Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Kate's Reading Challenge 2011: Book Seven


7. "Just my Type" by Simon Garfield (Profile Books, 2010)

Not just for font geeks or graphic designers, my second non-fiction read of the year "Just my Type" reveals the fascinating stories behind typefaces. Written with a healthy dose of sarcasm, Garfield describes how type has evolved over time, how our best-known fonts came into being and the role of typefaces in branding and advertising before naming and shaming the world's ugliest fonts.

My favourite aspect of the book is all of the quirky little stories featured, I particularly enjoyed the tale of a hoax, run by The Guardian, which imagined an entire island composed of towns, rivers, beaches, etcetera which shared their names with popular typefaces. After this feature was run in the newspaper, travel agents were apparently inundated with requests to fly to Bodoni airport!

"Just my Type" is witty, interesting and really insightful, and what's more it may have just helped me conquer my fear of non-fiction.


Thursday, 24 March 2011

Lucinda's Reading Challenge: Now for the Science Bit...


Obviously, ANYTHING on the
Mr B's science shelf is going to
be a good read, but I have to
say Michael Brooks' 13 Things
That Don't Make Sense
is a
bit of a find. In addition to
(paraphrasing Donald
Rumsfeld) some 'known
unkowns': What's really
out there in our universe?
and What is the elusive
difference between kiving and dead matter? Michael Brooks also covers some intriguing 'unknown unknowns': Does cold fusion exist? Do we have free will? and intriguingly, Homeopathy - does it have any scientific grounding? The chapters are cunningly linked together, so one big question flows seamlessly into the next and occasionally some of the concepts you've just read about are carried over too. This means that you get the chance to apply your new knowledge as you make your way through the book - which allows you the luxury of feeling a teensy bit clever! Mr Brooks is pretty adept at explaining some fairly advanced physics, biology and chemistry to a science novice like myself, but to stop there would make this sound like a useful, but dry, little textbook. What I really loved were the back stories describing how scientists have pursued answers to these questions throughout the centuries. Brooks provides insight into both the personalities and politics involved, describing successes and failures with equal verve and all topped off with a dollop of humour. The human aspect weighs up nicely against all those theorems and hypotheses. I now have a passing interest in the progress of scientific investigations I didn't even know existed! With Brian Cox et al bringing science back into the media spotlight, before long we'll all be talking about string theory and genomes - arm yourself with this little volume, however, and you'll be able to tell your quarks from your eukaryotes with confidence.

Sport next and I've chosen 'Just Sea and Sky' by Ben Pester. This is a decidedly low tech affair: Ben and crewman Peter sail from Plymouth to New Zealand in the 1950s minus any mod cons like electric lights or radios or GPS. I am expecting some hiccups!

Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Marvellous Monday Book Group: 14th March


The weather on
Monday evening
was disappointingly
benign. No rain
lashed against the
(single glazed)
window panes
of Mr B's,the wind
was absent and the
temperature almost
balmy. We were
gathered to discuss
Charlie Connelly's Attention All Shipping - a travelogue charting the mystical, poetic and remote place names of the Radio 4 institution that is The Shipping Forecast. The book is divided into segments, almost as though Charlie was having to complete his odyssey on his odd weekends off - however - everyone agreed that this meant the book could be dipped into and out of very easily and that the bite size anecdotes were perfect for reading aloud. We felt that we probably learnt more about Charlie himself than the places that he visited (and the fantastical back story of his great grandfather's relationship with the sea is really not to be missed), but as he was such a witty and amiable guide, it didn't seem to matter. There were some genuinely curious historical facts and stories thrown up by his travels, but perhaps the most absorbing bits were the people and communities that he encountered, from the hardy Norwegians on the tiny, North Sea Utsira island to the canoodling mecca that is Plymouth Hoe. It was noted that the journalistic style was occasionally a little too... well, 'blustery' - but overall this is an engaging, informative and funny read. And has it lampooned our romantic ideas of the shipping forecast locations? Not a bit!

Next up, on Monday 18th April is George Rodenbach's Bruges La Morte, first published in 1892 and what looks like a deeply atmospheric study of loss set against the backdrop of a beautiful, decaying city. AND...to sweeten the mood, we are promised genuine Belgian chocolates whilst we discuss! Perfect. Copies are now available from the shop. [Lucinda]

Tuesday, 8 March 2011

Kate's Reading Challenge 2011: Books Five and Six

5. "The Howling Miller" by Arto Paasilinna (Canongate, 2007)

“The Howling Miller” is a book that I’ve recommended to many people (based on Nic’s rave reviews) but one which has actually been sat on my “to read” shelf for an embarrassingly long time. So I finally decided to check out what all the fuss was about and I must say I wasn’t disappointed.

Gunnar is a troubled miller, who moves to a small village where he beautifully renovates a dilapidated mill and entertains with his excellent (if slightly bizarre) animal impressions. But at night the miller’s raucous howling proves too distressing for the villagers who diagnose him as a madman and banish him from their precious oasis. What follows is a witch hunt as Gunnar battles with his desire for his mill and the drop dead gorgeous horticulture expert and his longing for a hassle-free life.

I loved the other-worldly, almost fairy-tale feel to this novel; it’s unexpectedly charming and genuinely moving. I can now recommend it myself with absolute confidence that it's just as brilliant as Mr B promised!

6. "Ms Hempel Chronicles" by Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum (Atlantic, 2011)

With a tagline from Curtis Sittenfeld (author of two of my favourite books “American Wife” and “Prep”) I was pretty excited about this novel following a teacher in her mid-twenties.

Ms. Hempel’s experiences imparting her wisdom upon a class of keen but rebellious teens leads her to reflect on her own coming-of-age story. The narrative flips back and forth between strange and specific recollections of Beatrice’s child self and scenes from the classroom of the grown-up woman.

As a young teacher herself, Ms Hempel’s relationship with her pupils is wonderful combination of endearing and awkward, the girls rarely hesitate to confide in her, and the boys simply adore her. Ms Hempel’s own feelings about her class are slightly muddier and are only confused by her age and occupation, which leave her stranded between the indulgent lack of responsibility enjoyed by the children that she teaches and the adulthood that she knows is beckoning.

I loved the variety of classroom characters depicted, particularly bad boy Jonathan, whom Ms Hempel has a real soft spot for (a rebel without a cause can be so irresistible)! I also think that the teacher herself is a very realistically drawn and interesting character.

However, I found the flippant style of storytelling slightly disorientating, and whilst generally I don’t mind a narrative that jumps around a bit (I loved the abstract style of “The Rehearsal” by Eleanor Catton) in this case I’m not sure that it entirely worked. The main issue for me was that throughout the novel the dynamic was fairly consistent and nicely understated and the violent texture of the plot created a jarring effect, which I don’t really feel complimented the story.

All in all, I wouldn’t say that this book quite lived up to my high expectations but it did have a strong charm aspect, which made me feel very nostalgic for my schooldays…

Sunday, 20 February 2011

Libby's reading year: a quick catch up!

For someone so excited to write my first blog post I realise I have slipped under the radar recently but although I have not been blogging I have been reading as much as ever! This means I have three very different books to fill you in on.

The House by the Thames: and the People Who Lived There by Gillian Tindall

In my last post I promised that after reading The House By the Thames: and the People Who Lived There I would know all there is to know about the history of London. I feel that, although that was a slight oversight, I have definitely learnt a lot about 49 Bankside and that area through the ages.

49 Bankside and the small terrace of modest looking houses sits right up next to the millennium bridge, opposite St Paul's and in the shadow of the huge old power station which houses the Tate Modern. Having walked past those houses many times, I have long been curious about how they managed to survive and what kind of people live inside. The anecdotal history throughout this book is very interesting it explores the Tudor inn which once stood on the site, the boat men who carried passengers across the river to the theatres in Shakespeare's times and also the huge changes on Bankside at the time of the industrial revolution.


Sometimes in the past I have struggled to read non fiction; my love for novels springs from being able to immerse myself in a story and typically I did find some sections of this book more interesting than others. There is no denying that Tindall has done a brilliant job in creating a well written and accessible history and I wish I was as interested in the coal trade chapter as I was in the chapter describing the fire of 1666, but I am afraid that is probably more down to my short attention span than anything else.
I will feel inclined to bring my copy of The House by the Thames next time I am in that part of the city and use it as a sort of travel guide. There are definitely some particular anecdotes I think will stick in my head and others I would like to put in to context by giving Bankside a visit.
So, after my brief spell in the basement of the history section I decided to give myself a break back to fiction. With a novel which is also about a house....(drum roll)..
The Glass Room by Simon Mawer

I would like to start by saying that I loved this book. Much more than I thought I would after reading the first chapter, which I had to re-read having read the end. Set in Czechoslovakia in the late 1930s this novel revolves around the Landauer house: an innovative piece of modern architecture built for Liesel and Viktor Landauer by the architect Rainer before the gradual decline of their nation into war.
The novel is one about war, betrayal and attraction in a uniquely cold but beautiful setting. The glass house acts as a metaphor throughout the book- to begin with for the growth of the Landaur family and then, as the house passes hands from a laboratory for genetic experiments to a dance studio, for the cultural decline from decadence into war. The wholly believeable characters and the subtle way in which Mawer describes their precarious situation makes this a gripping, thought provoking read. Apparently the house in The Glass Room was based on a real historical landmark in former Czechoslovakia, which makes it even more fasinating for me. This is definitely a book that I would recommend and, although so far I have only read two, the best book I've read all year!

My next choice was made in a slight rush to avoid the prospect of a long train journey with nothing to read. I often find rash decisions are made in these circumstances but in this case I was sweetly surprised. I have gone from glass houses to glass..feet, strangely.

The Girl with Glass Feet by Ali Shaw
As the title suggest this book is about a girl whose feet are gradually turning into glass which she covers up with many layers of thick socks and some big policeman's boots. Set on a strange and in some ways magical small island, which we are led to believe, is somewhere in the very far
north.
The girl with glass feet, Ida, meets Midas a photographer come florist who is still coming to terms with his father's suicide and Henry Fuwa an obsessive science enthusiast who spends most of his day rearing mythical creatures which resemble tiny cows with wings. I really enjoyed both the lyrical fairytale descriptions and the subtle way in which Ida's transformation takes place. Even though the subject is obviously so fantastical the links with medicine and the modern day setting makes the glass feet thing almost matter of fact. The characters, too, are tragic but likable
and complex.
There are some beautiful parts to this novel which I really enjoyed and although I found the end chapters slightly over emotional for my tastes, (I don't want to say to much I case I give away spoilers!) This is an all round magical read once you ignore the cover which I think is way too girly and romantic.

I have already started my next read which, so far, I am very much enjoying. I will save that for
next time!

Sunday, 13 February 2011

All NF and no F makes Lucinda a Dull Girl

Well, I'm poised to move onto the Science
shelf at Mr B's and have a fascinating title
lined up: Michael Brooks' 13 Things That
Don't Make Sense. Before I dive into that
mind-bending treat, I thought I'd pen a
few thoughts on my final 'holiday read'.
Everyone in the shop raves about spy
master Eric Ambler and has their own
favourite - but Uncommon Danger is
the one title none of us has read yet,
so I thought I'd give it a go.

Uncommon Danger features a stock
Ambler premise: an ordinary man finds
himself embroiled in the world of
espionage - this time, it's a journalist,
Kenton. His quick descent into the shadowy
underworld of spies is totally convincing and the pace of the unfolding drama is relentless. There are kidnappings, shootouts, bond-style death evasion and a tentative love interest who is
anything but token. The language occasionally reminds you that this was written in the 1930's and there are a couple of fantastical lucky breaks needed to move the plot on, but I'm happy to roll with this - plus, the premise that big business can occasionally dictate global politics remains disturbingly relevant. Kenton's constant reappraisal of himself, his principles and his capabilities is one of the most succinct pieces of character development I've read in ages. Plus, Ambler is pinpoint accurate with his descriptions which keeps the whole thing super-pacey. When we are told in the prologue that 'Mr Baltergehen twisted his lips slightly. It was his way of smiling,' in one line we know all we need to know. What a treat!

Oh please, not that one again...a list for bored parents everywhere (by Mrs B)

It would seem that organising bookselling at the Bath Lit Fest and bringing up a small child leaves little time for reading - at least not for reading books without rhyme, pictures or soggy-edged corners. The pitiful few pages I manage in a day mean my own reading plan is limping slowy along, awaiting the end of the festival.

In the meantime I go to bed and dream of plum pie in the sun, tigers who eat all the cakes and of lions who are too fierce and sent back to the zoo. I had hitherto been ignorant of just how intimately you get to know children's books as a parent. It doesn't matter how many books you have at home (and you can imagine, we're not short of a few), the same favourites are revisited again and again and then some more. And it's only when faced with such daily repetition that you fully realise the benefit of a great children's book.

So here are mine (and Miss B's) very personal favourites which are genuinely fantastic and which I am happy to read time and time again, and which I have not tried to hide away or pretend have gone to Grandma's house.

1. The Tiger Who Came to Tea - Judith Kerr. A true classic but one I didn't know as a child myself so am just as enamoured as Miss B with the wonderfully hungry, smiley tiger and the terribly polite Sophie and her mum and the trip out in the dark to the cafe for sausages and chips.

2. Green Eggs and Ham - Dr Seuss. Again, I wasn't read these as a child and hadn't appreciated just how fantastic they are. The fun fast rhymes are funny for an adult too and are just so different and wonderfully odd compared to most other books out there.

3. Papa Please Get the Moon for Me - Eric Carle. This lovely pop-up board book was given to us as a present when she was born and was the first book we read to her when she was just weeks old, lying wide-eyed on the bed staring up at the moon unfolding. I am sure it has fuelled her obsession with the moon ever since and we still read it as a perfect goodnight story. Gentle, sweet and beautiful words to match the pictures.

4. Bear on a Bike - Stella Blackstone. As bear goes off on his travels to the market, to an island, to the forest, to a castle on different forms of transport, this has been a hit with Miss B I think because of the bright colours with lots happening on each page and for me for the above-average rhyming sing-songy words which make it so much nicer to read than the dull-dull "that's not my..." style book.

5. Mr Magnolia by Quentin Blake. A recommendation by my friend Karen as her favourite book as a kid and we sell it by the dozen at Mr B's. Of course there are Blake's quirky illustrations but coupled with such a wonderfully simple and silly story of Mr Magnolia only having one boot throughout until someone thinks to buy him a new one at which the cast of characters all shout whooppee for Mr Magnolia's New Boot! It makes me smile every time.

6. Welcome to the Zoo by Alison Jay. A wordless book with lots of different scenes at the zoo all beautifully illustrated. Look more closely and you see each page is interconnected with the others, with stories flowing from one page to the next with lots of v funny touches clearly designed for parent readers - I am entertained by new little things every time in a remarkably sophisticated "where's wally" (but better) kind of way.

7. One Ted Fell Out of Bed by Julia Donaldson. This is a corker of a book for bed-time story to get them all sleepy and I honestly don't tire of the rhyming text, despite having read it pushing a hundred times. Ted falls out of bed and plays with all the dolls and in toy cars and trolls and floats up on balloons until he gets all sad and builds a staircase of building blocks to try to get back into bed with his sleeping owner.

8. Harry the Dirty Dog by Gene Zion. My personal favourite as a child - or at least the one I remember the most. An American classic about a dog who doesn't want a bath and runs away playing in lots of dirt and then needing a bath to get clean for his family to recognise him. Lots of trucks and trains, tunnels and then a warming cosy coming home story with fabulous illustrations from the 60s.

9. Each Peach Pear Plum by Allan Ahlberg. Of course. Can't imagine this not being on every parent's top 10 list. Every inch of this is perfect - the clever, sweet rhymes all referencing other children's tales, the intricate, homely comforting illustrations with touches of humour and
of course it heavily features plum pie which surely makes everyone's belly feel warm.

10. A Squash and a Squeeze by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. This is my favourite from the array of great books by this duo where a lady thinks her house is too small until she has to share it with various animals.

Mrs B.x

Sunday, 6 February 2011

Lucinda's Reading Challenge 2011: Psychology


I'm fighting jet lag but just had to
pen a couple of thoughts about
Richard Sennett's ace book
The Craftsman. Even the cover
is fab (and drew the custom
official's eye when my bags
were searched at the airport!)
The good news is that this is the
first of a trilogy that Sennett is
writing about the philosophy of
material culture. This first
instalment is all about how we
perceive craftsmanship and
the lengths we go to to improve
the things we make. Richard Sennett
sees craftsmanship everywhere: in the honing of a piece of Linux code as much as in a piece of Ancient Greek pottery (where makers' marks started to become an important aspect of the finished article).

There are specific discussions about how we experiment and engage repetition to improve our craft - including some really interesting sections on violin fingering techniques, left and right hand jazz piano practice and glass blowing. It's fascinating to consider that the Craftsman will change his physiology through practice to perfect technique.

Biology and science in general, however, don't have all the answers. I found it rather romantic that science still can't come up with an answer as to why a Stradivarius sounds so good and why musicians can spot a replica every time. This intangibility of expertise means that the demise of the craftsman often means the demise of the technique. Richard Sennett ironically (as an author) shows how language is totally lacking when trying to communicate how to make something: the myriad micro-decisions that must be made when boning a chicken for example can never be written down in an accessible style - although one of our fave cookery writers Richard Olney is given praise for his gorgeous prose!

The mixture of history, practical information and thought means that this book is never dull and I reckon it's a must for anyone who has ever made anything using care and attention! Richard Sennett's references to craftsmen throughout history (be they artists, philosophers or scientists) are all intriguing. With one eye on the biography shelf - which I will be visiting in the near future - I think I've found a soul mate in John Ruskin. He's the Victorian artisan who championed individual hand made items over the homogeneity of industrialised mass production. I'm keen to find out more about him. Now, back to the zeds.

Friday, 28 January 2011

Lucinda's Reading Challenge: Philosophy Section


I'm blogging from a secret holiday
location and although poolside
might not be the most appropriate
place for a heavyweight piece of
political philosophy, I can't deny
that there are advantages to
reading this book in an environment
isolated from media bombardment.
John Gray's Black Mass is a thought
provoking and serious examination
of historical (Bolshevik Revolution)
and contemporary (War on Terror)
examples of Utopian ideology driving flawed policy.
Eh? I did warn you it was a dense read. He sets out his stall in very convincing manner: human societies across the globe have repeatedly sought a post-apocalyptic Utopia with generally disastrous consequences. This is more than a simple 'the grass will be greener over the hill' doctrine - the idea that we are wedded to thinking that the old must be swept away and obliterated first is a scary prospect and yet John Gray provides ample back up to his claim that left and right, religious and secular movements all appear doomed to follow this hopeful path into folly. I like the fact that Gray tries very hard to remain impartial and even when he does offer a more polarised position (such as some of his assertions about the motives and consequences of the Iraq invasion) a lot of it has probably drifted towards mainstream thinking anyway! More crucially, I managed to follow all his arguments pretty easily - with one caveat - being a piece of highbrow thinking, knowledge of political history is assumed along with some expert terminology (thank goodness for internet dictionaries). Well worth the challenge - and I hope that upon my return, I shall be able to turn a more informed eye to any Chilcot Enquiry editorials! Oh - more good news: the positives I took from Karen Armstrong's 12 Steps to a Compassionate Life can co-exist quite happily alongside this piece. Her approach calls for individuals to change - not for any political or institutional directive to impose a regime. Next up: Richard Sennett's The Crafstman, which may turn out to be the perfect holiday read...'what motivates us to work'. But right now, I'm off to catch a water taxi to the beach.

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

Mr B's 2011 Reading Journey Book 3 (Texas) - End Zone by Don DeLillo

As Chris Rea once said, "Warm winds blowing, Heating blue sky, And a road that goes on forever, I'm going to Texas". Aaah. What warming thoughts for a January evening with a violent and chilly wind blowing into Wiltshire fresh from the Russian steppe.

Fans of high literature will be delighted to learn that I opted to go beyond the Road to Hell liner notes for my Texan read, instead going for an early novel by American literary behemoth Don DeLillo. End-zone is a novel set at a West Texas college - the side of Texas characterised by colossal skies and military bases and test-grounds. The story is narrated by (American) football player Gary Harkness who has started and abandoned studies at various other colleges before attempting to settle down at the r
emote and comparatively minor Logos College. Gary's life consists of playing football, having somewhat bizarre pseudo-intellectual conversations with his teammates and worrying about his obsession with nuclear conflict. Sound like a bizarre and slightly impenetrable basis for a story? You betcha.

Here's what I liked about End Zone. First, I liked the dark and often oddball humour, particularly through the gradual development of the peculiarities and neuroses of Gary's team-members (one of whom wets the bed, another of whom is named after a fridge).

Secondly, I liked it as a piece of sports-writing (a genre I like and which I think is often under-rated and wrongly regarded as incompatible with great literature) . Most of the novel could be enjoyed by anyone with no knowledge of American Football whatsoever (other than the basic idea that the team dynamic is crucial and that, at its messiest, its brutal and warlike) and it's certainly not about sport per se. However the 35-page "Part 2" consists of a description of the team's crunch match and would be tough to endure if you had absolutely no knowledge of or interest in the sport.

But for me the downsides of End-zone outweigh the upsides. The characters seem subordinated to the wider game of drawing endless parallels between on-field and on-battlefield combat, which culminates in teacher Zapalac's damning conclusion "I reject the notion of football as warfare. Warfare is warfare. We don't need substitutes because we've got the real thing".

In the latter stages of the novel the conversations between the characters become too oblique and filled with subtext that even they don't seem to have any handle on - at least for simple me with my preference for at least one of plot or compelling characters. Much of the overly intellectual chatter is no doubt intended to be amusing, but it bored me and took away from a novel that in any event doesn't head towards any great plot climax.

End Zone is an interesting novel and will be enjoyed by the more philosophically and militarily minded, but it says something of DeLillo's monolithic later works that this is considered one of his most accessible. Nearly everything he has written sounds great in summary and I really want to like his writing. I'd love to know which others of his people have enjoyed so I can give another one a go.

Cover Notes: End Zone is published by Macmillan and a new edition comes out in March. That's the lovely new nuclear-football yellow and black cover. I read the first cover on this post which is the outgoing edition now out of stock at the publisher. I found a copy in Foyles on a rare treat to myself - a genuine browse as a book-buyer in someone else's bookshop.

Soundtrack: I've mostly been listening to Paul Heaton's brilliant "Acid Country" album whilst reading End Zone. Highly recommend it.