
Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl
This is the time of year when Toronto is so hot and humid that I generally get a lot of reading done, from new releases to classics to backlist titles that I meant to read a year or two ago but never got around to it.
I don’t know about all of you, but I sure appreciate having books to fall back on as entertainment options while I wait for cooler days ahead.
Here are five backlist books I loved and five more I hope to maybe get started on over the next several weeks of summer.
The Backlist Books I Loved:

1. A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller
Genre: Science Fiction, Post-apocalyptic
What It’s About: Cloistered monks who rebuilt society after a devastating nuclear war.

2. The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters
Genre: Historical Fiction, Gothic
What It’s About: An English physician who befriends a formerly-wealthy family in the mid-to-late 1940s. The family lives in a crumbling mansion that may be haunted.

3. The Annals of a Country Doctor by Carl Matlock, MD
Genre: Memoir, Medicine
What It’s About: The funny, touching, and sometimes bittersweet memories of a rural medicine physician in the 1970s.

4. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
Genre: Fiction
What It’s About: Race, loneliness, and a young girl coming of age.

5. Dracula by Bram Stoker
Genre: Science Fiction, Horror
What It’s About: An arrogant man named Jonathan who ignored countless warnings and travelled deep into Transylvania to help Count Dracula purchase a house. What Jonathan didn’t know was that Dracula was a vampire.
The Backlist Books I Hope I Will Love:

1. Hey, Hun: Sales, Sisterhood, Supremacy, and the Other Lies Behind Multilevel Marketing by Emily Lynn Paulson
Genre: Nonfiction
What It’s About: How multi-level marketing schemes deceive their customers.

2. Piñata by Leopoldo Gout
Genre: Fantasy, Horror
What It’s About: A modern-day retelling of a classic piece of traditional Mexican lore.

3. After Sappho by Selby Wynn Schwartz
Genre: Historical, LGBTQ+
What It’s About: The lives of queer women at various points in history.

4. This Is Not My Home by Vivienne Chang
Genre: Children’s (picture book)
What It’s About: The difficulties of moving to a new area and making new friends.

5. Meet Me in Mumbai by Sabina Khan
Genre: Young Adult
What It’s About: The main character’s transracial adoption, queer family, and coming of age experiences.

Professor
My second answer involves a problem that many writers and publishers have that I sorely wish I could help to solve for them.
When Jana released the summer topics for Top Ten Tuesday, she suggested we include reasons why we didn’t finish the books in this week’s list if we can do so kindly.




While doing research for this post, I stumbled across a fact that I never would have guessed is true.
There’s nothing like a compelling title to grab my attention and make me yearn to see if the blurb is just as good.
Here’s a photo of me from last autumn so you can see what I typically wear. Jeans, yoga pants, and subtle shirts that generally don’t have any writing, logos, or obvious designs are what fill up my wardrobe for the most part.
Those of you who have followed me for a while might remember how fascinated I am by Neanderthals, prehistory, hunter gatherers, anthropology, archeology, other extinct hominid species, and similar topics.
I stay cool during heat waves by:
This week’s original theme was “Book Covers In the Colors of My Country’s Flag.”
I know this week’s prompt only asked for one answer, but I’m going to give four because I couldn’t narrow them down any more and, just like I do with books, I also jump around between musical genres.