My Commonplace Book: June 2025

A selection of quotes and pictures to represent June’s reading:

commonplace book
noun
a book into which notable extracts from other works are copied for personal use.

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He’d be better off reading detective stories than going to Miss Covey’s English Grammar class. After all, there are worse places to find an education than crime fiction.

A Schooling in Murder by Andrew Taylor (2025)

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“Yes, I learned to hate, Peter, and that is worse than being sick, or starved, or thirsty, or in pain.”

Jennie by Paul Gallico (1950)

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Hand-coloured photo of Dawson City c. 1899 at the end of the gold rush (University Library Washington)

I was a child of the outdoors, a wild thing, made more of mud and scrapes than manners and poise. My father did not try to change that. He knew, because he was the same, that trying to make me something I was not would be like trying to alter the flow of a river by standing in the water and shouting.

The Rush by Beth Lewis (2025)

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“The amount of time you spent together probably matters, but less time doesn’t mean less love. Whether it’s a day or year, human or cat, and even if we may never see them again, there are those who are irreplaceable in our lives.”

We’ll Prescribe you a Cat by Syou Ishida (2023)

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If you feel that you have been humiliated, you have got to learn to dare to yell and scream that you feel that way. Women have become paralysed. It’s the culture. It’s the culture that has made us all lose the courage to be ourselves when we are hurt – to really yell and scream.

The Stepdaughter by Caroline Blackwood (1976)

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‘The world?‘ Cassandra gave a small laugh, as if at the follies of youth. ‘I regret to inform you that the world does not think of any of us as much as we all like to think.’ It was at least true that at her own time of life, it did not give a jot. ‘As for the minuscule circles in which we both live…It may be true that you have created a minor diversion. But for what do we live but to create sport for our neighbours?’

The Elopement by Gill Hornby (2025)

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Olimpia Maidalchini, Contemporary portrait by Diego Velázquez

He knows very well that this is what it is to be an artist. Success is built upon the backs of many failures. You must turn the page; you must try again.

These Wicked Devices by Matthew Plampin (2025)

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“Do you think a murderer ought to be a happy man?”

Miss Marple coughed. “Well, they usually have been in my experience.”

“I don’t suppose your experience has gone very far,” said Mr Rafiel.

In this assumption, as Miss Marple could have told him, he was wrong. But she forebore to contest his statement. Gentlemen, she knew, did not like to be put right in their facts.

A Caribbean Mystery by Agatha Christie (1964)

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His living room, about eight tatami mats in size, was littered with books, as usual. While many were architecture-related, the vast majority were mystery novels. More than seemed reasonable, actually.

AUTHOR: So many books. As always.

KURIHARA: That does seem to be where most of my money goes.

Strange Houses by Uketsu (2021)

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Maggie Dickson’s pub, Edinburgh

It is a world of confidence, even amongst those who lack the good looks or wisdom or godliness to have earned it. It is not a world I am comfortable in, but I have had to find a way through. Theirs is a black-and-white world of certainties: of good and bad, and right and wrong. To them, I am wicked. So they strung me up in front of a baying crowd. But none of them had ever been in my shoes.

The Mourning Necklace by Kate Foster (2025)

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‘But I think that everyone should do all the things they shouldn’t do – and then, they won’t.’

Dr. Parry laughed as he rose reluctantly from the old creaking basket-chair. ‘It takes a doctor to disentangle that,’ he said. ‘But I imagine you refer to moral inoculation.’

‘Yes,’ nodded Helen. ‘Like being vaccinated against small-pox.’

The Spiral Staircase by Ethel Lina White (1933)

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His words were meant to chill me, and they did. But I wouldn’t tell him what ghosts there were waiting in the night for me, sometimes even in the day. ‘Which of us isn’t haunted by our past?’ I said, at last. ‘We each have one, after all. You can’t live and not have a past.’

Love and Other Poisons by Lesley McDowell (2025)

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Favourite books read in June:

The Rush, The Mourning Necklace and The Spiral Staircase

Authors read for the first time this month:

Beth Lewis, Syou Ishida, Caroline Blackwood

Places visited in my June reading:

England, Scotland, Wales, USA, Japan, Canada, Italy, a fictional Caribbean island

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Reading notes: June was another good month of reading for me, helped by having a week off work at the beginning of the month, and my 20 Books of Summer also got off to a great start. I’ve read nine books from my list so far, which gives me hope that I’ll be able to complete the challenge this year! I’m also pleased that I was able to contribute two cat-related posts to Mallika’s Reading the Meow event.

In July, I will be continuing with 20 Books of Summer and I have a book lined up for the Read Christie 2025 challenge as well. I’m also hoping I can catch up with posting my outstanding reviews!

What did you read in June? Do you have any plans for July?

9 thoughts on “My Commonplace Book: June 2025

  1. TracyP says:
    TracyP's avatar

    They all sound like interesting books but I want to know about Strange Houses, I read Strange Pictures this year and didn’t know there was another book by Uketsu.

  2. Calmgrove says:
    Calmgrove's avatar

    “Gentlemen, she knew, did not like to be put right in their facts.” Ain’t that the truth – and I acknowledge that in the full knowledge that I write that as a man! It’s a tough realising that, nevertheless…

  3. jessicabookworm says:
    jessicabookworm's avatar

    Hello Helen, I am pleased to hear you had another good month of reading and well done on already having read nine books off your Books of Summer list! 😊 Also, as a cat owner, it is lovely to hear you fitted in two books for Reading the Meow event, which I haven’t heard of before. 😺 I wish you more good reading in July.Blessings, Jessica 💌

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