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The Art of More by Michael Brooks

4 out of 5 stars

Our brains are not wired specifically for counting. Until we are taught otherwise, the untrained maths brain will only notice up to three things, before considering any above that is just more. Instead, we have a deeply ingrained culture that tells us that maths is important and that it matters. But we all have our limits, for some, it is the GCSE, but others go on to much higher levels.

Brooks begins with arithmetic, the simplest form of maths. As a species, we have been counting for around 20,000 years and even now we can see differences in cultures in the way that people use their fingers to count. He touches on fractions and negative numbers before we arrive at geometry. For some this may bring back the horror’s of a Pi you can’t eat, but it is more straightforward than algebra where we are reminded of that moment in maths when they add the complexity of letters to maths. Who remembers the quadratic formula?
For me though, the point when my brain juddered a little was calculus. I still understand it in principle, but it has been sooooo very long since I did it and rusty is an understatement… His chapter on logarithms seems easy by comparison and for some reason, imaginary numbers for me were relatively straightforward to master. As the saying goes, there are lies, dam lies and statistics and those that have a mastery of these slippery numbers can often hold the upper edge on those that can’t.

As maths books go, this is a pretty good one. Brooks tells us about the history behind each particular subject and some of the key people who have been instrumental in making our modern world a mathematical one. It is very readable, and only occasionally veers into the realm of the formula. Should that bring back nightmares from school then that can be skipped if necessary. If the thought of maths doesn’t terrify you too much, then this is a good place to start.

Sunless Solstice Ed. By Lucy Evans and Tanya Kirk

3.5 out of 5 stars

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

As the nights draw in after the clocks go back, stories with darker moments are what some people seek out. And the editors of this book have sought out what they think that people want to read in the depths of midwinter. The twelve selected stories are drawn from some well-known authors, like Daphne du Maurier and Muriel Spark, to others that I have never heard of.

It wouldn’t be a collection of ghost stories without a moor and the first is The Ghost at the Cross Roads and a card game with a dark stranger. There is a tense story about a séance that goes wrong and another about a man who has a dread of cats. It is not just the winter that is chilling in some of these stories…

As with any collection, there were some I liked and others that I didn’t. It leans heavily on the gothic melodrama as I was kind of expecting, but there was the odd one or two in here that I did find unsettling. Not all were as scary as I thought that they’d be, but it is a nice wintery collection of stories. A ghost story told around an open fire in a pub is going to come across very differently when told walking down a misty holloway. If you like your Christmas stories less twee, then this is a good place to start.

Three Favourite Stories
On The Northern Ice
Ganthony’s Wife
A Fall of Snow

Mistletoe Winter by Roy Dennis

4 out of 5 stars

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

This is a companion volume to the earlier book, Cottongrass Summer that was published in 2020 and in this book he takes us through each of the seasons with thoughts and essays on a wide variety of subjects. He has taken

The book begins, as you’d expect with Mistletoe, a plant that Dennis doesn’t see where he lives now, but always comes across when he is in Southern England in the winter. As the leaves fall away in the autumn, the heavy globes are their most visible. They had an attraction to people who used these still green plants in ritual ways, as well as being an important food for mistle thrushes who spread the sticky seeds onto other trees. He writes about a friend who has a barn owl in her shed and the alarm call of the Ptarmigan.

This was written during the first lockdown of 2020 and that world-changing event is reflected in some of the essays in here, he sees more of the comings and goings in his garden than he would have done previously and it gives him the time to track the white-tailed eagles that were released on the Isle of Wight. One of them has even been in Poole Harbour recently. It is not just about the UK though, there is an essay on the Californian condor, Rocky Mountain goats and Pears for bears in Germany.

He is a passionate writer with a series of persuasive arguments for always seeking to improve the way that we care for the natural world. The constant theme that runs through the book, is a warning that what we have now can be so easily lost and when it is gone, it is gone forever. It is not so much a timely book more of an urgent reminder to do something to change. Great stuff.

My Books of 2021

Well, that was quite a year. Again. Kind of longing for a return to normality, but I can’t see it happening any time soon. Anyway, you’re hopefully here for the books and these are the favourites that I read during 2021. First up are some honourable mentions that I gave 4.5 stars to:

Fire, Storm & Flood – James Dyke

Fox Fires – Wyl Menmuir

Where – Simon Moreton

Thin Places – Kerri ní Dochartaigh

How To Be Sad – Helen Russell

Skylarks With Rosie – Stephen Moss

Shearwater – Roger Morgan-Grenville

Much Ado About Mothing – James Lowen

Light Rains Sometimes Fall – Lev Parikian

On Gallows Down – Nicola Chester

Springlines – Clare Best and Mary Anne Aytoun-Ellis

The Heeding – Rob Cowen & Nick Hayes

Red Sands – Caroline Eden

Summer In The Islands – Matthew Fort

Slow Trains Around Spain – Tom Chesshyre

Water Ways – Jasper Winn

 

I can now reveal my books of 2021:

First are two books on books. The Book Collectors of Daraya is about people seeking out an existence in the war-torn country of Syria and how they collected books for others to read and find a little bit of inner peace. My second is White Spines; the story of Nicholas Royle and his obsession with collecting the Picador White spined books.

     

I finally finished the Discworld series this year. I had intended on doing it in 2020 but didn’t read these four. They are here because I think that he is a genius, his ability to shine a light on our world and the peculiarities of our society and make us laugh about it are unlikely to be equalled.

   

   

I read several books on London in 2021, but these two were outstanding. They are very different, but each has that special something that makes London such a different city compared to others in the UK.  Budden captures the surreal nature of the place in his book and Chivers shows how the very bedrock the city is built on can be traced if you know where to look.

   

Two of my favourite natural history books this year were The Screaming Sky and the Circling Sky. Charles Foster is obsessed with the swift and he has distilled that into this short volume. Neil Ansell’s book is more wide ranging, but equally well written. He takes us on many journeys into the 1000-year-old landscape that is the New Forest, recalling past trips there when younger. I was lucky enough to spend some time with him there this year too.

   

We live in a biased world and that bias is particularly prevalent when you look at how men and women are treated. Most things are designed for the male mind and body, which means that when women come to use them they are often put into danger. Not only could they hurt themselves, but some of these examples that Criado-Perez uses show how these poorly made product have killed. Eye-opening stuff and an essential read.

My final two books are travel. You didn’t think that I would not have any travel books on this list, did you? First is a book on the extraordinary Island of Madagasgar, written by John Gimlette. It is lavishly illustrated and his prose is top-notch as ever.

 

My final travel book and my book of the year for 2021 is The Bells of Old Tokyo. Anna Sherman has captured a part of Japan that I knew nothing about and her prose is sublime. Just get a copy and read it. A friend call Jeremy who runs Travel Writing World has an interview with her here.

Thank you to those that have read, commented and shared my post all this year. I know that there are not that many of you reading this, but I appreciate every one of you.

 

Favourite Book Covers of 2021

These are my favourite covers of the books that I have read over the course of 2021. They are in no particular order, but the one at the bottom is my cover of the year. The way I see it, the cover of the book has one job only and that is to be catching or attractive enough to make me want to pause, pick them up and then make me want to read it. In my opinion, all of these covers do that.

     

     

     

 

    

     

     

 

     

 

 

     

     

And my book cover of the year is:

 

 

 

December 2021 Review

The build-up to Christmas starts in August so by the time it comes around, I am a mix of bored and fed up by it. That said we had a nice quiet Christmas with a couple of family members over and met up with small numbers of other families too. Ate too much, but that kind of goes without saying really. I was only given one book for Christmas, but did get a new bookcase! Anyway this is mostly about my December reads, so here we go. I only read 12 books which I needed to get to the 190 books I needed for my Good Reads challenge, and then started pre-reading for 2022.

The books are a right of mix of types and genres and the first is David Howe’s, Extraction to Extinction which is about the way we have exploited the minerals from the surface of our planet and the impending ecological crises coming from these extractions. Bleak but worth reading.

Possibly the most surreal book that I read this year is Mordew by Alex Pheby. It is about a boy who lives in this magical world that has echoes of Victorian London about it and the story concerns his growing powers over his Lord and master. It is an immersive fantasy story.

A Christmas book, but not the sort that has any mention of tinsel within the covers. Rather these are stories that will give you goosebumps.Ii liked all the stories bar one and whilst it wasn’t scary, it was slightly unnerving!

A subject that is capturing my interest more and more is folklore. This was a library book by two of the contributors of #FolkloreThursday on Twitter and in here they look at folk stories from the rivers and seas around the world. It is not an in-depth study, but a overview.

The Vikings are portrayed as a grim, violent and brutal bunch of reprobates that raped and pillaged their way along the coastlines of Europe. They did do that, but they were also capable of fine art, cultural nuance and were in contact with peoples all over the middle east and even further. Well worth reading.

Most people don’t think about maths again after leaving school, but modern society is built on maths, equations and numbers. Brooks takes a number of concepts that you might or might not have come across and explains their significance to modern life.

I am not a big reader of philosophy but decided to give this a go after being sent it by the publisher. I struggled with some parts of it but found other parts that were absolutely spot on. May need to have another read of this at some point.

The two natural history books that I read this month could not have been any different. The first, Mistletoe Winter is another collection of essays from Roy Dennis about some of his favourite subjects and a reminded of the mess we are making of the environment. To say he is livid would be an understatement. The second is the debut by Nicola Chester. In this memoir, she takes us through her life in the natural world and the political stance that she has taken against the damage being done by various organisations. Compelling reading.

    

The Black Sea is surrounded by a number of countries that have been through or are still going through a significant upheaval. To find out what life was like in these places Jens Mühling circumvented the region and tried to find out what made these people tick. Really enjoyed this and it is a great companion book to Caroline Eden’s Black Sea cook book and travelogue.

I have two books of the month for December and they are the final two books in the Discworld series, Raising Steam & The Shepherds Crown. Needless to say, I loved them. R I P Terry Pratchett, thanks for everything

   

 

Has anyone read any of these? Or are there some now that you now want to? let me know in the comments below

January 2022 TBR

Can someone tell me where 2021 went? How it went so quickly and also why it took sooooo long? I thought that I would be a little more ahead, but I am not. Again…

Suddenly it is TBR time again. You know the drill, he is an unfeasibly large list that I will be picking my books from:

 

Finishing Off (Still!)

Lotharingia – Simon Winder

Sea People- Christina Thompson

On The Marsh – Simon Barnes

Another Fine Mess – Tim Moore

Elephant Complex – John Gimlette

Opened Ground – Seamus Heaney

Thicker Than Water – Cal Flyn

Tall Tales and Wee Stories Billy Connolly

Nests – Susan Ogilvy

A Thing Of Beauty – Peter Fiennes

 

Blog Tours

None this month

 

Review Copies

The Fairy Tellers – Tales Nicholas Jubber

The Cure For Sleep – Tanya Shadrick

Astral Travel – Elizabeth Baines

The Germans and Europe – Peter Millar

Britain Alone – Philip Stephens

We Own This City – Justin Fenton

Spaceworlds –  Ed. Mike Ashley

The Power of Geography – Tim Marshall

Finding the Mother Tree – Suzanne Simard

The Four Horsemen – Emily Mayhew

The Spy who was left out in the Cold – Tim Tate

The Devil You Know – Gwen Adshead & Eileen Horne

Letters from Egypt –  Lucie Duff Gordon

The Sea Is Not Made Of Water – Adam Nicholson

Above the Law – Adrian Bleese

Somebody Else – Charles Nicholl

Scenes from Prehistoric Life – Francis Pryor

The Turkish Embassy Letters – Mary Wortley Montagu

Survival of the City – Edward Glaeser & David Cutler

Wish You Weren’t Here – Gabby Hutchinson Crouch

Black Lion – Sicelo Mbatha

The Babel Message – Keith Kahn-Harris

Biography of a Fly – Jaap Robben

The Heath – Hunter Davies

An English Farmhouse – Geoffrey Grigson

 

Library Books

The White Birch – Tom Jeffreys

Planetfall – Emma Newman

After Atlas – Emma Newman

 

Poetry

Opened Ground – Seamus Heaney

History of Forgetfulness – Shahe Mankerian

 

Challenge Books

Wintering – Katherine May

An English Farmhouse – Geoffrey Grigson

Biography of a Fly – Jaap Robben

Nests – Susan Ogilvy

Thirteen Ways to Smell a Tree – David George Haskell

The Night Lies Bleeding – M.D. Lachlan

Divided – Tim Marshall

The Wonderful Mr Willughby – Tim Birkhead

The House of Islam- Ed Husain

Asian Waters – Humphrey Hawksley

Blue Mind – Wallace J. Nichols

21 Lessons for the 21st Century- Yuval Noah Harari

The Restless Kings- Nick Barratt

To Obama- Jeanne Marie Laskas

What We Have Lost – James Hamilton-Paterson

 

Clearance Books

Our Game –  John Le Carré

The Tailor of Panama – John Le Carré

Year of the Golden Ape – Colin Forbes

Dreaming in Code: – Scott Rosenberg

 

Photo Books

Lost Dorset: The Towns – David Burnett

 

All Year Reads

Word Perfect – Susie Dent

A Poem For Every Night Of The Year – Allie Esiri

 

Er. That’s it. I think…

My 2022 Reading Intentions

These are my reading intentions for 2022.

Blogging

I have always tended to think of myself as a reader who blogs rather than just a book blogger. This is partly why not every single book that I read gets a review written for it. And in the past year, there have been occasional moments when I have thought about stopping blogging. There have been various reasons for this, partly it sometimes feels like a job, where I think that reading should be a pleasure, secondly that I am not sure if I am having that much of an impact when I see others who have 10,000 plus followers on their various social media platforms. That said, I have been doing this for five years now (in April 2021 and I missed it) so I am going to keep going.

Review Copies

I am grateful for every single review copy that lands on my doormat. Thank you to all publishers and publicists that keep filling my bookshelves. I am sorry that I can never read them as quickly as I would like, hence why I have quite a big backlog. I am going to try not to ask for too many this year, partly because of space issues, but also because it is not fair on them to send me a book and I take waaaay too long to get around to reading it.

My Own Books

I have a lot of books at home and I mean a lot. Nine bookshelves in total as well as lots of Tsundoku around… I seriously need to make a list of the books that I want to read and pass on to family, friends and donate to the library and start reading them to relieve some of the pressure on my creaking bookshelves. I really need to stop buying books too, but can’t see that happening any time soon… This is something that a fellow blogger, Lisa of Owl Be Sat Reading, (https://owlbesatreading.wordpress.com/) is doing this year, Follow the hashtag #BeatTheBacklog on Twitter to

Library Books

I do have far too many library books out, and I am finding that having a full card means that you don’t get that chance to pick things up at random as there is no room. I would like to get from 100% to around 75% or ideally 50% full on my two library cards

Female and BAME Authors

I have been hovering around the 35% mark of female authors read each year and I am hoping to get to 40% this year. I am aiming to read more by BAME authors too. I have a number at home lined up, but I kept a list from the Observer that I will be picking others from.

Poetry

I didn’t manage to read twenty-four poetry books in 2021 so I am aiming to read eighteen poetry books in 2022. If I read more that will be great. I found a copy of A Poem For Every Night Of The Year in a charity shop and I am aiming to read a poem from that every day too.

Literary Awards

Last year I was a bit rubbish at reading some of the shortlisted books from my favourite prizes (again). I get too distracted by other books! Would like to have read all the books from the past three or four years on both the Stanford and the Wainwright prizesby the end of 2022.
Wainwright
Royal Society
Baillie Gifford
Arthur C Clarke
I would like to read some of the winners from other prizes too, including:
Republic Of Consciousness Prize
Rathbones Folio Prize
Women’s Prize for Fiction
Jhalak Prize
The Portico Prize

Challenges

I quite like book challenges. It is a way of finding new books that you might not have come across before to fit a particular brief. It kind of follows my philosophy of reading widely and reading deeply.

The World From My Armchair Challenge
My ongoing challenge is to read a travel book set in or that passes through every country, sea and ocean in the world. I and about a third of the way through and even though I thought I could complete it in four years, I didn’t. It is not a problem, I am going to keep going with it and if possible I’d like to read another 20 books towards it.

Nature Challenge
I recently joined a nature book group on Facebook and they are setting a challenge for 2022 to read 45 books that meet particular categories or themes! I have a spreadsheet. The scary thing was that I already have 37 books that meet the challenge

Read the Decades Challenge
This is for a group that I kind of still run on Good Reads. At the moment, I haven’t got the mental time and energy to keep it going and the other moderators have to a certain extent dropped by the wayside too. But I do set up a challenge each year for the few members that still participate. All this is, is to read a book from each decade from the 2020s going back as far as you like.

Science Fiction & Fantasy

Aiming again to average at least one a month for this. Science fiction is good for expanding the mind and as Terry Pratchett says: Fantasy is an exercise bicycle for the mind. It might not take you anywhere, but it tones up the muscles that can.

Photobooks

I have bought an awful lot of art & photobooks in the past year (some of which are shockingly valuable) and I want to read some of these books next year. Aiming to read at least six.

Other Bookish Stuff

As I mentioned above, I have a lot of books around the house. Even though I know a lot of what I have read in the past, when I am perusing charity shops and second-hand books shops, I have been known to buy the odd duplicate. Sometimes this is deliberate, it is in better condition or signed etc, etc. Sometimes I do not realise that I already have a copy and then find the earlier purchased copy… So, what I want to do this year is to actually catalogue my books, partly so I know what I have at home, but also, I have an idle curiosity to know just how many books are sharing the house with me. Does anyone use a book cataloguing app that they can recommend?

The main way that I manage my reading is through Good Reads, but as a backup I use spreadsheets. This is mostly for security, so I don’t lose records of all that I have read and want to read. The way I have configured them means I can extract a lot more data than I get from Good Reads. At present I must have around 30 different spreadsheets that all do different things and what I want to do is start to combine them to get down to about five or so. I have always tried to keep the layouts very similar so I can cut and paste between them easily and that is another thing that needs a little bit of tinkering…

2021 Book Stats

I finished 190 books in 2021, the same as 2020 and many other years. I did reach my Good Reads Target again.  Here are my stats for the last years reading.

My total pages read was 50665  and my monthly average of books was 15.8, the same as last year. This broke down into these monthly totals:

January – 17

February – 16

March – 17

April – 17

May – 16

June – 16

July – 18

August – 17

September – 16

October – 15

November – 13

December – 12

 

The split of books read

Male Authors – 124

Female Authors – 66 (35%)

BAME / BIOPC – 2% (5 authors in total)

 

Sources

Review Copies – 112 (last year was 94)

Library Books – 45 (last year was 42)

Own Books– 33 (last year was 54)

 

Split

Non-Fiction – 137 – 72.5%

Fiction – 37 – 19%

Poetry – 16 – 8.5%

 

Random Stats

Longest Book – Behind the Enigma – 823 pages

Shortest Book – The Less Deceived – 32 pages

 

 

Most Read Author

Dervla Murphy – 5 books

 

Stars Awarded:

5 Stars – 13
4.5 Stars – 16
4 Stars – 74
3.5 Stars – 45
3 Stars – 32
2.5 Stars – 8
2 Star – 2
1.5 Stars – 0
1 Star – 0

 

Genres

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

Natural History 32
Travel 29
Fiction 22
Poetry 16
Fantasy 11
Miscellaneous 8
Science 8
History 8
Memoir 7
Books 6
Technology 5
Food 5
Mental Health 4
Environmental 4
Landscape 3
Science Fiction 3
Social History 2
Business 2
Information Society 1
Archaeology 1
Spying 1
Britain 1
True Crime 1
Economics 1
Maps 1
Politics 1
Conspiracy Theories 1
Maths 1
Folklore 1
Language 1
Architecture 1

Publishers

These are the number of books read by each publisher. The top eight are all independent publishers. Eland were top last year.

Eland 11
Bloomsbury 10
Faber & Faber 9
Elliott & Thompson 8
William Collins 7
Little Toller 6
PIcador 6
Saraband 6
Canongate 5
Head of Zeus 4
Corgi 4
Fum D’Estampa Press 3
September Publishing 3
Pan Macmillan 3
Salt 3
Particular Books 3
Unbound 3
Headline 3
Haus Publishing 3
Sandstone Press 3
Profile Books 3
Octopus Books 2
John Murray 2
Oneworld 2
Liminal 11 2
4th Estate 2
Penguin 2
Jo Fletcher Books 2
Chelsea Green 2
Quirk Books 2
Europa Editions 2
Summersdale 2
Icon Books 2
Indigo Dreams 2
Chatto & Windus 2
Century 1
Duckworth 1
Eland 1
Michael O’Mara 1
Pelagic Publishing 1
Rodrigues Court Press 1
Quadrille 1
Gollancz 1
Wood Wide Works 1
Liliput Press 1
Scribe 1
Leaping Hare Press 1
Trapeze 1
Melville House 1
Salt Publishing 1
Penguin Classics 1
Burro Books 1
Hutchinson 1
Transworld 1
Paper + Ink 1
Virago 1
Quartet Books 1
Dead Ink 1
Hamish Hamilton 1
Bodeian Library 1
White Fox Press 1
Granta 1
Tinder Press 1
Michael O’Mara Books 1
Emma Blas Publishing 1
Orbit 1
Harvill 1
Reaktion Books 1
Two Roads 1
Penteract Press 1
Mudlark 1
Octopus Publishing 1
Jonathan Cape 1
Eye Books 1
Batsford Books 1
Mortimer Books 1
Route Publishing 1
W.W. Norton 1
Brewers 1
Allen Lane 1
Portobello Books 1
Bradt 1
Bodley Head 1
Yale University Press 1
Monoray 1
Galley Beggar Press 1
Exisle Publishing 1
Chroma Editions 1
Sagging Meniscus Press 1

The Shepherd’s Crown by Terry Patchett

5 out of 5 stars

Something is stirring deep in the chalk. The animals can sense it and Tiffany Aching can feel it through her boots too. A once vanquished enemy is gaining strength once again. Tiffany has enough to do in her steading as her reputation had grown on the Ramtops but her life is about to change in ways that she could not imagine.

There has been a death and this death has sent ripples all around Discworld.

The elves realise that this is their chance as the force that held them in place is now weaker. It may be time to make their move on the world above. To push them back again, Tiffany is going to need all the help that she can get from all the witches that she knows and of course the Nac Mac Feegles.

To protect the land; her land; there will be a reckoning…

So that is it. There are no more Discworld books after this.

Ever.

And it makes me really sad.

It is a finely plotted end to the forty-one novels of the wonderful mad world that he created. There were flaws though, elements of the plot were a thin veneer in comparison to his earlier books that were rich and deep with subtle nods to other great works of art and literature. It saddens me that even though there were plans for ten more stories and almost certainly ideas that had been squirrelled away for books not yet conceived we will never ever know what they were to be as his last request was to have the hard disc crushed under a steam roller.

But, I can forgive him all of that. He knew this was his last book, and he want one of his great characters with him on his journey across the black sands.

R I P Terry. Thanks for everything

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