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.

Phantoms Of Kernow by Joan Passey (Ed)

This is the second Tales Of The Weird book that draws its material from Cornwall. Passey, whilst researching the first book, Cornish Horrors: Tales from the Land’s End, found loads of different stories set in the county. There were too many for that first volume, hence this second bite of the poisoned cherry…

 

The Spectre Ship Of Porthcurno – Robert Hunt

A very brief story of a ghost ship that would sail up the beach, across the land, and then disappear. It is linked to a man who lived in Chygwiden and who was rumoured to be a pirate or buccaneer. He loved to go to sea in the most stormy weather and always seemed to survive.

 

The Wrecker And The Deathship – William Bottrell

A man appeared in a village from places unknown. He was wealthy enough to live by independent means and soon married a widow. There were a suspicious number of boats wrecked on the rocks beneath his house. This would come back to haunt him in his dying days…

 

The Toll Of Charon – Richard Dowling

A melancholic and grim tale about a girl who is left alone in Cornwall after her father passes away. They were not from the area originally, so she had no family or other support network.
She decides that her only option is to follow her dream of selling songs and music, so heads off to London to seek her fortune…

 

The Ghost Of The Treasure Chamber – Emily Arnold

I liked this story about a girl who is sent from India to Cornwall to live with relatives to help with her health. On the boat over she meets a clairvoyant and is persuaded to have a session with her. She sees a man in armour in her vision and it scares and unnerves her slightly.
She settles in with her family in their house, but soon learns that they will have to leave in the coming months to service debts, unless the family legend is true…

 

Dr Wygram’s Son – G. M. McCrie

A very strange tale about a doctor’s son who is laid low with an illness. His father decides to treat him with a most unusual type of cure. The narrator of the story has promised in the past to be of assistance and hurries to the house in Cornwall to fulfil that.

 

The Man Who Coined His Blood Into Gold – J. H. Pearce

A moral tale of greed and a reminder of why you shouldn’t trust the little folk in everything that they promise. The story is set in that most Cornish of places, a mine. (No not a pasty shop).

 

A Pair Of Hands – Arthur Quiller Couch

A tale of a house and a maid, oh and a ghost. It is only a little ghost, who is hardly any trouble at all and had a rather sweet nature.

 

Aunt Joanna – Sabine Baring-Gould

An elderly, deeply religious and quite crotchety lady is neighbours to a couple. She passes away one night and they take on the responsibility of making arrangements for her funeral. Whilst sorting things out they make a discovery that surprises them. After she is interred, they are haunted by her ghost as she searches their house for what was once hers…

 

Father Brent’s Tale – R. H. Benson

A disturbance on the river sounds like a large ship passing. He can see where the bow wave has washed but there is nothing to see at all. What ever it was that passed by though has severely disturbed the boy in the house…

 

The Ghost of Carnaquilla – Elliott O’Donnell

This story reminded me of one of my favourite childhood stories, Stig Of The Dump. I liked it, but I didn’t find it very chilling or ghostly.

 

The Misanthrope – J. D. Beresford

A weird tale about a man who had chosen to isolate himself from humanity. He has a skill that means when he looks at people in a particular way, he sees their true character. Quite cleverly written.

 

Negotium Perambulans – E. F. Benson

A man who is living in a rebuilt church is found dead in that building one day. But how he is found and what is seen sends terror throughout the locals, who decide never to go near the place again.
Then, a Mr Dooliss comes and decides to rebuild the church, but is very reluctant to welcome visitors. Know one knows if the thing that is seen before will return…

 

The Iron Pineapple – Eden Phillpotts

This is a very odd story about a man who is driven by his obsessions, and that leads to a series of events…

Letters To The Earth by Various

Love

This section has a series of letters, poems and notes to this only planet that we have to keep us alive in this vast universe. They very from the simple four line poem to the complex and deep stanza. There are simple thanks you’s to a beleaguered planet and longer more intimate letters from people who see the bigger picture.

Loss

This is a really painful set of letters and poems to read. People are mourning the loss of animals and landscapes as humans exert mass destruction over almost every domain on the planet. It is full of anger and remorse for the damage we have caused so far and the destruction that is yet to come. The authors of these are also angry at themselves that they seem unable to make a difference and livid that politicians, who are often funded by vested interests, actively want to keep things as they are or make them worse.

Emergence

This is a reminder that we are at a turning point or crossroads with regards to the climate and collapse in natures diversity. The decisions that we collectively make in this emergency with determine our outcomes in the coming years. We could end up with a better world, or a shaky future, or societal collapse. Only time and history will tell…

Hope

Even though the news on climate is constantly grim, it looks like the 1.5°C target is long past now, there is a possibility that we could keep it under a 2°C global average. We just need comprehensive and fast political action. The authors of the pieces in this section still have hope; hope that change can happen; hope that change will have the desired effect and hope that actions large and small can make that difference.

 

Someone wise once told me, do not try to change the minds of those with power, they do not list and are never affected. She said to create change, go to the people. – Ashby Martin 18

 

Action

This final section is all about the action that we all need to take, both collectively and individually. The people writing these pieces really get the urgency behind taking this action now.

 

You may think that you are simply one small positive
droplet in an ocean of troubles. A droplet can’t do
anything. But if you search our ever expanding ocean
You will find millions of other small droplets with the
same mindset as yourself. Together you form a sea in
an ocean. That sea can stir a storm. That sea can
Make a change

Harkiran S. S. Dhingra 15

I thought that this was a well-balanced collection of letters, poems and other sorts of prose. It is a great mix of people that you might have heard of and, most importantly, people that you haven’t who are equally committed to seeing action on climate change. As has been said many times before, there is no planet B,  and the more we bugger this one up then the more we will be masters of our own doom. The plant will survive. We won’t.

Well worth reading in my opinion, and if you choose to read it too, then do everything that you can to help combat climate change.

My Books of 2025

Another year passes and another list of my favourite books from the past twelve months. I didn’t have quite as many five-star reads as normal, either from the 150 books I read. First up are some honourable mentions that I gave 4.5 stars to:

The Flitting – Ben Masters

Slow Trains To Istanbul – Tom Chesshyre

Panoramas of Lost London: Work, Wealth, Poverty & Change – Philip Davies

Venice Sketchbook: Impressions, Seasons, Encounters & Pigeons – Huck Scarry

Renaturing: Small Ways To Wild The World – James Canton

Normally Weird And Weirdly Normal: My Adventures In Neurodiversity – Robin Ince

Of Thorn & Briar: A Year With The West Country Hedgelayer – Paul Lamb

How to Lose a Country: The Seven Warning Signs of Rising Populism – Ece Temelkuran

Under A Metal Sky: A Journey Through Minerals, Greed and Wonder – Philip Marsden

The Laundromat: Inside the Panama Papers Investigation of Illicit Money Networks and the Global Elite – Jake Bernstein

Dilbert 2.0 – Scott Adams

Upon A White Horse: Journeys In Ancient Britain And Ireland – Peter Ross

Cage of Souls – Adrian Tchaikovsky

 

And here are my eleven five-star reads.

A Quiet Evening – Norman Lewis

Collected here, from a period of nearly five decades, are thirty-six of Norman Lewis s best articles. In each, his writing crackles with poker-faced wit and stylistic brilliance. As a witness to his times the good, the bad and the absurd he was unmatched, and his instinct for important events, and moments, was infallible. His range here includes Ibizan fishermen, an interview with Castro’s executioner, the genocide of the South American Indian tribes, a paean to Seville and his meeting with a tragic Ernest Hemingway. That meeting was a shattering experience, Norman wrote to Ian Fleming who had commissioned him, of the kind likely to sabotage ambition. Fortunately it didn’t, and the articles assembled between these covers are compulsive, hilarious, tender and beautifully written, at times deeply upsetting and always unforgettable.

On the Narrow Road to the Deep North: Journey into a Lost Japan – Lesley Chan Downer

After eight years working in Japan, immersing herself in its language and literature, Lesley Chan Downer set off in the footsteps of Matsuo Basho, Japan’s most cherished poet, to explore the country’s remote northern provinces. Basho’s pilgrimage to find the landscapes that had inspired the great medieval poets gave birth to Japan’s most famous travel book, rich in strange imagery and sometimes comic encounters along the road. In this intriguing cross-threading of journeys, perceptions and exquisite haiku, Lesley creates her own funny, loving and honest portrayal of contemporary Japan. As she walks, she finds at one and the same time a drab, post-industrial landscape of concrete and cables, but also a land still full of the old enchantments. Nights in thatched highland villages and saké-drenched poetry sessions encourage her to see for herself if any of the legendary hermit-priests still survive in the sacred mountains of the north.

 

London Made Us: A Memoir Of A Shape-Shifting City – Robert Elms

‘London is a giant kaleidoscope, which is forever turning. Take your eye off it for more than a moment and you’re lost.’
Robert Elms has seen London change beyond all imagining: the house he grew up in is now the behemoth that is the Westway flyover, and areas once deemed murder miles have morphed into the stuff of estate agents’ dreams, seemingly in a matter of months.
Elms takes us back through time and place to myriad Londons. He is our guide through a place that has seen scientific experiments conducted in subterranean lairs, a small community declare itself an independent nation and animals of varying exoticism roam free through its streets; a place his great-great-grandfather made the Elms’ home over a century ago and a city that has borne witness to epoch- and world-changing events.

 

Venice – James Morris

Often hailed as one of the best travel books ever written, Venice is neither a guide nor a history book, but a beautifully written immersion in Venetian life and character, set against the background of the city’s past. Analysing the particular temperament of Venetians, as well as its waterways, its architecture, its bridges, its tourists, its curiosities, its smells, sounds, lights and colours, there is scarcely a corner of Venice that Jan Morris has not investigated and brought vividly to life.

James Morris first visited the city of Venice during World War II. As he writes in the introduction, ‘it is Venice seen through a particular pair of eyes at a particular moment – young eyes at that, responsive above all to the stimuli of youth.’ Venice is an impassioned work on this magnificent but often maddening city.

Morris’s collection of travel writing and reportage spans over five decades and includes such titles as Sydney, Coronation Everest, Hong Kong, Spain and Manhattan ’45. Since its first publication, Venice has appeared in many editions, won the W.H. Heinemann award and become an international bestseller.

 

We Came By Sea – Horatio Clare

We Came By Sea, Stories of a greater Britain is an untold story of the small boats crisis, a story which shows the best of us. It is the story of the volunteers who help thousands of refugees in Calais, of the lifeboat crews mounting one of the great search and rescue operations of all time, of an unrecognised, uncelebrated, all but unknown Britain which is giving its all to help the vulnerable and desperate. It is a journey through an unexamined nation, a nation which is as truly great and good as the people in the dinghies believe Britain to be. It is not the story we have been told, and it is a true story.

 

Ultra-Processed People: Why Do We All Eat Stuff That Isn’t Food … and Why Can’t We Stop? – Chris van Tulleken

It’s not you, it’s the food.

We have entered a new age of eating. For the first time in human history, most of our calories come from an entirely novel set of substances called Ultra-Processed Food. There’s a long, formal scientific definition, but it can be boiled down to this: if it’s wrapped in plastic and has at least one ingredient that you wouldn’t find in your kitchen, it’s UPF.

These products are specifically engineered to behave as addictive substances, driving excess consumption. They are now linked to the leading cause of early death globally and the number one cause of environmental destruction. Yet almost all our staple foods are ultra-processed. UPF is our food culture and for many people it is the only available and affordable food.

In this book, Chris van Tulleken, father, scientist, doctor, and award-winning BBC broadcaster, marshals the latest evidence to show how governments, scientists, and doctors have allowed transnational food companies to create a pandemic of diet-related disease. The solutions don’t lie in willpower, personal responsibility, or exercise. You’ll find no diet plan in this book―but join Chris as he undertakes a powerful self-experiment that made headlines around the world: under the supervision of colleagues at University College London he spent a month eating a diet of 80 percent UPF, typical for many children and adults in the United States. While his body became the subject of scientific scrutiny, he spoke to the world’s leading experts from academia, agriculture, and―most important―the food industry itself. But more than teaching him about the experience of the food, the diet switched off Chris’s own addiction to UPF.

In a fast-paced and eye-opening narrative he explores the origins, science, and economics of UPF to reveal its catastrophic impact on our bodies and the planet. And he proposes real solutions for doctors, for policy makers, and for all of us who have to eat. A book that won’t only upend the way you shop and eat, Ultra-Processed People will open your eyes to the need for action on a global scale.

 

The North Road – Rob Cowen

At the heart of this book is a highway. The A1; The Great North Road. A 400-mile multiplicity of ancient trackway, Roman road, pilgrim path, coach route and motorway that has run like a backbone through Britain for the last 2,000 years.

In this genre-defying and profoundly personal book, Cowen follows this ghost road from beginning to end on a journey through history, place, people and time. Weaving his own histories and memories with the layered landscapes he moves through, this is the story of an age, of coming to terms with time past and time passing, and the roads that lead us to where we find ourselves.

Written in kaleidoscopic prose, The North Road is an unforgettable exploration of Britain’s great highway.

 

In Search of the Perfect Peach: Why Flavour Holds the Answer to Fixing Our Food System – Franco Fubini

What makes a great-tasting tomato? Why do scarred greengages taste better? Is ‘eating local’ everything it’s cracked up to be?

The first bite of a perfectly ripe peach can be truly transformative – a joyful experience that stays with you forever. But, as Franco Fubini came to realise, flavour is a signifier of so much more than nostalgia. It has the power to change the way we grow, shop and eat – transforming the planet as well our palates.

From the citrus groves of Sicily to a knock-out taco in Mexico City, this is the story of how Franco’s pursuit of flavour led him on a journey to understand how this incredibly simple desire can lead to radical change. Having spent over two decades as the founder of Natoora, sourcing amazing flavour for some of the best kitchens and most demanding chefs in the world, Franco brings together his intimate experience of the supply chain in a book that shines a light on how flavour has dropped off our plates and how we can get it back.

Through flavour, a better future of food suddenly becomes one in which we are not only closer to nature and to the people who grow our food, but where we are also actively building seasonal diversity back into our diets, putting nutritious food on our plates and restoring the health of our soils.

Franco Fubini offers us a deeply optimistic vision of how we, as consumers, can follow flavour to fix the food system and bring joy to our every meal.

 

Lone Wolf: Walking The Faultlines Of Europe – Adam Weymouth

In 2011, a lone male wolf nicknamed Slavc set out from Slovenia, and, tracked by a GPS collar, travelled for 2000km, before arriving four months later in Lessinia, an Italian plateau north of Verona. Finding the only female wolf for hundreds of miles around, they started a lineage now some fifty of which live on the plateau to this day, the first wolves in the Italian Alps for 150 years.

In Lessinia, Adam Weymouth follows the path of Slavc, tracing the changes facing these wild corners of Europe, where the call to rewild meets the urge to preserve culture, where nationalism and progress pull away, and where the people are travelling, too.

The result is a multifaceted account of a country caught in a moment of kaleidoscopic change, from an award-winning writer with a uniquely perceptive eye for detail.

 

Craftland: A Journey Through Britain’s Lost Arts & Vanishing Trades – James Fox

An enchanting and illuminating exploration of the history of craftsmanship and the world’s oldest craft traditions, documenting the rapid disappearances of time-honored practices and shedding light on artisanal work in the face of massive technological industrialization by renowned Cambridge art historian Dr. James Fox.

During an age of mass manufacturing, fast fashion, synthetic materials and the unsustainable practice of companies valuing quantity over quality, a return to tradition, connection, and simplicity is essential.

Art historian and award-winning broadcaster Dr. James Fox explores the rapidly fading crafts and artisanal traditions of the world—such as coopering, basket-weaving, wheelwrighting, metalwork, and blacksmithing—that have shaped so much of our history through their alchemy of the hand-made human touch and generational wisdom.

Fox explains the history of craftsmanship in Britain, taking readers across the lands and communities that originated there, teaching them about the practices, traditions, and people at their heart. From coopers to thatchers, basket makers to bellfounders and dry wall builders, Fox tours Britain, once the workshop of the world, in search of its lost and disappearing craft traditions and the artisans trying to keep them alive including, a rush weaver who has managed to rebuild a sustainable business with her baskets and other wares, a bell foundry that uses the same practices it used in the nineteenth century, and dry wallers, building walls one piece of stone at a time that could last two centuries.

Part travelogue and part historical record, Craftland is a profoundly intimate meditation on our human cultural heritage, exploring what we lose as these traditions fade from view in the race of progress, and what we stand to gain if we bring them back.

 

And my book of the year is:

Nature Needs You: The Fight To Save Our Swifts – Hannah Bourne- Taylor

 

The inspirational story of a bird lover who became a nature-warrior in a David v Goliath battle to save swifts from extinction.

Nature Needs You tells the compelling story of how Hannah, without campaigning experience, funding or contacts, set out to save swifts from extinction in the UK. Her mission is to change the law and make ‘swift bricks’ mandatory so that the birds who nest in our walls will have a future in Britain. Nature Needs You delves into the highs and lows of trying to win hearts and minds, grab the news agenda with her naked Feather Speech, win Caroline Lucas and Lord Zac Goldsmith’s support, navigate meetings with Secretaries of State and debates in the Houses of Parliament, survive the trolling and midnight self-doubt and raise a petition with the requisite 100,000 signatures for a Parliamentary debate. At stake, with a decline in numbers of over 60% since 1995, are the birds who have become our symbol of summer, the swifts screaming in the skies above us.

Steeped in love for the wild, by a talented writer, Nature Needs You is a clarion call to save the nature on our doorsteps and prove that passion can be a superpower in bringing change to nature-depleted Britain. Raw, funny, self-deprecating and unstoppable in turn, this is nature writing with the pace of a thriller. Hannah is now knocking at the door of the new Labour Secretary of State for Housing, in the hope that, where Rishi Sunak and Michael Gove failed, Angela Rayner and Matthew Pennycook will save our swifts.

 

So there you have it. Have you read any of these? Let me know in the comments below.

 

 

 

2025 Book Stats

I finished 150 books in 2024, same as  2023. I did reach my Good Reads Target again for the 13th year.  Here are my stats for the last year’s reading. He is a word cloud from all the titles:

My total pages read was  44087 (1006  more pages than last year! (or the same length as Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell), and my monthly average of books was 12.5. This broke down into these monthly totals:

January – 15

February – 12

March – 14

April – 13

May – 14

June – 12

July – 14

August – 14

September – 12

October – 11

November – 11

December – 8

 

Author Splits

Male – 96

Female – 54

Ethnic Minority – 14 (My target was 12)

 

Sources

Review – 32

Library – 55

Own – 59

Borrowed – 4

 

Genre

Non-Fiction – 111

Fiction – 27

Poetry – 12

 

 

Random Stats

Longest Book: Evolution – Stephen Baxter – 761 pages

Shortest Book: The Man Who Planted Trees – Jean Giono – 46 pages

The total cost of the books I read was £2355.72 (Helped by one £47 and one £50 book)

 

Most Read Author

My most read author was Ana Sampson; I read three the books she had edited. Autors that appeared more than once were Henry Eliot, Oliver Burkeman, Rupi Kaur and Tom Chesshyre

 

Stars Awarded

5 Stars – 12

4.5 Stars – 13

4 Stars – 49

3.5 Stars – 30

3 Stars – 32

2.5 Stars – 11

2 Stars – 3

1.5 Stars – 0

1 Star – 0

 

 

Storygraph Wrap Up

I am Storygraph now, and here is my 2025 Wrap up

 

Genres

I use a spreadsheet to keep track of the types and genres of books that I read. These are detailed below:

Travel – 19

Natural History – 15

Fiction – 13

Science Fiction – 12

Poetry – 12

Photography – 7

Memoir – 6

Social History – 6

Landscape – 5

Architecture – 5

Environmental – 4

Art – 4

Humour – 3

Prehistory – 3

Mental Health – 3

Miscellaneous – 3

Gardening – 3

Weather – 2

Politics – 2

Geology – 2

Fantasy – 2

Food & Drink – 2

Britain – 2

Craft – 2

Technology – 2

True Crime – 2

Spying – 1

Behavioural Economics – 1

Food – 1

History – 1

Navigation – 1

Books – 1

Future – 1

Economics – 1

Maps – 1

 

Publishers

These are the number of books read by each publisher. Amazingly I read books from 84 different publishers, only four less than last year. Six of the top ten were independent publishers compared to five in 2024 so that is a slight improvement

Faber & Faber – 7

Bloomsbury – 6

Penguin – 6

Simon & Schuster – 6

Canongate – 4

Eland – 4

Picador – 4

Batsford – 3

British Library Publishing – 3

Elliott & Thompson – 3

Granta – 3

Head of Zeus – 3

Michael O’Mara Books – 3

Oneworld – 3

Profile – 3

Summersdale – 3

W&N – 3

4th Estate – 2

Andrew McMeel Publishing – 2

Bantam Press – 2

Century – 2

Chelsea Green – 2

English Heritage – 2

Harper Collins – 2

Harvill Secker – 2

Hutchinson Heinemann – 2

Little Toller – 2

Lonely Planet – 2

Orbit – 2

Profile Books – 2

Unbound – 2

Vintage – 2

William Collins – 2

Abacus – 1

Allen Lane – 1

Basic Books – 1

BBC Books – 1

Bonnier Books – 1

Books by Boxer – 1

Calon Books – 1

Carcanet – 1

Cassell – 1

Chroma Editions – 1

Cornerstone – 1

Didier Millet – 1

Ebury Press – 1

Fitzcarraldo Editions – 1

Frances Lincoln – 1

Gecko Press – 1

Gollancz – 1

Green Books – 1

Harper Voyager – 1

Headline – 1

Ian Henry Publications – 1

John Murray – 1

Jonathan Cape – 1

Jonglez Publishing – 1

Kyle Books – 1

Little, Brown – 1

Macmillan – 1

Manilla Press – 1

Melville House – 1

Mondadori – 1

Monoray – 1

Pan – 1

Portfolio – 1

Rider – 1

Robinson – 1

Salt – 1

Saraband – 1

Seren Press – 1

Sphere – 1

Taschen – 1

Tate – 1

Tauris Parke – 1

teNeues – 1

Thames & Hudson – 1

The Bodley Head – 1

The Bridge Street Press – 1

Trapeze – 1

Viking – 1

Virago – 1

Whittles Publishing – 1

Witness Books – 1

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