
Good morning everyone today on Two For Tuesday I’m featuring two of my upcoming bookclub reads.
As some of you know I help run the bookclub for Rossiter books in Malvern where I work. It’s great fun (though a little nerve wracking at times) to pick books that I’ve loved for everyone else to enjoy.
This month our book is Days At The Morisaki Bookshop which I’ve been hearing great things about. Then our February book is going to be Three Hours by Rosamund Lupton. I was looking for a thriller in a cold setting and I remember loving this when I read it a few years ago.
Do you belong to a bookclub? What is your bookclub read this month?
Days At The Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa

The Japanese bestseller: a tale of love, new beginnings, and the comfort that can be found between the pages of a good book.
When twenty-five-year-old Takako’s boyfriend reveals he’s marrying someone else, she reluctantly accepts her eccentric uncle Satoru’s offer to live rent-free in the tiny room above his shop.
Hidden in Jimbocho, Tokyo, the Morisaki Bookshop is a booklover’s paradise. On a quiet corner in an old wooden building, the shop is filled with hundreds of second-hand books. It is Satoru’s pride and joy, and he has devoted his life to the bookshop since his wife left him five years earlier.
Hoping to nurse her broken heart in peace, Takako is surprised to encounter new worlds within the stacks of books lining the shop.
And as summer fades to autumn, Satoru and Takako discover they have more in common than they first thought. The Morisaki bookshop has something to teach them both about life, love, and the healing power of books.
Quirky, beautifully written, and movingly profound, Days at the Morisaki Bookshop will appeal to readers of Before The Coffee Gets Cold, The Cat Who Saved Books, and anyone who has had to recover from a broken heart.
Three Hours by Rosamund Lupton

THREE HOURS TO SAVE THE PEOPLE YOU LOVE
In rural Somerset in the middle of a blizzard, the unthinkable happens: a school is under siege.
Pupils and teachers barricade themselves into classrooms, the library, the theatre. The headmaster lies wounded in the library, unable to help his trapped students and staff. Outside, a police psychiatrist must identify the gunmen, while parents gather desperate for news.
In three intense hours, all must find the courage to stand up to evil and save the people they love.






























