
Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Please check out her website for more TTT topics!

This week’s topic is:
Books With Occupations in the Title



- Maid for Each Other by. Lynn Painter – a maid.
- The Knight and the Moth by. Rachel Gillig – a Knight is kind of a job?
- Assistant to the Villain by. Hannah Nicole Maehrer – an assistant is a job!



- Heartless Hunter by. Kristen Ciccarelli – a hunter can be a job!
- A Legend in the Baking by. Jamie Wesley – a baker is an occupation.
- Happy Medium by. Sarah Adler – a medium is an occupation and also in the book cover is a farmer which is also an occupation.



- Battle of the Bookstores by. Ali Brady – not in the title, but there are bookshop owners in this book.
- The Undertaking of Hart and Mercy by. Megan Bannen – an undertaker is definitely a job.
- The Housemaid by. Freida McFadden – another maid.

The Last Fashion House in Paris by. Renee Ryan – seamstresses.

What’s on your TTT?

Find me here: Instagram (bookstagram📚) | TikTok | Etsy | youtube
July 1: Freebie/Throwback (Come up with a topic you’d like to do or go back and do an old topic you missed or just want to do again!)
July 8: Books I’d Like to Re-read (Share either your favorite books that you enjoy re-reading or books that you’d like to read again!) (Submitted by Becky @ Becky’s Book Blog)July 15: Books with Honorifics in the Title (“…an honorific is a form of address conveying esteem, courtesy or respect. These can be titles prefixing a person’s name, e.g.: Mr., Mrs., Miss, Ms., Mx., Sir, Dame, Dr., Cllr, Lady, or Lord, or other titles or positions that can appear as a form of address without the person’s name, as in Mr. President, General, Captain, Father, Doctor, or Earl.” For more info, click here.) (Submitted by Joanne @ Portobello Book Blog)July 22: Books Set in/Take Place During X (Pick a place, time, era, etc. Examples: Books set in Europe/Italy/Australia/Chicago, books set in Regency England, books that take place during the 1900s, books set in imaginary worlds/post-apocalyptic/dystopian worlds, books set on the ocean, books set it castles, books that take place during WW2, etc.)July 29: Beach/Beachy Reads (Share books you’d take to the beach OR books that take place at the beach.)September 9: Villains (favorite, best, worst, lovable, creepiest, most evil, etc.)
August 5: Genre freebie (Pick any genre you’d like and build a list around it. You can even narrow the topic if you’d like, such as: thrillers with unreliable narrators, fantasy romance with fae characters, or historical romance with suspense elements.)
August 12: Books Guaranteed to Put an End to Your Book Slump (Which books would you recommend to someone (it’s me, I’m someone) dealing with the dreaded book slump? No book is grabbing their attention or making them excited to sit down and read and they are suffering for it.)
August 19: Books with a High Page Count (Share those doorstop books!)
August 26: Non-bookish Freebie (The sky is the limit here. Make a top ten list on any topic of your choosing, bookish or not!)
September 2: Books With Occupations in the Title (Submitted by Hopewell’s Public Library of Life)
September 16: Literary/Bookish Candles I’d Make (Pick a book and assign it a fragrance or fragrance combo that would make a nice candle.) (Submitted by Heather @ The Frozen Library)
September 23: Books on My Fall 2025 to-Read List
September 30: Book Covers that Give off Fall Vibes (Or, if you’re not a cover person, share the books in general that feel like Fall.)


Great selection! I loved The Last Fashion House In Paris.
I enjoyed that one!
The Housemaid!!! I’m actually listening to it today, haha! So, I’ll give myself a break on that one. Great job!
I still need to read it!
Great picks! I had a few of these on my post this week too 🙂
Undertaking absolutely works!