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January 2023 Review

Didn’t January drag on and on? it always feels so long. But we made it to February and I like that there is more light in the evenings now too. One advantage of a long month is I can get more read and in the end finished 18 books!

Books Read

Haunters at the Hearth: Eerie Tales For Christmas Nights – Ed. Tanya Kirk – 3 Stars

The Metal Heart – Caroline Lea – 3 Stars

The Peckham Experiment – Guy Ware – 3.5 Stars

Robot Overlords: Robots Never Lie – Mark Stay – 3.5 Stars

Treacle Walker – Alan Garner – 3.5 Stars

Gnomon – Nick Harkaway – 4 Stars

The Crow Folk – Mark Stay – 4 Stars

Babes In The Wood – Mark Stay – 4 Stars

The Golden Mole – Katherine Rundell – 3 Stars

Escape from Model Land – Erica Thompson – 3.5 Stars

Green Unpleasant Land – Corinne Fowler – 4 Stars

Millstone Grit – Glyn Huges – 4 Stars

What Remains? – Rupert Callender – 4 Stars

We Saw It All Happen – Julian Bishop – 3.5 Stars

England’s Green – Zaffar Kunial – 4 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

Restoring The Wild – Roy Dennis – 4.5 Stars

Hothouse Earth – Bill McGuire – 4.5 Stars

England on Fire – Stephen Ellcock& Mat Osman – 4.5 Stars

 

 

Top Genres

This is something that you are not going to see very often:

Fantasy – 3

Fiction – 3

Science Fiction – 2

Poetry – 2

History – 2

Natural History – 2

Maths – 1

Miscellaneous – 1

Environmental – 1

Art – 1

 

Top Publishers

Simon & Schuster – 2

Faber & Faber – 2

Gollancz – 1

Chelsea Green – 1

William Heinemann – 1

Peepal Tree Press – 1

British Library – 1

Little Toller – 1

Icon Books – 1

William Collins – 1

 

Review Copies Received

Invisible Friends: How Microbes Shape Our Lives and the World Around Us – Jake M. Robinson

Reconnection: Fixing our Broken Relationship with Nature – Miles Richardson

RSPB How to Photograph Garden Birds – Mark Carwardine

RSPB Handbook of Garden Wildlife: 3rd edition – Peter Holden & Geoffrey Abbott

Falling Away – David Banning

The Quiet Moon: Pathways To An Ancient Way Of Being – Kevin Parr

One Fine Day: A Journey Through English Time – Ian Marchant

Across A Waking Land: A 1,000-Mile Walk Through A British Spring – Roger Morgan-Grenville

Pharmakon – Almudena Sánchez Tr. Katie Whittemore

The Angel Of Santa Sofia – Josep M. Argemí Tr. Tiago Miller

 

Library Books Checked Out

Treacle Walker – Alan Garner

The Ghost of Ivy Barn – Mark Stay

All In: How we build a country that works – Lisa Nandy

 

Books Bought

The Martian Chronicles – Ray Bradbury

Dent’s Modern Tribes – Susie Dent (signed)

The Unofficial Countryside – Richard Mabey

Next to Nature: A Lifetime in the English Countryside – Ronald Blythe (signed)

The Unseen University Challenge: Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Quizbook – Terry Pratchett & David Langford

Messengers: City Tales From a London Bicycle Courier – Julian Sayarer

The Road to Le Tholonet: A French Garden Journey – Montagu Don

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

The Photographs Of HG Ponting – Beau Riffenburgh

Dorset Pilgrimages: A Millennium Handbook – Peter Knight & Mike Power

Crossing Open Ground – Barry Lopez

Interpreting the Landscape from the Air – Mick Aston

A Croft in the Hills – Katharine Stewart

Akenfield: Portrait of an English Village – Ronald Blythe

Out Of The Valley: Another Year At Wormingford – Ronald Blythe

Solomon Time: Adventures in the South Pacific – Will Randall

Being a Beast: Adventures Across the Species Divide – Charles Foster (signed)

Orison For A Curlew – Horatio Clare

Saxons & Vikings – David A. Hinton

Railway Stations – Mike Oakley

The 8.55 To Baghdad – Andrew Eames

Cleopatra’s Needle: Two Wheels by the Water to Cairo – Anne Mustoe (signed)

 

Are there any in that long list that take your fancy?

How many books did you manage to read in January?

Let me know in the comments.

 

Smelling the Breezes by Molly & Ralf Izzard

5 out of 5 stars

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

Travelling anywhere with a small child is an adventure in its own right, whether you are just heading to the beach for a day out or contemplating a small holiday. The thought of going on a 300-mile walk around Lebanon with four small children, and two donkeys is enough to send a chill down my spine.

However, some people are made of much sterner stuff than I am and two of them are Ralph and Molly Izzard. In 1957 they embarked on this venture around the country. Their walk would take them through villages and towns and along some pretty precarious paths and up into the pastures in the hills where men herded goats.

Their four blond children were a passport to a lot of warm hospitality. People were pleased to see them and wanted to hear why this British family had chosen to walk their little bit of the country. Izzard doesn’t paint a rose-tinted view of the country, rather you get to see things as they are in their slightly scruffy sun-bleached reality. The balance between the travel, the people and the meld of cultures is spot on.

I thought that this was a wonderful travel book. Molly, who wrote the majority of the prose is a sensitive traveller, open to new people and places whilst attending to the needs of her young family. Places and people are beautifully described, and the way that she has written it means that you feel like you are alongside the children and donkeys and walk the dusty roads on their  trek. Very highly recommended.

February 2023 TBR

February! All ready! And January seemed to last so long. Anyway, you’re not here to listen to me witter on about why I can’t understand time, you’re here to see what I have planned to read this coming month. So here are the books I will be picking from:

 

Still Reading

The Travel Writing Tribe: Journeys in Search of a Genre Tim Hannigan

Eating to Extinction: The World’s Rarest Foods and Why We Need to Save Them – Dan Saladino

 

Review Books

The House of Islam Ed Husain

The Wonderful Mr Willughby: The First True Ornithologist Tim Birkhead

Asian Waters: The Struggle Over the South China Sea and the Strategy of Chinese Expansion Humphrey Hawksley

Handbook of Mammals of Madagascar Hardcover Nick Garbutt

Swan: Portrait of a Majestic Bird, from Mythical Meanings to the Modern Day – Dan Keel

Dandelions – Thea Lenarduzzi

Pharmakon – Almudena Sánchez Tr. Katie Whittemore

Handbook of Mammals of Madagascar – Nick Garbutt

The Quiet Moon: Pathways To An Ancient Way Of Being –  Kevin Parr

RSPB How to Photograph Garden Birds – Mark Carwardine

RSPB Handbook of Garden Wildlife: 3rd edition – Peter Holden & Geoffrey Abbott

The Lost Orchards: Rediscovering The Forgotten Cider Apples Of Dorset – Liz Copas & Nick Poole

 

Other Books

Walking With Nomads Alice Morrison

Under The Blue – Oana Aristide

Wahala – Nikki May

In the Shadow of the Mountain: A Memoir of Courage – Silvia Vasquez-Lavado

Park Life: Around The World In 50 Parks – Tom Chesshyre

The Bookseller’s Tale – Martin Latham

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

The Ship Asunder: A Maritime History In Eleven Vessels – Tom Nancollas

A Walk in the Park: The Life and Times of a People’s Institution – Travis Elborough

Wanderers: A History of Women Walking – Kerri Andrews

 

Challenge Books

The Overstory – Richard Powers

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

 

Poetry

Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis – Wendy Cope

 

Photobooks

Sea Fever – Stuart Franklin

Are there any that you have read or that take your fancy? Let me know in the comments below

Once Upon a Tome by Oliver Darkshire

3.5 out of 5 stars

I have been in lots and lots of second-hand bookshops, as anyone who follows me on Twitter will know… There is something about them that I love. There is the thrill of never really knowing what you are going to find, it might be a book that you remember from childhood or something that you have been looking for, for a long time. They have a certain reverence to them too, a hushed murmur as people move slowly around the bookshop.

I must admit that I have never been to Sotheran’s, but next time I go to London it is going to be on my list of bookshops that I visit. I probably won’t be able to afford anything, but from reading this book by Oliver Darkshire, it sounds like a wonderful place to visit for an hour or so.

I really enjoyed this insight into the strange world of the rare bookseller. It is not a conventional career choice by any means and the people that work in these bookshops are unique, to say the least. Darkshire’s prose is reasonable and there are moments that made me really laugh. What I really enjoyed is his insight into the human characters that come here seeking those rare books that have eluded them until this point. An essential read for any book collector.

A Bloggers Reading Journey – Owl Be Sat Reading

Welcome to the second in y series of discovering a little about bloggers reading journeys. This week it is the turn of Lisa, a *mumbles* forty-something British Book Blogger and Reviewer. She has loved reading and all things books as long as She can remember. She lives in Hampshire in the South of England and needs coffee to function as a human being. Her love of books is getting ridiculous.

My world pretty much evolves around books. So if she goes missing, you’ll generally find her wrapped in a blanket or in the bath with her nose in a book or Kindle. Sometimes though she is reading about books on Goodreads. Or loitering on Twitter. But not browsing ARCs on NetGalley for hours on end fighting my request urges. Oh and lastly I recently joined Instagram and Pinterest.

She mainly reads horror, psychological thrillers and historical fiction, but lately, she has been getting into some non-fics, like true crime and the natural world. I also enjoy poetry, short stories and occasionally go for some light-hearted reads or humour.

When not reading she like spending time in the natural world, and walking everywhere. Anything to combat the excesses of wine and food that she loves.

 

What is your earliest reading memory?

My earliest reading memory has to be practising with my Mum at bedtime for a whole week to read Ladybird Book ‘The Enormous Turnip’. I can still picture the 1970’s itchy blankets on my bed and feeling very proud when I was able to read from start to finish in one sitting 😌

 

What was your favourite childhood book?

My favourite childhood book was so many, but the one that always sticks in my mind is called Frank and Polly Muirs Big Dipper (sounds iffy 🤣) It was a treasury of stories, poems, funny quizzes etc. The last story in it was called ‘Whatamess’ about a very dishevelled dog if I remember rightly! 😅

 

What book do you remember reading at school?

School reading, now that has to be James Herberts ‘The Dark’. Very violent and gory and it did the rounds in senior school. Everyone in my circle loved it, and then the deputy head confiscated it. How dare you Mr Ellis! I can still see him now, wandering off thumbing through it. I reckon he read as well! 😂

 

What was the book that changed you?

The book that changed me – that’s a tough one. Probably The Dark as stated above, to be honest! It was the first horror, and adult book I’d ever read and I’ve never looked back. Horror has always been my first bookish love 🖤

 

Who was the author who helped you discover a whole new genre?

The author that helped me discover a whole new genre was Sarah Waters. Historical fiction! Love it  with a passion.

 

What was the last book that you bought?

The last book I bought was a Christmas pressie actually! The new Brandon Sanderson The Lost Metals for my husband! 🤫 don’t tell him 😂

 

What was the last book you reread?

The last book I reread was We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson. I read it every year without fail. Long time favourite.

 

What was the last book you couldn’t finish?

The last one I couldn’t finish – let me check my Goodreads – Of Cottages and Cauldrons. It was an autumnal anthology and I was pulled in by the cover art 🤦🏻‍♀️ the stories were, for want of a better word, amateur. I gave it my best shot. But it was pretty bad imo 😬

 

The book I am currently reading

I’m currently reading 2! Beast by Matt Wesolowski book 4 in the Six Stories series. I’m reading it together with my husband. We sit together on the sofa and alternate chapters. And I’m also reading Cursed Bunny by Bora Chung. A Korean short story collection which is equal parts genius and demented 😂 exactly the kind of thing I love!

 

Where do you read?

Where I read – on the sofa mainly and in the bath most nights!

 

What books / genre do you turn to, to get out of a reading slump?

Terry Pratchett usually gets me out of a reading slump, or The Hobbit. Or I’d pick up a collection to ease myself back in.

 

What was your last five star read?

My last 5 star read was The Carnivorous Plant by  Andrea Mayo, again, translated fiction. Very tough read about domestic violence and coercion. Hard but powerful. Deserved all the stars.

 

How many books do you currently own?

I can’t possibly tell you how many books I own but including kindle books well over 1000 😬🤫 without kindle, probably in excess of 500 🤦🏻‍♀️ and I wonder why I have no storage space left 🤣

 

What is the oldest book on your bookshelves?

The oldest book on my shelf is Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland which I believe was bought for me in about 1979 by my Nan and Grandad. I’d have to double check that date but it’s define of the oldest and it’s falling apart so I try not to touch it too much!

 

What book did you last buy based on the cover?

Probably Cursed Bunny – I saw it in a charity shop and for whatever reason, I gravitate towards books with rabbits/hares on the front. Weird. 🐰

 

What book do you always recommend?

I always recommend Maggie Richell-Davies’ The Servant. It’s under the radar and deserves to be a bestseller. An incredible historical fiction, it’s my book of the year this year!

You can find Lisa all over the internet. Her linktree is here

I Belong Here by Anita Sethi

3.5 out of 5 stars

Anita Sethi was on a train journey when she was racially abused for merely asking a fellow passenger to turn his music down. The man was arrested and was charged and then later prosecuted for his tirade. She was left to pick up the pieces and rebuild her life. She became afraid of being enclosed and longed for open space and big horizons. She know that she belonged in this country and didn’t want this experience to stop her from travelling.

What happened to her on that train journey was just horrific, and whilst justice was served, and the man punished for the cruel things that he said, she is left picking up the pieces. She does have help though from a variety of people that are there to ensure that she gets through it. What she also relies on is the crutch that is the natural world.

She decides to embark on the walk along the Pennine way to seek healing and but also to reclaim her place in this land. She is a little unprepared for something as strenuous as this and suffers from a number of minor ailments. She is joined on some stages by others for company and there are times when she has to rely on the generosity of strangers to help her to get where she wants to get to.

It is not a bad book overall. There are some really powerful parts to her writing, especially the response to the abuse she has suffered all the way through her life, culminating in the attack on the train. She is not the first to suffer in this way and this is her way of saying to those on the receiving end of it that there is a way through. Other reviewers have said that it can be a bit repetitive, and I can see where they are coming from. I didn’t find that irritated me, rather I felt that it was more of a book to support others who have been at the receiving end of similar racist abuse.

The walk along the Pennine Way along with the emotional buoyancy that it gave her, felt like a secondary element of the book really, which is a shame as I would have loved to have read more of the travels. It was reading this book that I realise that I have met Anita once at one of the shortlist events for the Wainwright Prizes, she had just come from the funeral of Sophie Christopher and we were introduced.

Wild Nights Out by Chris Salisbury

3 out of 5 stars

When the sun goes down, you’d think that there would not be much to see for the wildlife spotter, no need for a pair of binoculars, just a torch to see where you’re going. But it is not like that at all, you need to take a little time for your eyes to adjust to the dark. Strangely enough, it is a similar time from sunset to dusk.

All the nighttime creatures appear from the shadows, and now your eyes are used to the dark you’ll be able to see them. And your binoculars will still work fine, they will take all the light around and concentrate it into your eyes. As the brain cannot get all the information it needs from your eyes, it will heighten your other senses, so you may begin to hear and feel things that you might not have been aware of before.

But how to navigate in this environment?

In this book, Chris Salisbury has pulled together lots of advice and suggestion for activities for children of all ages (even big children) on subjects such as the night sky, how to find animals in the night and the skills and tools that you need to navigate without light. I didn’t think that this was a bad book overall, I am not really the target audience which it was aimed at. I skim-read the activities that he included for encouraging both children and adults to embrace the dark, that said if you are looking to lead these sorts of activities then this would be an excellent resource.

Gnomon by Nick Harkaway

4 out of 5 stars

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

It has reached the point in the UK where the state is the all-seeing and all-knowing entity that watches all its citizens. Every single thing you say or do or post is recorded and the state has unlimited access to your innermost thoughts. Almost all the population has accepted this, partly as society is the safest it could be in history.

The state wants to respond to any potential threat to the security of itself and the population, and whilst interrogating a dissident, Diana Hunter, she dies in custody. This is the first time that this has happened and they need a top investigator to find out what exactly happened; the trusted state inspector Mielikki Neith is assigned to the investigation.

Immersing herself in the neural recording of the investigation, she slowly starts to realise that things are not as they seem. Rather than just finding the lady who passed away, she finds a number of different characters from an alchemist to an artist. Circling below these characters is an entity that calls itself Gnomon; Neith doesn’t know what it is but it is very much not of this time.

Nothing is as it seems and as she tries to untangle the complex web inside the neural recordings, she at last gets a glimpse of the real Diana Hunter. It comes to her that they hold snippets of the answer that she must decode. But doing that will reveal to her the perilous state that the System is in and if she can do anything about it.

I liked a lot of things about this book. I liked the way that society has been constructed and the all-seeing ‘System’ guides steers and watches, always watches the populace of the UK. I thought that the technologies enabling Neith to see inside Hunter’s mind were as fascinating as they were terrifying. The pervasive state is a disturbing mixed bag of a utopian/dystopian future, there is still those who wish to circumvent it.

I did think that it had a few flaws though. It is mind-bendingly complex and deeply layered and it took me a while to work out who was who. It did feel a bit overwritten too and could have been shorter in my opinion with a much tighter plot. I won’t expand on the plot too much as that would spoil it for anyone else wanting to venture into this weird world, but I did like it, once I had formed my mind around the convolutions. It might be a bit overwhelming for some people, but be patient with it and it will reward you as a reader.

Black Lion by Sicelo Mbatha

4 out of 5 stars

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

My name is Sicelo Cabangani Mbatha. My wilderness name is Bhubeselimnyama – Black Lion.

Probably the most dangerous animal that we have in the area is the adder, provided you can find one when they are out from the spring onwards. We don’t have to be wary of properly dangerous animals like lions or crocodiles. Where Sicelo Mbatha lives though these animals are just a fact of life, something that was brough home to his when his cousin was taken by a crocodile when crossing a river.

It was as if I could sense the unbounded wonder of nature and life and earth. I wept because I did know how else to respond

It didn’t make him want to go to the city, he wanted to stay in the Zulu homeland where he grew up, the draw of the natural world was too great to resist. He grew up as a child of nature, living a life that had been carried on that way for generations and learning it from the elders as they sat around the fire in the evening.

He began his working life, as many his age do, as a cow herder and it was being outside that reinforced his desire to become a game ranger. He passed his qualifications but did not have the money to be able to carry on his studies, so ended up working as a volunteer at the Mduba compound. It was here that he was to learn a lot of the skills, lion tracking, and monitoring rhino, that he would take through his career.

He would then become a trainee guide and best of all this was a paid position so he could properly support his young family. He thrived in this new position and learnt so much about the practical skills required in running a wilderness school. But it didn’t give him everything that he need, so when a position came up at Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife he applied and got it. It would be there where he would learn the next set of skills and become closer to the wilderness of Africa.

I really liked this account from Sicelo Mbatha of his life so far. It hasn’t been the easiest path that he has chosen to walk, but his heart is in the right place and he is happy with the choices that he has made. What comes across in the book is his passion for nature and all aspects of the natural world. At a deep level, he understands just how important it is to have a diverse world that is rich in specie, and that we as humans are just a part of that. Well worth reading to hear a new authentic voice in nature writing.

West Cumbria Mining by David Banning

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

In the news recently was the announcement that the British government has given approval for the first coal mine to be opened in the country for decades. Provided you ignore the fact that burning coal is one of the worst ways of pumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the powers that be said that this was going to be a carbon-neutral site. I was under the misbelief that the Tories didn’t like coal miners and this lot wouldn’t get irony if it ran them over in an MPV.

Coal mining is dirty and dangerous work and the men who used to do it in this country were a special breed. The places around the county that had pits used to be proud of what they did and the contribution that they made to the country and economy. It brings back memories for David Banning too, of his childhood and the family members that used to head below the surface to earn a living.

Reliving these memories with him feels like he is mining his past. He has uncovered various documents and photos to add historical context to his family story. His relative Sam Snaith was very elusive about his work in the pit, and Banning has pieced together a narrative from other contemporary accounts and tiny details that he did reveal.

But this isn’t a look back at the past through soot-flecked spectacles, Banning has something to say about the new coal mine at the stage of writing that was being approved. Even though it was claimed to be a British company creating British jobs, tracing the money showed that it was, as expected, located offshore. Things are never as they seem.

I liked this mix of memoir and personal family history set in the context of the mines of West Cumbria. It has a nice balance to each element of the book. Setting the future in the context of the past works really well too and whilst Banning doesn’t come across as angry when talking about the new mine, you can tell that he sees the project as futile and we are shredding what little is left of our reputation on the global stage.

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