Haven't read any Sabatini for a long, long time, and this was not a great one. It didn't have the derring-do and vivacity of Captain Blood or Scaramouche and was more about palace intrigue and the awfulness of Frederick the Great; a dishonest coward in this story. One of Sabatini's last books.
Monday, 20 May 2024
Wednesday, 15 May 2024
Colson Whitehead, the Colossus of New York
A stream of consciousness intended to evoke the chaos and complexity of New York, and very poetic - but I don't know the city that well and am certainly not a New Yorker so it didn't really connect with me.
Friday, 10 May 2024
Chantal Lyons, Groundbreakers: The Return of Britain's Wild Boar
Lots of personal experience and investigations into the Wild Boar of England from the author, who lives in the Forest of Dean and is a big fan of boar. The book manages to be very even-handed though, seeing both sides and appreciating that these very cool creatures do affect their environment and the surrounding community in negative ways as well as positive ones. I'm still a fan of managed rewilding, paradoxical though it is, but it's easy to say that when you're not a farmer worried about his livestock. After a very damp and cold spring, summer finally seems to have arrived, luckily just in time for a cub camp this weekend. William and I are off to B2B at Polyapes, I hope he has a fantastic time.
Wednesday, 8 May 2024
Diana Wynne Jones, Howl's Moving Castle
That was a lot welsher than I was expecting, as I only know it from the Japanese anime version, and I had assumed that was where it came from. I didn't realise that there had been a book first. Howl turns out to be 'Howell Jenkins' a Rugby fan who has somehow ended up a magician in a magical world, but who can pop back to the valleys occasionally. It was a great book for kids though, full of magic and inspired by fairy tales. I'll recommend it to my kids, but it's probably too young for Freddie and Libby now, and not enough action for William. Ah well, what a shame. It was William's 10th birthday on Monday, and he had a great time at laserquest with his friends. He's still young enough to unashamedly enjoy toys and playing, and is getting increasingly into football. He got a Man City shirt for his birthday, as he has decided they are his team. Let's see if that lasts. Him and i are going away camping with the cubs this weekend, which I don't feel really prepared for yet - 48 hours to prep and pack though. I think I should manage to pack down my popup tent though as Fred has been giving me lessons.
Thursday, 2 May 2024
John Keegan, Warpaths: Travels of a Military Historian in North America
I bought this in Hay and assumed it had been written fairly recently - 21st Century anyway - until I started to read it and it seemed very dated in parts. Turned out to have been 1995, and although I found the book interesting, entertaining and educational about the role warfare has played in American history and the geography of the battlefields Keegan visits, some of his old-school attitudes took the breath away. He was openly sympathised with slaveowners and lamented the lost Gone With The Wind society, and when it came to the American West I had to double-take as he placed the blame squarely on Native Americans for being devious, untrustworthy and greedy. You assume these attitudes have long since disappeared, but then you see the Trump supporters and realise there are still people who can bring themselves to believe such crazy things. I've run out of excuses now not to write up my cycling trip. . .
Wednesday, 1 May 2024
John le Carre, Silverview
A novel that le Carre left unfinished at his death that his author son completed. It's set in modern times, but is unmistakably le Carre in tone and would have worked better if set in the Cold War. It's very difficult to believe that in the era of the internet, mobile phones and social media that complex arrangements involving strangers meeting in a cafe at a prearranged time holding a particular book to pass on a confidential letter would ever be required. Particularly when another key part of the plot involve the informer using an unsuspecting patsy's computer to send out the secrets he's flogging. These are minor quibbles though. It was pleasant that WG Sebald's 'rings of Saturn', which I've recently read, played a significant part in the story, and also it's just le Carre, and so enjoyable, challenging and cynical as ever.
Chris Broad. Abroad in Japan: Ten Years in the Land of the Rising Sun
Enjoyable enough, despite the execrable pun in the title. At its best in the first few 'fish out of water' chapters, when the author is working as a teacher and trying to come to grips with Japanese culture. Once he finds fame as a youtuber it becomes less interesting, and it is more about how he can increase his subscribers/produce interesting content than Japan itself. I'll still be putting it in Helen's tsundoku pile given where she works.