Having finished both "Two Wheels Over Catalonia" and "Azincourt" I moved onto "Stay Close" by Harlon somebodyorother, standard detective lit. I then read Private: London by James Patterson, ditto, followed by Home Front by Kristin Hannah. This last one really hit me, it's the story of a woman who had a less than perfect childhood, her parents died a couple of months before her 18th birthday (father drunk crashed the car and killed both himself and his wife). She went to college, joined the army, got married and joined the National Guard. Just after her 41st birthday she gets sent to Afghanistan. The main story is around her relationship with her spouse and her children. There were many times I was in tears reading it, maybe realising that in some small way it mirrored things I had gone through (apart from the going to a war zone and coming home injured, of course).
After that I needed a light read so I am now reading "The Lost Cyclist" by David Herlihy, about a guy from the US who, in the late 1800's set off to tour the world on a safety bicycle. He is last heard of in Turkey, and the story picks up with 2 cyclists setting off to find out what happened.