My favorite day of the week, Thursday. It’s been a quiet week here, great weather and time to read. What about you? What did you do this week? What are you reading?

Most of Madeline Martin’s novels are set during World War II. I loved The Last Bookshop in London. The Booklover’s Library even had a cameo by one of the characters from The Last Bookshop in London. Now, in The Secret Book Society, Martin takes us back to Victorian England, to 1895, when women could be locked away in asylums at the whim of a husband or relative. The Secret Book Society opens with a message to Clara Chambers, the Countess of Duxbury, that a friend has been taken to an asylum.

I’m reading this book, but I’m not far into it, so here’s the blurb.

You are cordially invited to the Secret Book Society…

London, 1895: Trapped by oppressive marriages and societal expectations, three women receive a mysterious invitation to an afternoon tea at the home of the reclusive Lady Duxbury. Beneath the genteel facade of the gathering lies a secret book club—a sanctuary where they can discover freedom, sisterhood, and the courage to rewrite their stories.

Eleanor Clarke, a devoted mother suffocating under the tyranny of her husband. Rose Wharton, a transplanted American dollar princess struggling to fit the mold of an aristocratic wife. Lavinia Cavendish, an artistic young woman haunted by a dangerous family secret. All are drawn to the enigmatic Lady Duxbury, a thrice-widowed countess whose husbands’ untimely deaths have sparked whispers of murder.

As the women form deep, heartwarming friendships, they uncover secrets about their marriages, their pasts, and the risks they face. Their courage is their only weapon in the oppressive world that has kept them silent, but when secrets are deadly, one misstep could cost them everything.


I’m actually finishing a nonfiction book, and reading two other novels besides this one, including Tim Sullivan’s The Patient. What about you? What are you reading this week?