September is nearly gone and I’m still struggling with the reading/ blogging blues that first showed up for me in July. Still, a reading list for Fall 2021 for this week’s Top 10 Tuesday seemed doable — even if I (probably) won’t end up reading through. 🙁
The reading list is tailored for:
► The R.eaders I.mbibing P.eril (RIP) XVI Reading Challenge 2021 hosted @perilreaders on Twitter and Instagram, where you get to try out spooky stuff, at least once a year (in my case), and
► The Treason & Plot #WitchWeek2021 Challenge hosted by Calmgrove and LizzieRoss Writer, where you get to try out books involving gothic mayhem and dark magic.
If these reading challenges interest you, here are a few suggestions!
1 / Wakenhyrst by Michelle Paver
From the blurb: 1906: A large manor house, Wake’s End, sits on the edge of a bleak Fen, just outside the town of Wakenhyrst. It is the home of Edmund Stearn and his family – a historian, scholar and land-owner, he’s an upstanding member of the local community. But all is not well at Wake’s End.
2 / Cuckoo Song by Frances Hardinge
From the blurb: When Triss wakes up after an accident, she knows that something is very wrong. She is insatiably hungry; she keeps waking up with leaves in her hair, and her sister seems terrified of her. When it all gets too much and she starts to cry, her tears are like cobwebs.
3 / The Bride of Newgate by John Dickson Carr
From the blurb: Dick Darwent brooded in a dark cell of Newgate Prison – waiting to be hanged. Lady Caroline Ross, rich, cold and beautiful, prepared a champagne breakfast to celebrate her marriage. How were the fates of these two people intertwined?
4 / Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton
From the blurb: A foundling, an old book of dark fairy tales, a secret garden, an aristocratic family, a love denied, and a mystery. The Forgotten Garden is a captivating, atmospheric and compulsively readable story of the past, secrets, family and memory.
5 / The Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison
From the blurb: As a Witness for the Dead, Celehar can, sometimes, speak to the recently dead: see the last thing they saw, know the last thought they had, experience the last thing they felt. It is his duty … to find the killers of the murdered.
6 / The Ashes of London by Andrew Taylor
From the blurb: London, September 1666. The Great Fire rages through the city, consuming everything in its path… In the aftermath of the fire, a semi-mummified body is discovered in the ashes of St. Paul’s, in a tomb that should have been empty.
7 / The Poison Thread by Laura Purcell
From the blurb: When Dorothea’s charitable work brings her to Oakgate Prison … she meets one of the prisoners, the teenaged seamstress Ruth, she is faced with another strange idea: that it is possible to kill with a needle and thread.
8 / What’s Bred in the Bone by Robertson Davies
From the blurb: From the well-hidden family secret of his childhood to his mysterious encounters with a small-town embalmer, an expert art restorer, a Bavarian countess, and various masters of espionage, the events in Francis Cornish’s life were not always what they seemed.
9 / The Red House Mystery by A.A. Milne
From the blurb: Far from the gentle slopes of the Hundred Acre Wood lies The Red House, the setting for A.A Milne’s only detective story, where secret passages, uninvited guests, a sinister valet and a puzzling murder lay the foundations for a classic crime caper.
10 / The Hollow Kingdom by Kira Jane Buxton
From the blurb: The Secret Life of Pets meets The Walking Dead in this big-hearted, boundlessly beautiful romp through the Apocalypse, where a foul-mouthed crow is humanity’s only chance to survive Seattle’s zombie problem.
So which books are on your Fall 2021 Reading List? Are you participating in the RIP XVI and Treason & Plot Challenges too? What’s been your reading experience for September?
38 replies on “Fall 2021 Reading List”
Ooh, some juicy titles here! The Addison is great, and the Robertson Davies is one I intend to get to when I’ve finished his Salterton Trilogy. But I’ve yet to read Frances Hardinge, despite having The Lie Tree and another title of hers on my shelves.
Thanks for linking to Witch Week! Which reminds me, I need to do some work on that as time’s moving on…
Haha, the witches are coming! But seriously, thanks for hosting the meme. When the prompts (and graphics) are so much fun, reading becomes so much more wonderful. Look forward to all the posts you’re planning!
And thanks from me as well! My September reading has included a couple of Mary Stewart adventure-suspense novels, sci-fi from Philip K Dick, and now one that you recommended: Poul Anderson’s Midsummer Tempest.
Ooh, glad to know Midsummer Tempest is on your reading list! That is such a unique book, and perfect for WitchWeek come to think of it. Thanks for hosting this wonderful meme, this would be the first time I’m participating. 🙂
I hope your reading and blogging blues will go away soon. Whenever I’m in a slump I try re-reading a favorite book. I don’t know if that will work for you but it usually does for me. 🥰
Yes, likewise! I’ve been re-reading Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer like crazy, and now I think I’ve run out…. 😅
Forgotten Garden does sound good!
My post: https://lydiaschoch.com/top-ten-tuesday-books-on-my-fall-2021-to-read-list/
I have some of these on my wish list to read, but read THE ASHES OF LONDON a while back and thoroughly enjoyed it!
Thanks Alex, that sounds promising! I’ve also heard that the books in the series just keep getting better. *cross fingers*
Yes, the series is really an intriguing one, the way Taylor has set the characters up, and gives us a compelling set of murders and mysteries within the historical setting. Hope you enjoy them too.
Great list! All of these look very fitting for the season and I hope you enjoy them all 🙂
Haha, yes. Look forward to some spooky adventures!
These sound so interesting! Great list.
Interesting! I was going to say that’s a Laura Purcell I haven’t read but it sound like exactly like The Corset (which I really loved). I wonder if it got renamed for some marketing reason?
I just hunted that up, I think you’re right!
Cuckoo Song is one that looks really good to me. Fun list!
OMG, how lucky you are! You are going to discover The Forgotten Garden, by Kate Morton. I so so loved that book!!
You have some great choices here. I’m definitely intrigued by some of these titles and most of all the Kate Morton book. The Poison Thread sounds really good too! My blogging slump is due to too much work lately but whatever the reason for yours, I hope you are able to get out of that and find comfort in your reading!
Same here! Work is really going crazy, and some housing issues too. Sigh. It sucks when reading is no longer the reliable crutch it used to be. I hope we’ll both bounce back soon!
Forgotten Garden sounds interesting! Here is our Top Ten Tuesday. Thank you!
A great list! I hope you enjoy reading them all.
I’m hoping to read Hollow Kingdom soon.
Pam https://readbakecreate.com/autumn-2021-tbr-10-books-i-hope-to-read/
Super, let’s see if our reading ends up coinciding!
I love this time of year and the spooky readalongs and events- yay ha. So many of these look PERFECT.
Love that cover for The Forgotten Garden!
Yeah, I am hoping I will manage to read at least *one* of these!
Interesting list, Lex. I think the Witches Week project sounds interesting. And if you don’t finish all the books in time, we don’t get judged here.
I have read The Ashes of London a couple of years ago and found it highly interesting. A great combination of historical novel and crime story. Enjoy.
Thanks for visiting my TTT earlier.
Thanks, Marianne! I think in all of the blogging fever, sometimes I forget that reading and reviewing are not supposed to be a tight schedule, and that it’s OK to go with the flow. 🙂 Good to hear that Ashes of London was a solid read.
Sorry you’re having a reading/blogging blues! Hope it’ll be over soon and you’ll enjoy some nice reads!
Thank you! I really hope so too, it’s gone on pretty long 🙁
Hi Lex! I will probably do Fraterfest with Caffeinated Reviewer again this year. Three of your books might just make my list:
Wakenhyrst
Forgotten garden
The hollow kingdom
Thanks for bringing them under our attention. Yea! Love spooky reading time.
Elza Reads
Ooh, really? Fraterfest sounds excellent (and now I’m going to have to look up what that meme is all about!) I am really looking forward to Forgotten Garden in particular.
I’m going to have to try The Witness for the Dead. Thanks for the introduction!
I’ve heard very good things about it, set in the same world as Goblin Emperor by the same author (and which is also a great underdog book!).
I did not know A.A. Milne wrote a mystery! I’m going to have to look into that one.
Yes, I’ve heard it’s good, and quite short too (right now, that’s a huge plus for me!).
Good luck with your reading plans! I’ve also had trouble sticking to plans lately and just gone with the mood but I’m thinking of putting together a TBR for oct.
I love putting together TBR(s)! Though of course, I end up doing all kinds of mood reading and never stick to TBR plans, haha. Hope October is looking up for you.
I really enjoyed a trilogy by Michelle Paver set in Jamaica and have had my eye on this one, hoping it would get published in the US.
Laura Purcell is another author I’ve had my eye on but have not got around to reading any of her books yet.
I read Ashes of London right before the pandemic. My mother really likes this series but I think I prefer his mysteries.
Haven’t read Purcell’s work before either. But I’ve read superb reviews of Poison Thread, so would like to start there.