My Commonplace Book: October 2025

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

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

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Very old vampires are anachronisms: they are living history, bringing the past right into the present, with all the traumas of the past. Every one of us who has written about a vampire knows our own vampire very well, because each reflects something of what we thought of humanity at the time we wrote them.

White Teeth, Red Blood: Selected Vampiric Verses by various authors (2025)

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And so they strolled on over the sand, happy in each other’s company but with their minds full of things they should have said, but didn’t.

A Ghost Hunter’s Guide to Solving a Murder by F.H. Petford (2025)

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The Cat-sith, a creature from Celtic mythology.

So, give me the unknown any day. Forget what other people learned, discover something new, something no one else knows, that’s when you make a name for yourself. That’s when the big people come looking for you.

Monstrous Tales by various authors (2025)
(Quote from Boneless by Janice Hallett)

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‘Nor I!’ Granmere laughed again. ‘Thou wouldst never set out to do the impossible?’

Simon reflected. ‘Nay, I think not, sir. Yet I believe that there is very little that is impossible. There is always a way.’

Simon the Coldheart by Georgette Heyer (1925)

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I was captivated. Each wasp knows its function and performs it: no doubts, no mistakes, no misunderstandings. The beautiful logic of insect lives. A million miles from the messy irrationality of human beings.

Rainforest by Michelle Paver (2025)

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“It’s sometimes a mistake to remember too much,” said Mitchell Dane. “Half the people in the world make their own troubles by forgetting what they ought to remember, and then they keep ’em alive by remembering what they ought to forget.”

The Black Cabinet by Patricia Wentworth (1925)

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St Mark’s Square, Venice

But then, I told myself, trying to make sense of it, is that not the case with all of the places, things, and people we dream of, that they seem mundanely familiar and at the same time inexpressibly strange?

Venetian Vespers by John Banville (2025)

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I thought of it, afterwards, with astonished guilt. I told myself that it is impossible to dissect your friends and separate the good from the bad, that you accept them as they are, imperfect as they are.

The Odd Flamingo by Nina Bawden (1954)

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But the brightest lights shine only against the darkest of backgrounds…

Murder Most Haunted by Emma Mason (2025)

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Favourite books read this month:

The Black Cabinet and Monstrous Tales

Authors read for the first time this month:

F.H. Petford, Emma Mason, Sunyi Dean, Jenn Ashworth, Abir Mukherjee – and too many poets to list them all here!

Places visited in my October reading:

England, France, Germany, Scotland, Wales, Italy, Mexico

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Reading notes: My October reading has been devoted mainly to books for 1925 Club and also the RIP XX challenge, so lots of dark, atmospheric or ghostly reads this month! November is always a busy month in the book blogging calendar (I wrote about my plans here) and I’m looking forward to joining in with Nonfiction November, Novellas in November and, if I have time, Margaret Atwood Reading Month and German Literature Month.

What did you read in October? Do you have any plans for November?

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