22 Jun 2026

Anne of Avonlea (by Lucy Maud Montgomery)

Anne of Avonlea by Lucy Maud Montgomery
(Amazon UK link)
I reread the classic teenage novel ‘Anne of Green Gables’ by LM Montgomery last month, so a couple of days ago I picked up the first sequel, ‘Anne of Avonlea’. I last read it only a few years ago, but I’d forgotten most of the details. As with the previous book, it’s set in Prince Edward Island in Canada in the early part of the 20th century. 

There’s not a whole lot of plot; this book covers the two-year period when Anne, aged sixteen, is working as a teacher at the Avonlea school. Not just a teacher, but THE teacher - the only one in a class of several ages. It seems incredible to me now, over a hundred years after this was published, that someone so young could have so much responsibility.

But although Anne is quite nervous about it, and full of ideals which won’t necessarily help her, she turns out to be an excellent teacher. Most of the children love her, and she wins their respect by listening to them, explaining things they find difficult, and letting them know that she cares. Only one boy is continually disrespectful, sneering that a ‘girl’ can’t be a teacher…

20 Jun 2026

The secret beach (by Veronica Henry)

The secret beach by Veronica Henry
(Amazon UK link)
I’ve liked all the books I’ve read by Veronica Henry. So when I saw her novel ‘The secret beach’ at a church bookstall a few months ago, it was an easy decision to buy it. I’ve just spent the last few days reading it. 

The main protagonist is a woman called Nikki, who is in her early forties. We first meet her in a prologue set twenty years before the main story, where she’s about to meet someone on a secret beach. She is going to say something which they will both find difficult, but we don’t learn what this is until much later in the book.

The main story opens as Nikki finds a house that she loves, not far from where she grew up. It’s near a special beach, and she falls for it as soon as she sees it. It needs a lot of work done, but she’s still surprised to learn that she’s able to buy it without any competition. A lot of the book then follows the gradual transformation of her new home, culminating in a housewarming party.

17 Jun 2026

Shopaholic abroad (by Sophie Kinsella)

Shopaholic abroad by Sophie Kinsella
(Amazon UK link)
I reread Sophie Kinsella’s classic ‘Secret dreamworld of a shopaholic’ last month, and was slightly surprised at how much I enjoyed it. I came late to ‘chick-lit’, and generally don’t like this kind of book. But the writing is excellent, there’s some humour, there’s nothing explicit, and the heroine is oddly likeable.

So in the last couple of days I have re-read the second in the series, ‘Shopaholic abroad’, which I first read at the end of 2010. I remembered that Becky would be travelling to the United States with her boyfriend Luke, but nothing else about it. I knew it would be light reading, but didn’t expect to finish it quite so quickly. It’s compulsive somehow, despite the fact that I did find Becky increasingly frustrating as the book progressed.

At the start of the previous book, Becky paid her debts and determined a budget, and promised her friend Suze that she would not go shopping without discussing her potential purchases. But Becky really does seem to be addicted to shopping, with little idea of how her purchases are adding up. It’s ironic that she has worked for financial advice magazines, and is currently employed by a TV station, answering finance-related questions. She likes the personal touch most, and getting behind the questions to find out what the questioner really wants… but she’s also good at trotting out really very good advice, even though she doesn’t take it herself.

16 Jun 2026

Jesus: safe, tender, extreme (by Adrian Plass)

Jesus, safe, tender, extreme by Adrian Plass
(Amazon UK link)
I regularly read my collection of books by the British Christian writer Adrian Plass. I love his fiction, particularly the humorous ‘diaries’ that made him so well-known in the Christian world. But I also appreciate his non-fiction, more so each time I read a book.

It’s just over ten years since I read ‘Jesus: safe, tender, extreme’ so it was more than time for another reread. I knew that it was going to be interesting, with the author’s personal spin on Jesus, but I hadn’t remembered anything much about the content as such.

The prologue introduces us to Adrian Plass’s mother-in-law who was living in their dining room as he started the book. She had been diagnosed with terminal cancer and wanted to die at home with her family. Clearly she was a lovely, radiant woman and an inspiration to much of what follows in the book.

15 Jun 2026

Second form at Malory Towers (by Enid Blyton)

Second form at Malory Towers by Enid Blyton
(Amazon UK link)
I re-read the first Malory Towers book in Enid Blyton’s series for teenage girls about a month ago, so in the last 24 hours I’ve re-read the second. Apparently I last read ‘Second form at Malory Towers’ as recently as December 2022 but I haven’t reread the rest of the series for considerably longer. So for the sake of continuity I read this book again - and, despite the relatively short time since I last read it, I had forgotten a lot of the detail.

Unlike many school series, Malory Towers dips into its heroine (Darrell Rivers)’s school career at a rate of just once per year. At the start of this book she’s thirteen, and about to go into the second form. School forms back in the 1940s were much more random than they are now; Darrell’s second form is probably equivalent to today’s Year Eight, or thereabouts. Age was only one criteria for being moved up; academic ability was also taken into account. 

So Darrell and her friend Sally have a new teacher - Miss Parker - as their form mistress, and she’s reputed to be rather stricter than Miss Potts. Sally is made head girl of the year, much to Alicia’s dismay. Alicia is usually top of the class, and has been at the school rather longer than Darrell and Sally. But she has quite a harsh character and doesn’t look kindly on anyone who struggles with school, or who has difficulties of any kind.