Author: Paul (Page 15 of 186)

Bibliomaniac by Robin Ince

5 out of 5 stars

Those who follow me on the various social media networks out there will know that I buy a lot of books. Far more than I can realistically read, but they make me happy and as far as I see it, a home without books is just a house…

Robin Ince also buys a lot of books. Like hundreds of them a year. He will trawl charity and second-hand bookshops looking for anything that piques his interest. If he likes the look of it, he buys it. Knowing what my house looks like, I do wonder just what his house looks like…

This wonderful book is the account of his travels around the independent bookshops of the UK promoting one of his books and a record of the books that he finds and brings home on his tour. He reads far more fiction than I do, but he has a similar principle, if it looks interesting then he will buy it. I do this with non-fiction books…

I am a bibliomaniac.
There is no cure and I am not seeking one.

Whilst we have similar philosophies on books, I don’t think that I have ADHD like he does, but I do think that I have autistic traits hence why I can see the parallels that I have with him. He is a big fan of independent bookshops which will become very evident if you read this book, and I am too. They offer an alternative curated selection of books that reflects the interest of the bookseller, rather than me feeling that I on the receiving end of a corporate marketing machine. If you have read White Spines by Nicholas Royle, then this is a must-read for you.

Now Is The Time To Know Everything by Simon Moreton

4 out of 5 stars

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

Miscarriage is one of the big taboos in this country. Almost no one talks about it, and even though it is a fairly common occurrence, you rarely get to hear about those who have suffered. I know of one or two couples where it had sadly happened, but I am sure there are others.

As people are reluctant to talk about it, you will probably never know who in your friendship circles has suffered. If you do come to know it is probably going to be from the bereaved mother-to-be. Rarely do we hear from the father’s perspective.

In this book, Moreton takes us on his journey through the heady days of early pregnancy and the anticipation of welcoming a new individual into the world. It is also a reflective book, he delights in tracing back through various family members in the hope of understanding just what sort of person you might have been.

Even though this is a book about a tragedy, it isn’t a sad book. To me, it felt like a love letter to the child they never knew. It is the story of how they came to be and were made by the generations before. It is also a discovery for him, he learns of family secrets that were unknown until now.

For those who have gone through the grief and trauma of an event like this, this might not be the book they need, but for others, there will be some resonance in the words and art.

The Lost Flock by Jane Cooper

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

It is said that if you never want to work again, then make a hobby you love a job. I am not totally convinced by this reasoning, as I think that I would probably end up disliking it. For me, a hobby is something that you can use to escape the world and pressures of modern life. But for some people it works, though I think if Jane Cooper knew quite how things would turn out, she may have done things differently.

It began with knitting and the discovery of rare-breed wool. Further research led to a whole new world of rare breed sheep that she knew nothing about. She travelled around the country collecting fleeces from those that had rare breeds and meeting the sheep in question. And slowly but surely she fell for one of the breeds.

The one that sparked her interest was the Orkney Borerary a tiny but robust and hardy breed that can trace its heritage way back to the Vikings who first brought this breed to the islands off the Scottish coast. It is one of the few surviving breeds of primitive sheep and they are hardy and much smaller than the sheep you will see in fields.

Before long she was hooked and she wanted a flock of her own. This prompted a move from Newcastle to the islands itself and this book is her story from taking on a handful of sheep to a flock of over 100. However, her enthusiasm is infectious though and she has persuaded a number of other crofters to adopt the sheep in their flocks.

I liked this book. It is an interesting story of how someone who followed her interests and passion and ended up becoming the sole custodian of a flock of this rare breed of sheep. It has not been an easy journey, there have been setbacks, the abattoir being closed on the island by a short-sighted council being one of the challenges they have had to face. Cooper is one of those people who should be celebrated for her tenacity in keeping the Orkney Borerary alive.

The Narrow Smile by Peter Mayne

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

Peter Mayne knew India well. He had grown up there and apart from a short period when he was schooled in the UK he was there until 1949 when he moved to Morocco. The partition of the country happened this time and he ended up as deputy sectary to Pakistan’s Ministry of Refugees & Rehabilitation. When serving in this position, he came to know the Paktun people whose tribal lands bridged the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

After a few years spent in Morocco, he wanted to head back to the region to see what it was like now and to catch up with some of his friends from the past. This book is the story of that journey.

I found it a relaxed and slow-paced travel book, but I hought that it is worth reading for a snapshot of the region in the early 1950s. He is a thoughtful and observant traveller, sensitive to the Paktun’s way of life and their outlook. He is welcomed by all the people that he meets, and manages to catch up with some friends and associates from the past. One thing that did strike me from his prose, is that the privilege and authority that he had when he was part of the occupying force is long gone. The balance has very much shifted, but that said, he is still a valued guest, even though he is subject to the whims and demands of his hosts. This power shift becomes even more evident when he keeps trying to push south into Afghanistan. Permission is eventually granted, but then he cannot find anyone to take him.

His lyrical writing style immersed me in the place; I felt the heat as he did, sat alongside him on the bus journeys as they bumped along the roads and watched the ‘Jawanan’ dance through his eyes. They were most happy people, content with their lot but were so difficult to lead. Their independence had been hard won and they weren’t going to let any country usurp that. I thought that this was well worth reading and a reminder that I must read his Moroccan book.

April 2024 Review

April flew by as usual. We celebrated our 29th Wedding anniversary and I got myself a new job! Apart from that it was fairly uneventful. Oh and I read some more books and bought far too many.

Here is April’s selection:

 

Books Read

Small Worlds – Caleb Azumah Nelson – 3 Stars

Ireland’s Green Larder: The Definitive History of Irish Food and Drink – Margaret Hickey – 3.5 Stars

Secret Britain: Unearthing Our Mysterious Past – Mary-Ann Ochota – 4 Stars

Information: The New Language of Science – Hans Christian Von Baeyer – 3 Stars

Utter, Earth: Advice on Living in a More-than-Human World – Isaac Yuen – 4 Stars

Mystic Orchards – Jonathan Koven – 3.5 Stars

Human Origins: A Short History – Sarah Wild – 3 Stars

Hothouse – Brian W. Aldiss – 3 Stars

Steeple Chasing: Around Britain By Church – Peter Ross – 4 Stars

Walking The Bones Of Britain: A 3 Billion Year Journey From The Outer Hebrides To The Thames Estuary – Christopher Somerville – 3.5 Stars

Wounded Tigris: A River Journey through the Cradle of Civilisation – Leon McCarron – 4 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

The New Wild – Fred Pearce – 4.5 Stars

 

Top Genres

Travel – 14

Fiction – 8

Natural History – 7

Poetry – 4

Memoir – 4

Science Fiction – 3

History – 2

Humour – 2

Science – 2

Writing – 1

 

Top Publishers

Bloomsbury – 3

Unbound – 2

Saraband – 2

Canongate – 2

Sphere – 2

Salt – 2

Eland – 2

West Virginia University Press – 1

Elliott & Thompson – 1

Hutchinson Heinemann – 1

 

Review Copies Received

None!!

 

Library Books Checked Out

Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces – Laurie Winkless

How Bad Are Bananas?: The Carbon Footprint of Everything – Mike Berners-Lee

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

Cull of the Wild: Killing in the Name of Conservation – Hugh Warwick

Wayfarer: Love, Loss And Life On Britain’s Ancient Paths – Phoebe Smith

Weathering – Ruth Allen

 

Books Bought

An Unexpected Light: Travels in Afghanistan – Jason Elliot

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

Wild Signs and Star Paths: 52 keys that will open your eyes, ears and mind to the world around you – Tristan Gooley

On a Hoof and a Prayer: Around Argentina at a Gallop – Polly Evans

The Great White Palace – Tony Porter (Signed)

The Piano Shop on the Left Bank: The Hidden World of a Paris Atelier – T. E. Carhart

Reflections of Sunflowers: A Bittersweet Return To The Idyllic South Of France – Ruth Silvestre

The Story of San Michele – Axel Munthe

The Stone Boudoir: Travels Through the Hidden Villages of Sicily – Theresa Maggio

Full Circle – Michael Palin (Signed)

Citadel (Languedoc, #3) – Kate Mosse

Heartburn – Nora Ephron

The Art of Travel – Alan de Botton

A Savage Dreamland: Journeys in Burma – David Eimer

A Land – Jacquetta Hawkes

Prehistoric Britain – Timothy Darvill

Crow Country – Mark Cocker

Sea and Sardinia – D.H. Lawrence

The Hero’s Way: Walking with Garibaldi from Rome to Ravenna – Tim Parks

Adventures Among Birds – W.H. Hudson

Nature Near London – Richard Jefferies

Kiwis Might Fly: A New Zealand Adventure – Polly Evans

Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life – William Finnegan

Tideways and Byways in Essex and Suffolk – Archie White

Historic Forests of England – Ralph Whitlock

 

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

 

May 2024 TBR

How is it May already? How? Please let me know below. There are a lot of review books being rolled over from last month as I didn’t get to those. As usual, it is an eclectic mix and an attempt to read some of the books I have decided that I no longer want to keep, so they are being read and passed on!. So here it is:

 

Still Reading

Nature Writing for Every Day of the Year Ed. Jane McMorland Hunter

A Cloud a Day Gavin Pretor-Pinney

A Year Of Garden Bees & Bugs: 52 stories of intriguing insects Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton

Set My Hand Under The Plough E.M Barraud

 

Other Books

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

The Left Hand of Darkness Ursula K. Le Guin

Purple Hibiscus Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Venomous Lumpsucker Ned Beauman

The Unauthorised Biography of Ezra Maas Daniel James

Salt Slow Julia Armfield

 

Review Books

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

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

Black Ghosts Noo Saro-Wiwi

Minor Monuments Ian Maleney

Seaglass Kathryn Tann

The House Divided: Sunni, Shia and the Making of the Middle East Barnaby Rogerson

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

Scenes from Prehistoric Life: From the Ice Age to the coming of the Romans Francis Pryor

Human Origins: A Short History Sarah Wild

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

In All Weathers Matt Gaw

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

Hedgelands: A Wild Wander Around Britain’s Greatest Habitat Christopher Hart

Brazilian Adventure Peter Fleming

 

Library Books

The Spymasters: How The CIA’s Directors Shape History And The Future Chris Whipple

Secret Britain: A Journey Through The Second World War’s Hidden Bases And Battlegrounds Sinclair McKay

The Gathering Place Mary Colwell

Footmarks: A Journey Into Our Restless Past Jim Leary

The Rosewater Redemption Tade Thompson

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

Mischief Acts Zoe Gilbert

 

Poetry

An Ocean of Static J.R. Carpenter

Crawling Horror Ed. By Daisy Butcher & Janette Leaf

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

I don’t mind insects, they have an essential purpose in the world, whether it is pollinating, feeding vast numbers of other species or even clearing all the crap that everything leaves behind. I generally don’t find bugs creepy, but some people do, and this is the inspiration behind all these authors’ stories.

This is the list of stories included:

The Sphinx • Edgar Allan Poe • (1846)
The Blue Beetle: A Confession • A. G. Gray, Jun. • (1857)
The Mummy’s Soul • Anonymous
After Three Thousand Years • Jane G. Austin • (1868)
A Dream of Wild Bees• Olive Schreiner • (1888)
The Moth • H. G. Wells • (1895)
The Captivity of the Professor • A. Lincoln Green • (1901)
The Dream of Akinosuke • Lafcadio Hearn • (2007)
Butterflies • Lafcadio Hearn • (1904)
Caterpillars • E. F. Benson • (1912)
An Egyptian Hornet • Algernon Blackwood • (1915)
The Wicked Flea • J. U. Giesy • (1925)
The Miracle of the Lily • Clare Winger Harris • (1928)
Warning Wings • Arlton Eadie • (1929)
Beyond the Star Curtain • Garth Bentley • (1931)
Leiningen Versus the Ants • Carl Stephenson • (1938)

None of these stories terrified me, I am glad to say, but there was the odd one that made me shudder, in particular Caterpillars. I thought some were better than others, with my favourite being Beyond the Star Curtain, with The Captivity of the Professor coming a close second.

It is a great little collection that these editors have uncovered from the vaults of the British Library. I liked the intro for each of the authors and a potted history of each story, and even better, it was just before the story, so no flipping backwards and forwards. The stores are as diverse as the insects portrayed. Not all of the stories portray the insects as enemies of us, but those stories are in there if you fancy being creeped out a bit.

Sunken Lands by Gareth Rees

 

4.5 out of 5 stars

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

What we are doing to the planet has been well documented elsewhere by numerous scientists and authors. They and others are battling against vast corporations and sympathetic governments who have a vested interest in keeping us using fossil fuels. Sadly, the disinformation campaign is working, in that the urgency to do something about the problem is diluted. As the erratic weather starts to impact more and more people’s lives, then tougher questions are starting to be asked of our politicians.

One of the effects of climate change is rising sea levels. A lot of it will come from melting glaciers, but water when it is warmer will expand adding to the issue. These changes will affect millions of people around the planet. Rees wants to visit some of the places where populations are most at risk from the rising waters and also to discover the locations of past flood myths and see for himself the now sunken landscapes.

It is a journey that will take him to New Orleans to witness for himself the wreckage that Hurricane Katrina left behind. He visits Italy to scuba dive over a live caldera (!!!) and to view the Roman remains. But he doesn’t also visit real places, this is a symbolic journey, so Atlantis is visited through the mythological landscapes too.

To remind us that this is not a problem that is going to affect sun-drenched islands in the Pacific, he heads to Dungeness close to where he lives to see the stumps of fossilised trees that were submerged 3500 years ago. It is called Noah’s Wood as people once thought that it was inundated in the biblical flood.

It is a stark reminder that we are an island nation and that we will be affected by these changes too.

I haven’t read many of Rees’ books, though I do have all of them. One of them, Unofficial Britain, was my book of the year in 2020. This is an equally engaging travelogue. He has researched his subjects well and he has a keen eye for detail, something no doubt from his psychogeography experiences, where the tiny details do matter.

But this is a book about the future; a future that is rising sea levels, extreme weather events and land lost to erosion and storm surges. It is a future that worries Rees and to be perfectly frank, worries me to. Well worth reading and I can highly recommend it.

Mystic Orchards by Jonathan Koven

Welcome to Halfman, Halfbook for my stop on the Blog Tour for Mystic Orchards by Jonathan Koven and published by Kelsay Books.

About the Book

Mystic Orchards is a collection of spellbinding poems and hybrid pieces. Exploring cultural heritage and identity, the shared pain and joy of family, art, reality, memory, and true love; these pages confront a dream. Visiting the orchards is a journey from the darkness of fear toward hope, from total stillness back into the tumult of life.

About the Author

Author Photo

Jonathan Koven grew up on Long Island, NY. He holds a BA in English and Creative Writing from American University, works as a technical writer, and reads chapbooks for Moonstone Arts. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife Delana, and their cats Peanut Butter and Keebler. He has both fiction and poetry published by Assure Press, Animal Heart Press, Thirty West Publishing, and more. Read Jonathan’s poetry debut Palm Lines (2020), available from Toho Publishing. His fiction debut Below Torrential Hill (2021) is also available, a winner of the Electric Eclectic Novella Prize.

My Review

Poetry is a very personal thing for me. For a long time it felt like a school exercise, but over the past few years I have been trying to read more widely and have discovered lots of different poets since picking them poetry collections up again a few years ago.

But where to start? Well, you could go for one of the recognised classic collections, or you could explore the more modern collections, such as Mystic Orchards by Jonathan Koven. This is a very personal collection with a mix of poetry styles and short prose pieces that tease out his cultural heritage and the joy and pain of families, love, art and his idenity.

The lyrical prose felt like I was reading a series of dreams and it felt very personal, almost intimate. Even though I didn’t understand the context of some of the poems in this collection, they often resonated because of his choice of words and his openness in the subjects covered.

Some of the lines are particularly beautiful, these were some that stood out:

of wish maker gone
to the water a wanderer turned water strider

To draw maps of light
As it reaches this rock

Outside
Bonded
inside,
fragments left
for a new self.

I liked the variety of forms in the collection, short poems, longer stanza’s and short prose work really well with his chosen subjects. Family is a bit subject, but I also liked that themes from natural world permeated lots of the poems, wolves, fireflies, elms and rivers all get a mention as you read the collection. Overall I though that this was a thoroughly enjoyable collection.

Three Favourite Poems

Future Is Older Than The Past
Ineffable
Reason On The Horizon

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 Isabelle Kenyon, from Kenyon Author Services for a copy of the book to read.

 

 

 

 

Apple Island Wife by Fiona Stocker

4 out of 5 stars

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

Fiona Stocker had already moved halfway around the world from the UK to Australia. However, the life they had made there in the city of Brisbane, was becoming a little jaded and they felt that owed their daughter a chance at a slower pace of life.

They had heard good things about Tasmania and a trip out there reinforced those messages. It didn’t take long to find a property that they liked the look of and as a bonus, it came with five acres of land. They made the decision there and then, and set in motion the move to Tasmania.

Soon after they moved in, her husband acquired some alpacas, an animal that he had always fancied keeping, but as he was developing his new cabinet-making company, it fell to Fiona to look after them along with a toddler and a fast-growing bump, would soon be their second child. It did take a while, but slowly they began to settle into their new home and community.

I thought that this was a very enjoyable book, she writes with a bone-dry wit about the life they are having there. It did seem strange to be reading about a family life set in this part of the world having read so many travel books of people beginning a new life in Europe, it is a very different finding that the garden has wallabies, venomous snakes and huntsmen spiders. Not sure I am keen on the latter two…

If there was one flaw, I think each chapter has been adapted from her blog, they reflect the piece written at that time and it didn’t feel like there was a cohesive narrative at certain points in the book. That said, these snapshots of family life and the way that they settled into their new life is an engaging read.

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