds most my cup of tea. I would have said Remarkable Creatures except that I’ve already read and loved that. Have you read The Lady and the Unicorn? It’s one of my favourite books! I’m also intrigued by Cloistered. I read Karen Armstrong’s Through the Narrow Gate and Beginning the World many years ago, which are on the same lines it seems.
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I HAVEN’T read The Lady and the Unicorn, though it’s been on my radar for quite a while. You may have given me the push I need. Yes, Karen Armstrong’s an interesting writer, isn’t she. I too haven’t read anything by her for years now. Good luck with MM@tM!
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The first and last in the list are in my list of books to read.
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👍Hooray!
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The Cloistered book caught my interest, too. Didn’t catch the audio.
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We’d neither of us make good nuns …
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Well, that certainly
raised a laugh in an otherwise grim day! Thanks for that.
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😄
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The last two look the most interesting. A little more humorous is “And then there were Nuns” by Jane Christmas.
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Noted. Thanks!
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I’d be interested to hear how you get on with Dangerous Liaisons. I think I said my piece on that last time!
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To be honest I had eight reservation waiting for me at the library when we came back from holiday. I suspect DL isn’t ging to get to the top of the pile for a while … if ever!
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As usual a fairly eclectic selection. I have struggled to read this month, but have recently finished The Midnight Library by Matt Haig (was that one of your recommendations?) having read The Life Impossible in December. Not my usual fare, but I enjoyed them. And they both made me think about the possibilities in life. As for Ellie Griffiths I actually love her books – easy reading for when your brain can’t handle something too demanding.
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I’m not a huge Matt Haig fan. I’ve just read The Humans when I ran out of reading material in Spain, and though it had its moments it wasn’t for me. I’d definitely have preferred an Elly Griffiths! She’s coming to speak at our Indie bookshop in February. I have my ticket!
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The Detective Harbinder Kaur series is good.
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WOW!!! I think this is the most impressive “six degrees of separation” that I have ever encountered, Margaret.
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Gosh. Thanks Rebecca, she said, picking herself off the floor …
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I think a lot of us went the epistolary route, but I haven’t seen your choice of epistolary novel so far. I have only read one of your books, Remarkable creatures, which I enjoyed a lot. I enjoyed your archaeology and palaeontology thread. Notes from deep time has a great cover, too.
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Ah, someone else who’s seduced by a good cover. Hooray! I can tecommend my first choice if you ever want to give it a go.
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Thanks!
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Fun chain! I have enjoyed everything I have read by Tracy Chevalier but it’s been a while
Have a great week!
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Great chain. I always love finding one where I know at least one of the books. Here it’s “Remarkable Creatures”, one of my favourite books by a great author.
Here is my link:
https://momobookblog.blogspot.com/2025/02/six-degrees-of-separation-dangerous.html
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Tracy Chevalier never disappoints, does she, even though I thought this was one of her weaker books. You’re so well read, I quite expect you to know most of the books in the 6 Degrees album!
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Hahaha, I am glad when I find one or two books in other people’s list, even if they read the same type of genres as I do. LOL
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I keep meaning to look into the Ruth Galloway books. Thanks for pointing out the first in the series.
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It doesn’t hugely matter what order you read them in though there is a narrative about Ruth’s personal life that threads through the series.
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Super work! Remarkable Creatures and Meet Me at The Museum are favorites of mine, too.
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Thanks so much. I’ve just got round to reading your post and was surprised that I got away with commenting. WP hads decided not to let me comment much these days…
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It’s a pain! You have to login, type [I almost always now copy my text so I can paste it if anything goes wrong] then post and usually repeat the process on some blogs!
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I keep on forgetting to sut and paste, so that’s where I fall down!
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Great chain, there are a few on there I might check out.
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Hooray! Result!
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Your usual top notch variety, Margaret. Almost all of which, remarkably, I have had on my radar for some while and now I’ll add Deep Time which sounds wonderful. Youngson, McKenzie and Coldstream really need nudging up the list so thank you for reminding me of them.
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A bit of a poisoned cahlice, bumping books up the TBR isn’t it? There are only so many hours in the day. Deep Time really is a great book.
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Poisoned chalice at times, yes. But at other times I’m very grateful to be reminded. The Youngson in this instance, particularly. It’s actually available in my local library. (I usually have to reserve and wait.) Guess where I’m off to soon!
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😊
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