Tag: books

  • Blue Moon by Lee Child

    Blue Moon by Lee Child

    I’ve never read any of Lee Child’s Jack Reacher novels, and I felt it was about time to put that right. He’s one of the bestselling writers in the world, and although I’ve never read him, I’ve seen and heard him interviewed on multiple occasions. What little I know of Reacher comes from the two…

  • Cassandra Darke by Posy Simmonds

    Cassandra Darke by Posy Simmonds

    I’ve had a copy of Cassandra Darke sitting around for about a year, without having really picked it up to read until now, and there’s absolutely no reason for this. It’s great. Posy Simmonds is the author of a series of literary themed graphic novels with perhaps Tamara Drewe (a retelling of Far From the…

  • The Night Fire by Michael Connelly

    The Night Fire by Michael Connelly

    As sure as night follows day, there’s a new Michael Connelly each autumn, and this time around we get a novel that features his three key characters: Harry Bosch, Mickey Haller (the “Lincoln Lawyer”), and Renée Ballard. There are several stories going on at once in this book, but the two key stories are the…

  • All the Rage by Cara Hunter

    All the Rage by Cara Hunter

    There has been a brutal attack on a girl in Oxford. She was fortunate that the attacker was scared off by a passing police car, but the victim was viciously assaulted. DI Adam Fawley is on the case, with the victim not keen to really come forward for reasons which become clearer later. In the…

  • Super Pumped

    Super Pumped

    As I write this, WeWork, the office sharing business, has just been taken over by its primary backer Softbank, themselves having invested more into the business that its current valuation. I confess that I’m a sucker for stories like this – over valued Silicon Valley “unicorns” that can’t possibly deliver everything they’re promising investors. Having…

  • Confessions of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell

    Confessions of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell

    One of the funniest books I read last year was The Diary of a Bookseller, which in diary form, relates the trials and tribulations of running a second hand bookshop in the small Galloway town of Wigtown. Bythell has a caustic wit – sometimes directly shared with customers who behave in stupid manners, and sometimes…

  • Swag by Elmore Leonard

    Swag by Elmore Leonard

    I’ve recently begun a rewatch of perhaps the best TV adaptation of Elmore Leonard – Justitifed with Timothy Olyphant. I’m halfway through the second season. But I happened to be in Heffers in Cambridge recently where they have famously good Crime Fiction section. Richard Reynolds is their crime fiction expert, and earlier this year he…

  • Rosewater by Tade Thompson

    Rosewater by Tade Thompson

    It’s always good to keep up with the Clarke Award, Britain’s premier SF award which this year was awarded to Tade Thompson for Rosewater. The book is set in a future Nigeria, where Kaaro is earning a living using his special skills to find things. He is a “sensitive” and he’s been recruited by a…

  • Hello World by Hannah Fry

    Hello World by Hannah Fry

    Having previously read and very much enjoyed (if that’s the right phrase) Cathy O’Neill’s Weapons of Math Destruction I wasn’t sure if Hello World was going to tell the same story. These are both books about the dangers of artificial intelligence – or more specifically machine learning – that is behind so much of what…

  • Waterland by Graham Swift

    Waterland by Graham Swift

    Earlier this year, I was cycling through Fen Drayton, the Cambridgeshire nature reserve, with a friend, and he mentioned reading Waterland some years earlier. I’d always known of the book but had never read it. But now I was beginning to become interested in this strange landscape, that is as man-made as any other landscape.…

  • Crudo by Olivia Laing

    Crudo by Olivia Laing

    Note: I’m a little behind on some of my book reviews, so there here follows a big batch all at once! I do this mostly to have a comprehensive record of my reading. Crudo is a slight novel; in terms of length as well as subject. Our narrator is Kathy, and she’s relates her life…

  • Tokyo Ueno Station by Yu Miri

    Tokyo Ueno Station by Yu Miri

    A lot of Japanese novels that seem to get English translations can be quite similar, addressing universal themes of love or loneliness through outsider characters. I’m not sure if that’s a reflection on a society where the need to conform to norms is stronger. This book is similar, but very much different. Tokyo Ueno Station…

  • Fen by Daisy Johnson

    Fen by Daisy Johnson

    I think I picked up Fen in Blackwell’s in Oxford, drawn to it by one of those bookseller reader cards. Fen is a short story collection set in and around the fens, telling dark gothic tales. It reminded me a little of Angela Carter’s short stories, although in a much more contemporary setting. The tales…