Can it really be time to post this already? The last couple weeks of May have been so chilly and rainy, I could hardly believe it when I realized the beginning of June was upon us. Of course, I’ve been planning my summer reading list since winter, as I always do. And it’s an absolute hodgepodge of genres, as it always is. This year it seems like even more of a hodgepodge than usual—but I probably say that every year, too!
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones: The First Forty Years, 1899-1939 by Iain H. Murray
The Lark by E. Nesbit
The Dean’s Watch by Elizabeth Goudge
The Lost Girl of Astor Street by Stephanie Morrill
Indian Country by Dorothy M. Johnson
Love’s Labour’s Lost by William Shakespeare
When Life Was Young at the Old Farm in Maine by C.A. Stephens
Lords of the Land by Matt Braun
Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart
Greenery Street by Dennis Mackail
Redwall by Brian Jacques
Cheerfulness Breaks In by Angela Thirkell
O Pioneers! by Willa Cather
The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk
Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey
Beau Geste by P.C. Wren
Voyage to Somewhere by Sloan Wilson
For the Glory: Eric Liddell’s Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr by Duncan Hamilton
Also as usual, making it up ahead of time meant that I pillaged the list a couple of times when looking for something to read right now—Framley Parsonage by Anthony Trollope and West is West by Eugene Manlove Rhodes were originally on here, but I read them early.
I planned to roll some research reading for Dearest Lieutenant into my summer reading, hence The Caine Mutiny and Voyage to Somewhere. Though that project is on hold at the moment, I left those titles on anyway; I may just push them to the end of the summer when I could be ready to start working on it again (or maybe they’ll provide the impetus to get back to work). A few of these titles depend on my ability to track down a copy—interlibrary loan, here I come again!—and I really hope that other Thirkell readers are right, and Cheerfulness Breaks In marks the beginning of an upswing in the series, because the last few titles were rather disappointing. Based on how much I liked the earlier books, though, I’m willing to give a few more tries.
Have you read any of these books? What’s on your summer reading list?
image: ‘Love Story’ by E. Phillips Fox | Wikimedia Commons