The Sound Atlas by Michaela Vieser & Isaac Yuen

5 out of 5 stars

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

One of my favourite words is susurrations. This is the word that describes the sound that the wind makes as it rustles the leaves in a tree. The sound is as wonderful as the word.

When we go into a landscape, we need to use all our senses, including our hearing. This book is an exploration of the sound in the landscape. And wind is one of those strange elements. We can hear it and see its effects, but you cannot see the wind itself.

Sounds have been with us since big bang (can you imagine how loud that was?). Though there was nothing living around to hear it back then, the sounds can still be detected as a background white noise. This was discovered by accident by two astronomers in New Jersey.

Humans have made instruments for thousands of years for ritual and (we assume) entertainment purposes, but can a building be an instrument too? In the Vittala Temple in Hampi, India, the pillars holding the structure up are musical. When tapped, they resonate and oscillate, giving off different notes. I would love to hear it one day.

Before that, humans, have used the acoustic properties of caves. Probably for ritual purposes, but we can’t be certain, though. Ancient instruments that have been played in caves in Spain have an extra depth and almost an ethereal element to the sound. It is also speculated that stone circles have the ability to reflect sounds back into the centre of the circle too.
Animals can make a fair amount of noise too. The chirp of cicadas whilst sitting in the balmy heat of a Mediterranean summer is a happy memory. I remember hearing the roar of a lion at Dublin Zoo, and that sound triggered something deep inside my brain; no doubt the fight or flight response left over from an ancestor long gone. Even the pets we still have at home can be noisy in their own way.

Water is capable of making a whole range of sounds. The relaxing sound of a stream in a woodland has a similar effect to the gentle lapping waves by the beach. Add high winds and low pressure to the ocean, though, and the roar of the waves then is a very different sound. Take a walk outside when it has snowed, and you’ll notice how quiet it is. Partly that is because there are fewer cars moving about, but the snow absorbs sounds very well indeed. However, the crack of ice as you are traversing a crevasse is a very different sound, and not really one that you’d want to hear at that moment.

Most of the noise we hear every day is the din that we humans make. And we make a lot of noise; road and other transport noise, sounds from factories and other industry and so on. However, some of the sounds we can make are just beautiful, singing, and the sounds of instruments played by a very talented individual. Other sounds can be more distressing, though, the keening sounds made by mourners, someone in a lot of pain. One of the sounds of my childhood has long gone now, the long base note of a foghorn; it was powerful enough to be heard through fog over a distance of many miles.

One of the loudest noises ever heard on this planet was the volcano of Krakatoa, which was heard around 3000 miles away. Humans have made some of the next loudest noises when they exploded atomic bombs in various parts of the world. Years later these bombs are still making a sound as they trigger the Geiger counters.

In this world of sound there are some people that seek silence. The closest most people can get to total silence is the inside of an anechoic chamber. It is so quiet in there that you will be able to hear the noises that your body makes. It has been known t drive some people to distraction.

You might think that you’d get some peace at the bottom of the ocean too; however, you’d be disappointed. Even 11km down in the Mariana Trench, you’d hear noises from whales, subterranean earthquakes and even the noise from a surface storm will penetrate that far down. Plus, there is the din that we make in the oceans from propellers, undersea explosions and submarine sonars. This noise is incredibly damaging to cetaceans

I thought this was a wonderful book. It is full of fascinating facts about the ocean of sound that surrounds us. If you were to pick one popular science book to read this year then I can highly recommend this one.

An Insect A Day by Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton

4 out of 5 stars

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

The majority of people, do not think about insects most of the time, or if at all. However, there are two moments when you become very aware of these six-legged creatures that we share the planet with. The first is that moment that you are just dozing off to sleep. and you can hear the tiny whine of a mosquito in the bedroom. The second is when you unfurl a picnic blanket and unpack food on a fine summers day and from nowhere the wasps arrive.

These are just two of the one million known insect species. And one million is around 10% of the total number of species that is thought to number around 10 million in total. And we are utterly dependent on them. They clear up the dead, pollinate countless plants, a lot of which we eat and are key to the immense amount of life on the planet.

I am not sure how you even begin to distil the one million known species down to the 366 different type that the authors have chosen for this book, but somehow they have managed to do it. There are insects in the book that are big, bold and beautiful. There are the weird and the wonderful, the mundane and common and a fair number that are a bit disgusting! They have chosen species that have very specific role and that fill a particular niche

The pictures of the selected insects in the book are amazing. My favourites are the butterflies and moths, but I do have a liking for the bigger beetles, such as the stag beetle, rhino beetle and the iridescent beetles. And who doesn’t love a bee, the range and colours of these insects is staggering.

I found this book endlessly fascinating. Couzens and Ashton have compiled and interesting set of facts, figures and information for each of the chosen insects as well as how they fit into the wider context of ecosystems. If you like insects then this book would be right up your street, and even if you’re not a fan then I would still recommend this book as I am sure you would learn an awful lot.

February 2026 Review

February is always short so I never end up reading as much as I think I can. But this month, we put the house back on the market, so I had even less time!

The flip side was that it was relentlessly wet so I didn’t venture out that much… However, I did manage to read 11 books, one under my target of twelve.

 

Books Read

On the Road Bike: The Search for a Nation’s Cycling Soul   Ned Boulting             Cycling     4 Stars

Everything I found On The Beach            Cyan Jones               Fiction      3 Stars

Bog People: A Working-Class Anthology Of Folk Horror        Hollie Starling (Ed)  Fiction      3 Stars

Warrior: The Biography of a Man with No Name    Edoardo Albert & Paul Gething                History     3.5 Stars

The Life-Changing Magic of Numbers    Bobby Seagull          Maths       3 Stars

An English Forest    Richard Kraus          Photography             4 Stars

Wealden  Nancy Gaffield         Poetry      4 Stars

It’s A Gas: The Magnificent And Elusive Elements That Expand Our World          Mark Miodownik       Science    4 Stars

Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces Laurie Winkless       Science    4 Stars

Hafren: The Wisdom of the River Severn                Sarah Siân Chave   Travel       3.5 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

Small Earthquakes: A Journey Through Lost British History In South America     Shafik Meghji            Travel       4 Stars

 

Top Genres

Travel       4

Fiction      4

Miscellaneous          3

Science Fiction        2

Science    2

 

Top Publishers

Granta      2

Longbarrow Press   2

Calon Books             1

Daunt Books             1

Reaktion Books        1

 

Review Copies Received

Treasures on Earth: Buried Wealth in Landscape and Legend               Jeremy Harte

The Black Fox          Gerald Heard

The New Flesh         Mark Morris (Ed)

 

Library Books Checked Out

Someone Is Walking On Your Grave:  My Cemetery Journeys              “Mariana Enriquez & Megan McDowell (Tr)”

 

Books Bought (Or Sent by Friends)

As I have said elsewhere, I am trying to buy fewer books. So I will give totals of l the number of books that enter my house and those that leave permanently. These are the figures for this month:

Books in: 6 I kept these below:

None! Nada! Zilch! Yes really!

 

Books out: 25 (The books leaving the house were sold, returned to the library or passed on to friends or charity. I am aiming for this number to be higher than the one above!!!).

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.

March 2026 TBR

March! And the promise of spring. Boy, do we need it after the first two months… Here is this month’s list that I will be selecting from:

 

Still Reading

The Lost Stradivarius – John Meade Falkner

 

Review

21 Lessons for the 21st Century – Yuval Noah Harari

Your Journey Your Way: The Recovery Guide to Mental Health – Horatio Clare

Slow Trains Around Britain: Notes from a 4,088-Mile Adventure on 143 Rides – Tom Chesshyre

Return of the Ancients: Unruly Tales of the Mythological Weird – Katy Soar  (Ed)

Little Ruins – Manni Coe

Cry of the Wild: Tales Of Sea, Woods and Hill – Charles Foster

Politics, But Better: An A – Z Guide to Creating a More Hopeful Future – Tatton Spiller

Medusa: A Novel of Mystery, Ecstasy and Strange Horror – E. H. Visiak

Possessed: A Lost Novel of the Occult – Rosalie Synton & Edward Synton

 

Books I’m Clearing

Russians Among Us – Gordon Corera

Shadow State: Murder, Mayhem, and Russia’s Attack on the West – Luke Harding

Chris Hoy: The Autobiography – Chris Hoy

Volkswagen Camper: Six Decades of Success – Richard Copping & Ken Cservenka

Spring – Michael Morpurgo

Experimental Landscapes in Watercolour: Creative techniques for painting landscapes and nature – Ann Blockley

I’m a Joke and So Are You: Reflections on Humour and Humanity – Robin Ince

 

WFMAC

The Year of Living Danishly: My Twelve Months Unearthing the Secrets of the World’s Happiest Country – Helen Russell

Along the River that Flows Uphill: From the Orinoco to the Amazon – Richard Starks

 

Stanfords Shortlist

A Training School for Elephants – Sophy Roberts

Moonlight Express: Around the World By Night Train – Monisha Rajesh

 

Library

Here Comes the Fun: A Year of Making Merry – Ben Aiken

The Starling: A Biography – Stephen Moss

Common People: A Folk History Of Land Rights, Enclosure And Resistance – Leah Gordon & Stephen Ellcock

Cabin: How To Build A Retreat In The Wilderness And Learn To Live With Nature – Will Jones

The Future Of Agriculture – Sarah Bearchell

 

Poetry

A Sleepwalk on the Severn – Alice Oswald

 

Book Club

This month’s book is Thomas Hardy, Two On A Tower. Not overly worried about reading it, so may listen to the BBC adaptation.

 

 

#20BooksOfSummer (Still going…)

Sunfall – Jim Al-Khalili

Revenger – Alastair Reynolds

Shadow Captain – Alastair Reynolds

 

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.

 

 

We Are All Adrift by David Banning

4 out of 5 stars

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

The boundary between land and sea is constantly changing. Twice a day, the tides ebb and flo,w bringing water up and down the shoreline, and the weather can give us millpond stillness on the ocean or the full wrath of a winter storm, plus everything in between.

Moving between land and sea can be as easy as launching from a shallow sandy beach or almost impossible when you mix vertical cliffs and pounding waves. A harbour makes that transition between land and sea so much easier, regardless of the size of the vessel.

Banning makes the 320-mile journey from Morecambe Bay to the Sussex coast to visit his mother on a regular basis. He sometimes will use this as a stepping stone, taking the ferry to Dieppe to holiday in France. A route that I have done myself a number of times when we have holidayed there in the past. It turns out that this route was the same one that Ho Chi Minh was also on back in the early 19th century. Who knew?

This region is also on the ‘front line’. That is, if you believe the nonsense pedalled out by the right-wing press and amplified by populist far-right-wing politicians who thrive on lies and misdirection.

The truth is much more nuanced than that (read We Came by Sea for a more balanced view). Whilst there will always be the occasional troublemaker arriving in the country, they are few and far between. In fact, probably even less so than in the ranks that support the populists.

The great artist, Eric Ravilious, famous for his pastiches of the rolling Sussex downlands, is also linked to Morecambe. There he was involved in decorating the tea room in the Midland Railway Hotel on the promenade. Banning also talks about another artist that I have never come across before, Harold Mockford. Iam aware of Ravilious’ work, but not yet discovered Mockford. He writes about the decisions that we take, which shape the direction of our lives and the inherent strangeness of our lives.

We have the famous Old Harry Rocks here in Dorset, but in Sussex, that probably an even more famous set of chalk cliffs called the Seven Sisters. These are quite imposing and close to Beachy Head that I have been to the top of a few times. Banning describes them as ‘hung like white curtains’ and like Old Harry Rocks, they are a big draw for tourists, and they are both being eroded by the relentless power of the sea.

I did like this book; however, I did find it a very difficult book to categorise. It is part memoir, part art book, along with a dusting of travel writing. Along with that, it is an observation of the state of our nation through the prism of Newhaven harbour. Banning gets to see it through an outsider’s eyes, as well as noting how the artists Mockford and Ravilious interpreted it in their own  way. I really liked the art of Ian Sharp and the photos that Banning has taken. However, If I were to have one criticism of this book, I found it too short, and it left me wanting more.

The Cruel Stars by John Birmingham

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

Lieutenant Lucinda Hardy is on another commission. Her previous commission had left her with a Star of Valor award, but as it was a black op and covered under Top Secret Absolute rules. But people on her new ship knew about it, and she had no idea why it had been declassified.

Professor Frazer McLennan is investigating the inside of a Voortrekker, a ship that had crashed in the southern wastelands of Van Maartensland. He has visitors arriving soon and for someone who doesn’t like people, that is the last thing that he really wants…

Sephina L’Trel was considering her life choices. It wasn’t the most ideal moment to do so, though. She has just decapitated a mob boss, and there were lots of people trying to shoot her. On reflection, she had had better days.

A princess had been hiding in the garden playing a game with two friends. But now she has been caught and has to go and practice her scales. It was an obligation that she really didn’t want to meet, but pushing back against their will would have no effect.

A man in a cell is facing condemnation, and a priest is trying to convert him to Christianity. He doesn’t want to be converted, but relents, knowing that the outcome is, for him at least, irrelevant.

These five individuals would be there when the invasion started. They would face their greatest fears as the enemy is one that want to obliterate the human race. It is going to be messy and brutal, and their paths are inextricably linked. This story is an account of their time in the conflict.
Each of these five individuals tell the story of the invasion from their perspective, the ebb and flow as they come up against the Sturm. We learn of the alliances made between the factions, too, as the intensity of the fight back against the invaders continues after the initial surprise, but there are many losses on both sides. It builds to a high tension and fast paced ending; and that is all I will say about the plot!

It has been quite a while since I have read any military sci-fi, and I thought that this was pretty good overall. The tech feels plausible, though I can’t say I’d want to meet one of these machines that the Marines use! I thought that the plot was fairly good, thoug,h as with any series book, some of the outcomes can be guessed; it is the route there that makes the story. The characters didn’t have much depth to them, but then, this isn’t a novel for character development. I will definitely seek out the subsequent books in the series to read at some point.

Cage of Souls by Adrian Tchaikovsky

4 out of 5 stars

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

Stefan Advani is on a boat heading towards an island. He has been banished from the city of Shadrapar, the last of all cities on a world that is ever more alien to humanity. The island is a place where criminals are sent. His crime is agitation, subversion, and attempting to pervert the course of justice. It is a brutal place and almost no one leaves there alive…

It is bleak there. The prison is organic and is in the middle of a swamp. It is somehow kept afloat by ancient pumps that are somehow kept going by an equally ancient engineer. As well as surviving the sadistic prison warders, he has to kowtow to the prison hierarchy which is equally brutal. He doesn’t think he is going to last a week in this hellhole.

The second part of the book takes us back to the city of Shadrapar and is about the events that led up to his incarceration. He has come from a moderately privileged position, though not the upper echelons of the society there. He and some friends decide to write and publish a book. They print 50 copies of it, and no one shows any interest in it at all. Until one day they authorities decide that the book is actually very dangerous as it threatens their status quo, and if there is one thing that the people in power don’t like, it is the possibility of losing it.

His adventures take him underground, to a place that he thought only lived in the darker recesses of his imagination. To find it actually exists comes as a bit of a shock, and what he finds there makes his imagination seem quite tame in comparison. The narrative returns to the island again. Things are afoot there now, and he knows that as the tension builds, he is going to be caught up in the maelstrom.

This is quite some book. It is the first of Tchaikovsky’s that I have read, and I thought it was astonishing. Where he has imagined this world from is a complete mystery. That said, there are elements of it that do feel familiar. There are hints of Venice and the lagoon in which it is located in. The remote prison where criminals and other prisoners that the authorities want to have removed for their convenience is a common happening in societies, even today. Then he has layered that world with all sorts of things that will shock and possibly scare you in equal measure. There are two books that it reminded me of were Paradox by John Meaney and Perdido Street Station by China Miéville. If you have read and liked those books, then I can wholeheartedly recommend this too.

January 2026 Review

January always drags, but as it was raining (a lot) There was plenty of time to stay inside and read! Hence the list below:

Books Read

A Butterfly Journey: Maria Sibylla Merian Artist and Scientist – Boris Friedewald & Stephan von Pohl (Tr) – Biography – 4 – Stars

The Ghosts of Merry Hall – Heather Davey – Fiction – 2 – Stars

The Owl Service – Alan Garner – Fiction – 3.5 – Stars

Scoff: A History of Food and Class in Britain – Pen Vogler – Food & Drink – 4 – Stars

Free: Coming of Age at the End of History – Lea Ypi – Memoir – 3.5 – Stars

Philip K. Dick: In His Own Words – Philip K. Dick & Gregg Rickman – Memoir – 4 – Stars

Make Time: How To Focus On What Matters Every Day – Jake Knapp, & John Zeratsky – Miscellaneous – 2.5 – Stars

Night Vision: In Search Of The True Dark – Jean Sprackland – Miscellaneous – 4.5 – Stars

Meridian – Nancy Gaffield – Poetry – 4 – Stars

The Old Drift – Namwali Serpell – Science Fiction – 2.5 – Stars

The Cruel Stars – John Birmingham – Science Fiction – 3.5 – Stars

False Calm – Maria Sonia Cristoff – Travel – 3 – Stars

Tea and Grit: A Bicycle Journey along the Silk Road – Helen Watson – Travel – 4.5 – Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

The Sound Atlas: A Guide to Strange Sounds across Landscapes and Imagination – Michaela Vieser And Isaac Yuen – Miscellaneous – 5 – Stars

The Uninhabitable Earth: A Story of the Future – David Wallace-Wells – Environmental – 5 – Stars

 

 

Top Genres

Miscellaneous – 3

Travel – 3

Memoir – 2

Science Fiction – 2

Fiction – 2

 

Top Publishers

15 books and 15 separate publishers! So I am posting all of them

Titan Boon – 1

Journey Books – 1

Longbarrow Press – 1

Atlantic Books – 1

Allen Lane – 1

Head of Zeus – 1

Reaktion Books – 1

Penguin – 1

Jonathan Cape – 1

Harper Collins – 1

Bantam Press – 1

Prestel Verlag – 1

Vintage – 1

Fragments West – 1

 

Review Copies Received

Nature Within: How the Natural World Shapes Our Minds, Bodies & Health – James Bashford

 

Library Books Checked Out

Failed State: Why Nothing Works And How We Fix It – Sam Freedman

Storm Pegs: A Life Made In Shetland – Jen Hadfield

Bog People: A Working-Class Anthology Of Folk Horror – Hollie Starling (Ed)

 

Books Bought (Or Sent by Friends)

As I have said elsewhere, I am trying to buy fewer books. So I will give totals of l the number of books that enter my house and those that leave permanently. These are the figures for this month:

Books in: 8 I kept these below:

The Umbrian Thursday Night Supper Club – Marlena de Blasi

The Flow – Amy-Jane Beer

 

Books out: 34

(The books leaving the house were sold, returned to the library or passed on to friends or charity. I am aiming for this number to be higher than the one above!!!).

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.

 

Are there any that you have read from the lists above? Let me know in the comments below

Handbook of Mammals of Madagascar by Nick Garbutt

4 out of 5 stars

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

I first came across Lemurs when I went to Jersey Zoo (or Durrell as it was back then), and they had a number of different species that they were breeding to hopefully be able to return to the wild. They are beautiful animals and were the flagship species that they were using to promote all sorts of conservation and recovery programmes that they were undertaking in the islands of Madagascar.

This huge island off the coast of Africa is pretty unique. It has been isolated for millions of years that the evolutionary paths that the animals have taken to fill the niches that all habitats have generated richness and diversity of animals that exist nowhere else on earth. It sounds like an amazing place.

However, these animals are threatened. Partly by climate change as it slowly wreaks its havoc on global weather patterns, but mostly by humans. Yep, us. Again. So most of the 217 species that are covered in the book have some sort of habitat degradation or fragmentation, or it has just been removed wholesale because of logging and mineral extraction.

There are several sections to the book, with details on regions and habitats, places to go and see some of these fantastic mammals and even a section on those strange and often huge animals that have sadly been lost because of extinction. However, the majority of the book is about the species that can still be found there.

There is an incredibly dense amount of information in here. It is subdivided into tenrecs, bats, lemurs and carnivores. Each species has a section to itself and contains a wealth of information on the location, how threatened they are, habitat, population size and then details on where to find them should you wish to make the arduous journey to some of the more remote parts of the island.

It did take me quite a while to get through, as there is so much detailed information within. It does read like an academic journal, which is hardly surprising, really. I couldn’t quite believe how many lemur species there were! But alongside this mass of up-to-date information are wonderful photos of the species being written about, some of which are rarely photographed, given their remote location on the island. Well worth reading if you are interested in the fauna of Madagascar at any level.

February 2026 TBR

Here is the TBR for February. Quite a list, but this is what I am going to be picking from, though reading all of them would be excellent!!!

Still Reading

Small Earthquakes: A Journey Through Lost British History In South America – Shafik Meghji

Everything I found On The Beach – Cyan Jones

 

Stanfords Shortlist

A Training School for Elephants – Sophy Roberts

Moonlight Express: Around the World By Night Train – Monisha Rajesh

 

Review

Warrior: The Biography of a Man with No Name – Edoardo Albert with Paul Gething

21 Lessons for the 21st Century – Yuval Noah Harari

Your Journey Your Way: The Recovery Guide to Mental Health – Horatio Clare

Slow Trains Around Britain: Notes from a 4,088-Mile Adventure on 143 Rides – Tom Chesshyre

Return of the Ancients: Unruly Tales of the Mythological Weird – Katy Soar (Ed)

Little Ruins – Manni Coe

Hafren: The Wisdom of the River Severn – Sarah Siân Chave

 

Books I’m Clearing

Russians Among Us – Gordon Corera

On the Road Bike: The Search for a Nation’s Cycling Soul – Ned Boulting

Chris Hoy: The Autobiography – Chris Hoy

Volkswagen Camper: Six Decades of Success – Richard Copping & Ken Cservenka

Shadow State: Murder, Mayhem, and Russia’s Attack on the West – Luke Harding

An English Forest – Richard Kraus

 

WFMAC

The Year of Living Danishly: My Twelve Months Unearthing the Secrets of the World’s Happiest Country – Helen Russell

Along the River that Flows Uphill: From the Orinoco to the Amazon – Richard Starks

 

Library

Bog People: A Working-Class Anthology Of Folk Horror – Hollie Starling (Ed)

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

Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces – Laurie Winkless

The Life-Changing Magic of Numbers – Bobby Seagull

Here Comes the Fun: A Year of Making Merry – Ben Aiken

 

Poetry

Wealden – Nancy Gaffield

 

Bookclub

I have read this month’s book, Quiet Moon, already!

 

#20BooksOfSummer (Still going…)

Sunfall – Jim Al-Khalili

Revenger – Alastair Reynolds

Shadow Captain – Alastair Reynolds

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.

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