Saturday Summary 2026-03-14: Books Read, Books Bought, Books Up Next

I’ve been travelling this week, which somehow has resulted in my doing more book buying than book reading. Still, my travelling was made much more pleasant by listening to Marguerite Gavin perform the latest Dana Stabenow novel. 

Anyway, here’s what I’ve read and bought this week and what’s up next.


This week I read two very satisfying reads and set one book aside.

Like ‘Curtain’, the last Poirot novel published. Agatha Christie wrote the Jane Marple novel‘Sleeping Murder’ during World War II and then held back its publication until the 1970s. Unlike ‘Curtain’, which brought Poirot’s career to an end, ‘Sleeping Murder’ does not read like Jane Marple’s last case. It is a vigorous, cleverly constructed mystery novel in which Jane plays a crucial and active role in the denouement. This is not the frail but still mentally acute Jane whom we met in Nemesis’. That’s not a criticism. I enjoyed meeting Jane again at the height of her powers.

I loved the concept of a collaborative novel set mostly on the roof of a seven-story walk-up apartment building in Manhattan during Lockdown. Sadly, I didn’t love the execution of the idea. 

The start was slow and laboured, but I put that down to the need to set up the situation. 

By the end of Day 1 (of 14), I suspected that the novel wasn’t going to work for me. The storytelling felt clumsy, contrived and emotionally distant. I knew that if the narrative style didn’t change, I’d never make it through the 367 pages of the novel. 

I gave up partway through Day 2. The style was too declamatory and too arms-length to be engaging. It was like ‘The Canterbury Tales’ but with none of the humour. 

‘The Harvey Girl (2026) is the first book in an historical fiction series about Pinkerton Agent Claire Wright. It hooked me immediately. Claire is clever, brave, and lies fluently to everyone to protect her cover story of being a Harvey Girl. The story used real people and events from America’s ‘Gilded Age’ to enliven and give context to the mystery at its heart. I enjoyed the mystery, the historical setting, and getting to know Claire. There’s a lot of violence in the story, but then this is the American West before the law had arrived, and when the billionaires of the day regularly demonstrated that the law didn’t apply to them. The book doesn’t have a cliff-hanger ending, but it does have a Season 1, Episode 1 feel where many possibilities are left open, not all mysteries are solved, and it was clear that we will meet some of the most charismatic characters again in the next book. I was fine with that, even if I have to wait a year for Episode 2.


I bought six books this week an I’m excited about all of them.

The first two booka are Speculative Fiction: a collection of sixteen short stories by Michael Hodges, and a quirky novel from Loraine Wilson. I loved her novel ‘This Is Our Undoing. ‘We Are All Ghosts In The Forest’ is the first book in a series. The second book, ’The Salt Oracle’ will be published in November.

I bought the next two books because they’re on the 2026 Canada Reads Shortlist. Neither of them are books I’d normally pick up. One is about a hockey player and one is a second chance romance. I’m hoping to read them next month as I watch the Canada Reads books being championed on CBC.

Adam Macallister’s sportswriting career is about to end before it begins, but he’s got one last shot: a Sports Illustrated profile about hockey’s most notorious goon, the reclusive Terry Punchout-who also happens to be Adam’s estranged father. Adam returns to Pennington, Nova Scotia, where Terry now lives in the local rink and drives the Zamboni. Going home means drinking with old friends, revisiting neglected relationships, and dealing with lingering feelings about his father and dead mother-and discovering that his friends and family are kinder and more complicated than he ever gave them credit for. 

June Wood has nothing left to lose.

With her hit TV show cancelled, and no acting jobs lined up, being lured back to New York by a mysterious email was easy. Thanks to a clause in her former landlord’s will, June and her old roommate, Adam Harper, now own the multimillion-dollar property-or they will in a month, once the paperwork is signed.

June and Adam are stuck together for four weeks. Which would be fine, if it wasn’t for the fact that they haven’t spoken in five years. But this is the opportunity of a lifetime, and once it’s over, she can return to LA and forget all about Adam, New York and everything that went wrong in their friendship.

Through shared meals and late-night conversations, old wounds and long-buried sparks resurface. It soon becomes strikingly clear that June and Adam have unfinished business. Second chances are always a risk, but maybe, if they are finally honest with each other and themselves, it could be different this time.

Each of the final two books kicks off a new series, but that’s about all they have in common. One is a twelve year old novel about a secret supernatural branch of the FBI, the other is a hot off the press Nordic Noir crime story set in a small town in Denmark.

Eleri Eames thought her career as an FBI analyst was over after her last case got her committed for psychiatric help. When she’s offered a chance to be an agent with the secret NightShade division, it feels like a second chance. But her new partner may be hiding more than she is, and he and NightShade are both not what she expected.

Donovan Heath was content in the morgue, his uncanny abilities making him a sought-after medical examiner. When his wins start drawing unwanted attention, that offer from the Bureau starts looking like a solution. NightShade needs the unusual edge he brings. Donovan understands what he is makes him a target, but Eleri might just figure him out before he can decide if he even trusts her.

Thrown together on their first assignment, they’ll have to track a charismatic cult leader, solvea high-profile kidnapping, and navigate a world where nothing is as it seems.

As NightShade’s mysteries grow darker, the line between what they hunt and what they are blurs.

Police detective Nelly Birkebæk and her teenage son, Matthias, leave Aarhus in search of a new—and hopefully quieter—life in the provincial town of Hedeborg in central Jutland. Nelly has purchased a run-down house in one of Hedeborg’s nicer neighborhoods, where her neighbor, the friendly—and a little too curious—Ejnar Skjold, quickly takes an interest in her.

But there’s no time to settle in. A missing teenage boy is found dead in a creek in a wooded area just outside town, and it soon becomes clear that the person who called it in was not the first to discover the body.

Hedeborg is a town with many layers. The local eccentric, Randi Bruun, keeps talking about a drone circling over her house. The powerful Eskelund family, who live near the forest, pull more strings than anyone dares admit. And then there are those who live out in the Village—those nobody really talks about.


It’s Saint Patrick’s Day on Tuesday so this week I’m reading Irish novels: a murder mystery set during Lockdown, a thriller that kicks off a three-book series, and the latest twisty mystery from Liz Nugent.

I’m reading ’56 Days’ (2021) both because it’s St. Patrick’s Day and as part of my Fiction In A Time Of COVID reading challenge. ’56 Days’ is a mystery set during Lockdown, which Catherine Ryan Howard wrote during Lockdown so it’s a true artifact of the COVID days. I don’t use streaming services, so I wasn’t aware, when I picked this book, that Amazon has just launched it as a TV series on Prime. Here’s the trailer:

Blinding Lies’ (2020) is the first book in the Anna Clarke trilogy. It’s a debut novel that has been very sucessful. I’m hoping that it will capture my imagination and leave me keen to read the rest of the trilogy.

The Truth About Ruby Cooper’ (2026) was published on Thursday, so it really is hot off the press. I bought it as soon as I saw it because I loved ‘Lying In Wait’ (2016) and ‘Strange Sally Diamond’ (2023). I have high hopes of this book.

2 thoughts on “Saturday Summary 2026-03-14: Books Read, Books Bought, Books Up Next

    • I should have tagged it. It’s Cobh in County Cork in Ireland. It’s the port that most of the Irish migrating to America left from. I thought it was a good fit for St. Patrick’s Day.

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