Did you enjoy the latest episode of RTÉ's new book show with a difference, Page Turners? If you missed it, you catch catch up here, via RTÉ Player.

Find out more about all the titles featured in this week's episode below - there's also a link to order a copy of each book from your local library.

NORA - NUALA O'CONNOR

When young Nora Barnacle met James Joyce, there was an instant attraction. Little did she know that this meeting and attraction would lead to an extraordinary life ahead, one that spans a European adventure, two children and the greatest work of literature of the modern age.

A captivating bio-fiction of a passionate, strong, and loyal woman whose story deserves to be told, author Nuala O'Connor does this authentically in a book that reads like a love letter to Irish literature's greatest muse.

'I did not know that it would be that sexual, though' - Natalia from the Fiction and Coffee book club in Dublin.

Order a copy of Nora from your local library here.

LET THEM LIE - FLORENCE GILLAN

When Aoife, returns to her family home in Sligo to attend her father's anniversary mass. she discovers a secret that could rip her family apart...

Let Them Lie is the debut novel by Irish writer Florence Gillan. A dark and gripping mystery set in the West of Ireland, one that will leave you asking 'What would I do with that secret?’

‘I couldn’t put it down and it’s the first thriller in a long time where I really enjoyed it’ - Emma from the Forge book club in Donegal.

Order a copy of Let Them Lie from your local library here.

THE LAST WHITE MAN - MOHSIN HAMID

The Last White Man tells the tale of a white man, Anders, who wakes up one day dark-skinned, and his whole world begins to totally change...

Mohsin Hamid's previous works have earned him a Man Booker Prize nomination - in this short novel, he explores race and identity in a unique and thought-provoking way.

'This is a brilliant literary device’ - Theresa from Tertulia Book Club, Westport Co. Mayo.

Order a copy of The Last White Man from your local library here.

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - HARPER LEE

To Kill a Mockingbird is Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize winning novel set in America’s Depression-era South. The twentieth century classic has been a favourite on the secondary school curriculum for years and recently celebrated its 60th Anniversary.

The book is a coming-of-age tale based around lead character Scout, one that tackles tough subjects of race and injustice through the eyes of a child. Featuring some of the most famous literary characters of the Twentieth Century (Boo Radley, Atticus Finch) it’s a gripping tale that all of our book clubs really enjoyed.

'It’s rightfully a classic and I think it holds us really well - if you read it recently, or if you read it a long time ago, re-read it’. - Máire from the Camán book club in North Cork.

Order a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird from your local library here.

THE OPTICIAN OF LAMPEDUSA – EMMA JANE KIRBY

Penned by award-winning BBC journalist, Emma Jane Kirby, this gripping book turns the real-life testimony of Lampedusa's local optician into a book that deeply touched all our club members who read it.

When the optician and his family set out for a day out on his boat, they could never have predicted becoming accidental heroes. Faced with a sinking migrant ship, it becomes a tale about the awakening of human courage and conscience.

'I don’t think I exhaled the whole time I was reading it’ - Maureen from the Forge Book Club in Donegal.

Order a copy of The Optician Of Lampedusa from your local library here.

Page Turners, RTÉ One, Thursdays at 10.15 pm - keep reading RTÉ Culture for your weekly Page Turners updates and reading lists.