My reviews of other books in Mick Herron's Slough House series can be found on this blog:
- Slow Horses (2010)
About books of all kinds - random musings by Elizabeth Robinson
Retired lawyer Sybil Van Antwerp lives alone in Arnold, Maryland. There is routine to the septuagenarian's life. She reads, keeps her house by the river tidy, but mostly she sits at her desk with a mug of Irish breakfast tea and writes letters. Occasionally she will send an email, but Sybil prefers to write in cursive longhand and send the letters by post.
Sybil writes to authors like Joan Didion, Ann Patchett and Larry McMurtry, telling them about her admiration for their books. She writes to her beloved brother, Felix now living in France with his husband. She writes to her daughter Fiona, a career-driven mother living in London, and to her son Bruce who lives near enough that he could visit more often. She writes to a child of a colleague, the local Garden Club, her neighbour, the editors of a newspaper and a company help desk. Sybil is also writing a long, unsent letter to another person in which she reveals some of her most painful memories and deepest fears.Virginia Evans' delightful debut The Correspondent (2025) is an epistolary novel, told in letters. Through the letters she writes and receives, we learn about Sybil and the secrets she holds, the regrets she has, and the belonging she desires.
Sybil is a remarkable character you cannot help feeling affection for. Externally she presents as strong-willed and cold, but underneath she is vulnerable and needs to make peace with her past. Evans has lovingly crafted Sybil and tenderly helps her to know and possibly forgive herself.
The novel is engrossing and covers some deep themes - family, friendship, loss, aging, regret, companionship. I loved how it shined a light on the lost art of letter writing. In a world of social media, instant messaging and AI, the art of a handwritten letter has disappeared. I cannot even remember the last time I wrote or received a handwritten letter, yet I have fond memories of sending aerograms and cards in the time before the internet. If I could, I would love to write to Sybil (she would be an excellent pen pal) and exchange book recommendations with her.
I highly recommend this unique novel. While it is only January, I have a feeling this will be among my top books for the year. I will be thinking about The Correspondent for a long time to come.
Agatha Christie's The Body in the Library (1942) begins with a murder. The body of a young woman is found lying on the hearth rug the library of Gossington Hall, the estate of Colonel and Mrs Bantry, by the maid. She wakes the Bantrys with a shriek.
While the Colonel contacts the local police - Inspector Slack and Colonel Melchett - Mrs Bantry has other ideas. She telephones her dear friend Miss Marple, the amateur sleuth. Marple is able to disarm witnesses with her charming, grandmotherly visage, and piece together a mystery with her fine intellect and quick wit. The police know Miss Marple and are keen to hear her perspective.The detectives need to identify this woman, who is unknown to the Bantry household. Their investigation takes them to the Majestic Hotel in Danemouth where an invalid guest, Conway Jefferson, has reported an 18 year old dancer, Ruby Keene, missing. She was onstage at 10pm, and seen dancing with a man at 11pm, but did not return for her midnight set. her cousin Josie, who recommended Ruby for the hotel job, confirms the identity of the body.
Suddenly there are a lot of potential suspects and when a second body is found, things become more complicated. There are many threads to pull in the investigation, revealing bitter rivalries, secret relationships and financial incentives among the many suspects.
Miss Marple attends police interviews and notices things that others don't. She sees the state of someone's fingernails, the sideways glances another gives, and can tell if a person is lying. Marple figures everything out long before the police, and helps to solve both murders.
This is the second Miss Marple book, preceded by The Murder at the Vicarage (1930), and I enjoyed her as a character, even though she was in the background for much of the story. While Miss Marple worked alongside the police, she did not dominate or show them to be incompetent. Rather she partnered with them and helped them with the investigation.
The Body in the Library is a delightful novel, brimming with humour. Christie is clearly having a great deal of fun telling this tale.
I have had this book for a very long time, but had never read it. I recently stumbled across the "Read Christie" challenge, run by Agatha Christie Ltd (the company established by the author which owns the rights to her works). The 2026 challenge, 'Biggest, Best, Beloved' has selected twelve titles for a monthly read along. The Body in the Library has been given the category of 'Best Opening' and it certainly starts lives up to that description. I don't know if I will pursue the full Read Christie challenge this year, but I might give it a go. The Agatha Christie books I have previously enjoyed have generally been quick reads.
My reviews of other Christie novels are available on this blog:
On a small island in Scotland's Outer Hebrides a shocking crime occurred in an otherwise peaceful crofter community in July 1857. Angus MacPhee, a troubled and troublesome man, brutally murdered his parents and aunt, then took off fearing capture. Locals formed a hunting party and found him, taking him to Inverness for trial. MacPhee's siblings are left to pick up the pieces.
Graeme Macrae Burnet has taken this true crime story and composed a novella, Benbecula (2025), narrated by MacPhee's brother Malcolm. Told retrospectively, Angus first appears to be a lazy man in a household which tolerates his weirdness. His father is disinterested, his mother is only focussed on the hearth fire at the croft, and his siblings are busy working to bring in sea ware to make a small living off selling kelp. Angus smokes his pipe and pleasures himself, without lifting a finger to help. His sibling do their best to avoid him.If you a senior leader, facilitator or board chair, Larry Dressler's Standing in the Fire (2018) is definitely worth a read. In this short book, Dressler explores what to do if a meeting goes off the rails, participants are polarised, or you find yourself in the middle of a fiery situation. The book is subtitled 'Leading high-heat meetings with clarity, calm, and courage' - and addresses how to do just that.
In my career I have had to have many difficult conversations, participated in intense board meetings, mediated grievances, and managed challenging group dynamics. Despite my experience, every so often a curve ball is thrown and upon reflection I wonder what I could have done differently to take the heat out of a situation or responded more effectively when I was the target of other's emotions.Business books often have models - a pyramid or Venn diagram which purports to solve all your woes. Thankfully, Dressler doesn't really do that. Instead he focusses on practical tips for managing group dynamics.
He begins with an analogy of fire and how in groups a fire can be destructive or productive. Heat can escalate in a group environment and degrade into aggression, personal attacks, misinformation and rumour. Conversely, fire can serve groups by bringing passions to the surface, illuminating issues, clearing the air, and allowing creativity to flourish.
I like his depiction of leaders as fire tenders - 'people who can stand in the face of incendiary conflicts and perplexing challenges and help others hold the tensions, emotions and uncertainties long enough to arrive at new insights and common ground' (p25). In order to master this skill, we have to look inward at how we react and adapt to situations. We need to know our own triggers and what we can do to tend our own fires.
Dressler shows six ways of standing in fire by being present, self-aware, open, empathetic, ready for the unexpected and knowing what you stand for. He gives examples from his work and interviews with business leaders to showcase different skills, provides reflect questions to provoke introspection and homework for those who want to develop their skills.
Not all of his tips will work for everyone. Indeed, there were many where I thought I am never going to do that. But there was much that resonated for me.
Standing in the Fire is a quick read, but a book I can see myself go back to overtime to hone these important skills.
Day's End (2022) is the fourth novel in Garry Disher's Hirsch crime series and his best to date.
Paul Hirschhausen (Hirsch) has been stationed at the single-officer police station in Tiverton, South Australia for three years now and has gradually become part of the community. He covers a huge rural area, and does the rounds twice a week to check in on locals and providing a visible police presence. The pandemic has reached the town, bringing with it division and isolation.A Belgian visitor, Janne Van Sant, is in town looking for her son. He was a backpacker working on a rural property before he allegedly took off to Queensland with a girl. A body has been found in a smouldering suitcase, but it is not Van Sant's son. On top of this, some residence have been the victims of online scams, including Hirsch's partner Wendy. Up in the more populated Redruth, his colleagues are dealing with racist graffiti, druggies and other crime.
There is a lot going on in Day's End and Disher handles it all brilliantly. I really appreciated the way he depicted the COVID lockdown impact on the regional area and the challenges young people face in a town which gives them little to do.
Disher is such a great crime writer. He is an expert with pacing and uses short chapters which always leave the reader wanting more. As such, I was easily able to finish this 400 page book in two days. You really get feel for the landscape here, and Van Sant, as a foreigner in this strange land, comments that places are named for ill-adventure - Mischance Creek, Desolation Hill etc.
I was fortunate to receive book five in this series, Mischance Creek (2025), for Christmas so will be returning to Hirsch's world before long.
My reading year begins with a review of the stack of books on my 'To Be Read' pile to see which ones I really want to read and which can be shelved a little longer. I have also recently done a major clean up and cull of my library and found many forgotten gems. So I have the following prioritised for 2026:
For the past few years I have consistently been able to read at least 30 books a year. In 2025 I exceed this, reading 45. For 2026, I will aim for 40 books! I will continue to explore new authors, genres and subject matters, however I am also enjoying my Box Sets plan to read the back catalogues of authors I admire. I also need to get cracking on my Fifty/Five list of what I planned to read before the end of 2028 as I have not done very well so far.
I read a lot in 2025! My reading goal for 2025 was 35 books, which I surpassed reading 45 titles this year - over 15,500 pages! When planning for 2025, I had a stack of books on my to-be-read pile, and managed to read only a handful before I got distracted, as I always do, by other titles.
So here's what I read in 2025:Jane Harper is known for writing gripping crime novels in which information is drip-fed to the reader. Her novels portray different aspects of the Australian landscape - outback towns, sleepy coastal hamlets, dense forests. Best known for her debut, The Dry (2016), the first in a trilogy featuring Federal Police investigator Aaron Falk, her books have been adapted in to feature films and a Netflix series.
Harper's latest novel is Last One Out (2025) is set in the fictional town of Carralon Ridge, a small town in rural New South Wales that has been hollowed out over time by the Lentzer mining company which has bought up properties to expand operations. The buy outs have caused tension within the town between those who will fight to remain in their homes and those who have 'sold out' and sought to leave the town behind. The dusty main street is full of boarded up buildings and the pub opens infrequently. Those who stayed live with the distant thrum of the mine and the occasional heavy vehicle rattling past their doors.Rowena Crowley moved to the Ridge over twenty years ago, married a local man Griff, and raised two children - Sam and Della. Ro worked in the small medical practice and enjoyed her life. Five years ago, on her son's 21st birthday, he disappeared. Sam's rental car was found near some abandoned buildings along with his footprints. His absence caused the family to disintegrate with Ro and Della moving to Sydney and Griff staying behind, working for the mining company.
It has been five years since Sam disappeared. Ro has returned to Carralon Ridge for her son's annual memorial service. She also wants answers about what happened to her child. With only a few families remaining, she starts to unravel the events of what happened to her son that day.
Unlike other crime novels, there is no gruesome murder, no police procedural. Last One Out is a novel about loss. The loss of a child, of a home. of a community, of a way of life. The impact of the large mining company looms large over this town, with those who remain in this dusty place grieving for the loss of their friends, family and heritage.
Last One Out is a slowly paced novel which takes a while to get moving. In parts it felt a bit repetitive, as Ro tried to grab on to her memories of Sam's last day, but I understand what Harper was trying to achieve. I liked the depiction of Ro and her relationship with Griff, irrevocably altered by the loss of their son and her moving away. The only thing I struggled with was trying to get my head around the landscape of the town. I have grown used to the maps Chris Hammer includes in his novels and I wish there had been one here.
The Last One Out is rather sombre but well worth a read.
My reviews of other Jane Harper novels are also available on this blog: