Decades: Compiling The Ultimate Library with Donna Morfett
Decades took a snooze last weekend as I was snoozing after a busy long-weekend at Bloody Scotland up in Stirling. The festival remains the absolute high point of my reading year and once again I had an absolute blast meeting old friends, making new friends and listening with rapt attention to the stories and anecdotes of so many wonderful authors.
But the important matter of filling the shelves of my Decades Library cannot be ignored for too long and it is with great pleasure I welcome a new guest curator to Grab This Book. Before I hand over the controls to Donna I’d best explain a little more about my Decades Library and the rules I set all my guest curators…
Back in 2021 I pondered the dilemma a new librarian may face if they were presented with an empty libarary and given carte blanche to add absolutely any books to the library shelves. Where would you start? Which books would you choose? How could you be sure the books you were picking would be loved by readers? Realising I could not answer this question alone I invited guests to join me and get them to tell me which books they would add to my library shelves. I wanted the Ulitmate Library, the best, the most loved and the gems which my guests have read down the years.
To ensure a broad selection of titles I asked each of my guests to follow just two rules when making their nominations for books to add to my Decades Library:
1 – Choose Any Five Books
2 – You May Only Choose One Book Per Decade From Five Consecutive Decades
Easy – five books from any fifty year publication span.
This week it is my pleasure to welcome Donna Morfett to my blog. Donna has made five terrific recommendations and she has kept things as up-to-date as my rules permit by choosing a book which was published just two years ago!
Time for me to stop milking my part and pass you into the care of Donna…
Born and raised in a small Town in Bedfordshire.
I have loved reading as long as I was able to understand the words written on the page, and the love has remained. Now I use it as a way to help cope with poor mental health.
As with many people across the world, the pandemic left us with lots of time, and twiddling thumbs. As well as trying to complete a degree in Forensic Science at the time, I thought i’d try and write a book!
I took part in NaNoWriMo, in November 2021, and wrote my first full length novel, The Disappearance of Peter Markham. I finished it in June 23 and it was picked up by Rampart Books in Dec 23. Then there is Cassie, which came joint second in a recent short story competition. When entered, they were given covers and proper editing, so I thought, why not release it, and raise some money for charity. So thats how Cassie came to be.
My debut novel The Disappearance of Peter Markham was released by Rampart books on May 23rd 2024. Its the most exciting experience, releasing your first book. If you want to write. Do It!! The follow up is well underway so keep an eye on my socials for news on that.
If you’d like to get in touch or follow me on social media, then please do so here:
FACEBOOK Donnas Interviews Reviews and Giveaways
X @lilmissmorfett
THREADS/INSTA @donnasbookreviewsandinterviews
TikTok @donnamorfett
DECADES
Secret Diary of Adrian Mole – Sue Townsend
Although I was born in the 80s and I probably didn’t read this until the early 90s, everyone loved these that I recall. They were relatable in some way and hilarious, maybe easing some of our own teenage angst.
Harry Potter and the Philosophers Stone – J.K Rowling
I didn’t read the first Harry Potter until i went to Uni for the first time at 18. I was hooked and I fell in love with the characters and the world created. One of the few series that ive reread multiple times. Its my fall back to get out of rare reading slumps. It was tough to choose between this and The Secret History by Donna Tartt, but the impact this book had long term is greater so edges it.
The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruis Zafon
This book is stunning, beautiful, mysterious, brilliant. Set in Barcelona in 1945, it features the Cemetry of Forgotton books. I mean how can that not pique your interest. It follows a young boy that picks a book everyone is interested in and became a series. Sadly Carlos Ruis Zafon passed away but this lives on long in my memory and I recommend it to everyone.
Abattoir of Dreams – Mark Tilbury
I credit this book at the starting point to changing my life. I read it, loved it, raved about it on social media, received my first ever signed book. From there my life as a blogger began and everything that followed came from that one point. The story is dark, brutal at times, but utterly brilliant. I have a tattoo of the central image of the original cover.
Lessons in Chemistry – Bonnie Garmus
This was one of those books that was everywhere and one friend whose judgement I trust raved about it, so I read it. It blew me away. As a female fighting a still male dominated society, to read about someone like Elizabeth who was unafraid to just be herself and do what she did because she genuinely couldn’t understand why she wasn’t allowed was refreshing and wonderful. There was a brilliantly thrown in shock early on as well.
A huge thank you to Donna for five terrific recommendations. All the books are being added to my Decades Library and the “newest” book to join the Decades collection remains a novel from 2022…as we get further into this decade will there be a new contender emerging from the ranks? There are so many wonderful books out there I am sure it will just be a matter of time.
Don’t miss Donna’s debut: The Disappearance of Peter Markham
DECADES WILL RETURN