Author: Paul (Page 36 of 186)

The Mortal Word by Genevieve Cogman

3.5 out of 5 stars

A copy of this was provided free of charge from the publisher in return for an honest review.

There is a chance of genuine peace between the dragons and the Fae, or at least there was until a senior diplomat was stabbed. Irene is summoned along with a detective called Vale, to see if they can solve the murder. The time they arrive in an 1890s version of Paris and hope that her neutrality and experience can rescue the talks and solve the murder.

But these things are never straightforward, and having the presence of the Blood Countess, a Fae who is there to disrupt the conference in the city. As they uncover the evidence they find that the suspect could be any number of people, including a member of the library who is supposed to be there in a neutral capacity. And as ever someone wants her removed from the investigation, or ideally dead…

This is another fast-paced page-turner in this very likeable series. Even though you know, for each of the seemingly impossible tasks that Irene is presented with, she is somehow going to survive. As the plot unravels, it is the journey I’m here for though and that is what makes this series worth reading. I am now familiar with the characters now, but one flaw I find is that they don’t seem to develop that much. If you want a fantasy series that is slightly different to other things out there, then I can recommend this.

Fox by Jim Crumley

4 out of 5 stars

For several Sunday evenings in a row, I would see a fox around 8 pm. I am not sure if it was the same one as I would see it in different places. It was quite bold and was utterly unphased by me being in a car going past it. We have even had them in the back garden on occasion. It goes to show that the urban fox is a mammal that is readily adaptable to the challenges that we throw at it.

Crumley is an admirer of these animals too and in these chapters, he tells us six stories of foxes beginning with one that appears from under his plane as it is sitting on the tarmac at Heathrow. Mostly he finds them as he moves around his beloved Highland landscapes, sometimes at the end of a pair of binoculars but occasionally a face-to-face encounter.

I like Crumley’s writing style so this is a perfect little book. I would have really liked more of it too, as I felt bereft when it had finished. I have read one of the others, and that, like this, has a stunning cover too. Must buy some of the others now.

Field Guide to Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises by Mark Carwardine

4 out of 5 stars

A copy of this was provided free of charge from the publisher in return for an honest review.

I have been fortunate enough to see dolphins a few times, but have not yet seen a whale. Should I ever be lucky enough to do so then I am going to need this book with me. They are not the easiest animals to spot. This new authoritative and up-to-date guide by Mark Carwardine and a significant number of whale experts and biologists around the world have packed it with detailed colour illustrations and helpful identification tips.

For a field guide, it is utterly beautiful to look at, almost too good to take on a boat where it will probably get wet! That said, you really need to have this with you if you have the opportunity to go whale watching. The information is clear and concise, and they have picked details that may help you identify the glimpses that you are most likely to get in the oceans. I thought it was a top-notch guidebook.

The Wild Silence by Raynor Winn

3.5 out of 5 stars

This is Raynor Winn’s follow-up book to the very successful Salt Path, the story of Moth, her husband being diagnosed with a terminal illness and them both losing absolutely everything. They set off to walk the South West Coast Path and discover the beauty of this coastline and their own natural resilience to the hardships of life.

This book covers the time before and after that book was printed and the changes that its success gave to their lives and the opportunities that they had because of it. So much so that one person who read it gave them the chance to move to a farm for reasonable rent with the promise that they would bring wildlife back to the fields and hedgerows.

I thought that this book neatly filled in the details of their lives before and after they completed the walk on the path to the publication of the book. Winn has a way with words, that makes this really easy to read. I did like this a lot, but for me, The Salt Path had the edge on this. I thought that she might have mentioned being shortlisted for the Wainwright Prize, the first and only time I have had the pleasure of meeting her and Moth. It is much more of a memoir than a nature book but that outlook on the natural world permeates throughout the book. I did think that the walk through Iceland didn’t quite fit with the rest of the book, that said I get why she included it, as it is relevant to Moth’s health.

Shadowlands by Matthew Green

3.5 out of 5 stars

Just north of where I live is not one but two deserted villages, Knowlton and on the opposite bank of the River Allen is Brockington. I have walked past them on a guided tour and looked at the bumps in the fields. There are various reasons why this might have happened, the Black Death being a popular one, but the exact reason may never be known.

Matthew Green first heard of Dunwich in 2016, a medieval city that had fallen into the sea because of coastal erosion. The last church in the city had dropped into the sea in 1922 and the mysticism of the place intrigued him. It would be the beginnings of a series of journeys that would take him from the wonderfully named Winchelsea to the bleak Scottish islands that are battered by the Atlantic, to the mountains of Wales where a village was deliberately drowned to provide an English city with water.

I thoughts parts of this were excellent, particularly the chapters on Skara Brae on Orkney and Stanford in Norfolk. These two chapters had Green visiting the sites and teasing out the stories from what he was observing. Other chapters were more of a potted history with a handful of paragraphs when he did actually rock up to the place. It can’t be easy to get the feel of a location that mostly is at the bottom of the sea or is a series of lumps and bumps in a field, but reading this I felt that he had researched these places mostly from a desk. It was not bad overall, but I thought it could have been much better.

Dorset Before the Camera by David Burnett

3.5 out of 5 stars

I have lived in Dorset now for 17 years and I think that it is one of the most beautiful counties. It has a richly varied coastline and the landscapes vary from scarce heathland to the impressive cliffs of the Jurassic coastline. A few minutes on your favourite search engine and you can find some of the amazing photographs taken here.

The images in this book though were created by artists and cartographers hundreds of years before anyone had invented the photograph. The oldest image in here is from 1539 and Burnet has collected them together in various subjects including Towns, Castles and churches and Country Life.

I thought that this was a fascinating collection, alongside each illustration is a description of what it is as well as any details about the subject. There have been changes in over the years, it is kind of inevitable really, but every now and again there is a picture that shows how little has changed! One for the Dorset fan.

June 2022 Review

This is a bit later than planned as I have just come back off holiday in Corfu. We had a wonderful time and it was hot. Properly hot. Anyway, here are the books that I read and packed into my house in June

Books Read

Dorset Before the Camera: 1539-1855 – David Burnett – 3.5 stars

Sustainable Materials – With Both Eyes Open – Julian Allwood & Jonathan Cullen – 3 stars

One People – Guy Kennaway – 4 stars

Salt Lick – Lulu Allison – 3 stars

Jacobé & Fineta – Joaquim Ruyra – 3 stars

Woodland Folk Tales of Britain and Ireland – Lisa Schneidau – 3 stars

A Curious Absence of Chicken – Sophie Grigson – 3.5 stars

Shadowlands – Matthew Green – 4 stars

The Ottomans – Marc David Baer – 3.5 stars

The Wild Silence – Raynor Winn – 4 stars

Field Guide to Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises – Mark Carwardine – 4 stars

The Nature of Summer – Jim Crumley – 4 stars

Fox – Jim Crumley – 3.5 stars

New Leaf – Seán Lysaght – 4 stars

Scraps Of Wool – Bill Colegrave – 4 stars

The Best British Travel Writing Of The 21st Century – Ed. Jessica Vincent – 4 stars

 

Book Of The Month

My book of the month was The Draw Of The Sea – Wyl Menmuir. The is a wonderful eulogy to all this based around the coast. He has a way with words that makes this a wonderful read

 

Top Genres

Natural History – 16

Travel – 14

History – 9

Poetry – 9

Science – 7

 

Top Publishers

William Collins – 6

Faber & Faber – 5

Picador – 4

Unbound – 4

Eland – 4

 

Review Copies Received

On the Scent: Unlocking The Mysteries Of Smell – And How Losing It Can Change Our World – Paola Totaro and Robert Wainwright

The Night Wire: and Other Tales of Weird Media – Aaron Worth

Rhythms of Nature: Wildlife and Wild Places Between the Moors – Ian Carter

RSPB ID Spotlight – Ducks, Geese and Swans – Marianne Taylor, Stephen Message

RSPB ID Spotlight – Garden Bugs – Marianne Taylor, Stephen Message

The Po: An Elegy For Italy’s Longest River – Tobias Jones

Our Haunted Shores: Tales from the Coasts of the British Isles – Ed.Emily Alder& Joan Passey & Jimmy Packham

Inside Qatar: Hidden Stories From Inside One Of The Richest Nations On Earth – John Mcmanus

The Draw Of The Sea – Wyl Menmuir

 

Library Books Checked Out

The Ten Equations That Rule The World And How You Can Use Them Too – David Sumpter

Under The Blue – Oana Aristide

Wahala – Nikki May

Rule, Nostalgia: A Backwards History of Britain – Hannah Rose Woods

Grounding: Finding Home In A Garden – Lulah Ellender

Sea State – Tabitha Lasley

 

Books Bought

Field Notes: Walking The Territory – Maxim Peter Griffin

A Time From The World – Rowena Farre

wanderings – Dan Williams

When There Were Birds: The Forgotten History of Our Connections – Roy Adkins, Lesley Adkins

Alexa, what is there to know about love? – Brian Bilston

The Old Man and the Sand Eel – Will Millard

Pilgrim’s Road: A Journey to Santiago de Compostela – Bettina Selby

Spirit of Place: Letters and Essays on Travel – Lawrence Durrell

The Best of Granta Travel – Ed. Bill Buford

Longshoreman – Benjamin Pond

The Condé Nast Traveler Book of Unforgettable Journeys: Great Writers on Great Places – Klara Glowczewska

Abandoned Churches: Unclaimed Places of Worship – Francis Meslet

Selected poems 1963-2003 – Charles Simic

Four Quartets – T.S. Eliot

Utz – Bruce Chatwin

My Journey to Lhasa – Alexandra David-Néel

Under A Sickle Moon: A Journey Through Afghanistan – Peregrine Hodson

Rome Sweet Rome – Archibald Lyall

Edward Vine’s Dorset – Barry Miles

Betjeman’s Britain – John Betjeman

Phosphate Rocks: A Death in Ten Objects – Fiona Erskine

Kings of a Dead World – Jamie Mollart

The Great Horizon: 50 Tales of Exploration – Jo Woolf

Chasing the Monsoon: a Modern Pilgrimage Through India – Alexander Frater

From Sea To Shining Sea – Gavin Young

Worlds Apart – Gavin Young

What Am I Doing Here – Bruce Chatwin

Travels with Herodotus – Ryszard Kapuściński

Thesiger – Michael Asher

Up The Country – Emily Eden

Dalvi: Six Years in the Arctic – Laura Galloway

Wanderers: A History of Women Walking – Kerri Andrews

Notes from the Cévennes: Half a Lifetime in Provincial France – Adam Thorpe

Extraordinary Clouds: Skies of the Unexpected from the Beautiful to the Bizarre – Richard Hamblyn

The Old Country – Jack Hargreaves

A London Reverie – J. C. Squire

The Trespasser’s Companion – Nick Hayes

A Curious Absence of Chickens by Sophie Grigson

3.5 out of 5 stars

It was following an interview with a fellow author called Russell Norman about his book Venice that made up Grigson’s mind. She would sell of give away anything that she couldn’t get into her purple car and move to Puglia in Italy. In May 2019 she arrived back there after an absence of 40 years.

Stopping in the town of Vieste she felt welcomed by a magnificent dinner and epic firework display to celebrate a saint. But this wasn’t the place for her, she wanted to go further south and ended up in Ceglie Messapica where she finds a place where she will make her home.

Whilst the food in Puglia is Italian, it is also very much not Italian as it doesn’t take long for her to notice the differences and discover the unique flavours and styles. Each chapter picks up on a food-centric theme about life there, from wood-fired ovens to the absence of cows in the landscape. Some of the dishes look wonderful and will be trying some out.

I liked this a lot, she paints a wonderful picture of life there. I have been to Sardinia and Sicily and Umbria but not this part of Italy as yet. There are more recipes than travel writing than I would have preferred, but Grigson is still an entertaining and informative writer and each recipe has an introduction or a potted history about the dish. If you like Italy and want to make yourself hungry whilst reading this is a good place to start.

One People by Guy Kennaway

4 out of 5 stars

A copy of this was provided free of charge from the publisher in return for an honest review.

On the northwest of the island of Jamacia is a tiny hamlet called Cousin Cove. It is alongside the sea and it is full of larger-than-life characters who are making the best of the life that they have there. There are no secrets in this place and as soon as anything of interest begins to happen people are drawn in to see what is happening.

There are eleven short interconnected stories in the book, with a rich array of characters in each. They are always on the lookout to supplement their meagre incomes but any means, fair or foul and had nothing to lose by taking a chance. Most people, especially tourists didn’t stop unless they happened to come unstuck on the road in. There were always lads waiting to help them out of the swamp in the hope of a few dollars.

Other stories concern those asked to look after tourists second homes and are quite surprised to find that they have returned without telling them they were returning. They have half an hour to reclaim the possessions that have been borrowed by other villagers. They all dream of getting of the island, something that they are very unlikely to ever have the chance of. Half of them have no idea where their birth certificate is.

My favourite story was Tree Bay Gyal. It is about three women who are using every trick they know to seduce a tourist. They, along with everyone else in Cousin Cove have plans for a money-making scheme and yet almost none get off the ground. Like all the other stories, there is always the scent of ganja in the background as they mull over their lives at the end of a spliff.

Kennaway has painted this evocative image of a tiny Jamaican village and I really liked this. It has a dark streak of humour that runs all the way through the story as we learn how the characters try to make money from the various schemes they concoct. The patois took me a little while to get used to, but it feels authentic. I can recommend this is you want a little insight into how life was in Jamacia in the 1990s.

The Draw Of The Sea by Wyl Menmuir

Welcome to Halfman, Halfbook for my stop on the Blog Tour for The Draw Of The Sea by Wyl Menmuir and published by Aurum.

About the Book

Since the earliest stages of human development, the sea has fascinated and entranced us. It feeds us, sustaining communities and providing livelihoods. It fires our imagination, providing joy and solace, but it also wields immense destructive power. It connects us to faraway places, offering the promise of new lands and voyages of discovery, but also shapes our borders, carving
divisions between landmasses and eroding the very ground beneath our feet.
In thirteen interlinked chapters of beautifully written prose, Wyl Menmuir sets out to investigate what it is that draws us to the water’s edge, portraying the lives of fishermen, surfers, sailors, boatbuilders, free-divers, swimmers and artists. In the specifics of these livelihoods and their rich histories and traditions, he captures the universality of humankind’s connection to the sea. In more personal, reflective passages, Wyl reveals the grief that underpinned his settling in
the far South West and how living by the sea has consoled and restored his family.
The Draw of the Sea is a meaningful and moving investigation into how we interact with the environment around us, how it comes to shape the course of our lives, and what we have to lose – as individuals and as a society – if we don’t acknowledge its significance. As unmissable as it is compelling, as profound as it is personal, this must-read book will delight anyone familiar with
the intimate and powerful pull of
life beyond the shoreline.

About the Author

Wyl Menmuir is a novelist, editor and literary consultant living in Cornwall. He is the author of the Man-Booker nominated novel The Many, and the critically acclaimed Fox Fires and his short fiction has appeared in Best British Short Stories. A former journalist, he has written for Radio 4’s Open Book, the Guardian and the Observer. He is co-creator of the Cornish writing
centre, The Writers’ Block, and is a lecturer in creative writing at Falmouth University.

My Review

I have always been drawn to the sea, whether spending time at the beach watching the waves gently lap the sand or being in awe at the power of a storm crashing into the rocks. Wyl Menmuir is another who feels this draw too. So much so that he moved from the centre of the country down to Cornwall to be closer to the coast.

In this book, he travels around Cornwall and Scilly Isles and all the way up to Svalbard finding out the stories of the people who live and love the coast in the same way that he does. Across twelve chapters, he meets rock poolers, scavengers, wreckers and surfers. He even has a go at free diving, those amazing people who can hold their breath for minutes at a time.

Most fascinating was his walk with Lisa Woollett who has become a collector of the random items that wash up on the seashore and Tracey Williams who has a thing about finding the Lego pieces that wash up from a container that was lost at sea many years ago. He begins his own collection, but his wife asks him to move it outside as the smell worsens…

I must admit I loved this book. Menmuir has picked an interesting bunch of people that have a story to tell about their life on the coast. He wants to be involved or participate in the thing that he is investigating. I think that this gives him a better perspective on their lives and his prose about the subject is lyrical and informed. If you have the slightest interest in the sea then I can highly recommend this.

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.

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