I am reading "Unbelievers An Emotional History of Doubt" by Alec Ryrie, Prof of Divinity and like Tiffy a licenced CoE reader.
Knowing God by J. I. Packer (a classic and an absolute treasure) Karl Barth's commentary on the Epistle to the Romans John Stott's The Cross of Christ
https://www.amazon.com.au/s?k=Elephant,+Camel+(and+tea)&rh=n:2496751051&_encoding=UTF8 The book I am reading at the moment is Elephant, Camel (and tea) by Christine J Matthews and I. E. Petrie. I am finding it quite delightful, and a springboard for much thinking. It is in a sense Unsystematic Theology, in the sense of the Parish Clerk who constantly finds his work interrupted, and then on reflection realise that the interruptions were the work. It is not a work of classical Anglicanism so don't expect that here, however it is a great read, and I wholeheartedly recommend it. Our region is in a Covid19 lockdown at the moment, so this has been a fabulous piece of sunshine.
Patristic Universalism by David Burnfield https://www.amazon.com/Patristic-Universalism-David-Burnfield-ebook/dp/B07FBLNPWH
Ecology - A very short introduction by Jaboury Ghazoul - Oxford Interesting, helpful, and non-polemical
Reading a historical fiction set in the middle ages, "The Accursed Kings" by Maurice Druon. It was the direct inspiration for the Game of Thrones, and presents a hair-raising view of the middle ages quite at odds with the pasteurized iddylicism of some Roman Catholic trads.
Saving My Assassin, by Virginia Prodan. It is a first-person account of Christians suffering and courageously serving God while under severe persecution in Communist Romania.