Oaklore by Jules Acton

Welcome to Halfman, Halfbook for my stop on the Blog Tour for Oaklore by Jules Acton and published by Greystone Books.

About the Book

What connects Robin Hood, the history of ink, fungi, Shakespeare and sorcery? In Oaklore, Jules Acton, an ambassador for The Woodland Trust, explores the incredibly diverse history of the ‘king of the woods’: from a source of food and shelter to its use in literature as a plot device and muse, its role as an essential ingredient in ink, and in mythology from across the British Isles as a sacred plant and precious resource. Acton’s infectious enthusiasm shines through in chapters that open with excerpts from oak-y poems, as well as tips for connecting with nature – like how to recognize bird songs and help moths and butterflies thrive. Meeting fellow oak-lovers along the way, and trees like Sherwood Forest’s Medusa Oak or the gargantuan Marton Oak in Cheshire, Acton plots an unforgettable journey through the tangled roots of the oak’s story, and that of Britain itself.

About the Author

JULES ACTON – whose surname means ‘oak place’ – can trace her love of nature back to childhood. A former journalist, she has worked for the Woodland Trust, the Wildlife Trusts and WaterAid. She lives near Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire, with her husband, Toby, and rescue dog, Pepe. This is her first book.

My Review

I love being in a woodland, especially in spring and early summer when the sunlight filters through the leaves, dappling the floor with light. Equally good is finding a really old single tree this planet for several of our lifetimes.

Like Acton, I have a particular fondness for oak trees and similar to her too, my surname means oak, coming from the French le Chene. These are long-lived trees; it is said that an oak takes 300 years to grow, 300 years to live and 300 years to die. Though there are a select few that have even outlived this.

This book by Acton is a celebration of these magnificent trees and all the stories and folklore associated with them. She tells of how there are more ancient oaks in the UK (100) than there are in the whole of mainland Europe (85). This is one of the few positives left over from the feudal system that we have lived under for 1000 years or so.

Oaks are capable of supporting up to 2300 different species. They are probably not all on the same tree though! There are purple hairstreaks that live at the top of the canopy, so you have to look very hard to see them. They support a variety of different types of gall wasps, whose homes have been used to make ink for hundreds of years. These are just two of the 1178 different invertebrates that can be found on or in the oak.

If you like lichen, then an oak is the place to look. She has written a whole chapter on these algae and fungi hybrids, and even the Remedy Oak near me in Wimborne gets a mention. Fungi aren’t always funguys though, some of the ones found on oaks can either feed or kill you depending on the one that you pick…

Oaks are pretty resilient, hence why they live for such a long time in the right places. There are diseases out there that can affect them, but they thankfully haven’t suffered in the same way that elms and ash have. They can’t live the length of time that they do without some help and they rely on the whole menagerie of creatures and plants on them to help them survive. Even an oak that has lived 900 years, when it dies can still support a different set of creatures for another century or so.

Don’t think that they are all in good health though. We have really low tree cover compared to mainland Europe (13% versus 30%) and only 7% of the forests and woodlands that we have are in good condition, I found this quite shocking.

I thought that this was a really engaging natural history book. Acton is very enthusiastic about her chosen subject of the oak, but she is keen to point out that she is not an expert. If you are keen to read a natural history book that doesn’t have the personal backstory you may find elsewhere, then this is a good book to start with.

Don’t forget to visit the other blogs on the blog tour

 

Buy this at your local independent bookshop. If you’re not sure where your nearest is then you can find one here

My thanks to Anne Cater from Random Things Tours for the copy of the book to read.

November 2024 Review

I read eleven books last month, lower than normal, but it has kept me on my end-of-year target. No five-star books this month, so I have selected the best four-star from the ones that I read. I thought that I had bought less than normal, but it turns out that I hadn’t…

 

Books Read

North – Seamus Heaney – 4 Stars

Seveneves – Neal Stephenson – 3.5 Stars

The Station – Athos: Treasures and Men – Robert Byron – 3.5 Stars

The Secret Life of the Mountain Hare – Andy Howard – 4 Stars

The Art of The Fellowship of the Ring – Gary Russell – 4 Stars

The Long Unwinding Road: A Journey Through the Heart of Wales – Marc P. Jones – 4 Stars

The Whalebone Theatre – Joanna Quinn – 3.5 Stars

Blue Machine: How The Ocean Shapes Our World – Helen Czerski – 4 Stars

Blue Mind: How Water Makes You Happier, More Connected and Better at What You Do – Wallace J. Nichols – 3.5 Stars

A Cloud a Day – Gavin Pretor-Pinney – 4 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

Bloom: From Food to Fuel, the Epic Story of How Algae Can Save Our World – Ruth Kassinger – 4 Stars

 

Top Genres

Fiction – 33

Travel – 30

Natural History – 14

Poetry – 11

Memoir – 9

Science Fiction – 8

Science – 4

History – 4

Miscellaneous – 4

Humour – 3

 

Top Publishers

Bloomsbury – 7

Eland – 5

Vintage – 5

Picador – 4

Summersdale – 4

Faber & Faber – 4

Canongate – 4

Saraband – 3

Orion – 3

Orbit – 3

 

Review Copies Received

The Company of Owls – Polly Atkin

Oaklore – Jules Acton

An Insect a Day: Bees, Bugs, And Pollinators For Every Day Of The Year – Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton

Three-Quarters Of A Footprint: Travels in South India – Joe Roberts

On This Holy Island: A Modern Pilgrimage Across Britain – Oliver Smith

While the Earth Holds its Breath: Embracing The Winter Season – Helen Moat

 

Library Books Checked Out

The Masquerades of Spring – Ben Aaronovitch

The Ponies At The Edge Of The World: A Story of Hope and Belonging in Shetland – Catherine Munroe

 

Books Bought

Turkiye: Cycling Through a Country’s First Century – Julian Sayarer

The Lost Future of Pepperharrow – Natasha Pulley

Wild Twin – Jeff Young (Signed)

The Secret Life of the Mountain Hare – Andy Howard

The Art of The Fellowship of the Ring – Gary Russell

The Far Land: 200 Years of Murder, Mania and Mutiny in the South Pacific – Brandon Presser

The Naming of the Shrew: A Curious History of Latin Names – John Wright (Signed)

Aeneid Book VI – Virgil, Seamus Heaney (Tr)

Homecoming – Melissa Harrison (Signed)

Walking the Himalayas – Levison Wood (Signed)

C’est La Folie – Michael Wright (Signed)

Celtic Britain – Lloyd Laing

Autumn – Martin Maudsley & Sarah Acton

Coast & Sea – Sarah Welton

A Gleaming Landscape: A Hundred Years of the Guardian’s Country Diary – Martin Wainwright (Ed)

The Marmalade Diaries: The True Story of an Odd Couple – Ben Aitken

Bothy: In Search of Simple Shelter – Kat Hill (Signed)

Erebus – Michael Palin

The Lost Rainforests of Britain – Guy Shrubsole

The Last Grain Race – Eric Newby

Flavours Rosello – Pino Iacaruso (Signed)

Before the Coffee Gets Cold – Toshikazu Kawaguchi, Geoffrey Trousselot (Tr)

 

So are there any from that list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

 

Brazillian Adventure by Peter Flemming

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

It was an inauspicious start, an advert in  the Agony column of The Times. It read:

Exploring and sporting expedition, under experienced guidance, leaving England June, to explore rivers Central Brazil, if possible ascertain fate Captain Fawcett; abundance game, big and small; exceptional fishing; ROOM TWO MORE GUNS; highest references expected and given. – Write Box X, The Times, EC4

He wrote for particulars and after a little consideration, applied and was selected. His main qualifications were his age, 24 and his school, Eton.

They departed and undertook a fairly uneventful trip on a liner to Brazil. They had a telegram asking them not to undertake the search for Fawcett, with the threat of legislation being passed to hinder them. They stopped at Lisbon, Madeira and Tenerife and not having the strongest sea legs, he found the trip to be full of tedium. Nine days later they arrived at Rio as the sun was setting. Officials boards the ship to examine passports where they encounter the mind numbing pedantry of the minor official. They were eventually allowed to depart and readied themselves to depart to San Paulo in the morning.

Reader, they didn’t…

They finally departed after several false starts and lots of procrastination. The guy who was their main contact was Major Pringle. One morning there were two cars there to take them and a lorry had been provided for their baggage. The description of the journey sounded terrifying. Though I am not sure what was worse, the local driver heading towards them at full speed or the bridges they were crossing. It was an alien place, though he noted that the birds seemed familiar and yet utterly different at the same time. They would take lunch at different places on the trip, but invariably it was the same, rice and beans with roast meats.

Their first main stop is in Goyaz. It is a strange place where not much happens and even that happens very slowly. They end up becalmed there for a while and Fleming begins to suspect that their fixer, Major Pringle isn’t as committed to their quest as they had been led to believe. Fleming sets about trying to prove this with a false despatch that he had written for the papers back in the UK and getting Major Pringle to approve it. After another wait, they were finally allowed to proceed into the jungle.

There is a short journey by road again and they finally get to board the boats that will take them into the jungle. The batloa were 30′ clinker boats that leaked lots. They learned to settle into a routine, mostly to relieve the monotony of spending three weeks in a small boat. Fleming is amazed by the birds and wildlife that she sees from the gunwale.

They come across some of the Carajas Indians. Fleming admires certain parts of their features and describes a little of their life, but does note that they are staying with them and he isn’t seeing them in their camp, so his perception of them is skewed a little. He is entranced by the giant otters of the Amazon two of which they capture. They see alligators frequently on the river and in the spirit of the time, shoot a few…

The expedition is left in the lurch when Major Pringle has a change of heart over his commitments to the expedition and quits it to head back downstream in the smallest canoe. They were going to have to go it alone in the jungle searching for traces of Fawcett.

Since the dawn of time (whenever that was) this patch of the earth’s crust had been green and empty; it was green and empty still. Aeons had passed there unregarded. And now here were we, stealing minutes under the nose of eternity, counting our pretty swag in a place where a century was hardly legal tender. In all this there was a comforting sense of the ridiculous.

They decided to split the expedition into two; one half was going to continue on the rive and Flaming would join the land party. They come across another tribe called the Tapirapes. They are as curious about their Western visitors as Fleming’s party is about them. It was as Fleming was trying to get to sleep one night that he realised how futile the drive to find these three men who had disappeared seven years before, was. It wasn’t going to stop him though.

Progressing through the jungle was hard work though. Most of the time it was impenetrable and they could only move after a lot of frenzied macheting. They come across another river and camp and eat well. Another of the party is not well enough to carry on, so he heads back with the Indians who have accompanied them on their journey so far. In the end the jungle won, so they decided that the easiest way to progress was to wade up the river. (As can be seen on the cover of this edition).

They reach a point where they can’t really proceed any further because of the river. An enormous storm is a reminder of the power of nature and they make the sensible decision to turn back. It is a decision that Fleming knows saved their lives.

They return to the mission base and catch up with Major Pringle. He was still angry for various reasons, but not as angry as Fleming was when he found out that Pringle had not forwarded on the missives that he had written for the Times. Pringle hadn’t opened them, but he didn’t trust the contents so he heads off to the British consul, where he hope that his reputation can be kept. Fleming’s part ends up chasing him along the river in another boat with the intent of getting there before him. The race is on…

I thought that this was a really enjoyable travel book. You can tell that Fleming is a child of the British Empire with some of his prejudices, but generally he is sympathetic to the Brazilians, in particularly the Amazon natives. It is a great example of how not to plan an expedition. They took lots of unnecessary risks and were stitched up by their local fixer. All of these things contributed to it nearly becoming as big a disaster as Fawcett’s expedition.

Fleming is a good writer too and this is an engaging travel book with quite a lot of jeopardy! Though how he compares to his brother Ian, I have no idea as I have not read any of his. Another fine addition to the Eland catalogue

December 2024 TBR

My final TBR of 2024. That year has passed in a blur really but somehow I have made it to the end. The end of my 150 book challenge for Good Reads is in sight too as I have just finished my 138th book of 150. Almost there. I know there are more than 12 books below, I tend to complete my challenge and then make a start on the chunkier books that are taking up lots of shelf space on my TBR with the intention of finishing them in January. Is that cheating for annual challenges? I don’t think so. What do you think?  There are a few must-reads this month including Oaklore and The Lost Future of Pepperharrow. Anyway, here they are:

 

Daily & Weekly Books

Nature Writing for Every Day of the Year – Jane McMorland Hunter (Ed)

A Cloud a Day – Gavin Pretor-Pinney

A Year Of Garden Bees & Bugs: 52 Stories Of Intriguing Insects – Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton

 

Blog Tour

Oaklore – Jules Acton

 

Review Books

The Heart Of The Woods – Wyl Menmuir

The Border – A Journey Around Russia: Through North Korea, China, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania, Poland, Latvia, … Finland, Norway and the Northeast Passage – Erika Fatland Tr. Kari Dickson

Prisoners of Geography: Ten Maps That Tell You Everything You Need to Know About Global Politics – Tim Marshall

Prisoners of Geography: The Quiz Book: How Much Do You Really Know About the World? – Tim Marshall

Cornish Horrors: Tales from the Land’s End – Ed. Joan Passey

Hunt for the Shadow Wolf: The Lost History of Wolves in Britain and the Myths and Stories That Surround Them – Derek Gow

While the Earth Holds its Breath: Embracing The Winter Season – Helen Moat

Polar Horrors: Strange Tales from the World’s Ends – Ed. John Miller

Handbook of Mammals of Madagascar – Nick Garbutt

From Utmost East to Utmost West: My Life Of Exploration And Adventure – John Blashford-Snell

 

Library Books

An Irish Atlantic Rainforest: A Personal Journey into the Magic of Rewilding – Eoghan Daltun

Iconicon: A Journey Around The Landmark Buildings Of Contemporary Britain – John Grindrod

 

A Present For Someone Else

The Lost Future of Pepperharrow – Natasha Pulley

(Doesn’t everyone read books before they wrap them up?)

 

Poetry

Foothold – Pam Zinnemann-Hope

 

So, are there any books that you like the look of or have read before? Let me know in the comments below

Wild Wanderings by Phil Gribbon

3 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Some people are born to climb mountains

Phil Gribbon is one of those people. He has a hugely impressive CV; he has over 100 first alpine ascents of mountains in the Arctic, has led expeditions in Greenland, America and Canada; has written for various illustrious publications and was awarded the Polar medal. Somehow he also had time to be a physics professor.

This book is a series of essays of his recollection of climbs and expeditions that he undertook over a number of years. Some of the essays are several pages long and others are just over a page. There are photos in the centre of the book and they have included sketches made by Gribbon throughout the book.

I thought that this was an interesting book. There are moments of exhilaration and awe that he feels as he makes his climbs. But these expeditions can be dangerous and he writes about a couple of tragic events – a reminder that however prepared and experienced that you are, it may not be enough.

His prose is crisp and he writes in a matter-of-fact style, as well as a bone-dry humour and a very healthy respect for the place that he is climbing. If you are looking for a book that is full of superlatives and eloquent prose about the mountains, then this might not be the book for you. Instead, it is recollections of memorable climbs that he has undertaken all over the world.

It is only a small thing, but I wasn’t keen on having the synopsis and who’s who at the beginning of the book in two different sections, I personally would have preferred the intro and context at the beginning of each essay. flipping back and forwards to see who was with him in each was a little tiresome.

That aside, if you have a love of mountains then this should be on your reading list.

Children Of The Volcano by Ros Belford

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

In the Spring of 2023, Ros Belford was back in Salina. A tiny island just off the coast of Sicily. It had been a while since she had been there, but the memories of that time came flooding back fully, when she stood outside the house she lived in with her daughters. The thought of breaking in as she had to do when she had forgotten her key, crosses her mind. She would love to see what the inside is like now and to bring back more memories. She doesn’t. But she does find a stone her daughters had painted of the volcano they could see from the house. She picks that up and walks away

Her earlier memories were from 2004 when her circumstances changed; splitting up from the father of her girls and a paid opportunity to update a guidebook meant that she could take them to Italy, a place she loves so much. The first trip was to Sicily and then on to Favignana. Their arrival in Sicily is an assault on the senses; the noise and the smells, the hot air blowing their hair from the open car window as it hurtles down the motorway to Trapani to catch the hydrofoil to Favignana. They arrive and just need to find somewhere to live.

She finds a room in Villa Antonella. It will do for the short term, but she needs to rent somewhere as the budget will not stretch to a hotel room for the duration. They settle into life on the island and start to get to know people.

Belford finds a suitable and affordable place to rent and moves in one evening after hurriedly buying bedding. Within a few days, it feels like home with toys and clothes strewn about the house. Life begins to feel normal once again, developing routines that fit their life there. They stay for the summer and then another opportunity to update a guidebook for Sicily comes up. When they are on the way over there, her daughter asks what those specs in the distance are. It turns out that they are the Aeolian islands and the memory of a conversation with a food critic surfaces, they loved the island of Salina.

She knew they had found their next place to live.

They travel the island on the bus, watching the raptors hanging in the air, noting the colours in the landscape as they pass. In the distance is the island of Stromboli with smoke rising from its active conical volcano. The bus driver tells them they may be able to see the lava at night.

She meets Emma, an English lady who had moved to the island to marry someone. It is the start of a long friendship. It feels, as the bus driver said, that the island has found them. As they get to know the locals, someone recommends a property to rent. It is a bit of a mess, but the view from the terrace is what sells it to her. Belford knows they will be happy there.

I really liked this book about the tiny islands of Sicily. It brought back happy memories of a holiday we had on the island in 2019. Belford’s writing is evocative, painting a picture of the landscape and the rich tapestry of life on this island. I liked the addition of two essays by her daughters at the end of the book too. They appreciated what their mother had done for them in their formative years and how living there had shaped their own lives for the good. I thought this was well worth reading.

Similar Recommendations
Extra Virgin by Annie Hawes
A Year In Provence by Peter Mayle

Minor Monuments by Ian Malaney

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Family members can be really hard to read. They often deal with some injustice that the author wishes to set the record straight on, or they can be a whimsical recount of a particular episode and the memories and subsequent events that happened. And then you come across memoirs like this one that haven’t been written with a specific aim in mind. They contain and reveal so much about the joy and pain of life, love and family.

The first thing that Malaney did when taking his partner to the family home was to take her to the bog. It is not the smallest room in the house, but the bog that was past his grandparent’s house and over some very wet ground to the sheer wall of peat. It is not the most auspicious start, but it sets the tone of the book. The first chapter is about the sounds he hears when he is down there. Mostly, the sound of the wind, from the gentle breeze that barely can be heard to the howling gales that have come in from the Atlantic.

He begins to record there, taking his inspiration from Richard Skelton and Pat Collins and the way that they use sound in their art. Returning to Ireland after some time away he sees that his grandfather, John Joe is beginning to fade away. He starts to record his grandfather’s voice secretly. They are not high-quality recordings but they are what he will have to remember the sound of his voice.

He thinks that there must have been members of his family in the same spot for at least 200 years, but the written records are a little sketchy. The home he lived in and his grandparent’s house and land became the stamping ground with his brothers and cousins and the neighbour’s kids. It was a place that they could just be. They built huts, made music and became their own people. The family memories also draped over this landscape became part of his personal hinterland.

All of the chapters are like this; a sense of belonging to that place he grew up in regardless of where in the world he happens to be. He has chosen a career that is culturally rewarding, but sadly not financially so. His grandfather is admitted to hospital in Dublin and he is back in the country and gets to see him more often. He notes that he is fading away because of his dementia.

Some of these essays are fragmented, snatched as they float through his memories, and others are heartfelt, more considered pieces that he has taken a long time writing. I found this to be a very moving book. Not only is Maleney a quality writer, but he draws deeply from his emotions to convey all the feelings he has about life as he finds it.

He writes about this little patch of Ireland beautifully too, describing its bleakness in a beautiful, tender way.I found that the way he writes about death is not morbid:

‘Death was the removal of a person from the flow of time’

I had never thought about it in that way before, but it made complete sense.

If you want to read a different type of memoir, that might give you a different outlook on life after, then this is a great book to start with.

October 2024 Review

October is one of those funny months. It is the longest, only by an hour mind, and the darker evenings should mean that I can more read. But this month I didn’t. I only read 10 books in October, but a couple of them,, (and a half) were seriously chunky books. There were the books that I did read:

 

Books Read

Citadel – Kate Mosse – 3 Stars

Still Life in Milford: Poems – Thomas Lynch – 3 Stars

Brazilian Adventure – Peter Fleming – 4 Stars

All My Wild Mothers: A Memoir Of Motherhood, Loss And An Apothecary Garden – Victoria Bennet – 4 Stars

Empordan Scafarlata – Adrià Pujol Cruells Tr. Douglas Suttle – 3 Stars

The Rosewater Redemption – Tade Thompson – 4.5 Stars

Hagstone – Sinéad Gleeson – 3.5 Stars

Island to Island: From Somerset to Seychelles – Sally Mills – 4 Stars

Clear Thinking: Turning Ordinary Moments Into Extraordinary Results – Shane Parrish – 2.5 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

Our Island Stories: Country Walks Through Colonial Britain – Corrine Fowler – 5 Stars

 

Top Genres

Fiction – 32

Travel – 28

Natural History – 13

Poetry – 10

Memoir – 9

Science Fiction – 7

Miscellaneous – 4

History – 4

Food & Drink – 3

Humour – 3

 

Top Publishers

Bloomsbury – 7

Vintage – 5

Picador – 4

Eland – 4

Canongate – 4

Summersdale – 4

Faber & Faber – 3

Jonathan Cape – 3

Orbit – 3

Orion – 3

 

Review Copies Received

Eerie East Anglia: Fearful Tales of Field and Fen – Edward Parnell (Ed)

The Weird Tales of Dorothy K Haynes – Dorothy K. Haynes

The Haunted Trail: Classic Tales of the Rambling Weird – Weird Walk (Ed)

 

Library Books Checked Out

It’s A Gas: The Magnificent And Elusive Elements That Expand Our World – Mark Miodownik

An Irish Atlantic Rainforest: A Personal Journey into the Magic of Rewilding – Eoghan Daltun

Tickbox – David Boyle

Hagstone – Sinéad Gleeson

 

Books Bought

Band on the Bus: Around the World in a Double-Decker – Richard King (Signed)

One Thousand Feasts – Nigel Slater (Signed)

England: A Natural History – John Lewis-Stempel (Signed)

Airplane Mode: Travels in the Ruins of Tourism – Shahnaz Habib

Notebook – Tom Cox (Signed)

Talking to the Neighbours: Conversations in a Country Parish – Ronald Blythe

Lost To The Sea: A Journey Round The Edges Of Britain And Ireland – Lisa Woollett

Back Door to Byzantium: To the Black Sea by the Great Rivers of Europe – Bill & Laurel Cooper

The Life And Times Of The Thunderbolt Kid – Bill Bryson

Dorset Witches – Rodney Legg & Olive Knott

Dorset Ghost Stories – Richard Holland

The Story of a Non-marrying Man and Other Stories – Doris Lessing

The Wisdom of Sheep & Other Animals: Observations from a Family Farm – Rosamud Young

Remainders of the Day: More Diaries from The Bookshop, Wigtown – Shaun Bythell (Signed)

Island Of The Colour Blind And Cycad Island – Oliver Sacks

Wainwright’s TV Walks – Alfred Wainwright

 

So are there any from that list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

November 2024 TBR

The clock changing always feels like a momentous part of each year. Now the nights are darker and the opportunity to stay in to read is welcome. This month’s TBR is shorter than some I have earlier in the year, and feels manageable. I only have one library book on this month’s list; in October I ended up reading two books that others had reserved that weren’t on the original plan!

 

Still Reading

Nature Writing for Every Day of the Year – Jane McMorland Hunter (Ed)

A Cloud a Day – Gavin Pretor-Pinney

A Year Of Garden Bees & Bugs: 52 Stories Of Intriguing Insects – Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton

Seveneves – Neal Stephenson

 

Review Books

The Border – A Journey Around Russia: Through North Korea, China, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania, Poland, Latvia, … Finland, Norway and the Northeast Passage – Erika Fatland & Kari Dickson (Tr)

Prisoners of Geography: Ten Maps That Tell You Everything You Need to Know About Global Politics – Tim Marshall

Prisoners of Geography: The Quiz Book: How Much Do You Really Know About the World? – Tim Marshall

The Station – Athos: Treasures and Men – Robert Byron

Bloom: From Food to Fuel, the Epic Story of How Algae Can Save Our World – Ruth Kassinger

Books Cornish Horrors: Tales from the Land’s End – Joan Passey (Ed)

Blue Mind: How Water Makes You Happier, More Connected and Better at What You Do – Wallace J. Nichols

Hunt for the Shadow Wolf: The Lost History of Wolves in Britain and the Myths and Stories That Surround Them – Derek Gow

The Long Unwinding Road: A Journey Through the Heart of Wales – Marc P. Jones

 

Library Books

Iconicon: A Journey Around The Landmark Buildings Of Contemporary Britain – John Grindrod

 

Poetry

North – Seamus Heaney

The Notebook by Roland Allen

5 out of 5 stars

The Moleskine notebook that I originally drafted this review in, I have been using on and off since 2015 when the first entry was on my birthday that year. It was one of three Star Wars-themed notebooks that I bought in a sale in a bookshop. I have about 30 pages to go to fill it up and then I can pick from one of the many <number redacted> notebooks that I have bought since then…

It wasn’t used that often when I first got it and now it comes everywhere with me. I draft reviews, write lists, make notes, and occasionally doodle and it has become an external part of my brain.

I had never really thought about where this little block of folded paper came from or where it began, but having seen this book was coming out and having read a number of books on stationary before it made me wonder when and where the notebook began. It is a subject that fascinated Roland Allen too and he decided to research and write a book about it.

The introduction starts with the creation of the book that I first wrote this in, the Moleskine. The original was a notebook made by a Parisian bookseller and made famous by Chatwin and Hemmingway and was reinvented. The modern version is now a world-famous brand used by lots of people around the world. I didn’t know this, until I went to Paris in 2024, that there are even Moleskine shops there!

His research has uncovered the first known recordings of these hand little aid memories and how they were first used by Italian merchants for recording sales and ledgers. He talks through the various paper and binding technologies that have been used through the Middle Ages and the different materials used since then.

There are chapters on famous notebook users and the legacy they left behind for us to study. There are chapters on travel writers, artists and sailors and how our European friends used them before bringing them to the UK.

Each chapter is short, engaging and full of fascinating facts. With this, he mixes personal anecdotes and gems that he has come across in his research. It doesn’t feel like an academic tome either, probably because he is a notebook user and diarist himself. If you have a thing about quality stationary, then this will be a perfect book for you.

 

I can also recommend:

Paper: An Elegy by Ian Sanson

The Missing Ink: The Lost Art of Handwriting by Philip Hensher

To The Letter: A Journey Through a Vanishing World by Simon Garfield

Adventures in Stationery: Stories From Your Pencil Case by James Ward

Notebook by Tom Cox

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