Why don't you let us know what you're reading at the moment? If you have any recommendations, send them in. Jot down your current top five.
Here's my own personal bedside table bookstack. As you can see I've found it hard to limit myself to a top 10.

1. South of the River by Blake Morrison (Random House). Totally engrossing read about five characters and their lives in London after Blair's election victory in 1997.
2. Blenheim Orchard by Tim Pears (Bloomsbury). Happy families in north Oxford - until a dad-of-three's life goes off the rails.
3. Isolarion by James Attlee (University of Chicago Press). What life is really like on the Cowley Road, with a little bit of pocket philosophy thrown in.
4. The Steep Approach to Garbadale by Iain Banks (Little, Brown). A welcome return from the author of The Crow Road.
5.Tearing Down the Wall of Sound by Mick Brown (Bloomsbury). Brown landed the last interview with record producer Phil Spector hours before he was accused of killing a woman filmstar at his home. This book is published to coincide with the murder trial.
6. On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan (Jonathan Cape). I loved his last novel Saturday and can't wait to get hold of the new one set in Dorset about a couple of nervous newlyweds.
7. A Piece of my Heart by Peter Robinson. This detective novel about a murder at a rock festival 40 years ago looks intriguing. Now out in paperback.
8. The Oxford Murders by Guillermo Martinez. Thought I would have a read as it is being made into a Hollywood film with Lord of the Rings star Elijah Wood.
9. Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh. A new film of this has also been given the green light. I read 200 pages but then got distracted. Must return to this one to find out how it ends.
10. Sadie the Air Mail Pilot by Kellie Strom. Published by Oxford-based David Fickling, this is a beautifully illustrated kids' picture book about a cat who delivers the mail, whatever the weather.
11. The Damned United by David Peace (Faber). This is a novel about the late Brian Clough and his 44 days at Leeds United. Peace tells the story from Clough's point of view and I couldn't put this down.