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  1. Today
  2. How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You ~ James Taylor
  3. Yesterday
  4. Daphne du Maurier, Flight of the Falcon
  5. Sweet Child of Mine - Guns n Roses
  6. Sweet Dreams - Patsy Cline
  7. whether you like it
  8. Dream Lover ~ Bobby Darin
  9. Last week
  10. Lover (When You're Near Me ) - Peggy lee
  11. It wasn't The Owl and the Pussycat. It was The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes.
  12. Long haired lover from Liverpool - Jimmy Osmond (possibly one of the worst songs ever made, although by all accounts he's a lovely guy).
  13. Long Haired Country Boy - The Charlie Daniels Band
  14. saying am taking this
  15. without so much as
  16. I Vow To Thee, My Country ~ Charlotte Church
  17. There are Rivers in the sky by Elif Shafak. Turkish novel about Assyrian empire- cuneiform tablets, etc- sprad from Iraq to London to Iraq. Starts excellent but DNF cos it got very teite with twee dialogue. 3/5 max.
  18. belong to other women
  19. A Country Boy Can Survive - Hank Williams, Jr.
  20. Club Country - The Associates
  21. I read 25 books in 2025, rather appropriately. Here's to 2026! Murder in York by J R Ellis 7/10
  22. Five Windows by D.E. Stevenson
  23. Going Up Country ~ Canned Heat
  24. Thank God I'm a Country Boy - John Denver
  25. Moonstone, Laura Purcell
  26. A Haunting in the Arctic by C J Cooke “In the mirror opposite, she could see it—her foot was no longer human, but the fin of a cetacean, dark and slick as ink, bringing fresh revulsion every time she looked at it.” This is more horror than historical fiction and is very definitely a ghost story. There are three separate storylines. The first is in 1901 and is on a whaling ship out of Dundee called the Ormen. The narrator is Nicky, a woman who has been abducted and is on the ship against her will. Her story unfolds as the novel progresses. Dominique is in the present and is exploring the wreck of the Ormen, which is on the shoreline in Iceland, near an abandoned whaling station: she is joined by three others who have arrived independent of Dominique with similar intent. It soon becomes clear that no one is quite who they seem to be, but that’s part of the gothic nature of the plot. In terms of folklore, what is pertinent is the “selkie wife”. This myth is common in Irish and Scottish folklore and involves women who become seals and vice versa. It plays a part in this novel as well. None of the characters are particularly likeable (apart perhaps from Nicky) and the there are plenty of twists towards the end. Some are clearly guessable and by the end when I understood what was going on, it all seemed a bit pointless. The violence is brutal and this is not for the squeamish, but it’s a clever reworking of the folklore. So I have mixed feelings. 6 and a half out of 10 Starting Oaklore by Jules Acton
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