Birding, by Rose Ruane. Pub 2024

I heard a bit of this read on the Backlisted podcast last year, even before the book was available. I pre-ordered it, and so when it arrived it was a bit of a surprise (I’d forgotten the order). The novel interleaves the stories of Lydia and of Joyce. Lydia is a former pop-star whose life... Continue Reading →

Every Valley, by Charles King. Pub 2024.

In our last year at university, my friend and I joined the University Singers, an amateur choral group supporting the more advanced singers within the School of Music. I think we saw a poster advertising the group’s plan to perform Handel’s Messiah that fall, and so we signed up. Thus began a lifelong love of... Continue Reading →

Do/Pause, by Robert Poynton

I wish I could remember where I heard about this book. I suspect it was an impulse purchase on a bookshop online store, where the lovely cover illustration and tagline appealed to me: You are not a To Do list. Part philosophy, part self-help, this manifesto advocates introducing conscious and deliberate pauses into one’s day... Continue Reading →

Useful Not True, by Derek Sivers. Pub 2024

I had read Sivers’ Anything You Want a few years ago, and found it to be a good inspiration and guide to being true to oneself when starting a business. The main takeaway from AYW is an important touchstone for me: “You can’t live someone else’s expectation of a traditional business. You have to just... Continue Reading →

Catch-22, by Joseph Heller. Pub 1961.

A book appearing on many “best novel” lists, this has been drifting around on my bookshelves for years. Seeking an entry for the “should read” category, I started on this in mid-January, thus embarking on a 4-month slog in the truest sense of the word. Set in a fictional location in the very real WWII... Continue Reading →

The Lion Women of Tehran, by Marjan Kamali. Pub 2024.

This was another recommendation from the folks who suggested The Berry Pickers. Of all their recommendations, all of which fall in the “mainstream” category, this was my least favourite – not terrible, just okay. Set primarily in the turbulent 50s and 60s Iran, we meet Ellie and Homa, schoolmates and friends from different backgrounds. Ellie... Continue Reading →

Wizard and Glass, by Stephen King. Pub 1997

Book 4 of the Dark Tower series was an epic in both storytelling and proportions – nearly 900 pages, and covering several significant storylines. Continuing where book 3 left off, our merry band of travellers survives the murderous train ride to find themselves walking a yellow brick road in Kansas and discovering an emerald castle... Continue Reading →

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