Something light and fun... Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz.
I am a sucker for Agatha Christie and similar style whodunnits and the adult books Horowitz has recently written have all been excellent. His book-in-a-book stories are great reading and different.
Superb, and highly recommended. His concluding chapter on forgiveness is jaw dropping impactful. William McRaven is a favorite author, a national treasure, and an inspiratio.
Great read so far - more than 3/4 through. Goodreads says it's 457 pages, but with non-fiction they count all the pages you don't read - index, acknowledgements, notes, bibliography, (kindle - dedication, readers guide). So the last page of the kindle I'm reading is 74 percent.
Tom Holland's Rubicon: The Last Years of the Roman Republic. Also reading David Thomas' Giovanni Maria de Agostini, Wonder of the Century: The Astonishing World Traveler Who Was A Hermit, which is about an Italian Catholic hermit who leaves Italy and travels alone through South and North America before finally being murdered in northern New Mexico during the American Civil War, where legends about his holiness and miraculous powers are still told today. He is also still remembered and commemorated in Argentina. A fascinating story of a one man phenomenon.