A selection of quotes and pictures to represent July’s reading:
commonplace book
noun
a book into which notable extracts from other works are copied for personal use.
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We salvage what we can, what truly matters to us, even at the gates of despair.
The Summer Tree by Guy Gavriel Kay (1984)
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One thought crosses Orazio’s mind as he takes in his surroundings at the Palazzo Conscente. Wealth may enable a man to acquire beautiful things but good taste cannot be bought.
Disobedient by Elizabeth Fremantle (2023)
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She was approaching a new land, and she would go ashore. She wanted to be alone. She would probably cry at the sheer beauty of the dream come true. She felt that she would enjoy that cry enormously, and that she would not be able to indulge it comfortably if someone were with her. She had that beautiful feeling that you get when you are in the middle of a very sad but fascinating book, which you are convinced will reduce you to pleasurable tears.
Wonder Cruise by Ursula Bloom (1934)
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Faith was different. Hers was not like other people’s. It had some basic defect, its restless inner needle always roving, from conviction to disbelief to shame and round again, moved about by some unseen current, the source of which she didn’t know. Mam had always said to pay no heed to how it worked; where the needle came to rest was a matter twixt a woman and her soul. In the end it was deeds that counted.
The Witching Tide by Margaret Meyer (2023)
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That meant that I could choose any I wished. Not that it could be better than my real name, but it was interesting to think what I would call myself. The problem was that once you had a name, even if it was the most terrible one in the world, it belonged to you. And often it was the first thing that people would know about you. So to try and unstick yourself from whatever it was was far more difficult than it sounded.
Atlas: The Story of Pa Salt by Lucinda Riley and Harry Whittaker (2023)
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Favourite book read in July:
Wonder Cruise
Authors read for the first time in July:
Ursula Bloom, Margaret Meyer, Harry Whittaker
Places visited in my July reading:
Fictional world of Fionavar, England, Italy, Malta, France, Germany, Norway, Siberia
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Reading notes: I only managed to read another five books from my 20 Books of Summer list this month, but one of them (Atlas) was so long it felt like the equivalent of two normal sized books! I’ll see how many more I can read from my list in August but I think 15 is a more realistic target now than all 20.
What have you been reading in July? Do you have any plans for August?












