As we stepped into Autumn, I found myself seeking out a real mix of genres from magical realism and middlegrade fantasy to contemporary fiction and romance, and I enjoyed them all.

The Beauty of Your Face by Sahar Mustafah
A meandering story that follows Afaf, the middle child of a Palestinian family living in America from her childhood, through adolescence and adulthood. The Beauty of Your Face explores alienation, isolation, assimilation, identity, religion and community. The time line jumps back and forth from Afaf’s formative experiences such as the disappearance of her older sister, adoption of Islam and years of family dysfunction right up to the moment she comes face to face with a racially motivated school shooter.
The Bookshop on the Corner by Jenny Colgan
I often find myself reaching for chick lit or contemporary romance when my own life is in flux and I’m in need of something comforting to read. The Bookshop on the Corner follows Nina, a librarian who finds herself redundant when her library is closed and takes the opportunity moves North to Scotland to open a travelling bookshop. Much like the Christmas Bookshop stories also by Jenny Colgan, I enjoyed the little community that Nina becomes part of as much as the slow burn romance.

Impossible Creatures by Katherine Rundell
A thrilling fantasy adventure following Mal, a girl born on an archipelago full of mythical and fantastic creatures, and Christopher, a boy from our world who finds out that his family are guardians of the crossing to the archipelago. All is not well on the archipelago, as the creatures are dying and the land is being poisoned, and the two children decide to investigate with the help of a smuggler and a scholar they meet along the way. I loved all the different creatures in this story, especially some of the more dark and dangerous beasts. Impossible Creatures was a great adventure that had plenty of humour, lots of thrills and a little bit of sorrow too, looking forward to seeing where the second book in the series takes the story.
Spells for Forgetting by Adrienne Young
I love stories about witches and picked this one up expecting something similar to Practical Magic but it turned out to be more of a twist-filled mystery with a slow burn romance set on a small island. Spells for Forgetting is heavy on mood and atmosphere, and it took a while to get going, but I still enjoyed this story about the inhabitants of a small island community rife with secrets and unsolved mysteries.
If you’ve read any of these, I’d love to know your thoughts. X