Jackie's 2024 Challenge

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Jackie's 2024 Challenge

1Jackie_K
Dec 16, 2023, 2:31 pm

Welcome to my 2024 Category Challenge thread! My name is Jackie, I live in Scotland and work as a research nurse, and I also dabble with creative writing (including publishing my first book in 2023). I think this is my 9th year in the Category Challenge group. I enjoy the book chat and always get hit with more great books to read thanks to all your recommendations. My reading skews very heavily towards narrative non-fiction, but I do try to read at least a little bit of fiction too!

I’m using the same categories as always, with only a couple of slight differences. I’m combining my vintage fiction (published 1900-1968) and ancient fiction (published pre-1900) categories, as they’re both very small, and I’m adding a new category of books I’ve started for previous challenges but never got round to finishing, so hopefully I’ll finally be able to put a few of those back on the shelves finished this year! As long as I end the year with at least one book in each category I’ll be happy that my challenge is complete.

2Jackie_K
Edited: Jan 27, 11:09 am

1. Central & Eastern Europe/former Soviet Union

I lived, worked and studied in Romania and Moldova for a while back in the ever-dim and retreating past (first as an English teacher, and more recently doing my PhD research), and although much of my regional reading probably relates to Romania, I have books relating to many of the countries of the region. This is where they'll go!

1. John Reed - Ten Days that Shook the World. Finished 25.1.24. 2.5/5.

3Jackie_K
Edited: Dec 1, 7:41 am

2. Non-fiction (general)

A catch-all category for my non-fiction which doesn't fall into any of the more specific categories.

1. Chris van Tulleken - Ultra-Processed People. Finished 10.2.24. 4.5/5.
2. Elif Shafak - How to Stay Sane in an Age of Division. Finished 29.2.24. 4/5.
3. Professor Sue Black - All That Remains: A Life in Death. Finished 15.3.24. 4.5/5.
4. Noam Chomsky - Who Rules the World?. Finished 24.4.24. 3/5.
5. John Green - The Anthropocene Reviewed. Finished 10.9.24. 4/5.
6. Margaret Atwood - Burning Questions. Finished 14.10.24. 4.5/5.
7. ed. David Rothenberg & Marta Ulvaeus - The Book of Music and Nature. Finished 17.10.24. 2/5.
8. Ed Yong - I Contain Multitudes. Finished 28.11.24. 4.5/5.

4Jackie_K
Edited: Nov 16, 5:11 am

3. Contemporary fiction (1969-present)

The dates aren't completely random - this category is for fiction contemporary with me, so published from the year of my birth to the present.

1. Mark Stay - The Holly King. Finished 13.3.24. 4.5/5.
2. Morgan Delaney - The Phoenix (An Alumiere Sisters Adventure). Finished 26.5.24. 4/5.
3. Satoshi Yagisawa (tr. Eric Ozawa) - Days at the Morisaki Bookshop. Finished 28.9.24. 4/5.
4. Katya Balen - October, October. Finished 15.11.24. 4.5/5.

5Jackie_K
Edited: Jul 14, 4:31 pm

4. Sexual/reproductive health & rights; gender; sexuality; parenting; children

Books relating to my academic and research interests (although not necessarily either academic or serious research books!).

1. Katy Hessel - The Story of Art Without Men. Finished 12.2.24. 5/5.
2. Lauren Elkin - Flaneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice and London. Finished 14.7.24. 4/5.

6Jackie_K
Edited: Feb 27, 4:54 pm

5. Celtic

I love living in Scotland, and this category is for all books relating to the Celtic lands (Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Isle of Man, Cornwall, Brittany).

1. Frank Rennie - The Changing Outer Hebrides. Finished 25.2.24. 3.5/5.

7Jackie_K
Edited: Sep 9, 2:15 pm

6. Vintage (1900-1969) and Ancient (pre-1900) fiction

Two categories I've struggled with in the past, so I'm combining them in the hope that I'll manage at least one in 2024!

1. Goscinny & Uderzo - Asterix Gladiateur. Finished 18.2.24. 3/5.

6a. Poetry

I don't read much poetry, but when I do I always remember I don't have a category for them! So here's one just for poetry.

1. ed. Stewart Conn - Other Worlds: An Anthology of Scottish Island Poems. Finished 28.7.24. 4/5.
2. Raymond Antrobus - All the Names Given. Finished 8.9.24. 4/5.

8Jackie_K
Edited: Jul 3, 4:49 pm

7. Academic

More general academic books I've picked up over the years. I still enjoy reading them and learning, even though I'm not working in academia any more.

1. Dr Margot Singer & Dr Nicole Walker (eds) - Bending Genre: Essays on Creative Nonfiction, 2nd edition. Finished 7.4.24. 3/5.
2. Theresa Lillis & Mary Jane Curry - Academic Writing in a Global Context. Finished 8.4.24. 3.5/5.
3. Christy Wampole - Rootedness: The Ramifications of a Metaphor. Finished 2.7.24. 3.5/5.

9Jackie_K
Edited: Sep 9, 2:15 pm

8. Biography; autobiography; memoir; true story

Aren't people fascinating?!

1. Andrew Cotter - Olive, Mabel & Me. Finished 11.4.24. 4/5.
2. Michael Rosen - Getting Better: Life lessons on going under, getting over it, and getting through it. Finished 15.4.24. 4.5/5.
3. Binyavanga Wainaina - One Day I Will Write About This Place. Finished 12.6.24. 5.5.
4. Noam Chayut - The Girl Who Stole My Holocaust. Finished 2.9.24. 3/5.
5. David Sedaris - The Best of Me. Finished 8.9.24. 4/5.

10Jackie_K
Edited: Jan 2, 5:14 pm

9. I've started so I'll finish

This is for some of the books I've started (usually for various reading challenges) in previous years, but never got round to finishing. Hopefully some of them will finally get read this year!

1. Andrew Shaffer - Hope Never Dies. Finished 2.1.24. 4/5.

11Jackie_K
Edited: Aug 30, 4:36 pm

10. Travel

Who doesn't love armchair travelling?

1. David Clensy - Walking the White Horses: Wiltshire's White Horse Trail on Foot. Finished 5.1.24. 4/5.
2. Dom Joly - The Dark Tourist. Finished 17.8.24. 4/5.

12Jackie_K
Edited: Dec 19, 9:10 am

11. Religious

Mainly related to Christianity, but not exclusively.

1. Andrew Rumsey - Strangely Warmed. Finished 30.3.24. 4/5.
2. John O'Donohue - Anam Cara. Finished 14.12.24. 3.5/5.

13Jackie_K
Edited: Nov 10, 7:26 am

12. Nature, environment, landscape, place

I'll continue to try and read a book a month in this category. Definitely my literary happy place!

1. Stephen Moss - The Twelve Birds of Christmas. Finished 5.1.24. 3.5/5.
2. Aaron Reynolds - Effin' Birds. Finished 5.1.24. 4/5.
3. Jennifer Ackerman - The Genius of Birds. Finished 6.1.24. 4.5/5.
4. Angela Harding - A Year Unfolding. Finished 12.1.24. 4.5/5.
5. Ed Yong - An Immense World. Finished 18.1.24. 4.5/5.
6. Jonathan Franzen - The End of the End of the Earth: Essays. Finished 26.1.24. 3.5/5.
7. ed. Nancy Campbell - Nature Tales for Winter Nights. Finished 30.1.24. 4/5.
8. Camille T. Dungy - Soil: The Story of a Black Mother's Garden. Finished 17.2.24. 5/5.
9. Kenneth Libbrecht & Rachel Wing - The Snowflake: Winter's Frozen Artistry. Finished 18.3.24. 3.5/5.
10. Tony Angell - The House of Owls. Finished 23.3.24. 3.5/5.
11. Richard Milne - Rhododendron. Finished 12.4.24. 3/5.
12. Andrew D. Blechman - Pigeons: The Fascinating Saga of the World's Most Revered and Reviled Bird. Finished 29.4.24. 3.5/5.
13. Jos Smith - The New Nature Writing: Rethinking the Literature of Place. Finished 5.5.24. 3.5/5.
14. Ruth Allen - Weathering. Finished 20.5.24. 4/5.
15. Kathleen Jamie - Surfacing. Finished 5.6.24. 4.5/5.
16. Marlene Zuk - Sex on Six Legs. Finished 21.7.24. 4/5.
17. Tim Birkhead - Birds and Us: A 12,000 Year History from Cave Art to Conservation. Finished 5.8.24. 4/5.
18. Kapka Kassabova - Elixir: A Voyage into Alchemy. Finished 25.8.24. 4/5.
19. Elizabeth Tova Bailey - The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating. Finished 21.9.24. 4.5/5.
20. Jim Crumley - Watching Wildlife: In the Moment. Finished 23.10.24. 5/5.
21. Leif Bersweden - Where the Wildflowers Grow. Finished 5.11.24. 4/5.

14Jackie_K
Dec 16, 2023, 2:32 pm

Hooray - welcome to my thread!

15Tess_W
Dec 16, 2023, 4:17 pm

Good luck with your 2024 reading. I always come here to get my hit of non-fiction!

16MissBrangwen
Dec 16, 2023, 4:35 pm

I've starred your thread and look forward to following along! I always see so many interesting books on your threads that I would never come across otherwise.

17lowelibrary
Dec 16, 2023, 5:10 pm

Good luck with your reading in 2024. I have recently starting reading biographies and memoirs again, so looking forward to your reads in that category.

18VivienneR
Dec 16, 2023, 5:11 pm

Enjoy your reading in 2024. I'll enjoy following along and taking BBs, especially from >13 Jackie_K:.

19pamelad
Dec 16, 2023, 5:21 pm

>10 Jackie_K: Good luck with this category. I also have quite a few of these and am contemplating Hamnet for the third time. It's tricky when you've read half a book and put it aside. Do you start again from the beginning?

20dudes22
Dec 17, 2023, 4:32 am

I hope you have a good reading year, Jackie. And, like others said, I'm looking forward to some BBs from you.

21susanj67
Dec 17, 2023, 5:33 am

Hello Jackie! I like your categories and I think I'm going to pick up quite a few recommendations :-)

22Jackie_K
Dec 17, 2023, 6:55 am

>15 Tess_W: >16 MissBrangwen: >17 lowelibrary: >18 VivienneR: >19 pamelad: >20 dudes22: >21 susanj67: Thank you so much for your first visit :) I am looking forward to getting stuck into next year's reading, without hopefully leaving too many books this year that could fit in my >10 Jackie_K: category!

23MissWatson
Dec 17, 2023, 9:05 am

Have a great reading year, Jackie, and good luck with your >10 Jackie_K: category!

24rabbitprincess
Dec 17, 2023, 9:32 am

Great idea to dedicate a category to books you started but never finished! I need one for books I earmarked for previous challenges but never even started. Have fun reading in 2024!

25christina_reads
Dec 18, 2023, 1:14 pm

I'm your bookish opposite (in that I read almost exclusively fiction), but I am trying to read more nonfiction in 2024 so I will definitely be using your thread for recs!

26Jackie_K
Dec 18, 2023, 3:50 pm

>23 MissWatson: >24 rabbitprincess: That category seems to have hit a nerve with quite a few people! It's nice to know I'm not the only one guilty of overcommitting to challenges then not finishing every book.

>25 christina_reads: You're very welcome, I hope I can give you some good ideas!

27DeltaQueen50
Dec 18, 2023, 9:19 pm

It's great to see you set up for 2024. You appear to be the non-fiction guru for many of us and I am looking forward to seeing where you head this year!

28clue
Dec 22, 2023, 10:09 pm

Wishing you a great reading year in 24! I'll be following along.

29charl08
Jan 2, 3:26 am

I'll be following along in 2024, Jackie. I like the idea of the "I've started so I'll finish" category. I might borrow that one!

30Jackie_K
Jan 2, 7:03 am

>27 DeltaQueen50: Not sure about guru, I just seem to have found my lane and settled comfortably in it :)
>28 clue: Thank you very much! I have high hopes!
>29 charl08: I have so many of those I really thought I needed to do something about it!

I've also just added a new category, 6a, for poetry. I don't read tons of poetry, but whenever I do I realise I don't have a category for it, so it usually ends up in general non-fiction. No longer! :)

31Helenliz
Jan 2, 3:15 pm

Happy new year, Jackie.
Looking forward to your non-fiction reading for another year.

32Jackie_K
Jan 2, 5:15 pm

>31 Helenliz: Thank you, happy new year to you too Helen!

Category: I've started so I'll finish



A good way to start the new reading year, finishing a book I started in 2023 for the GeoCAT. Hope Never Dies is the first of two books by Andrew Shaffer riffing on the relationship between Joe Biden and Barack Obama, and sees them as amateur sleuths investigating the death of a railroad conductor known to Joe Biden from his years travelling from Wilmington to Washington DC, and unearthing way more than they'd bargained for, with almost everybody not who they seemed at first. I really enjoyed this book, it was silly, but with just the right amount of reference to politics (really not very much at all) to elevate it. Lots of fun. 4/5.

33rabbitprincess
Jan 2, 6:37 pm

>32 Jackie_K: I agree, this was silly fun :) There's a sequel, but I haven't read it.

34JayneCM
Jan 2, 8:55 pm

>2 Jackie_K: Very interested in this topic. I want to read more about Eastern Europe. Will also come in handy when reading for Eurovisionathon later in the year.

35Jackie_K
Jan 3, 5:28 am

>33 rabbitprincess: I bought the sequel at the same time as this one, but I'm saving it for when I need another dose of silly fun!

>34 JayneCM: Eurovision is great for stimulating interest in eastern Europe. They are obsessed with Eurovision over there! I follow media accounts from Romania and Moldova, and the amount of discussion of performances, who gave points to whom, etc, is something else!

36JayneCM
Jan 3, 11:20 pm

>35 Jackie_K: Moldova's entry for 2022 was so much fun! Eurovision is just such an out there, totally entertaining time. I love it!

37Jackie_K
Jan 4, 12:37 pm

>36 JayneCM: Quite a few of them have been pretty wild!

38Jackie_K
Edited: Jan 6, 12:55 pm

Category: Nature, Environment, Landscape and Place
January RandomKIT: Early Birds




Stephen Moss's The Twelve Birds of Christmas is a look at twelve British birds and their link to the Twelve Days of Christmas carol (some links are more tenuous than others, but his theory that the carol is actually about 12 birds is as plausible, and proveable, as any other theory about what it's about!). As well as information about the birds he also outlines folk myths and cultural beliefs about them, and examples where they've appeared in literature. He also talks about their ongoing fortunes given changing habitats and climate change. A nice light read, which I read a chapter a day of from 25 Dec to today. 3.5/5.

Category: Travel



I got a pdf copy of David Clensy's Walking the White Horses: Wiltshire's White Horse Trail on Foot from the November LT Early Reviewer programme. Thanks to the author for the copy of the book.

This book charts the journey of the author and his 10 year old son Charlie as they walk (in stages, not all in one go) the 93 mile long White Horse Trail to see all 8 of Wiltshire's white horses, those visually arresting figures carved into chalk hills. The book also finishes with a quick trip to the Uffington White Horse, the daddy of them all, although that is in Oxfordshire so is an extra bonus rather than part of the trail itself.

To start with I wasn't sure if this was narrative non-fiction or a travel guide, but once I got into the swing of the prose that didn't matter so much (I'd say having finished it that it's kind of both). He details both the routes that he took and the history of the area and the chalk figures themselves, and throws in snippets of conversations and nature along the way. I think I would have preferred the photos to appear as and when the areas they depicted were being described, rather than in a couple of blocks of several photos, but that's a minor personal preference.

Having a child of the same age as Charlie, it was fun seeing things through his eyes too; I must admit certain bits of their conversations were very familiar! (what is it about wanting your own YouTube channel?!). I suspect Charlie moaned much less than my 10yo would have though!

I think this would be a nice book to read if you are walking the trail - each section doesn't take very long to read, so it would be good to read at the beginning or end of the section you were walking. 4/5.

39lowelibrary
Jan 5, 2:51 pm

>38 Jackie_K: I am glad you chose to read The Twelve Birds of Christmas during the period ending with Twelfth Night.

40JayneCM
Jan 5, 9:41 pm

>38 Jackie_K: Walking The White Horses is on Kindle Unlimited so I had it on my KU reading list. I must admit, I did not know that there was more than one white horse so I am interested to read more.

41MissBrangwen
Jan 6, 6:20 am

>38 Jackie_K: The Twelve Birds of Christmas has such a beautiful cover!

42Jackie_K
Jan 6, 7:09 am

>39 lowelibrary: It was a nice way to spend the Christmas period!

>40 JayneCM: There are actually loads - everyone knows about the Uffington white horse, but there are lots, and not just in southern England. Check out this wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_figure

>41 MissBrangwen: Yes, I loved it! That's the good thing about having a thing for nature-related books, the chances of gorgeous covers are very good!

43susanj67
Jan 6, 7:23 am

What a good start to the year, Jackie! I used to *love* those memes of Obama and Biden, so I must look out for Hope Never Dies :-) And I also had no idea there was more than one white horse!

44Tess_W
Jan 6, 10:44 am

>38 Jackie_K: The 12 Birds of Christmas, definitely a BB for me!

45Jackie_K
Edited: Jan 6, 12:59 pm

>43 susanj67: I loved those memes too! There seemed to be a genuine friendship and respect there. And yes, there are 16 white horses in the UK, apparently! Plus various other geoglyphs (*gives Cerne Abbas giant the side eye*).

>44 Tess_W: It's a lovely easy read, Tess, I liked it a lot.

Continuing the bird theme:

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
January RandomKIT: Early Birds




Disclaimer: this book is absolutely not for anyone who hates swearing.

For everyone else, prepare to laugh like a drain (I did, and for the most part I'm not a big fan of swearing). Line drawings of birds, accompanied by sweary statements purporting to be what that particular bird is thinking, is pretty much the entire premise of Effin' Birds by Aaron Reynolds. I even laughed at the book dedication ("To my mother in law, who does not believe that this is an acceptable way to make a living"). So many of these reminded me of people and situations that I know (I'm really tempted to check out their merch store for next year's Christmas presents for a couple of colleagues). Obviously this book isn't literary greatness, but it did make me laugh which I appreciate at this dull start to the year. 4/5.

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
January RandomKIT: Early Birds




My first library book of the year is Jennifer Ackerman's The Genius of Birds. I really enjoyed this one - looking at the science behind what makes birds the amazing creatures they are. Topics included communication, navigation, social organisation, and ability to adapt to novel situations. I tell you what, I'm never going to hear "bird brain" as an insult again, they're amazing! 4.5/5.

46lowelibrary
Jan 6, 2:43 pm

>45 Jackie_K: Taking a BB for Effin' Birds. It sounds like a light hilarious read.

47Jackie_K
Jan 6, 3:03 pm

>46 lowelibrary: it is, but don't say I didn't warn you about the swearing! (to be fair, there's a big clue in the title!) 😁

48lowelibrary
Jan 6, 3:05 pm

>47 Jackie_K: I grew up as a military brat. Swearing is part of our love language.

49Jackie_K
Jan 6, 3:50 pm

>48 lowelibrary: Excellent! (also, you'd love Scotland. It's love language *and* punctuation)

50rabbitprincess
Jan 6, 5:21 pm

>45 Jackie_K: Effin' Birds is hilarious! My favourite designs are this one and this one. (I own them as stickers but would absolutely love a mug of the second design.)

51Jackie_K
Jan 6, 5:25 pm

>50 rabbitprincess: Haha - this is the one I'd have as a poster in my office: https://www.effinbirds.com/products/too-old-mug Oh, and this one too: https://www.effinbirds.com/products/more-meetings-mug

52RidgewayGirl
Edited: Jan 6, 5:30 pm

>38 Jackie_K: I lived not far from the Uffington white horse when my kids were small and it was a great place to go in the summer and fly kites. Our house was along the Ridgeway, another old road, and so on more than one occasion I ended up ferrying walkers down the hill into Wantage when they twisted an ankle or were disheartened by rain. Also, the Uffington country fair was fantastic, with all the breeds of giant horses since that area is all, appropriately enough, horse country.

>45 Jackie_K: I'm a fan of the artist, so my daughter got me a signed day-by-day calendar with an entirely in keeping message from Reynolds for my birthday. I also have a mug, which I have to remember to not get out when my father comes over.

53lowelibrary
Edited: Jan 6, 6:27 pm

>49 Jackie_K: I love Scottish men, does that count? If I had a bucket list Scotland would be on it, I have Scottish ancestry.

If the book is as funny as the merch, I will love it. Unfortunately, my library (in the bible belt) does not have it. On to the Thingaversary wishlist, it goes.

54Jackie_K
Jan 12, 5:02 pm

>52 RidgewayGirl: Those chalk downs and ancient ways are such an atmospheric and beautiful part of England. I'd love to explore it more.

>53 lowelibrary: I hate to break it to you, but I have to tell you that they're not all Jamie from Outlander...!

Category: Nature, environment, landscape and place



A Year Unfolding by printmaker Angela Harding is a GORGEOUS coffee table book. She's perhaps best well known as the cover artist for Raynor Winn's books (most well-known being The Salt Path), but she also does magazine commissions, plus lots of merch (we had a beautiful Advent calendar of hers a couple of years ago). The book consists mostly of pictures inspired by the nature around her home, or in places that she has visited on her and her husband's travels on his sailing boat, plus text explaining some of the pictures. It is organised by season - early spring, spring, early summer, summer, autumn, winter - and is just lovely, one of those books you just want to stroke. She has such a distinctive style, and captures the feeling of the landscape and the characters of the animals and birds she portrays so well. 4.5/5.

55lowelibrary
Jan 12, 5:23 pm

> I have never seen Outlander, I was thinking more of Gerard Butler or Sean Connery, although most of them are probably Alan Cummings or Craig Ferguson.

56susanj67
Jan 15, 3:00 pm

>54 Jackie_K: That looks lovely! I had her wall calendar for 2023 in my office but couldn't find one half-price (or any price) at Waterstones this time. Outrageous!

57Jackie_K
Jan 15, 3:26 pm

>55 lowelibrary: Well, I was thinking more of Rab C Nesbitt (a cultural reference I suspect may not have crossed the Pond)...

>56 susanj67: It really was. Gentle and beautiful, which frankly is a good thing in these less than ideal times.

58beebeereads
Jan 17, 8:01 pm

>45 Jackie_K: Sounds just what I need this winter! :-) I look forward to following a number of your categories this year. I bought your book last year, but saved it to begin in January. I love it...one bite at time during January. I plan to read it year round. Lovely writing and takes me right away from my present into a vision of your world!
I was finally able to create a thread that I will do my best to maintain this year. https://www.librarything.com/topic/357398#8369531

59Jackie_K
Jan 18, 5:23 am

>58 beebeereads: Oh thank you - you have no idea how much of a boost that has given me! I really hope you enjoy it, and that it gives you a bit of respite reading about someone else's reality. I was really moved that you are choosing to read it over an entire year (some people might think that's a bit too much of me, haha).

60Jackie_K
Jan 19, 1:12 pm

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
January PrizeCAT: Longstanding Prize (Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize winner 2023)




Something which I've often wondered, watching the birds and other critters that hang around my garden, is how they see and experience the world, and how different it must be from my own experience. This is basically the premise of Ed Yong's An Immense World, which looks at the science around animal senses - not just vision, hearing, etc, but also things like echolocation, experiences of pain, magnetoreception. I basically spent the last week and a half reading this book and having my mind blown. The world is so complex, and strange, and experienced so differently by so many different creatures, it's fascinating. An excellent read. 4.5/5.

61clue
Jan 19, 3:34 pm

>60 Jackie_K: I was given this recently, I hope to get to it soon. I haven't read anything but very good reviews

62Jackie_K
Jan 19, 4:14 pm

>61 clue: I found that even though the science he's discussing is amazing and complex, it was written in such an accessible way that I never felt like it was beyond me. I think that's the mark of a really good writer.

63dudes22
Jan 19, 6:24 pm

>60 Jackie_K: - I'll take a BB for this.

64RidgewayGirl
Jan 19, 6:36 pm

>60 Jackie_K: I listened to this one and I need to listen to it again. It was so dense with information and told in such an approachable way.

65Jackie_K
Jan 20, 6:09 am

>63 dudes22: It's a good one!
>64 RidgewayGirl: Yes, I found that I wasn't blinded by the science at all - that's a real gift, to be able to communicate such complex ideas in such an accessible way!

66JayneCM
Edited: Jan 25, 5:15 am

>54 Jackie_K: Ooh, putting this straight on my to buy list. I love her art.

>60 Jackie_K: Another one that was on my 2023 to read list, but is still unread. I am very much looking forward to your future reads in your nature, environment, landscape, place category. I try to read the Book Naturalists Book Club picks throughout the year but I cannot always get them in Australia.

67Jackie_K
Jan 27, 11:12 am

>66 JayneCM: Thank you for alerting me to that book club, I didn't know about it before but I bet I'll pick up plenty of BBs there!

Category: Central & Eastern Europe; former Soviet Union



Ten Days that Shook the World is an eyewitness account by American socialist journalist John Reed of the events of the early days of the Russian Revolution in November 1917. His position as sympathetic journalist meant that he had a front row seat in a number of important meetings and congresses, and he was able to see lots of the movers and shakers in action at the very birth of the Soviet Union.

Despite the first two chapters being taken up with explanations of who's who, and the various different groups and parties involved, there were simply so many different groups that it was really hard to keep straight in my mind who was affiliated with which group. My other overwhelming feeling as I read (not helped by the poor formatting of this particular ebook edition) was that although the undoubted confusion of the times was really well conveyed, with meeting after congress after meeting after congress, this pivotal event in world history still ended up coming across as, well, a bit boring. In all honesty, although this of course has value as an eyewitness account, for a more exciting and thorough exploration of these events I'd suggest reading China Mieville's October: The Story of the Russian Revolution instead. 2.5/5.

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
January RandomKIT: Early Birds




My second library book of the year is a collection of essays by Jonathan Franzen, The End of the End of the Earth: Essays. A lot of the essays are about birds (he is an avid birder) or the environment more generally, but also weave in elements of memoir and more general reflections. The writing is really good, but for the most part I couldn't shake the feeling that I was being held at arm's length by the author. Having said that, the longest essay, for which the collection is named, was really fantastic (an account of a cruise to Antarctica, memories of his late uncle, and reflections on his family history), and I really wished that I'd felt more immersed in the other essays too. 3.5/5.

68Tess_W
Jan 27, 10:40 pm

>67 Jackie_K: Oh my, I've slated Ten Days to read this year. I also have Mieville's book on my shelf!

69Jackie_K
Jan 28, 10:33 am

>68 Tess_W: If you are just going to prioritise one, I'd definitely go for the Mieville.

70Tess_W
Jan 28, 9:51 pm

>69 Jackie_K: Thanks, I will do that!

71Jackie_K
Jan 30, 2:19 pm

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



Nature Tales for Winter Nights, edited by Nancy Campbell, is an anthology of fiction, non-fiction and poetry relating to winter and nature, with authors as diverse as Kenneth Graham, John Clare, Susan Fenimore Cooper, and Tove Jansson. As is always the case with anthologies some pieces grabbed me more than others, but overall this is a strong anthology (and it also definitely wins the Gorgeous Cover of the Month award). My favourites were by Damien Le Bas, Marchelle Farrell, Tim Dee, Elizabeth-Jane Burnett, and Sarah Thomas, but honestly, the one piece that stopped me in my tracks was the very first one, a single, heartbreaking sentence by Anne Frank. 4/5.

72dudes22
Jan 31, 6:04 am

>71 Jackie_K: - Your thread is so dangerous - another BB for me.

73Crazymamie
Jan 31, 9:41 am

>71 Jackie_K: I really love that cover! Adding this to The List.

74Jackie_K
Edited: Jan 31, 1:31 pm

>72 dudes22: >73 Crazymamie: I've worked my magic again! The cover is lovely, isn't it?

By the way, Crazymamie, I've tried and failed to locate your thread, do you have one in this group? Or is my eyesight even more middle-aged than I thought?!

76antqueen
Jan 31, 1:50 pm

I read more fiction than nonfiction, but all of your bird books got me, and the Ed Yong one too. I read his I Contain Multitudes a few years ago and it was very good too. Also, the website for Effin Birds is just dangerous. I'm way too tempted to buy a few mugs and casually wield them at appropriate times during work meetings... so... thanks? I guess?

77Jackie_K
Jan 31, 1:58 pm

>75 lowelibrary: Thank you!
>76 antqueen: You're welcome! :D I've got an eye on some mugs for me and a couple of my colleagues. Work meetings are the perfect place to passive-aggressively raise some of those pictures to the screen :)

78hailelib
Jan 31, 5:07 pm

>60 Jackie_K: My library has this so I’ve made a note of it.

79MissBrangwen
Feb 5, 12:50 pm

>71 Jackie_K: Wow, what a beautiful cover indeed! It makes you want to cuddle up on the sofa on a crisp winter day and dive into the book. I've placed it on my ever-growing wishlist.

80susanj67
Feb 6, 4:52 am

It's just as well I had the library catalogue open while I was reading your thread, Jackie! There are so many lovely temptations. I've reserved the Ed Yong :-)

81Jackie_K
Feb 6, 10:52 am

>80 susanj67: #sorrynotsorry ;)

82Jackie_K
Feb 11, 9:36 am

Category: Non-fiction (general)



Ultra-Processed People by TV (and real!) doctor Chris van Tulleken is a hugely readable and frankly scary look at what we are eating and how it is affecting our bodies. The focus is on ultra-processed food, and I learnt loads. Mostly that quite a lot of what I eat is pretty gross. This was my favourite quote from the book:

...if you're wondering whether something might be UPF, it's probably a good rule of thumb that if any of the ingredients can also be found in your deodorant or your enema, then it probably is.

A helpful and accessible read which I hope will help me make more informed choices. 4.5/5.

83lowelibrary
Feb 11, 8:15 pm

>82 Jackie_K: I am taking a BB for this one. I eat way too much-processed food.

84Jackie_K
Feb 13, 7:14 am

>83 lowelibrary: It's almost impossible not to, it seems.

Category: Sexual/reproductive health & rights; gender; sexuality; parenting; children
February Non-Fiction Challenge: Women's Work




Katy Hessel's The Story of Art Without Men is a fantastic and beautiful book, charting the history of art exclusively through women artists, from the Renaissance to the present day. Having been so accustomed at only (or mostly) seeing art by male artists in museums and galleries around the world, this overview of women artists is long overdue. The book covers both traditional painting but also textiles, photography, film and performance art. I am ashamed of how few of these amazing artists I'd heard of before, but I now have a huge list of artists whose work I want to explore more. It is amazing how many women did manage to produce such fantastic work, given the institutional and societal barriers put up against their participation in art. With a picture on nearly every page, this book is a stunning introduction to many many talented women artists, and I thought it was terrific. 5/5.

85MissBrangwen
Feb 13, 12:35 pm

>84 Jackie_K: Added to the WL! It sounds like an excellent book.

86beebeereads
Feb 13, 7:49 pm

>84 Jackie_K: Thank you! I had not heard about this but on my TBR it goes. In fact I am placing a hold on it right now.

87Jackie_K
Feb 14, 3:38 pm

>85 MissBrangwen: >86 beebeereads: I'm sure you'll both like it! I thought it was excellent.

88Tess_W
Feb 16, 11:19 pm

>82 Jackie_K: That is exactly why I took to growing/processing/canning most of my food! However, my two nemesis: Diet Coke and McDonald's French fries! I indulge in the Diet Coke daily but the fried maybe 1-2 times per year.

89Jackie_K
Feb 17, 4:36 pm

>88 Tess_W: I hope to do much the same when I retire! I'm lucky in that even though I am a child of the 1970s I never liked the taste of Coke, or really any fizzy drinks, so I mainly just drink plain water. I have plenty of other edible vices, but I'm glad that I never got the fizzy drink bug!

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



I know it's still very early in the year, but I have to say that if Camille T Dungy's wonderful memoir Soil: The Story of a Black Mother's Garden isn't my book of the year by the end of the year, then future me has a phenomenal reading treat in store in 2024! What a beautiful book this is (and check out that gorgeous cover!). The book details the author's ongoing attempts to fill her garden with plants and flowers native to the area (Colorado), but is so much more than that. She wrote much of it during the 2020 lockdowns while she also homeschooled her daughter (I think this is one reason why I loved this book so much, as my own book is about my garden during 2020 lockdowns while we homeschooled our daughter - who I think is a couple of years younger). It was also the summer of the murder of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, among many others, and the tail end of the Trump presidency, so her experiences living as a black woman and black family in a predominantly white neighbourhood, as well as her family's wider history of being black in America, are threaded throughout the narrative. This is a stunning book which will stay with me a long time. I loved everything about it. 5/5.

90MissBrangwen
Feb 18, 3:24 am

>89 Jackie_K: And another BB! I don't know when I'll be ready to read about the pandemic, but this book, along with yours, will be essential reading for me then.

91dudes22
Feb 18, 5:53 am

>89 Jackie_K: - I'll be taking a BB for this too.

92Jackie_K
Feb 18, 8:25 am

>90 MissBrangwen: Thank you Mirjam! Both books will be there when you're ready for them, and I hope they both feed your soul as they have mine.

>91 dudes22: It's a good one Betty, I'm sure you'll like it!

93Jackie_K
Feb 18, 12:31 pm

Category: Vintage (1900-1968) and ancient (pre-1900 fiction)



Asterix Gladiateur by Goscinny & Uderzo is one of the earliest of the Asterix books, and I read it in the original French (which I suspect means that I missed a few in-jokes - I'll look out for the English translation). Cacophanix the bard (Assurancetourix in French) is kidnapped and taken to Rome as a gift for Caesar. Asterix and Obelix go to Rome to rescue him, and the usual fights and silliness ensue. 3/5.

94clue
Feb 18, 8:39 pm

>89 Jackie_K: I put this on my list, I definately want to read it but it will be awhile. Luckily my library has it!

95JayneCM
Feb 26, 10:29 pm

>89 Jackie_K: Good to hear you loved this one! It is on my list to source as a read for The Book Naturalists Book Club but I have not been able to find it in Australia yet - my library doesn't have it and it is too expensive to purchase here. The paperback will be released here in August, so I may purchase it then.

96Jackie_K
Edited: Feb 27, 4:58 pm

>94 clue: >95 JayneCM: I'm sure you'll enjoy it when you get to it!

Category: Celtic
February PrizeCAT: A Prize from your own Country




The Changing Outer Hebrides: Galson and the meaning of place by Frank Rennie is a look, over deep time, at a small corner of the isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides, the township of Galson, considering the geological record, flora and fauna, and social and political history and prehistory of the area. I found the first half of the book a bit dry, but once he got to more recent history - from the Clearances to the present day - it became much more interesting. It certainly made an area, which to the outsider might seem pretty bleak and lifeless, come alive with vast and fascinating history and ongoing life. This book won the 2020 Highland Book Prize. 3.5/5.

97charl08
Feb 29, 2:58 am

I've added a couple to the wishlist here (thank you!) and am reminded that I need to pick up the Hessel again. I do like her podcast: so many fascinating voices, most of whom are new to me. I would love to get to the Hebrides: one day!

98Jackie_K
Feb 29, 4:43 pm

>97 charl08: You're welcome! I thought about subscribing to that podcast, but I subscribe to so many I struggle to listen to everything I want to! Maybe I'll give one episode a go and then get hooked...

Category: Non-fiction (general)



Elif Shafak's short book How to Stay Sane in an Age of Division is another library book, I'm quite impressed with some of the non-fiction our library is acquiring recently! Really this was preaching to the choir, in that she is talking about fostering empathy, in order to counteract anxiety, anger and apathy, and promote democracy and optimism for the future. My favourite quote: "Knowledge requires reading. Books. In-depth analyses. Investigative journalism. Then there is wisdom, which conects the mind and the heart, activates emotional intelligence, expands empathy. For that we need stories and storytelling." Can't really disagree with that. 4/5.

99MissBrangwen
Mar 1, 11:45 am

>98 Jackie_K: This is already on my WL, and after reading your quote, I think I should get to it rather sooner than later!

100susanj67
Mar 2, 11:27 am

Jackie, I hope you're having a great book-y weekend :-)

101Jackie_K
Mar 16, 10:22 am

Apologies for abandoning the thread temporarily - I was reading, and do now have a couple of books to report.

>99 MissBrangwen: It's short and sweet, I hope you like it!
>100 susanj67: Thank you, the bookiness is ongoing, see below :)

Category: Contemporary fiction (1969-present)



The Holly King is the fourth in Mark Stay's Witches of Woodville series, and I do think the series is just going from strength to strength. In this one, just before Christmas 1940, the wood sees the return of the ancient demigod the Holly King who looks to reclaim his ancient territory, which has been inconveniently built on by pesky humans who've forgotten all about how they used to worship and serve him. A village son also returns, traumatised by the failed Allied action in Dunkirk, and barely keeping a grip on reality. Can Faye, Mrs Teach and Miss Charlotte protect the villagers from their biggest threat yet? 4.5/5.

Category: Non-fiction (general)
March Non-Fiction Challenge: Forensic Sciences




Professor Sue Black is arguably the UK's leading forensic anthropologist, and in All that Remains: A Life in Death, she writes of both some of the cases she has been involved in (including the 2004 tsunami, and early 2000s Kosovo), and a discussion about death which is both personal and philosophical. The first half of the book feels more memoir-like for the most part, but the second half is much more focused on the actual cases. Because of the nature of the subject, some of the material is very distressing (and also gross: I had my resting "eeewww" face throughout the section detailing what happens when bodies decompose). However, it is always immensely readable and fascinating. 4.5/5.

102MissBrangwen
Mar 16, 5:23 pm

>101 Jackie_K: I am happy to see that The Witches of Woodville continues is such a good way!

103Jackie_K
Mar 22, 10:57 am

>102 MissBrangwen: Indeed it does! I think there's another one being published later this year, which I'm happy about now that I've caught up with them all.

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



The Snowflake: Winter's Frozen Artistry by Kenneth Libbrecht and Rachel Wing is an easy to read book with beautiful photographs about how snowflakes form and the beautiful forms they can take. Even though I only read this in ebook format, the photos were clear enough that I didn't feel like I missed out (usually if I read a book with photos I want a paper copy). The science was explained in an easy to understand way. The final chapter, about snowflake photography, was just gloriously nerdy. 3.5/5.

104Tess_W
Mar 22, 9:39 pm

>101 Jackie_K: Guess I will finally have to purchase this one. Glowing rec by both ridgeway girl and yourself!

105susanj67
Mar 23, 7:53 am

>101 Jackie_K: I've just reserved The Crow Folk so I can start this series!

106Jackie_K
Mar 23, 2:15 pm

>104 Tess_W: Aha, I'm in good company then!
>105 susanj67: I hope you enjoy it as much as I do!

107Jackie_K
Mar 23, 6:01 pm

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
March RandomKIT: World Wildlife Day




Naturalist and artist Tony Angell's The House of Owls is part natural history of the nineteen species of North American owls, and part account of the owls to which he's lived in close proximity, thanks mostly to a nest box he constructed and put up in a tree by his home, which housed western screech owls for 25 years, and also owls he's rescued/rehabilitated back to the wild. It's illustrated by his own artwork too.

I particularly liked the first chapter, about the screech owls in the nestbox. Much of the rest was a little dry, and I would have liked more of his personal 'up close' observations. But it's certainly a good introductionn to a wonderful bunch of birds. 3.5/5.

108Jackie_K
Mar 30, 4:42 pm

Category: Religious



The book I've read specifically for Lent this year is a reread, last read 9 years ago: Andrew Rumsey's Strangely Warmed: Reflections on God, Life and Bric-a-Brac. Andrew was the vicar of the church I used to attend in London and is a wonderful man and fantastic priest (he is now a bishop). This book is a selection of 40 short pieces, some humorous, some serious, of church and Christian life and the quirky and faintly ridiculous culture (especially in its British and Anglican incarnation) that goes along with it. I enjoyed revisiting this book very much. 4/5.

109Jackie_K
Apr 9, 9:18 am

A couple of academic books have got the brain cells lurching about this past week:

Category: Academic



Bending Genre: Essays on Creative Nonfiction, 2nd edition, edited by Dr Margot Singer & Dr Nicole Walker, is a textbook for creative nonfiction students and writers, particularly looking at how the traditional literary essay, memoir and journalism can be disrupted to promote creativity and resistance, and looking at ethical issues around truth- and story-telling. A couple of the essays - the ones by Elena Passarello and Mary Capello spring to mind - were worth the price of the book in themselves, and many of the others were interesting and got me thinking, and I now have a good long list of essays that the various contributors discussed that I want to check out. I have to say, though, there were several chapters here which were so far into Pseud's Corner that I struggled to finish them, and reminded me of some of my less positive memories of academia! Overall 3/5, but the two mentioned essays were 5* reads for sure.

Category: Academic



Theresa Lillis' and Mary Jane Curry's Academic Writing in a Global Context is an interesting look at the politics of academic publishing in English for scholars whose first language isn't English, and who are based in countries that aren't part of the Anglophone mainstream (in this particular case, academics from Spain, Portugal, Slovakia and Hungary). It details the findings from a lengthy research project with many academics from each of the four countries, exploring how and why they choose whether to write for local or international publications, the meanings for them of publishing in English, and the barriers and gatekeepers which ultimately decide who gets published where and why. The last two chapters in particular I found really interesting, although as this was published in 2010 it is perhaps easy for me with the benefit of hindsight to take issue with the idealistic promotion of the then relatively new concept of open-access publishing (in the intervening years it seems to me there are as many barriers and gatekeepers, and financial constraints, in open-access as there are in traditional academic publishing). There is still a lot relevant here though, and having been out of academia for the last decade I'd be interested to see if the participants in this study and the authors feel that anything has changed or improved. 3.5/5.

110MissWatson
Apr 11, 6:09 am

>109 Jackie_K: I'm taking a note of the book on Academic Writing. My sister is working on a paper with this theme and it may interest her, even if it's a bit old.

111Jackie_K
Apr 12, 3:57 pm

>110 MissWatson: I hope she can find it and that it is helpful. It's an important subject, that's for sure.

Category: Biography; autobiography; memoir; true story



One of the joys of lockdown was discovering the antics of Olive & Mabel, the two dogs belonging to UK sports commentator Andrew Cotter. A video where he commentated on them doing normal dog stuff (in the absence of any sporting events to commentate on) went viral, and Olive and Mabel became doggie superstars. Olive, Mabel & Me is the story of that time, and the backstory of childhood family dogs, getting the girls before viral stardom, and generally why owning dogs is excellent. This was a delightful and thoroughly heartwarming book - I listened to the audiobook, but also have a hardback copy so could enjoy the lovely pictures of the two girls too. 4/5.

112Jackie_K
Apr 13, 6:28 am

Category: Nature; environment; landscape; place



Richard Milne's Rhododendron is a short book which packs in a lot of information about the shrub that seems to divide opinion like no other. The early chapters about history and taxonomy were a bit dry, but I must admit I did find the chapter entirely about R. ponticum (which is the variety which is running rampant throughout the UK and Ireland) really thought-provoking. 3/5.

113dudes22
Apr 13, 8:47 am

>111 Jackie_K: - I've added this to my audio list for the library. Sounds fun.

114Jackie_K
Apr 13, 4:12 pm

>113 dudes22: It's lovely in audio, Betty. I'm sure you'll enjoy it.

115Jackie_K
Apr 16, 3:19 pm

Category: Biography; autobiography; memoir; true stories



I started poet, broadcaster and national treasure Michael Rosen's Getting Better: Life Lessons on going under, getting over it, and getting through it thinking it was his memoir from covid (he caught covid very early on in the pandemic and spent 6 weeks in hospital, over a month of that in an induced coma), but that's another book (Many Different Kinds of Love). This is a memoir which looks not only at his experience of covid, but also a decade plus lost to undiagnosed hypothyroidism in his 20s and 30s, the death of his 19 year old son, the discovery of relatives who were killed in the Holocaust, amongst other things. The book focuses on how he dealt with these experiences of trauma and grief, and what has helped him to live well again. Despite the subject matter, he has a light touch which makes him a fine companion, and I found this very moving but also very relatable. 4.5/5.

116Jackie_K
Apr 25, 3:25 pm

Category: Non-fiction (general)
April Non-Fiction Challenge: Globalisation




Well, what a thoroughly depressing book Who Rules the World? by Noam Chomsky is. It's an expose of American geopolitical hypocrisy and dominance, and he is equally scathing of both major political parties and their policies (which gives me at least some confidence in the overall analysis).

I did have to take points off though for the many times he used Russian/Soviet and Russia/USSR interchangeably. I can't tell you how much that annoys me, and "the world's greatest public intellectual" (according to the quote on the front cover) really should know better. 3/5.

117Tess_W
Edited: Apr 26, 10:10 am

>116 Jackie_K: Ha! The world's greatest public intellectual? That must have been written by himself. In the U.S, amongst intellectuals, he is mostly known as a socialist, linguist, and philosopher. As to the scathing of both political parties, I'm amazed he had the "nerve" to do it, but I most heartily concur! "The truth is often ignored." I'm paraphrasing Huxley, I believe. As to the USSR/Russia, I agree, he should have known better! (I make my college freshman memorize 1922-1991, and they are tested on it, practical application of course. For example, true/false: In 1936, Joseph Stalin began a series of show trials in Russia)

118Jackie_K
Apr 26, 3:27 pm

>117 Tess_W: It's actually a quote from an Observer review, but I don't suppose he objected to having it on the front cover!

The other thing he managed in this book, which I thought was pretty impressive, was to make Adam Smith sound like a raving leftie. That's quite the achievement.

119Tess_W
Apr 27, 3:40 am

>118 Jackie_K: Wow to Smith

120Jackie_K
Apr 29, 4:06 pm

>119 Tess_W: I know, it really was something!

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
April RandomKIT: Enchanting Garden Visitors




Andrew D. Blechman's Pigeons: The Fascinating Saga of the World's Most Revered and Reviled Bird is both an interesting look at the birds themselves, and how perceptions of them have changed over time (from 'Dove of Peace' to 'rats with wings'), and also an account of the humans who are obsessed with them. He spends time with dedicated pigeon breeders and racers, attends a pigeon shooting club, meets people who are dedicated to saving pigeons from inhumane extermination methods, and even attempts to get an interview with surprise pigeon-fancier, Mike Tyson. It's a bird which is the subject of some surprisingly obsessive behaviour, which at times made me feel quite uncomfortable. I'm not quite sure why - possibly because as an outsider, it felt to me like the people he interviewed were so obsessive as to be not quite in touch with reality, and I felt like I was intruding (even though his accounts and interviews for the most part didn't feel particularly intrusive). I'm definitely glad I read this though, as it was a window into a world that you couldn't make up. 3.5/5.

121Jackie_K
May 9, 4:42 pm

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



Jos Smith's The New Nature Writing: Rethinking the Literature of Place is an academic book about my favourite book genre. It looks at a number of books (primarily focused on the UK) in the resurgence of the genre since the 1970s, and its relationship between art and environmentalism. I was aware of most of the authors, but do have a few others to look up as a result of this. I found the book interesting for the most part, although the chapter specifically looking at the work of Tim Robinson was a bit dense (I do really want to see his hand drawn maps of the Aran Islands though, and his Connemara books are already on my wishlist). I also found it very male-focused - with the honourable exceptions of Alice Oswald and Kathleen Jamie, pretty much all of the other authors discussed were men. There could easily be a Vol 2 made up just of women nature/place writers. 3.5/5.

122MissBrangwen
May 15, 5:49 am

>120 Jackie_K: I feel so sorry for pigeons because of all the scorn they receive. What a complicated history they have with humans!

123Jackie_K
May 15, 4:23 pm

>122 MissBrangwen: Yes, when I was writing my garden diary (that ended up being my book) I ended up having quite complicated feelings towards our pigeons! I started off thinking they were bullying thugs, but by the end of the year I must admit to quite enjoying them.

124Jackie_K
May 21, 9:40 am

Category: Nature, enviroment, landscape, place.



Ruth Allen's Weathering is quite a difficult book to categorise. The author has a PhD in geology, but left academia some years ago to retain as a therapist, and she often uses work outdoors in the landscape to explore issues with her clients. This book looks at the connections between geology and therapy, and did a great job of opening my eyes to the meanings and interpretations and trains of thought that can be inspired by studying rock in the landscape. It could potentially have been too 'woo-woo' for me, but there was enough science and rationality, alongside the social and more speculative, that the science/speculative seesaw was pretty well-balanced, in my view. The landscapes and rocks she talks about are all in the UK's Peak District, where she lives and works. She'd definitely be an interesting walking companion, that's for sure! I particularly loved the chapter where she was walking and talking with her friend who is a grandmother and who is actively thinking about 'growing into elderhood' (as opposed to 'getting old') and embracing all that this stage of life has in store. 4/5.

125MissBrangwen
May 21, 2:56 pm

>124 Jackie_K: "growing into elderhood" - What a wonderful expression!

126Jackie_K
May 26, 10:17 am

>125 MissBrangwen: Isn't it just?!

Category: Contemporary fiction (1969-present)



And now for something completely different...! Morgan Delaney is an Irish writer I know through an online writing group, and I helped him workshop a poem for the second book in his Alumiere Sisters' Adventures series. The Phoenix (An Alumiere Sisters Adventure) is the first book in the series, a shorter novella introducing the 1920s English town of Hawking-by-Hythe and its eccentric and superstitious inhabitants.

The town is suddenly overrun by sporadic plagues of hundreds of rats, which run through the town and surrounding fields, ending up at a particular farmer's field (site of the hanging and burial of a local witch 400 years previously) where they run around making crop circles and patterns before disappearing. The newcomer identical triplet Alumiere sisters, Gertrude, Victoria, and Colette, who run the local apothecary shop and who are largely viewed with suspicion by the locals who think they are witches (they insist they are scientists), investigate what is going on. And what is the significance of the arrival of swoony Jeb (who instantly has most of the town's women in the palm of his hand) or the curious professor from Luxembourg and his outlandish trousers?

I loved this story. Genre wise it's I guess 'cosy paranormal' (the author also writes full-on horror stories which I'm far too much of a chicken to read). Imagine the Thursday Murder Club with elements of witchcraft and steampunk. It was just the right side of absurd to appeal to my sense of humour, and I'll definitely be reading the other books in the series. 4/5.

127Jackie_K
Edited: Jun 6, 1:21 pm

Category: Nature, place, landscape, environment
June RandomKIT: Initials




Current Scottish makar (our equivalent of Poet Laureate) Kathleen Jamie's most recent set of prose essays, Surfacing, is another brilliant collection of nature, place, and travel essays. I wish I could write like this! This collection focuses on what's below the surface, and what happens when it comes to the surface, so there are essays from archaeological digs in Alaska and Orkney, memories of a trip to China/Tibet in 1989, as well as thoughts closer to home. It's all excellent, highly recommended. 4.5/5.

128whitewavedarling
Jun 6, 1:36 pm

Oh, that sounds lovely, >127 Jackie_K:! Taking a bb for this one!

129Jackie_K
Edited: Jun 7, 1:41 pm

>128 whitewavedarling: All of her prose collections (the others are Findings and Sightlines) are terrific. I've got some of her poetry lined up to read too - her poem for the COP26 conference in Glasgow was so very powerful.

130MissBrangwen
Jun 6, 3:23 pm

>127 Jackie_K: I'm adding this author to my wish list, too - I don't think I have heard about her before!

131dudes22
Jun 7, 5:42 am

>127 Jackie_K: - I'm going to take a BB for this too.

132Jackie_K
Jun 7, 1:41 pm

>130 MissBrangwen: >131 dudes22: I think you're in for a treat!

133Jackie_K
Jun 13, 4:00 pm

Category: Biography; autobiography; memoir; true story



One Day I Will Write About This Place by Binyavanga Wainaina is a truly extraordinary coming-of-age memoir. I don't think I've ever read anything quite like it. He writes about growing up in Kenya (he's a few years younger than me, I think, so a lot of the pop cultural references (Michael Jackson, Live Aid, etc) were the same and it was fascinating to see how the same things were perceived in Kenya rather than here), his failed attempt to get a degree in South Africa, politics, tribalism, family, and the power of literature. His writing is amazing - I thought I'd race through this, but instead I read it slowly in order to savour the language and what he does with it. I'm amazed how he can evoke the chaos, bustle, sweatiness, colour, smells, noise, vibrancy and menace of daily life. I honestly think everyone should read this, it's brilliant. 5/5.

134Jackie_K
Jul 3, 4:49 pm

Category: Academic



Rootedness: The Ramifications of a Metaphor by Christy Wampole is an academic book which I bought for personal interest from the University of Chicago ebook sale a couple of years ago. I read it now as rootedness is something I am thinking about for an essay I'm writing. It's broadly in the fields of literary criticism/philosophy/linguistics, none of which are my specialities (understatement!), so I must admit to skimming a fair bit of it. But I also must admit to highlighting quite a number of passages, including one sentence which gave me a huge lightbulb moment for my own essay. It looks at primarily 20th century French and German literature and philosophy, and how those authors write about roots and rootedness and how these accounts differ, complicating the metaphor of rootedness further. It's interesting, and I'd not rule out reading it again, but I need something lighter for now! 3.5/5.

135Jackie_K
Jul 14, 4:54 pm

Category: Sexual/reproductive health & rights; gender; sexuality; parenting; children



Lauren Elkin's Flaneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice and London is part memoir and part appreciation of the women artists and writers who have taken on the stereotypically male 'flaneur' identity. Much literature has been devoted to the men who wander city streets and make a thing of noticing everything and everyone, but this has always been considered a male thing. Elkin reclaims the streets for women, showing how on the contrary many women have written or otherwise portrayed the places they have got to know intimately through walking their streets. Writers and artists included here are Jean Rhys, Virginia Woolf, George Sand, Agnes Varda, Sophie Calle, and Martha Gellhorn. I found this fascinating. 4/5.

136Jackie_K
Aug 1, 5:34 pm

I've been on holiday and also have some family stuff which means that we have to spend this weekend in England, so it's been a while since I posted here. I do have a couple of books to report from the last couple of weeks though.

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place
July Non-Fiction Challenge: Insect World




Sex on Six Legs by Marlene Zuk is a popular science/natural history book looking at the curiously fascinating lives and development of insects, in particular their reproduction and living arrangements. It was curiously fascinating, and an enjoyable read. 4/5.

Category: Poetry



This gorgeous cover belongs to a poetry anthology I picked up last month at The Book Nook in Stirling - Other Worlds: An Anthology of Scottish Island Poems, edited by Stwart Conn. As with any anthology I liked some entries more than others, but I was particularly taken with the poems on love and loss. 4/5.

137Charon07
Aug 2, 10:15 am

>136 Jackie_K: Taking a BB for Sex on Six Legs. It sounds fascinating, and maybe it will reconcile me a bit to the creepy crawlies.

138charl08
Aug 2, 12:01 pm

>135 Jackie_K: I want to reread this one. I thought I had a copy but LT says not...

139MissBrangwen
Aug 2, 1:54 pm

>136 Jackie_K: Oh, the anthology looks wonderful!

140Jackie_K
Aug 8, 4:17 pm

>137 Charon07: It's a good one (I'm not the fondest of our 6 legged friends either!)
>138 charl08: I'm sure I'll go back to it in the future too.
>139 MissBrangwen: I hope you enjoy it if you get to it! I loved the cover too!

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



Tim Birkhead's Birds and Us: A 12,000 Year History from Cave Art to Conservation is an interesting and readable account of the interactions between birds and humans over thousands of years. From cave art and mummified ibises right through to current conservation efforts, it's all here. 4/5.

141Tess_W
Aug 16, 7:32 pm

I got a notice from Amazon today that one of my favorite authors has a new book out--CONGRATS! Of course, I'm getting it! Woot!

142Jackie_K
Aug 17, 5:34 am

>141 Tess_W: oh goodness, thank you so much Tess! It's short and sweet, this one, my first dabblings in poetry. I do hope you like it!

143Jackie_K
Aug 30, 4:37 pm

Category: Travel



Comedian Dom Joly's book The Dark Tourist: Sightseeing in the world's most unlikely holiday destinations was a fun and occasionally more serious look at travel. In it, he goes skiing in Iran, does an assassination destination tour of the US, and also travels to Chernobyl, Cambodia, North Korea, and finishes up in the country of his birth, Lebanon. He was born in the late 60s, so his formative years as an expat kid in Beirut were punctuated with bombs and destruction until he was sent to boarding school in England at the age of 10. So he has quite a complex relationship wtih Lebanon, and although this wasn't the first time he'd been back there as an adult, the previous time he'd been working, and this was the first time he reckoned with family destinations and memories. It also turns out that for a couple of years he was at the same school, he thinks at the same time, as Osama bin Laden. I enjoyed this book very much. 4/5.

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



Elixir: A Voyage into Alchemy by Kapka Kassabova is a beautiful book which powerfully evokes a particular place, the Mesta Valley in Bulgaria. The blurb calls it 'an exploration of the deep connections between people, plants and place', and oh my goodness does this book deliver on that! Over several seasons she talks and lives and walks with the people of this rural region, as they gather herbs and other medicinal plants, and attempt to maintain their way of life in the face of globalism, capitalism, and post-socialist chaos. The author is Bulgarian, but now lives in Highland Scotland, and I did like the links and observations of the two places that she made. There were a few occasions where the emphasis on herbalism felt a bit much, but that is honestly a small thing, because her writing is just so beautiful, so evocative, that I honestly felt that I was there alongside the same people she was, seeing the same beautiful views. Lovely. 4/5.

144Jackie_K
Sep 3, 9:38 am

Category: Biography; autobiography; memoir; true story
August Non-Fiction Challenge: Being Jewish




The Girl Who Stole My Holocaust is a memoir by Noam Chayut, former eager Zionist conscript in the Israeli army who gradually begins to question the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and his/Israel's role in the occupation. He ended up as a campaigner against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land.

This is a really important story, and many of the events of Israeli cruelty he recounts are shocking, even as they're unsurprising. I feel a bit churlish saying it could have done with better editing, but honestly I think it could have been even more forceful without so much repetition and, in places, self-indulgent writing. Despite that though, his is an important message and I also found the account of his early years helpful in understanding Israeli perspectives and accounts, which is something I think I needed. And of course it's very instructive given the current war in Gaza and increased attacks in the West Bank. 3/5.

145Tess_W
Sep 6, 11:43 pm

>143 Jackie_K: Definitely going to find The Dark Tourist! Great review!

146Jackie_K
Edited: Sep 9, 2:14 pm

>145 Tess_W: I hope you enjoy it!

I finished a couple of audiobooks this weekend:

Category: Biography; autobiography; memoir; true story



David Sedaris' The Best of Me is a collection of mostly essays (plus a handful of fiction pieces) selected and read by the author showcasing the 3 decades of his career. They are variously moving, funny, wry, cringey, and wise, often all in the one essay. I have no idea how his family are still speaking to him, but despite the cringe his love for them shines through. And at the bits where I started to think that he was insufferable and smug, he'd always end up lampooning himself and making it clear that he knew exactly that too, and wasn't proud of it. I wasn't mad on the fictional pieces - his essays are definitely the pinnacle here. The audiobook finished with an interview with the author. 4/5.

Category: Poetry



All the Names Given is a collection of poetry by one of my favourite British poets, Raymond Antrobus. Exploring identity, heritage, belonging, language, and deafness, this is a powerful collection which showcases his incredible talent. 4/5.

147MissBrangwen
Sep 9, 2:41 pm

>146 Jackie_K: I haven't come across Raymond Antrobus so far, but I'm adding him to my list. I still hope to read more poetry!

148Helenliz
Sep 9, 4:09 pm

The library has The Dark Tourist, so reservation placed.

149Jackie_K
Sep 11, 5:07 pm

>147 MissBrangwen: He's quite young, but writes amazingly thought-provoking poetry. He's also deaf, which adds another level of profundity to his work.
>148 Helenliz: I hope you like it! He's written quite a few travel books since The Dark Tourist too.

Category: Non-fiction (general)
September Non-Fiction Challenge: Essays




John Green's The Anthropocene Reviewed is a collection of essays subtitled "Essays on a Human-Centred Planet". Most of the pieces are based on episodes of his podcast of the same name. I expected them to be about the environment and climate change, and a handful of them are, but mostly it's about uniquely human inventions and values and ridiculousness that have led us to where we are today. I found this easy to read, yet moving, funny, profound, occasionally a bit annoying, but always thought-provoking, and I enjoyed it very much. 4/5.

150Jackie_K
Sep 22, 4:38 pm

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating by Elizabeth Tova Bailey is an unusual but very powerful memoir. Completely floored by an unknown virus, the author is confined to bed for several months, and has to be moved out of her home and into accommodation where she can be cared for. One of her visiting friends brings her a plant in a pot, and adds a snail she'd picked up in the woods nearby. Over the months that follow she watches the snail go about its business, firstly in the plant pot and then in a terrarium her carer gets for her. She finds herself fascinated by the creature, and as she watches it she reflects on her own illness and what the snail is teaching her about life.

I must admit to not being a big snail fan - I don't think I'll ever quite get over the ick factor, or stop being cross when they eat our veg - but this book has given me a new respect for a complex and fascinating creature. This book is short but beautifully written. 4.5/5.

151dudes22
Sep 23, 6:03 pm

>150 Jackie_K: - I'd already put this on my wishlist from seeing comments somewhere and your comments have me more interested in reading it. Maybe next year.

152MissBrangwen
Sep 24, 4:18 am

>151 dudes22: Same here!

153VivienneR
Sep 29, 2:14 am

>150 Jackie_K: That had to be one of the most unusual gifts! I'm not a fan either, but I think snails are fascinating. My husband picked one up as it headed for the street and took it to a safe place while a crow watched the event from the fence post. Lucky snail.

154Jackie_K
Oct 5, 12:32 pm

>151 dudes22: >152 MissBrangwen: I'm sure you'll enjoy it, in its quiet way.
>153 VivienneR: That is definitely one lucky snail! Your husband is a very kind man, clearly.

Category: Contemporary fiction (1969-present)



Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa (translated by Eric Ozawa) is a gentle story of a young woman, Takako, whose boyfriend turns out to be a scumbag, and when she finds out he's going to be marrying someone else, she leaves her job and reluctantly moves into the bookshop run by her somewhat eccentric uncle. Gradually she encounters the magic of books, makes new friends, and finds a way to help her uncle in a way that nobody else could have.

I'm coming to the conclusion that what I really like in fiction is stories where not all that much happens. This is definitely a good example of that - there's enough to be interesting, but not so much going on or so many characters that you need to remind yourself who's who every time you pick it up. I enjoyed this a lot. 4/5.

155lowelibrary
Oct 5, 2:10 pm

>154 Jackie_K: Taking a BB for this one

156charl08
Oct 5, 3:09 pm

>154 Jackie_K: Me too. It perfectly fitted my book mood!

157Jackie_K
Oct 5, 3:49 pm

>155 lowelibrary: I hope you enjoy it when you get to it.
>156 charl08: Yes - I can't be doing with dramarama at the best of times, so I don't want it in my leisure reading either! This was perfect for that.

158Helenliz
Oct 5, 4:00 pm

>154 Jackie_K: seen several positive reviews for this one recently.

159VivienneR
Oct 6, 3:46 pm

>154 Jackie_K: I really like Japanese fiction and read three last month. This was definitely the best.

160Jackie_K
Oct 15, 3:13 pm

>158 Helenliz: Yes, I'm yet to see a poor review. I guess if you don't like books where not much happens it's not going to be for you, but otherwise it's a nice gentle diversion.

>159 VivienneR: Japanese fiction seems to be having a worldwide moment, doesn't it?

Category: Non-fiction (general)
October Non-Fiction challenge: essays




Burning Questions: Essays and Occasional Pieces 2004 to 2022 is a collection of essays, speeches, book reviews, and other articles written by the author Margaret Atwood. It took me a few weeks to read it, it's a pretty chunky book, as you would expect from someone who thinks and writes so widely. I really enjoyed this, for the most part - even the reviews of books I've never read or even heard of had something to tweak my interest. The essays and other pieces here cover many different issues - feminism, climate change, debt, storytelling, family, culture, the writing life, amongst many others - and I always looked forward to opening the book and reading another couple of essays. 4.5/5.

161charl08
Oct 16, 1:14 am

>160 Jackie_K: Sounds like a great read for savouring Jackie. I subscribed to the free version of her substack newsletter, and am tempted to get the full version (if I could work out what to cancel instead).

162Jackie_K
Oct 18, 4:03 pm

>161 charl08: Yes, it was, definitely a savoury one! :)

Category: Non-fiction (general)
October Non-Fiction challenge: Music, more music




The Book of Music and Nature, edited by David Rothenberg and Marta Ulvaeus, is an anthology of essays of which I had high hopes. Unfortunately most of the essays were prime candidates for Pseud's Corner, and I'm honestly not much more the wiser now I've finished it. There were a couple of essays I found interesting (by R Murray Schafer and Brian Eno), but I ended up skimming much of this and couldn't really tell you much about what it's about (despite the title, which you would think would be obvious). 2/5.

163MissBrangwen
Edited: Oct 19, 4:20 am

>154 Jackie_K: This one is already waiting on my kindle, so I am glad you liked it! It was mainly a cover buy, but since I bought it I have seen so many positive reviews.

164Jackie_K
Oct 19, 8:48 am

>163 MissBrangwen: I'm sure you'll enjoy it!

Not to make everyone jealous or anything, but I am in Barter Books right now. Happy to confirm it is up to its usual spectacular standards.

165rabbitprincess
Oct 19, 10:42 am

>164 Jackie_K: AWESOME!!!! Someday I shall make the pilgrimage there.

166Helenliz
Oct 19, 1:14 pm

I've been later this afternoon!!!! I did wonder if I'd died and gone to heaven. Books plus tea and cake.

167susanj67
Oct 20, 3:40 am

>164 Jackie_K: Too late - I'm jealous! It looks like an amazing place :-)

168MissBrangwen
Oct 20, 4:55 am

>164 Jackie_K: What a dream!!!

>166 Helenliz: "Books plus tea and cake." Sounds like the best combination ever!

169charl08
Oct 24, 1:40 am

>164 Jackie_K: I want to go back: one visit was definitely not enough.

What was the haul?

170Jackie_K
Edited: Oct 24, 6:13 am

>165 rabbitprincess: >166 Helenliz: >167 susanj67: >168 MissBrangwen: >169 charl08: I knew I'd find understanding here!

>169 charl08: we're actually going to go again on the way back home in a couple of days, so I'll post the full haul then! I can confirm though that the cake was a hearty fruit cake and was excellent.

171Jackie_K
Oct 26, 12:21 pm

>169 charl08: Here's the final haul - I just added one more on the way home today.

1. Madeleine Bunting - Love of Country: A Hebridean Journey.
2. Horatio Clare - A Single Swallow.
3. Dave Goulson - A Sting in the Tale.
4. Ryszard Kapuscinski - The Shadow of the Sun: My African Life.
5. Margaret Drabble - A Writer's Britain: Landscape in Literature.

I did check the fiction stacks too - I have got most of my No 1 Ladies Detective Agency books from there over the years, but sadly there weren't any there today. My daughter picked up 3 books over the 2 visits too. My husband just donated the books that gave us the book credit!

172Jackie_K
Edited: Oct 26, 1:01 pm

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place



Jim Crumley's Watching Wildlife: In the Moment is a short book I got from the library and enjoyed so much I've just bought my own copy. He is a Scottish nature writer (actually he lives here in Stirling too, I've sat next to him in the cafe at our local indie bookshop and hoped that I would absorb some of his beautiful writing skill by osmosis), and in this book he describes some of the nature encounters he's had over the years, and how he manages to get so many lucky encounters (basically: it's not luck, it's hours of trudging up hills and waiting around). His writing is always just such a delight. 5/5.

Edited: I meant to add an example which made me laugh:

I walked from one oystercatcher territory to another, so the decibels of strident variations on a theme of "piss off" rose and fell about my ears with the rhythm of waves on shingle.

173MissBrangwen
Oct 27, 6:17 am

>171 Jackie_K: This looks like an excellent haul!

>172 Jackie_K: I added this one to my WL. The quote made me laugh, and it instantly makes you hear the noises of the scene :-) Although I must admit that I just had to google the call of the oystercatcher because I didn't know the sound.

174Tess_W
Nov 7, 11:30 am

>171 Jackie_K: nice haul! I also have the Clare book. Hoping it will fit into a challenge next year!

175Jackie_K
Nov 10, 7:31 am

>173 MissBrangwen: Oystercatchers are one of my favourite birds. I always thought they were restricted to the coast, but in 2020 I heard that distinctive cry near where I live, looked up and found one on top of a nearby house's roof! I discovered later that a family of oystercatchers were nesting in the grounds of our local community hospital; the nurses who were working there during the pandemic loved watching the parents and little ones coming and going and I think it was a real tonic during the whole 2020-ness of it all.

>174 Tess_W: I've read some of his newspaper articles and really like his writing, although I've never yet got to his books. Hopefully I'll find the opportunity to read it soon too (if I ignore all the other books on Mt TBR, sigh).

Category: Nature, environment, landscape, place.
October PrizeCAT: Missed it by That Much
?



Where the Wildflowers Grow by Leif Bersweden is an account of the year he spent (in 2021) cycling and walking through Britain and Ireland looking for various different wildflower habitats and sharing his joy of botany. He does sound the alarm for habitat destruction and climate change, but what comes through is his love of plants and the joy he gains from finding flowers and sharing his knowledge with others. A very pleasant antidote to *waves at everything*. 4/5.

This book was longlisted for the Wainwright nature writing prize, and shortlisted for the Richard Jeffries Prize in 2022.

176Jackie_K
Edited: Nov 16, 5:19 am

Category: Contemporary Fiction (1969-present)
November PrizeCAT: Children's Literature
November RandomKIT: I told it my way




October, October by Katya Balen, illustrated by Angela Harding who also created this beautiful cover, won the Yoto Carnegie Medal in 2022 and deservedly so. This middle-grade book is the story of October, a girl who lives in the woods with her dad until she is 11 when she finds an abandoned wild owl chick and her dad falls out of a tree and has catastrophic injuries. She is then taken to live with her mother in London (her mother had originally lived the wild life with them, but couldn't cope with it and returned to the city, and October thereafter had refused to have anything to do with her) while her dad has months in hospital and rehab. Initially rejecting her mother's attempts to reconcile, October struggles with life in the city, having to give the owl to a sanctuary, and going to school for the first time, till she makes a friend in Yusuf and they discover mudlarking on the Thames. This story is about becoming (and staying) wild, reconciliation, crafting stories, and living our best lives. I loved it. 4.5/5.

177MissBrangwen
Nov 16, 5:32 am

>176 Jackie_K: Another BB from you! The cover is amazing.

178Jackie_K
Nov 16, 5:36 am

>177 MissBrangwen: It is, isn't it? She's the same printmaker as in >54 Jackie_K:

179susanj67
Nov 17, 8:53 am

>176 Jackie_K: That one sounds (and looks!) amazing. My elibrary has the audio version available but I'm going to wait for the ebook so I can see the illustrations :-)

180Tess_W
Nov 21, 11:37 pm

>174 Tess_W:
>176 Jackie_K:

Two BB's! You are not good for my TBR, Jackie!

181Jackie_K
Nov 22, 11:43 am

>179 susanj67: Honestly, I think middle grade is my preferred age for fiction, there are so many really good books being written for that age group.

>180 Tess_W: If I said I was sorry, would you believe me? ;)

182Jackie_K
Dec 1, 7:42 am

Category: Non-Fiction (general)
November Non-Fiction Challenge: Too Small to See




I Contain Multitudes by Ed Yong is a fabulous book about microbes. What they are, what they do, how they work. Much like An Immense World, which I read earlier this year, I loved how every time I turned the page my mind was blown some more. Fantastic.

It also made me think of a meme I saw recently - along the lines of 'after all these millions of years of evolution, humans apparently reach the top of the tree and the only thing we're interested in doing is destroying ourselves'. Thinking about that in the context of I Contain Multitudes definitely made me ponder on the nature of intelligence, and wonder which is the more primitive being. 4.5/5.

183Jackie_K
Dec 19, 9:10 am

Category: Religious



Anam Cara by the late John O'Donohue is subtitled "A Book of Celtic Wisdom". I was looking forward to this; before his untimely death in 2007 he was a popular speaker at the Greenbelt Festival which I love, and I know many people have appreciated his gentle wisdom and spirit. I wonder if I just wasn't quite in the right frame of mind, because I found this a bit wanting - elements of it were lovely, and I could sense the profundity, but not quite touch it, if that makes sense. I don't mean it was pseudo-spiritual or vapid (in the way that I would characterise books by, say, Paulo Coelho), just that it didn't quite touch me in the way I was hoping. Actually the most moving thing for me was the poem of dedication at the beginning to his late mother, Josie - that was truly beautiful, and I will definitely seek out more of his poetry. 3.5/5.