Yep, it’s been another busy week. I’ve spent more time watching TV and playing games than reading I think! Here are my new books:

Spike: The Virus vs the People – The Inside Story by Jeremy Farrar and Anjana Ahuja is the story of COVID-19 from its earliest days to the height of the pandemic, when decisions had to be made quickly with a lot of uncertainty.
The Partner Track by Helen Wan is about Ingrid, the ‘first’ of her family – first generation Chinese American, first lawyer and soon to be first minority woman to make partner. But an incident threatens the firm’s reputation and Ingrid is shown as an outsider. Is partnership worth discarding her ethics for?
Carbolics by James May is a collection of his DriveTribe articles. It definitely contains nothing about boats; only cars, bikes and shockingly…walking.
How to Fake it in Hollywood by Ava Wilder finds Grey on a mission to save her career by agreeing to a fake love affair with a disgraced Hollywood star. Ethan is grieving and just wants to produce his movie. But could faking it lead to the real thing?
To see other books received/bought this week across the world, drop by the Mailbox Monday blog for links to everyone’s mailbox goodies.
It’s Monday! What are you reading? is hosted by Book Date.
What I read last week:
The Rom Com Agenda by Jayne Denker
What I’m reading at the moment:
Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
What I’ll be reading next:
Don’t know…
Nice looking assortment of books. I’ve been a reading machine since nothing on television is catching my attention. Come see my week here. Happy reading!
How to Fake it in Hollywood looks interesting. I hope you enjoy reading this week!
My It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? post.
Nice book haul. The Partner Track gets my attention, along with Spike. Have a good week and Happy Reading!
This is quite a diverse book haul, enjoy!
Mostly physical books then? I read a mix of e-books and hard copies. Here’s my latest review – from a paperback antho that I have a story in! 😉
http://www.lyndonperrywriter.com/2023/01/review-of-feast-of-fools-anthology.html