I haven't updated my recent reads so here goes:
12: Crossing the bridge of autism: our family story, Stephanie Maddox
13: 365 Surprising and inspirational rock star quotes, Alison Taylor
14: I'd Rather Be Reading: The Delights and Dilemmas of the Reading Life, Anne Bogel
15: The Wheel of Justice, Steven Livingston
16: The Librarian, Salley VIckers
Crossing the bridge of autism
I had high hopes for this one as I work with children with autism and thought it would be an interesting read and an insight into life with an autistic child. Sadly it wasn't as it was very shallow and seemed more like an expanded diary of appointments but it was worth a try.
365 Surprising and inspirational rock star quotes, Alison Taylor
There was nothing inspirational about this. It was free though so nothing ventured, nothing gained. At least it was short.
I'd Rather Be Reading: The Delights and Dilemmas of the Reading Life
I enjoyed this one. It basically does what it says on the tin. The dilemmas are lighthearted and fun and I'd recommend it for a short read when you have too much to do - in fact when you'd rather be reading.
The Wheel of Justice
This was a free short story. It's very bizarre. Set in America at an unknown date but modern, it's the story of a game show with questions about capital punishment. The 'winner' gets to execute a murderer. It's not what I'd normally choose to read; I didn't look at the description before I 'bought' it but as I'm not in favour of the death penalty it wasn't so much my cup of tea.
The Librarian
I enjoyed this one, started it yesterday and finished it off overnight when I couldn't sleep. A woman in her 20s moves from her job in a city library to a small middle England village in the 1950s and gets involved in village life and really makes the library appealing to the children and gets involved in coaching a girl for the 11+ after her landlady introduces them. Things go wrong and there are ripples in the metaphorical mill pond. It's a good story with an interesting ending.
I'm currently reading Wonderland: A Year of Britain's Wildlife, Day by Day by Brett Westwood, Stephen Moss but am doing so day by day so it's going to be a long read. It's excellent so far, having read about 3 weeks in one go to catch with it. I'm resisting the temptation to look ahead and read the entry for our family birthdays.