At the moment, I'm reading:
'Keats', by Andrew Motion, a breeze-block-siized biography of one of my favourite poets, 578 pages of text, plus notes and index. Good, but sometimes I wonder if al the information we're given is really relevant, such as the political situation in his childhood, which we're given axhaustive details of.
'The Diary of a Bookseller', by Shaun Bythell, proprietor of the Book Shop, Wigtown, Scotland's largest second-hand bookshop, in the town which is Scotland's Hay-on-Wye (or maybe Hay is England's Wigtown), both towns having many second-hand bookshops and a literary festival. Very entertaining. Some things, such as the eccentric and irritating customers, haven't changed much since 1936, when Orwell wrote his essay "Bookshop Memories", which Bythell quotes from extensively. When I volunteered in St Albans Oxfam bookshop, we had a bloke in his 50s who came in occasionally, criticised the stock, the layout, and other aspects of the shop, and left again. He occasionally bought books about railways. I suspect he was an aspie.
"The Conscious Mind", by various authors, published by New Scientist. The chapter on free will is interesting: it seems that the recent discovery that brain activity starfts shortly before we make a conscious decision to perform an act doesn't, on its own, disprove free-will, because we have a short period - a small fraction of a second - after the decision becomes conscious during which we can veto the action: what the book calls "free-won't".