What I Read in June 2023
Another new month, and another post looking at what I read last month. I read 10 books in June ranging from children’s classics, to a verse novel to a historical nonfiction title. And, in the month that my own little cat book was released, I hope I can be forgiven that my favourite read was a doggy story – Dianne Wolfer’s Scout and the Rescue Dogs. Here’s the full list:
Books for Kids


It was a lovely surprised to receive this in the mail, having supported a Crowd Funder for it some time ago. A high quality hard cover collection of poetry for younger readers, suitable for individual reading and classroom use. It can be read cover to cover (as I did) but could also be dipped in and out of for one poem at a time. Magisson’s illustrations are delightful.


1. Becoming Mrs Mulberry, by Jackie French (HQ Fiction, 2023). I picked this up on a whim when I saw that Jackie French was the author. Set in the years post World War 1 and exploring the impacts of war on both those who fought or served in other ways, and those wat home, long after the war is over. Agnes, who was studying for a medical degree, has had her studies impacted first by the war and then by a marriage to a wealthy, but shell-shocked, husband. A chance discovery of a traumatised child is at the centre of her gradual realisation of what she wants her new life to look like.
2. Untamed, by Glennon Doyle (Vermilion, 2020). I read this a couple of years ago but, being a huge fan of Glennon’s podcast, I decided o was time to reread. Hard to explain just why this book is so awesome – it is just a book that every woman should read. Perhaps the subtitle – ‘stop pleasing, start living’ is a hint why.
3. The Lost Man, by Jane Harper. Picked this one up in a Little Street library, and read it in a day. Set in remote Australia, as two brothers try to unravel what led their third to a lonely death on their remote property.
4. Women to the Front, by Heather Sheard & Ruth Lee (Ebury Press, 2019). Intriguing nonfiction about the Australian women who served as doctors in WW1. A piece of history I had been interested in, and now am even more fascinated by – but coincidental that I picked this one up before I realised this was also part of Mrs Mulberry (above).