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Happy New Year, everyone!

Please note we will be closed tomorrow, Monday 5th January, as we do our annual stock take and staff meeting. From Tuesday, we will be back to our usual hours of 10am to 5:30pm Mondays through Saturdays and noon to 4pm on Sundays.

We’re off to a fairly calm start to the new year with just one event this month on 21st January, on climate change, which we hope many of you will make it out for. Our books groups – there are four of them now – are in full swing, and you can find the list of the dates and books at the bottom of this newsletter. Before that though, we thought you’d like to have a look at our top 20 best sellers for 2025.

Best wishes for 2026 from,
The Five Leaves Booksellers

Five leaves top twenty best sellers of 2025


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1. Lincolnshire Folk Tales Reimagined ed, Rory Waterman and Anna Milon (Five Leaves)
2. Queer Nottingham 1960-1990 by CJ DeBarra (Five Leaves)
3. The House of Wolf by Tony Robinson (Little, Brown)
4. Curious Muswell Hill by Andrew Whitehead (Five Leaves)
5. Curious Crouch End by Andrew Whitehead (Five Leaves)
6. The Invisible Doctrine: the secret world of neo-liberalism by George Monbiot (Penguin)
7. My Story of Nottingham Castle by David Young (self published)
8. Friends of Dorothy by Sandi Toksvig (Little, Brown)
9. The Golden Road: how ancient India transformed the world by William Dalrymple (Bloomsbury)
10. Let the Light Pour In by Lemn Sissay (Canongate)
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11. Meadows Nottingham by Graham Woodward (self published)
12. The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden (Penguin)
13. Butter by Asoko Yuzuki
14. John Clare: the trespasser by John Goodridge and R. Thornton (Five Leaves)
15. Curious Camden Town by Martin Plaut and Andrew Whitehead (Five Leaves)
16. Fragments by Tara Singh (Five Leaves)
17. New Nottingham Journal volume one, ed. by Andrew Thacker (Agamemnon)
18. Some Japanese Ghosts by Lafcadio Hearn(Penguin)
19. Normally Weird and Weirdly Normal, my adventures in neuro diversity by Robin Ince (Macmillan)
20. Muslims Don’t Matter by Sayeeda Warsi (Bridge Street Press)

Upcoming Book Groups

Fiction Book Group


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Thursday, 29th January 7PM, Gliff by Ali Smith 
Thursday, 26th February 7PM, Set My Heart to Five by Simon Stephenson

Non-Fiction Book Group 

Tuesday, 10th February, 7PM, The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon 
Tuesday, 12th May, 7PM, Abolition, Vol. 1 by Angela Y. Davis 

Irish Book Group 

Monday, 26th January 7PM, The Wren, The Wren by Anne Enright 
Tuesday, 24th February 7PM, The Land of Spices by Kate O’Brien

Witchcraft & Paganism Book Club 

Tuesday, 20th January 7PM, Smoke Hole by Martin Shaw 
Tuesday, 17th March 7PM, Magic Maker by Pam Grossman 
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John Lucas

Our friend and colleague John Lucas died a few days ago. John and Five Leaves go back a long way, before the bookshop. Indeed, his book England and Englishness was launched at the old Mushroom Bookshop in 1990 and he was a regular at Lowdham Book Festival.

John was a novelist, the publisher at Shoestring Press (and Byron Press before that), a jazz musician, a poet, a critic, a memoirist, an academic, a social historian, a lifelong socialist and a cricketer. He wrote on all of these subjects and many more.

John’s Five Leaves’ books included The Radical Twenties: writing, politics and culture (1995); Stanley Middleton at 80 (joint editor with David Belbin, 1999); Poetry: the Nottingham collection (editor, 2005); Things To Say (poetry, 2010); Next Year Will Be Better: a memoir of England in the 1950s (2011); A Brief History of Whistling (with Allan Chatburn, 2013). He also wrote introductions to our Mask of Anarchy (Shelley) and Odour of Chrysanthemums (D.H. Lawrence) and appeared in several of our anthologies.

In 2007 we celebrated his seventieth birthday by publishing Speaking English, edited by Andy Croft, which brought together more than a hundred distinguished poets from four continents who knew John.

He was a regular at the bookshop, as a customer, as a speaker, an MC at Shoestring Press launches and as an author in his own right – last October launching his book The Moon Looks on Them All, a set of essays on friends and friendship. Appropriate, as John greatly valued friendship and was a valued friend to so many. More importantly, John was a devoted husband to the artist Pauline Lucas, and father of Ben and Emma. Pauline’s paintings appeared on many of John’s books and on many Shoestring titles. Pauline also wrote a book on the Nottingham artist Evelyn Gibbs, which we published, and the Lucas house is a veritable art gallery. His last publication was a private pamphlet about the art and artists they collected.

John was forthright in his opinions about politics and other matters – he hated our cover for A Brief History of Whistling! – and was always good company. His memory was near photographic and he could quote many writers from memory – especially his beloved Dickens.

I could go on. Those who knew him will be talking about John and thinking of him, those who didn’t know him will now have a flavour of his life.

We will let you know if there’s a memorial meeting.