An opportunity to leave the office for a little while at lunchtime so a trip to my favourite bookshop, and the nearby Oxfam bookstore. Spent a fair while upstairs in my favourite bookshop, but all chatting and no buying today, but did manage to pick up a 1st of 11.22.63 downstairs, which was a result, as it had proved elusive until now in the King collection. Excellent book, excellent story, and enjoyed it immensely a couple of years ago. Then successful with the final missing Galbraith at Oxfam, so now have all seven.
A slow start to 2025 for posting, but certainly not a slow start for reading. More of that later, but this post is a report of Saturday afternoon's excursion along Rochester High Street and some pleasing finds. A separate post will be required for the previous weekend's trip to Hythe and Dymchurch. Along the High Street in the charity shops, in Baggins, and in Shop 104, I was lucky enough to find: The latest Kate Atkinson Jackson Brodie in brand new paperback, in a special independent bookshop edition with sprayed black edges. Yes, I know I was lucky enough to go and get a 'signed' edition (well, stamped due to wrist problems) of the hardback first edition from the author herself, but that's hardly the point. Certain books need to be owned many-times over. Three more Elly Griffiths paperbacks for the collection - two Brighton Mysteries and one Ruth Galloway and, as it turns out, the first Ruth Galloway, which was a bonus. A first printing of Trigger Mortis in paperb...