I've just finished Lauren Beukes' The Shining Girls - good, a grittier read than I normally go for but interesting, not as gripping as I thought it'd be though.
Cecelia Ahern's 100 Names - ok but not as good as some of her others; and
City of Lost Souls, the fifth in the Mortal Instruments series - enjoyed them all, quite teenage style but a nice easy read to shut out the world to.
Aesop Fables, Goodnight moon and The Hungry Caterpillar. These books were very good and I had fun reading them to the nieces and nephews. I especially loved Aesop Fables.
Looking back Josephine Cox
Child of the North " "
Please Daddy No Stuart Howard. Well worh a read.
I've got to read all J Cox books now , their brilliant
Just finished 'the Chaperone' by Laura Moriarty. Some excellent reviews on Amazon and our reading group selection. A fascinating story based on the real-life Louise Brooks ( dancer and actress in the 20s &30s era of prohibition,) but much , much more. I couldn't put it down.
Hilary Mantel - Wolf Hall - very hard going
Stephen Lloyd Jones - The String Diaries - excellent
Dan Brown - Inferno - Don't judge me! (It was pants though)
Wiggins book was mediocre IMHO, Walsh pursued Lance Armstrong for most of LA's career after the cancer because he couldn't and wouldn't believe that such feats were possible without doping. He was villified by colleagues and riders alike but was obviously vindicated in the end.
If you want to know what really happened at US Postal, just how pervasive doping was in the peloton and the narcissisistic, destructive and manipulative character of Lance Armstrong, Hamilton's is THE book to read.
It deservedly won the 2012 William Hill Sports Book of the Year.