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Atlas Alone by Emma Newman

3.5 out of 5 stars

Dee has been on the ship for six months now and she raging about the circumstances that led her to be on there as well as the events that happened after they had left. She wants to find was responsible, but her limited privileges on the ship mean she is making no progress on it at all.

She has been noticed though by someone in authority. She is asked to provide some analysis for them and they are happy with her results and work. She gets paid for it and there is the offer of more work, and most importantly, access to databases that she never knew existed. On top of that, she has been invited to play in some of the games or mersives by a designer.

These games are incredibly intense, unlike anything that she has tried up until now. It is only after she returns to normal life that she realises that one of the people in the game she was playing is now actually dead on the ship. Her friend, Carl is asked to investigate. And whilst she knows the game felt real, she really doesn’t believe that it was that real. Or was it? Perhaps the chatbot that only seems to be talking to her may have the answer. On not. She really doesn’t know…

Given how much of a blast the previous book was, I had high hopes for this, the final book in the series. And don’t get me wrong, It was good in various ways, however, I was disappointed for a few reasons that I will come to in a moment. I really liked the AI and the tech that they use to live on this ship that was made from the information in the capsule. The characters were engaging too, though Carl from book 2 was a little two-dimensional in this. Some of the details of the plot were good, the way that the action in the ‘mersives was having an impact on real life on the ship, blurring the differences between the real world and the virtual worlds. I had a problem with a couple of the aspects of the plot though, firstly it seemed too easy for events to take place given how monitored the passengers on the ship were and it kind of felt that it was rushed to a conclusion. I had hope for other things to happen, but sadly that wasn’t to be.

Generally, I thought it was a good series though with some high points and only the odd low one. I kind of hope there is going to be the fifth book in the series, as there are so many unanswered questions, but haven’t seen anything about it.

The Accidental Detectorist by Nigel Richardson

Welcome to Halfman, Halfbook for my stop on the Blog Tour for The Accidental Detectorist by Nigel Richardson and published by Cassell (Part of Octopus Books).

About the Book

One man’s accidental journey into uncovering Britain’s underground obsession. A fascinating and engaging tale of metal detecting history and Britain for fans of The Detectorists.

When a travel writer is stuck on home soil in the middle of a pandemic he meets Kris Rodgers, one of Britain’s eminent metal detectorists. Dipping a toe in the hobby, Nigel quickly finds himself swept up in the world beneath the surface. Above the ground are a cast of fascinating and passionate people who open Nigel’s eyes to a subterranean world of treasure and stories that bring the history of the island to life.

Scouring the country from Cornwall to Scotland in search of treasure and the best detectorists, Nigel finds himself more immersed in the culture than he bargained for and makes his own personal journey from cynicism to obsession in his trail through the heartlands of metal detecting. From women’s groups who react against the hobby’s male bias, to the ‘Nighthawks’ who risk jail time in their pursuits, he finds his preconceptions disabused and gets to the heart of what makes this quiet community so obsessed with happy beeps.

About the Author

Nigel Richardson is a British journalist and author of five previous books who has worked at the top level for more than 25 years (13 of them on the staff of the Daily Telegraph in London). He writes about history, archaeology, landscapes, culture and wildlife conservation and has won numerous awards and commendations (UK Travel Journalist of the Year, Sunday Times Children’s Book of the Week, BBC Radio 4 Pick of the Week etc). Previous books include the travelogues Breakfast in Brighton: Adventures on the Edge of Britain and (with the actor Richard Wilson) Britain’s Best Drives: Journeys Back to the Golden Age of Motoring.

My Review

The first time that Nigel Richardson met a metal detectorist he was sat eating his lunch by the edge of a field. It wasn’t a hobby that had any appeal to him, and in a slightly sneering way, they have a terse conversation and it wasn’t helped by Richardson’s dog pilfering one of the man’s sandwiches. He had changed his mind a little about the men (and it is mostly men) who pursue this hobby after watching the brilliant TV comedy, The Detectorists.

Roll on five years and a travel writer who is unable to travel because of a pandemic is going to get quite bored and stuck at home. He managed to get a column that paid and the idea came to him to write about the hobby. He was put in touch with a local guy called, Kris, who had a big following on YouTube. He lent him a detector and they set about a field in Kent in the search for, well for anything he could find really. They found a few things and he even found a dress pin. More importantly, he had enough material for the column. Sitting in the car after drinking tea he thought about what had happened and then set off for home.

A few weeks later he retrieved his new machine from where it was hidden behind the wheelie bins. He was starting on a journey that he never ever thought that he would take.

It was a journey that would take him to various parts of the country from his local village to the wide skies of Norfolk. He walked in fields that people had walked across hundreds of years ago and lost the items that he would find later. He would share these experiences with one person sweeping the head of their machine across another part of the field and went to big rallies where there would be hundreds of other detectorists who were as obsessed as he was becoming. The one thing that he want to find was an elusive hammered coin. Everyone else seemed to have found them.

I liked this gentle heart-warming tale as Richardson tells how he discovered a new hobby that quickly becomes an obsession. He writes well, and it is an amusing and entertaining book to read. What made the book for me is his descriptions of the characters who occupy the detectorist landscape as well as that thrill of finding a little bit of history for yourself.

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

https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1I6nGZCeCQEzaRTF_ST3SkZ9Y6j4OnO_W&ll=53.88013082599319%2C-3.7254416000000674&z=6

My thanks to Anne Cater of Random Things Tours for arranging a copy of the book to read.

Before Mars by Emma Newman

4.5 out of 5 stars

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

Anna Kubrin has been travelling for months to get to Mars. She is fortunate to get a position, as the rest of the team has been there for a while and while her position as artist-in-residence is a little controversial, she can bring her skills as a geologist to the planet too. She has left on Earth a husband and small daughter and she is hoping that the year that she will be here with not damage that connection that she had with them.

But not everything seems right on the Mars base. She has a cool reception from one of the members of the team there, but she understands that some might not understand the reason that she is here. When she is shown the room that she will be staying in, she finds a painted note in her style advising her not to trust the colony psychologist. She recognises her writing but has no recollection of writing it. Her wedding ring has been changed too, and the engraving that was inside has gone.

It is not long before she is allowed out onto the surface of the planet so she can gain some inspiration for her art. She heads over to a place that no one has visited before, and behind a rock fits a footprint. It is from a boot similar to hers. There is no explanation as to why it is there and the colony AI is not particularly helpful when questioned about it. In some of the photos that she takes in preparation for her painting, there is something strange in the background of one that isn’t in the others

She wants to find out what happened and have an explanation for these strange events. This is mostly to prove that she is not losing her mind, but as she digs deeper she realises that this might not be a truth that she wants to know after all…

This book threw me a little, to begin with. It didn’t seem to follow the same timeline as the previous book, After Atlas. Part way through, I realised that whilst it is a series, it is the story of a series of events seen from a variety of characters perspectives. This book was much darker than the previous ones for a variety of reasons, that you will have to find out by reading the book. I am not going to say much more than that, just that if you like your sci-fi with an original take on a dystopian future then this series is really good and this is the best in the series so far.

After Atlas by Emma Newman

4.5 out of 5 stars

Carlos Moreno was only a baby when Atlas left the earth. His mother was on the ship and his life changed forever at that point. He was left with his father who had not made the selection for the ship and they ended up in the hands of the religious cult known as the Circle run by the charismatic leader called Alejandro Casales. That was forty years ago and attention is being focused on the capsule that was left as it is going to be opened soon.

He left that cult and made his way to the UK where he now works for the Ministry of Justice as an investigator. He is called in by his seniors to investigate a death. Alejandro Casales has been found in his hotel room and they think that he will be the best person to find out who did it. Given the profile of Casaleshas, there are a lot of interested parties and the inevitable legal teams from various gov-corps around the world who have an interest in knowing what happened.
He will have to ignore all his shared history with Casaleshas, but as he uncovers each clue he realises that he is getting into murkier and murkier territory.

I thought this was a big step up from her first book in this series. The pace of it is really fast as she throughs her main character through the emotional and physical mill whilst trying to solve this mysterious case. I got halfway through the book and realised that he couldn’t have solved the case already. He hadn’t, there was just so much more to unpack in the story. I really liked how she has built the society, it feels very dystopian with a pervasive tech that is built into people when they are chipped at the age of 16. The way that the super rich can influence governments is equally worrying, it feels like she has created a natural extrapolation of where we are in society at the moment. Excellent stuff and onto the next now.

Planetfall by Emma Newman

3.5 out of 5 stars

It has been twenty-two years since Ren and the others in the colony arrived on this planet far beyond earth. It was a place that was untainted by overpopulation, pollution, and war and held a promise to reveal our place in the cosmos. They made their home at the bottom of an organic alien structure and in that structure is Lee Suh-Mi the founder of the colony.

But the truth of what happened to Suh-Mi is not known to the other colonists, Renata Ghali is one of the few who knows exactly what happened and she has kept that secret since. The arrival in the colony of a stranger from one of the other ships threatens the status quo, especially when they learn that he is related to Suh-Mi. He is there for a reason and if the other colonists were to discover the truth, who knows what might happen

I really liked this story. The world-building is very well done, in particular the alien structure and the way that the characters interact with it. I liked the varied characters, there is an unreliable narrator, the disrupter and the sneaky type and they all go to make the story work really well. The plot was well mapped out and there was enough in there to keep me reading it, which is always a good thing. If there was one flaw, there were too many loose ends and unanswered questions in this, but it is the first in a series of four, so I am hoping that they get answered in the rest!

August 2022 Review

I had hoped to get more read in August because we had ten days off and were away in Jersey. Ended up doing lots of other things and not reading as much, but that is life. Did read 16 though, and bought a load! As usual.

Books Read

Outsiders – Ed. Alice Slater – 3.5 Stars

Nine Quarters Of Jerusalem: A New Biography Of The Old City – Matthew Teller – 3 Stars

The Restless Kings: Henry II, His Sons and the Wars for the Plantagenet Crown – Nick Barratt – 3.5 Stars

Ring of Stone Circles: Exploring Neolithic Cumbria – Stan L Abbott – 3.5 Stars

Word Drops: A Sprinkling of Linguistic Curiosities – Paul Anthony Jones – 4 Stars

Time On Rock – Anna Fleming – 3 Stars

Under Pressure: Living Life and Avoiding Death on a Nuclear Submarine – Richard Humphreys – 4 Stars

Where The Wildflowers Grow My Journey Through Botanical Britain – Leif Bersweden – 4 Stars

Living with Trees: A Common Ground Handbook – Robin Walter – 4.5 Stars

(un)interrupted tongues – Dal Kular – 3.5 Stars

Every Breath You Take – Mark Broomfield – 3.5 Stars

Planetfall – Emma Newman – 3.5 Stars

After Atlas – Emma Newman – 4 Stars

Before Mars – Emma Newman – 4.5 Stars

Atlas Alone – Emma Newman – 4.5 Stars

 

Book Of The Month

Field Notes – Maxim Peter Griffin – 5 stars

This is a magnificent blend of art and psychogeography and if you like either of those things then I would suggest you buy a copy.

 

Top Genres

Natural History – 22

Travel – 17

History – 12

Poetry – 11

Fiction – 8

Memoir – 8

Science – 8

Environmental – 6

Science Fiction – 4

Photography – 4

(I need to read some more travel books this month!!)

 

Top Publishers

Faber & Faber – 8

William Collins – 7

Unbound – 5

Gollancz – 4

Bloomsbury – 4

Picador – 4

Canongate – 4

Eland – 4

Little Toller – 4

Summersdale – 3

 

Review Copies Received

brother. do. you. love. me. – Manni Coe & Reuben Coe

The Horned God: Weird Tales of the Great God Pan – Ed. Michael Wheatley

Escape from Model Land: How Mathematical Models Can Lead Us Astray and What We Can Do About It – Erica Thompson

The Grove: A Nature Odyssey in 19 ½ Front Gardens – Ben Dark

The Accidental Detectorist: The Adventures of a Reluctant Metal Detectorist – Nigel Richardson

You’ve Been Played: How Corporations, Governments and Schools Use Games to Control Us All – Adrian Hon

 

Library Books Checked Out

Secret Britain: A journey through the Second World War’s hidden bases and battlegrounds – Sinclair McKay

Afropean: Notes From Black Europe – Johny Pitts

Apple Island Wife: Slow Living In Tasmania – Fiona Stocker

Small Island: A History Of Britain In 12 Maps – Philip Parker

Far From The Light – Tade Thompson

 

Books Bought

A Dorset Camera: 1855 – 1914 – David Burnett

Scotland: The Wild Places – Colin Prior (Signed)

A Lizard in My Luggage: Mayfair to Mallorca in One Easy Move – Anna Nicholas

Bottoms Up in Belgium – Alec le Sueur (Signed)

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

The Museum of Whales You Will Never See: Dreamers and Collectors in Iceland – A. Kendra Greene

A Handful of Honey: Away to the Palm Groves of Morocco and Algeria – Annie Hawes

Letters to Camondo – Edmund de Waal

Cuckoo: Cheating by Nature – Nick Davies

Cuba – The Land of Miracles: A Journey Through Modern Cuba – Stephen Smith

Viva Mexico!: A Traveller’s Account of Life in Mexico – Charles Macomb Flandrau

Ask Sir James: The Life of Sir James Reid, Personal Physician to Queen Victoria – Michaela Reid

The Train in Spain: Ten Great Journeys Through The Interior – Christopher Howse

Love Her Wild – Atticus

Selected Poems – Lawrence Durrell (Signed)

Mirrors of the Unseen: Journeys in Iran – Jason Elliot

The Owl Service – Alan Garner

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

Paranormal Purbeck: A Study of the Unexplained – David Leadbetter

 

Any of those that you have come across before or read yourself? Let me know in the comments below

September 2022 TBR

Here is the TBR list of books for September that I will be picking my books from. Not sure how many I will get read this coming month as my wife, Sarah, begins the first of her six cycles of chemo for breast cancer too. I do have one blog tour book that will be read, though.

 

Reading Through The Year

A Poem for Every Night of the Year – Allie Esiri

Word Perfect – Susie Dent

 

Finishing Off (Still!)

The Travel Writing Tribe – Tim Hannigan

Beautiful Country – Qian Julie Wang

 

Blog Tour

Accidental Detectorist – Nigel Richardson

 

Review Copies

Asian Waters – Humphrey Hawksley

Blue Mind – Wallace J. Nichols

The Devil You Know – Gwen Adshead, Eileen Horne

Above the Law – Adrian Bleese

Black Lion: Alive in the Wilderness Sicelo Mbatha

The Babel Message: A Love Letter to Language Keith Kahn-Harris

Isles at the Edge of the Sea – Jonny Muir

The Good Life – Dorian Amos

Britain Alone – Philip Stephens

We Own This City – Justin Fenton

Spaceworlds – Ed. Mike Ashley

The Power of Geography – Tim Marshall

The Devil You Know – Gwen Adshead, Eileen Horne

Letters from Egypt – Lucie Duff Gordon

Crawling Horror – Ed. Daisy Butcher & Janette Leaf

The Valleys of the Assassins – Freya Stark

The Cruel Way – Ella Maillart

Above the Law – Adrian Bleese

Cornish Horrors – Ed. Joan Passey

Somebody Else – Charles Nicholl

Scenes from Prehistoric Life – Francis Pryor

The Heath – Hunter Davies

Three Women of Herat – Veronica Doubleday

The Sloth Lemur’s Song – Alison Richard

Polling UnPacked – Mark Pack

The View from the Hil – Christopher Somerville

The Po – Tobia Jones

A River Runs Through Me – Andrew Douglas-Home

Illuminated by Water – Malachy Tallack

Rhythms of Nature – Ian Carter

Thunderstone – Nancy Campbell

be/longing – Amanda Thomson

Return to My Trees – Matthew Yeomans

Swan – Dan Keel

 

Library

Ravilious: Wood Engravings – James Russell

Between Light and Storm – Esther Woolfson

Bewilderment – Richard Powers

Tweet Of The Day – Brett Westwood & Stephen Moss

My 1001 Nights – Alice Morrison

A Song for a New Day – Sarah Pinsker

The This – Adam Roberts

Looking for Transwonderland – Noo Saro-Wiwa

 

Poetry

Dancing Satyr – Chris Waters

 

Books to Clear

Our Game – John Le Carré

The Tailor of Panama- John Le Carré

Year of the Golden Ape – Colin Forbes

Dreaming in Code – Scott Rosenberg

 

Own Books

Er, not sure there are any this month…

 

Challenge Books

The Wood That Made London – C.J. Schuler

English Pastoral – James Rebanks

A Still Life – Josie George

A Trillion Trees – Fred Pearce

 

Photobook

Ravilious: Wood Engravings – James Russell

The Seven Deadly Sins by Various, Tr. Mara Faye Lethem

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

The seven deadly sins are a list of vices within Christian teachings and currently are; lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath and envy. I say currently as the order has been different in the past, as well as having others included in the list in the early church, where they had nine at one point!

But what is the modern take on these vices? To answer that seven of the most exciting, vibrant voices in Catalan literature, Raül Garrigasait, Jordi Graupera, Oriol Ponsatí-Murlà, Marina Porras, Anna Punsoda, Adrià Pujol, and Oriol Quintana have been asked to chose one and write about it in any way they like.

It makes for a wide-ranging and interesting series of essays too, with subjects covered as diverse as relationships with others at the age of 14, a lesson learnt about pride at a delicatessen and a young girl first learning about lust, when a neighbour left his wife for a Russian girl thirty years younger than him.

I really enjoyed reading these. Each author has a vice they have chosen to write about and this makes them all very different in terms of the context, specific subjects and even if they think it is a vice or not. I didn’t really have a favourite and they all complement each other so well. As an aside, I think that the translator has done a great job too, finding the individual voices and making a cohesive book.

Word Drops by Paul Anthony Jones

4 out of 5 stars

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

I am a big fan of books on language. If you like books on the origins of the words that we use every day, or learning about phrases that have vanished from our regular usage then you cannot go wrong with a book by Paul Anthony Jones.

I have liked all the books of his that I have read previously and can happily add this one to the list of books I have enjoyed. This collection of words has been harvested from his excellent Twitter feed, @HaggardHawks. A lot of the content is the tweets replicated, such as learning what is bookstave is or discovering the original definition for bumfuzzle.

The advantage that the book has over Twitter is that he has the opportunity to expand some of the entries. For example the faintly ridiculous word, whangdoodle has a long explanation of its origins and which Sunday in the year is called Quasimodo day. It is a good way of changing the pace of the book from just reading the brief language gems. Can recommend this if you like filling your mind with random facts to repeat to friends and family.

(Un)interrupted Tongues by Dal Kular

Welcome to Halfman, Halfbook for my stop on the Blog Tour for (Un)interrupted Tongues by Dal Kular and published by Fly on the Wall Press. (And a day late because of other stuff…)

About the Book

(un)interrupted tongues unfolds Kular’s creative journey and life as a working-class woman of colour. Written and created intuitively, Kular seeks to unravel the past, in order to understand the present and to heal. Here, unbelonging is power. These poems are love letters to the reader, to never give up on creative dreams.

About the Author

Author Photo

Dal Kular is a Sheffield-born and based writer of Punjabi/Sikh heritage. She is a facilitator, tutor and mentor specialising in creative writing arts for healing. (un)interrupted tongues unfolds Kular’s creative journey and life as a working-class woman of colour. Written and created intuitively, Kular seeks to unravel the past, in order to understand the present and to heal.

My Review

Some people seek acceptance and power through membership and belonging. Dal Kular is not like that, rather she draws power from unbelonging. The poems in this collection are written from a very personal perspective, drawing deep from her Punjabi heritage.

Using the past to explain the present is a theme that runs all the way through this collection, but the past is not there to be seen through rose-tinted spectacles. She uses it through these poems to channel her anger into a way to heal from those injustices.

tell me new stories – flood
the urban lies. I prefer
to be formed elemental –
Stand earth stacked,
wind hacked, salt slapped
with the old Wo-man of Hoy.

It is an interesting collection that I ended up reading a couple of times through in the end. To say it is unconventional is an understatement, the form and layout of the poems is very different from any other collection that I have read recently, and the choice of words in some of the poems demonstrate just how she is carving her own path with prose. If you want to read a very different collection of poems from a working class perspective then I can recommend this.

Three Favourite Poems

I had a dream once
2019 | Orkney
I knew | | 2016

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 from Fly on the Wall Press for the copy of the book to read.

 

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