Love Your Library, September 2025

Thanks, as always, to Eleanor for posting about her recent library reading! And thank you to Skai for joining in again.

Somehow over the summer I forgot to mark two anniversaries: my library’s 25th birthday (July), and five years of me volunteering there (August). When I first started as a volunteer, Covid was still a raging unknown and the library was closed to the public. I shelved returns in an empty building. It was blissful, in all honesty. But I know it’s perverse to be nostalgic about the pandemic. I still enjoy my Tuesday morning sessions of hunting for reservations, even when it’s (too) busy and noisy during the school holidays.

Early in the month, my husband and I went to an evening event at the library with Jasper Fforde. C is a fan, having read five of his novels, whereas I read The Eyre Affair during graduate school and found it silly – in the same way I can’t really get on with Douglas Adams or Terry Pratchett. But with tickets just £5, I thought why not go and support the library.

Fforde considers himself an “accidental author” for two reasons: one, he was seen as a stupid child who would never achieve anything – his dyslexia wasn’t diagnosed until he was in his fifties; and two, he wanted to work on films, and indeed did for a time. In 1988 he sat down to write a short story treatment of his intended film script and fell in love with the process of writing. He described it as being like a jigsaw where the words just fell into place. Thirteen years of hard work later, he made the New York Times bestseller list.

I didn’t realize that Fforde has lived fairly locally and set novels in Reading and Swindon – comic in itself because these are very unlovely towns. His first two series, nursery rhyme crime novels and the Thursday Next books (the eighth and last, Dark Reading Matter, is due out in September 2026), were about “moving the furniture around in people’s heads,” taking existing classic stories and twisting them. When he tried making things up, as with the Shades of Grey and Red Side Story duology and The Last Dragonslayer children’s books, the results were not as commercially successful. During the question time he reflected on the irony of his book getting confused with the blockbuster Fifty Shades of Grey. He joked that some probably bought his book by mistake and then wondered where the bondage was.

The evening was a conversation with the library staff member who seems to organise all the events. She asked him a lot of questions about his process. He listed a few tenets he lives by: “the narrative dare” (come up with a random idea and then figure out how to pull it off), “the path less-trodden,” and “the no-plan plan” (he makes it up as he goes along). His mind works like a drift net, he said, saving bits and pieces up to use another time, such as snippets of conversation overheard on a bus. For instance, “Oh my goodness, they’ve trodden on the gibbon!” and “They say haddock is making a comeback.” He also leaves himself “off-ramps” he can take up later if he ends up writing a sequel.

(C is at the bottom right of the second photo.)

Fforde was very personable and self-deprecating and I got more out of the event than I might have expected to.

 

My library use over the last month:

(links are to books not already reviewed on the blog)

 

READ

  • The Most by Jessica Anthony
  • Sojourn by Amit Chaudhuri
  • The Wedding People by Alison Espach
  • Of All that Ends, Günter Grass
  • The Summer I Turned Pretty by Jenny Han
  • Seascraper by Benjamin Wood

SKIMMED

  • Wild City by Ben Hoare
  • The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller – The chilly writing and atmosphere suit the subject matter, but didn’t draw me in or make me care about the central characters.
  • Cuddy by Benjamin Myers (for book club)

 

CURRENTLY READING

  • Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck
  • Of Thorn & Briar: A Year with the West Country Hedgelayer by Paul Lamb
  • Endling by Maria Reva

CHECKED OUT, TO BE READ

  • The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood (for book club)
  • Red Pockets: An Offering by Alice Mah
  • Death in Venice and Other Stories by Thomas Mann
  • Opt Out by Carolina Setterwall
  • Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth

 

ON HOLD, TO BE COLLECTED

  • The Two Roberts by Damian Barr
  • All the Way to the River by Elizabeth Gilbert
  • The Haunted Wood: A History of Childhood Reading by Sam Leith
  • Buckeye by Patrick Ryan
  • A Long Winter by Colm Tóibín

C will read the Sopel for book club, but I have to miss that meeting for a Repair Cafe committee meeting.

IN THE RESERVATION QUEUE

  • New Cemetery by Simon Armitage
  • Book of Lives: A Memoir of Sorts by Margaret Atwood
  • It’s Not a Bloody Trend: Understanding Life as an ADHD Adult by Kat Brown
  • Flashlight by Susan Choi
  • The Perimenopause Survival Guide: A Feel-Like-Yourself-Again Roadmap for Every Woman over 35 by Heather Hirsch
  • Queen Esther by John Irving
  • The Matchbox Girl by Alice Jolly
  • Heart the Lover by Lily King
  • Misery by Stephen King
  • The Rest of Our Lives by Benjamin Markovits
  • What We Can Know by Ian McEwan
  • The Eights by Joanna Miller
  • Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
  • Super-Frog Saves Tokyo by Haruki Murakami
  • Rainforest by Michelle Paver
  • Death of an Ordinary Man by Sarah Perry
  • The Lamb by Lucy Rose
  • Flesh by David Szalay

 

RETURNED UNREAD

  • Fulfillment by Lee Cole – Argh, this keeps being requested off me!
  • An Eye on the Hebrides by Mairi Hedderwick
  • Love in Five Acts by Daniela Krien
  • The Artist by Lucy Steeds

I missed the moment on the last three but may try another time.

  • The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde – I thought about giving him another try after the event, but … no.

 

RETURNED UNFINISHED

  • The Mermaid Chair by Sue Monk Kidd – I read about 45 pages. The setup was interesting but the narrative voice did not captivate.
  • The Names by Florence Knapp – Ditto, but only 25 pages. The writing was just not very good.

 

What have you been reading or reviewing from the library recently?

Share a link to your own post in the comments. Feel free to use the above image. The hashtag is #LoveYourLibrary.

20 responses

  1. margaret21's avatar

    A fun post. But your library, in an established town, is quite young? I’m used to them having being founded by Victorian philanthropists, notably Carnegie (your compatriot of course!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      We do have an old Carnegie library building closer to the centre of town, but it’s been used for other purposes and/or derelict for my whole time in Newbury. The Corn Exchange is currently raising funds to turn it into an arts venue.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. margaret21's avatar

        Oh I see! Yes, our library premises are pretty new too, but the library service is much older.

        Like

  2. Laura's avatar

    Argh, shame about The Names, but unsurprising as it’s been so over-hyped. Will be interested in your thoughts on The Lamb, which I found so badly/simplistically written that I couldn’t get through it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’m not set on reading The Lamb; I remember your misgivings. But it’s one of various options I’m amassing for R.I.P. reading next month. That’s the great thing about using the library: if I don’t get on with a book in its early pages, it’s no matter as no money and very little time has been wasted.

      Happy birthday for tomorrow!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laura's avatar

        Thank you! I had The Lamb as an ARC but I’m absolutely fine with DNFing them if they really aren’t working for me.

        Like

  3. Skai's avatar

    Hello Beck, congrats to your library on turning 25! The library where I work turned 30 this year. Here is my library reading for September. https://inspirationalskai.blogspot.com/2025/09/love-your-library-september-august-26.html

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ah, I didn’t realize you worked at a library. That explains the heavy book borrowing 😉

      Thanks for participating!

      Like

      1. skaiwrite's avatar

        Yes, I don’t put it in my bio, but it’s my day job. That’s why this challenge is perfect for me. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Elle's avatar

    I’ve always very much enjoyed Fforde’s Thursday Next books, but again, as with Adams and Pratchett, I first encountered them as a bookish teen and a large part of their appeal was the literary in-jokes! I’d probably ration them quite carefully if re-reading; as I recall, the absurdist humour can grate quickly if you try to read too much at once. The event sounds good, though! Funny how sometimes an author can be better in person than on the page.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Lucky for you, there is one last one in the pipeline for next year. I may have to try a different of his series … or admit defeat.

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        I stopped reading after Something Rotten 😬 It felt like a natural endpoint!

        Like

  5. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    One of my other blogger friends out here said she loved Buckeye–as a native Ohioan I feel like I should put this one on my TBR. And I’ll be interested to know what you think of the new Gilbert memoir. I listened to the most cringey interview with her on NPR and I don’t think I can face that one.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Buckeye is dauntingly large, but the blurbs and comps are encouraging.

      What was cringey about it? Woo-woo, or selfishness?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

        Mostly the making everything about her–yes, I guess I’d categorize it as selfishness, and also great, blinding privilege. Also, her portrayal of hospice seemed suspect to me–that her partner had access to as many fentanyl patches as she wanted, for one. In my (limited) experience with hospice, that wasn’t the case. They are still controlled substances, even if the patient is dying. But it’s Gilbert’s story, so if she says that’s how it went down… I have friends who are big readers but never touch a memoir–I guess because of the idea that it’s all navel-gazing. I don’t usually feel that way and love memoir. But this one feels like one I can skip.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        Fair enough. My sister is a hospice nurse so I can check those details with her. It certainly does sound like a privileged experience of dying.

        Like

  6. Liz Dexter's avatar

    I have Of Thorn and Briar – I bought it as a consolation gift for myself when I went to the bookshop after finding out my hairdresser was retiring and my order for something else hadn’t come in yet!!

    I am the same about Jasper Fforde. I’ve read a couple but they are too silly – I can do Douglas Adams as I think he caught me when I was young enough, and I feel terrible I can’t enjoy Pratchett as I know wonderful, says good things about poverty, etc., but no.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I do feel bad because Pratchett is my husband’s favourite author, and even A.S. Byatt thought he was brilliant. I have read two complete Pratchett novels … they were okay.

      Like

  7. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    Interesting: I loved The Eyre Affair when it was new, but I have wondered if I would think so now. A schoolfriend recently tried him for the first time and loved the one she read (a newer one) so I figured there’s hope for a reread, and I do have a strong silly streak. I’ve not been to the library in about a month (shocking! I know heh) but I do still have a couple of loans I picked up then, so maybe I’ll be posting later October about the library again.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Of the recent stuff, C enjoyed The Constant Rabbit but is finding Early Riser a slog.

      Like

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