Monday 31 December 2018

Bibliography, December 2018

BOTM: J. Lahiri, The Lowland (2013)

N. Bulawayo, We need new names (2013)
D. Cadbury, The dinosaur hunters (2000)
S. Cooper, The Dark is rising (1973)
S. Hill, Howards End is on the Landing (2010)*
L. de Lisle, The white king (2018)
R. Ozeki, A Tale for the time being (2013)
A. Patchett, State of wonder (2011)
E. Ruete, Memoirs of an Arabian princess from Zanzibar (1868)
C. Toibin, Testament of Mary (2013)
P.G. Wodehouse, Sunset at Blandings (1977)
E. Zola, L'Assommoir (1877)
S. Zweig, Genius and Discovery: Five Historical Miniatures (1927 and 1940. New translation 2016)

Perhaps fittingly, Susan Hill's book about rereading, which I remember being underwhelmed by the first time I read it, I loved this time. For a while, I thought it would get book of the month, but I had a late surge of reading while in Wales. Astute readers will note that much of that surge was the remains of the 2013 Booker shortlist, which they really did get wrong, but has definitely confirmed me in my intention to read all the shortlists. Best of that remaining list and best of this month's reading was The Lowland. The write up isn't promising - it's plot is triggered by the Naxalite rebellion in India, but plays out in a domestic apartment in Rhode Island - but it's a cracking story and gently, wistfully, sad, though with shocking moments. It's a reminder too of the complex stories around each individual migration, and in this case especially about identity and obligation.

The surge also means I can give a definitive ranking of the 2013 Booker shortlist. Although they got the ranking wrong, it was a good list, with only Toibin's terrible Testament of Many undeserving of a place. My ranking:
  1. Crace
  2. Lahiri
  3. Catton
  4. Ozeki
  5. Bulawayo
  6. Toibin

Sunday 2 December 2018

Bibliography, November 2018

BOTM: J. Morris, Trieste and the meaning of nowhere (2001)

E.M. Brent - Dyer, The chalet school and the Lintons (1934)*
E. Hemmingway, Death in the Afternoon (1940)
O.S. Card, Children of the Mind (1996)
U. K. Le Guin, The wind's twelve quarters (1975)
U. K. Le Guin, The compass rose (1982)
S. Zweig, Beware of Pity (1939)

This was a disappointing month. Most of these were weak, though Hemmingway did allow me to really appreciate the extraordinary brilliance of Flanders and Swann's satire on the subject. Anyway, honourable exceptions go to the Chalet School and to the BOTM. Trieste... is gentle and lovely. Very clearly, Jan Morris shares my affection for the dusty byways of history and (by inexorable logic) the Habsburgs. Trieste is where this comes across best. I want to go now.

Thursday 1 November 2018

Bibliography, October 2018

BOTM: R. Powers, The Overstory (2018)

P. Bayard, Who killed Roger Ackroyd? (1998)
F. Butler-Gallie, A field guide to the English Clergy (2018)
B. Chambers, A long way to a small angry planet (2015)
E. Edugyan, Washington Black (2018)
A. Fraser, The king and the catholics (2018)
R. Kushner, The Mars Room (2018)
T. Marshall, Prisoners of Geography (2015)
S. Moss, Chocolate: A Global History (2009)
Y. Maxtone Grahame, Terms and conditions: girls' boarding schools 1939-79 (2018)
R. Robertson, The Long take (2018) 

Triumphant in my Booker preferences (making my agreement with the Booker jury about 50% ), it makes no difference to this month's top book as Milkman was the first one I read, hence in September. It lost out to Lincoln. The Overstory was great though and not just for hippies. The opening sequence of vignettes was a masterclass in condensed storytelling. The later plot-driven aspects weren't perfect, but were compelling and real. I think it's a worthy winner this month, but I did almost give BOTM to Maxtone Graham, whose book I loved, probably more than I should. As well as being fascinating in its own right, it's a reminder about how unfathomable the country was even a few decades ago.

Here's my Booker shortlist ranking. Everything pretty good save the last, which wasn't without merit, but I felt much too clumsy:

1. Burns
2. Powers
(daylight)
3. Kushner
4. Robertson
5. Edugyan
6. Johnson

Friday 19 October 2018

All my Wisdens

I've read all my Wisdens! (1977, 1982, 1994, 2003, 2006-2018). Strictly speaking, I didn't read everything. There are more than 1,500 pages in a typical Wisden. For each, I pretty much read all of the Comment, Review, England team, and selected sections (i.e., Surrey) from Domestic cricket - about 300-400 pages each time, adding up somewhere between 4,500 and 6,500 pages of cricket.

Overall, it was magnificent. It wasn't really what I was expecting at all. They aren't designed to be read in such a fashion, but it worked. On a standalone basis they were even better. Some articles were simply brilliant and though obviously the quality varies, it was usually excellent. It also inspired a re-joining of Surrey which turned out very well indeed.

Here some wider reflections:

Change. I'd rather imagined that the format stayed pretty much static. I knew that early Wisdens were fairly eclectic in their source material, but I thought the approach stabilised pretty early on. Turns out that's wrong. The order and content is constantly being tinkered with. New sections get added (and the whole idea of sections - absent in 1977). Slightly unexpectedly, the logic for this change seems always be with accessibility. All the various shifts seem to be to help the casual reader (though who the casual acquirer of a Wisden can be I have no idea). A more discerning man would identify the personalities of the editor here, and even I note that much of the innovation came from Scyld Berry, since when we have had a sleek consolidation under Laurence Booth, though this year's edition took the highly radical step of introducing a new section covering domestic Twenty20 leagues.

As a result, it is actually better now. The current order puts all the articles I want to read at the front - and there are a lot more of them than there used to be. In 1977, there were only a handful and they were mostly extended obituaries and retirement pieces. This constant changing also means that a lot of new bad ideas get ditched quickly. 2003's experiment with a literal drawing of key at the start of sections to tell you what was in them has fortunately been dispensed with. Likewise, the brief interlude (2000-2003) where the cricketers of year stopped being judged on performances in the English summer alone (so that Matthew Hayden and Shaun Pollock got recognition despite neither playing in England). Good innovation tends to stick around - the new writing competition is delightful - though not always. I rather liked the test team of the year, but it only lasted a couple of years. The most obvious shift is probably with regard to women's cricket. 2018 made three women cricketers of the year; in 2006, women's cricket was literally the last thing they covered. 

In this, it parallels the changes in cricket itself. Reading a sequence really drives home the pace of change of that. This is easy to forget even having followed it closely at the time. Lots of aspects of cricket can seem unchanging (it's part of its appeal), but this really shows how untrue that is. In 2003, which I tend to see as being pretty recent, no-one understands the Duckworth-Lewis method and T20 is described as an experiment purely for laughs. The domestic scene still had three one day competitions. Some of the same players are still playing in 2018, but the ground has shifted.

Not that Wisden itself moves with such speed. As a publication, it is fundamentally retrospective. By its nature it is nostalgic. Each Almanack includes an extract from one a century ago, including in one the vignette about how many days were lost to the funeral of Edward VII. Reading it, I dread to think what will happen to the County Championship when our current monarch dies. Its writing, perhaps inevitably in articles of record, look back. Reading a succession of articles, this makes for a rather delightful experience, being transported back, not always predictably, to crickets past. In a section of those never made cricketers of the year, I stumbled on a wonderful appreciation of Jeff Thomson by Ian Chappell. Benaud's obituary in a later year was expected, but no less affecting. Retrospection is nowhere more evident in the discussion of statistics. Successive editors are highly invested in their role as custodians of stats and frequently the editor's notes contain extensive justification for the treatment of, inter alia, obscure matches involving W.G. Grace. The corrections section on more than one occasion referred to matches from the 1890s.

At times, this retrospection can tip into reaction. In fact, this happens a lot of the time, even with regard to statistics. New developments in the game are viewed with reflexive suspicion: in 2003, discussing the Duckworth-Lewis method, the editor noted 'Stats are one of the joys of cricket, but there is a place for them and it is not on the field'. Matthew Engel, as editor, frequently chuntered against various innovations even before the advent of T20. In recent years, editors have fulminated against the the failure of global governance, the decline of English participation and the destruction of traditional long form cricket for T20 and the 100 ball new abomination. They're not wrong, but I feel they may lack perspective.

Curiously, the Almanack is generally mediocre at perspective on recent activity. 2006 and 2012 are triumphant - in discussing the 2005 Ashes Wisden does not hesitate to talk about the 'greatest series'; a year later all is despair. Some of this isn't their fault of course, and some of England's performances have had a little of rollercoaster about them, but you would hope Wisden was better at recognizing it. Of course, the prediction game is difficult. For every accurate pick - Jos Buttler was schoolboy cricketer of the year in 2010 - there come ones which lack precision: in 2012, Steve Smith is mentioned for his bowling. This perspective problem is also visible in the narrowness of view in the obituaries section. Simultaneously focussing only on cricketing prowess, yet keen to be relevant, we find in 2014 an entry for Nelson Mandela which has to concentrate on his fleecing of the national team for money for a school and in 2017, Jo Cox's tragic death allows Wisden to remember her having attended some local games in he constituency. None reach the heights of Rupert Brooke's obituary, which only really talked of his 1906 schoolboy season, though at least he had one.

Finally, for me, it all highlights the difficulty of memory. There are moments of Proustian clarity when reading the reports of Test matches I have attended or followed closely. I can remember vividly following India's Laxman-led fightback against Australia in 2001 and its recollection in Wisden brought that flooding back. But there are plenty of occasions where I struggle to recall whether I was there, and only meticulous diary keeping has allowed me to cross-reference back to the actual dates. In some cases, my memories of matches are treacherous. Reading it, I could have sworn I was at the Oval for Sachin Tendulkar's final innings in the UK when he came tantalisingly close to the perfect end. My 'diary' - read: spreadsheet - confirms beyond doubt I was in Wales. As a result of this I did some checking of the c.25 days of test cricket I attended in this period. Some are completely obscure to me. Wisden brought others back. In both cases, I am very grateful I read them.

Monday 1 October 2018

Bibliography, September 2018

BOTM: D.K. Goodwin, Team of Rivals (2005)

A. Burns, Milkman (2018)
T. de Lisle, (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2003)
M. Engel, (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1994)
D. Johnson, Everything under (2018)
N. Preston, (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1977)
J. Woodcock, (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1982)

I've been reading my Wisdens again. More on that in another post. I've also started the Booker shortlist, which has been generally positive. BOTM goes to the only book on this month's list that is neither. Goodwin's account of Lincoln's cabinet is outstanding and packed full of fascinating detail. There is an unfamiliarity bias (my knowledge of modern history is mediocre), but I think it is even better than that. The topic is well chosen and the account of the tearing apart of a political union pertinent. You should note those echoes, but you should read it because it's a fascinating account of the US political leadership at a critical time in its history.

Friday 14 September 2018

The eleven sixes of Alastair Cook

There has been, broadly appropriately, a vast outpouring of thoughts on Alastair Cook's last day of cricket. I have little to add to the general analysis, so I just want to talk about seeing him hit a six.

To appreciate how rare it was, it should be noted that in making 12,472 test runs, he has made precisely 11 sixes. almost all of the other great test accumulators have hit fifty or more (Sangakkara - his closest comparator - has exactly 51). Even Dravid made 21. Gilchrist has the record with 100. The only major run scorer who has fewer sixes is Boycott, who only managed eight. And as a proportion of runs, even he out-sixes Cook.

I saw Cook's last six, against Sri Lanka at Lord's in June 2016. One of only three in England. The only one scored in the second half of his career (this is slightly misleading, eight of those sixes came in a short period 2010-12). A freakish result.

I thought at one point that there was a book in it, on the evolution of big hitting. It would have helped that they are remarkably evenly shared - scored against all of the major test opponents save Pakistan. Regardless, I don't have time. Anyway, here is the list:

13 March 2008. vs NZ, Wellington. 60 runs (W). b. Martin
26 Feb 2009. vs WI, Bridgetown. 94 (D). b. Benn
12 March 2010. vs Bangladesh, Chittagong. 173 (W). b. Shakib Al Hasa
12 March 2010. vs Bangladesh, Chittagong. 173 (W). b. Madmudullah
15 Dec 2010. vs Australia, Perth. 32 (L). b. Harris
19 Jul 2012. vs South Africa, Oval. 115 (L). b. Steyn
2 Aug 2012. vs South Africa, Headingley. 46 (D). b. Duminy
23 Nov 2012. vs India, Mumbai. 122 (W). b. Ojha
5 Dec 2012. vs India, Kolkata. 190 (W). b. Ashwin
5 Dec 2012. vs India, Kolkata. 190 (W). b. Ashwin
9 Jun 2016. vs Sri Lanka, Lord's, 49* (D). b. Eranga

No-one will ever bat like that again.

Tuesday 4 September 2018

Bibliography, August 2018

BOTM: A. Hartley, The Zanzibar chest (2003)

R. Cowan, Common Ground (2015)
S. Fay & D. Kynaston, Arlott, Swanton and the Soul of English Cricket (2018)
R. Gough, History of Myddle (1700)
H. Lyttelton, As it occurred to me (2006)
C. Nixey The Darkening Age (2018)
A. Rajan, Twirlymen  (2010)
H. Rosling, Factfulness (2018)
D. Sandbrook, White Heat (2006)
Nixey first. I don't think it's the worst book I have ever read, as some reviewers have alleged, but it is terrible. Its faults are documented well here, to which I would add my huge irritation that it claims to advance a thesis, but has no narrative or chronological analysis, jumping from the third through seventh centuries with abandon. 

Everything else was much better. I think I would put Aidan Hartley's memoir top, though both Rosling and Fay & Kynaston's books were also outstanding. It's nicely written, with the right balance of personal and contextual that makes a good memoir, and, though some of the territory is well trodden (e.g., Rwanda), lots is not. Lots of it is also quite grim, so there's much credit in making it not only a engrossing read, but not a horrific one. It's also not too long: always welcome.

Saturday 18 August 2018

Yuste

We went to see King Lear earlier this week. I've not seen it before - I don't really know why - and I loved it (both production and play). I had two reflections. Firstly, on Jacobitism: there must be a book on the staging of Shakespeare, but I assume that Lear wasn't ever staged at all between 1688 and at least 1715.  The themes of ungrateful daughters and a French invasion may have been a little too raw.

By far my most common thought though was of Yuste, the location of the retirement of Charles V. I've long been fascinated by Charles V as a pivot point in European history. His own, memorably described, 'genealogical joyride,' brought into single ownership an unprecedented profusion of crowns and though I think his power in practice operated below the level of all those coronets, it was still vast. The consequences are still with us. Under him, the Reformation began and took hold, vast sections of the New World were colonised, the Union of Austria and Hungary was created, and in some ways, much of the next hundred years and beyond was shaped simply by his will. The partition of his domains between his brother and son in itself changed the dynamic of Europe. That he detached the Low Countries from the German Habsburg inheritance and linked it to Spain could be described as leading to the creation of up to six modern states. Portugal, Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Lichtenstein include at least two of my favourite places in the whole world, but they are all, to some extent, dynastic accidents.

That decisive partition is even more extraordinary because it was made while Charles remained alive. in the mid 1550s, he gradually abdicated all his possessions and retreated to a monastery, where he remained for over two years before dying. It would be wrong to argue that Charles was at the peak of his powers - he was in the middle of war with the French for a start - but this was in no way a forced abdication due to weakness (though I think there is some evidence of excruciating pain from gout playing a factor). For me though, extraordinary though the decision is, the truly astonishing thing is the period following: for over two years the most powerful European polity had two kings, and two very different kings at that. In that period, Philip II was fighting the French and indeed the Pope, while Charles apparently continued to correspond abroad. Yet, there are no suggestions of clashes, or that disaffected factions ran to Yuste. This is not the norm.

Though fascinating, to my knowledge there is nothing written in English at least about this almost unique period of two kings and about the self-imposed internal exile of the most powerful man in Christendom. I suspect it is little known (I wonder if early Jacobean audiences would have known of it), and little thought of. This is a great shame.

Wednesday 1 August 2018

Bibliography, July 2018

BOTM: W. Thesiger, The Marsh Arabs (1964)*

D. Barber, The third plate (2014)
N. Boulton, How I won the yellow jumper (2010)
P. Fitzgerald, Human voices (1979)
A. Maitland, Wilfred Thesiger (2007)
G. Maxwell, A reed shaken by the wind (1957)
A. Tinniswood, The long weekend: Life in the English Country House Between the Wars (2016)

This has been a great month. Barber first: I liked this a lot, about sustainable farming, but I bought in on the strength of articles like this and I wanted there to be a lot more about grains. I liked the middle, about pigs and fish, but it wasn't as strong as the vegetable sections. So a miss, but a great one. Next: Tinniswood on country houses was a treasure chest of anecdote and wonderfulness. How you react to stories of mad aristos is a key driver of politics. I love them; A less so. It's probably why we vote how we vote. However, while lovely, I missed analysis and and numbers. At one point, he takes a small sample of Debrett's to assess the numbers losing their stately homes over the period. That's just lazy.  Third: Human voices lovely, particularly good for me due to the BBC colour, but excellent generally.

However, inevitably, BOTM had to come from the cluster of Thesigania (my neologism), prompted by reading Maxwell's book on the Iraqi marshes. Reading both and then the biography was fascinating, as the layers of legend were stripped away in order. Maitland's biography is too long, and spends too much time too early, but still fascinating. In the end Thesiger's own work is the best. I recall, the first time I read them, I preferred this to Desert Sands. I can't remember why now, but it is a wonderful description of fascinating, fragile world, destroyed by modernity and Saddam.

Tuesday 17 July 2018

Bibliography, June 2018

BOTM: P. Mathiessen, The tree where man was born (1972)

K. Blixen, Out of Africa (1937)
C. Cornelius, A history of the East African Coast (2014)
A. Huxley, Grey Eminence (1941) 
P. Lively, A house unlocked (2001)
P. Mathiessen, Sand rivers (1981)
P. Mathiessen, African silences (1991)
D. Moyo, Dead Aid (2009)

Before we dive into the rest, people should know that Dead Aid is one of the worst books I have read. The analysis is terrible and though its not written quite so badly, it's written pretty badly. If that's the state of the criticism of Aid, there's nothing to see there.

Mixed bag on the rest. A very much liked Lively's memoir, but I think Mathiessen's was a more substantial output. I read them as a collected trilogy, and the editing favoured the first one. As a whole, they were good, though not excellent. Some of the writing was dense, but continually fascinating. I left desperate for an update, which will sadly have to come from someone else. 

Thursday 31 May 2018

Bibliography, May 2018

BOTM: L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2013)

K. Amis, On Drink (1972)
K. Amis, Everyday drinking (1983)
L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2014)
L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2015)
L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2016)
L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2017)
L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2018)
U.K. Le Guin, The birthday of the world (2002)
A. Trollope, The Belton Estate (1865)

I can't claim that this analysis is perfect. Environmental factors may have accounted for a closer reading of the 2013 Wisden than its counterparts. I also suspect they held back some of the good stuff for the 150th. Regardless, it was my favourite and pretty comfortably beat out the competition. Only Le Guin's science fiction came close. Amis was disappointingly poor despite the odd excellent bon mot.

Wednesday 2 May 2018

Bibliography, April 2018

BOTM: G. Tomasi di Lampedusa, The Leopard (1958), tr. A. Colquhon (1961)

S. Berry (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2008)
S. Berry (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2009)
S. Berry (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2010)
S. Berry (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2011)
L. Booth (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2012)
A. Christie, Ordeal by Innocence (1958)
M. Engel (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2006)
M. Engel (ed.), Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (2007)
D. Gilmour, The last Leopard (1988)
K. Kassabova, Border (2016)
S, Murray, Moveable feasts (2007)

I have had some methodological issues with this month's reading. Obviously, these entries are not the sum of my reading. Periodicals are excluded, both weekly like The Economist and those less often like Slightly Foxed and Sobornost. Nor does it include scholarly journals which can appear annually, like the JRS. However, despite some comparisons, I think I can draw the line the other side of Wisdens. Indeed, as I have basically spent the month reading them for all the years I have been going to test matches , it would have been a bad record to have them unrepresented. I'll write about them when I'm done next month. It's been fascinating.

I'm not sure I could put any of them top this month though. My favourite remains The Leopard. It was in 2007 too. It was particularly lovely to read just after the author's biography. Some elements, particularly the lethargy around Sicily, acquire a greater resonance. None of that is necessary though, and to read it is to be enfolded into a world that remains almost perfectly drawn despite its ever greater distance.


Tuesday 3 April 2018

Bibliography, March 2018

BOTM: D. Sandbrook, Never had it so Good: 1956-63 (2005)

Anon, The Secret Barrister: Stories of the Law and How It's Broken (2018)
A. Cherry-Gerrard, The worst journey in the world (1922)
T. Disch, On wings of Song (1979)
P. Fitzgerald, The Blue flower (1995) 
J. Morrissey, Genius in the Design: Bernini, Borromini and the Rivalry that Transformed Rome (2005)
G. Simenon, Piotr the Latvian (1930)

A collection of curate's eggs. With everything uneven, I toyed with making BOTM the first Maigret book, as it was nicely done, and short, though the ending was weird. I also gave consideration to Cherry-Gerrard, but I felt it was too long and unbalanced. However, despite numerous flaws, I most appreciated Sandbrook's account of Macmillan's Britain. I've made a thicket of notes from it which I'll put up later, and it is a treasure chest of information and gobbets. I'm not really an expert in modern Britain, so much of it was news to me. I'm not sure I'd suggest everyone reads it, as it is also too long and can't quite decide what kind of book it wants to be. I think there are two books trying to be written here. One about the social change (or lack thereof) through the period and a more conventional political and economic history of the period. I think Sandbrook has a better eye for the former (I'm unconvinced by his economics), and in either case, the book would have benefited from being wider in range, including at least the period to the end of the sixties which he went on to write in a second volume. Nonetheless, in the good sections, and there are many, he uncovers currents and significance that can easily be lost in compressing perspective of the recent past, and I do think that we often get that wrong. In most cases he doesn't and that perspective is welcome.


Friday 2 March 2018

Bibliography, February 2018

BOTM: T. Shipman, All out war (2016)

D. Acemoglu and J. A. Robinson, Why nations fail (2012)
J. Diamond, Guns Germs and Steel (1997)
E.R. Eddison, The Worm Ouroboros (1922)
G. Maxwell, The House of Elrigg (1965)
T. Shipman, Fall out (2017)

I said I'd read more non-fiction this year: it's working. And lots were very good indeed, though I found the frankly terrible history in Acemoglu too much to stomach. It made me very nervous of his wider conclusions. Compared with Diamond, which I thought was very good, I found the reviewing responses curious. Diamond is subject to much harsher reviewing opinion about overreach, but is actually much more measured than his critics claim - and much more than Acemoglu. Regardless, my favourites were Tim Shipman's books on the collapse of functioning British politics. I've given it to the Brexit one, but it could have been either. They're thorough, detailed accounts of the double implosions of the Tory party that have brought to where we are. I suspect All Out War was easier to write and it's certainly easier to follow, if entirely depressing. The level of anatomisation of politics does remind me of the (disappointingly not by Bismark) quotation about laws and sausages, but feels essential to understand what happened, and what is following. These are excellent aids to that process.


Tuesday 6 February 2018

Bibliography, January 2018

BOTM: S. Middleton, The Daysman (1984)

J. Berger, A fortunate man (1967)
K. Grahame, The Golden Age (1895)
E. Hemingway, The old man and the sea (1952
K. Lowe, The Fear and the Freedom: How the Second World War Changed Us (2017)
N. Mahfouz, Sugar Street
C. Mieville, This census taker (2016)
S.S. Tepper, A Plague of Angels (1993)
T. Travers, London boroughs at fifty (2015)
S. Zweig, Triumph and Disaster: Five Historical Miniatures (1927 and 1940. New translation 2016)

The temptation to make this Grahame's wonderful evocation of childhood in the Edwardian age was almost overwhelming. And it is lovely, though it does repeat, and is ultimately slight. I'm also conscious that it was almost designed for me and yet didn't elicit the depth of response I would have expected. So I resisted, and instead I plumped for an account of a Comprehensive Headteacher in the 1980s. Middleton won the Booker a decade previously with Holiday which I thought was decent rather then excellent. This was better, and his understated prose I think deployed to best effect.

Thursday 4 January 2018

Bibliography, 2017

I come across this summary of a year's reading, which is in a far better format than this, but it's too late now. Regardless of format, it's been my worst year for reading since records began (67 books),  but a year of non-fiction triumphs. Fiction still accounted for the majority of my reading, but at the lowest level since the children. Books of the Month were evenly split, but the quality differential was high. As a result, I'm resolved to read much more non-fiction next year, especially history and economics.

So strong was the non-fiction field that I struggled to make a choice. At least three were pretty much everything you could want of their genre. Lost in Translation is amongst the best memoirs I have ever read, and Bowling Alone made me take (some) sociology seriously. However Piketty was brilliant, insightful and loaded with data. It wasn't the book I expected at all, though some conclusions were in line with some of my existing thinking. It has shaped and refined how I think about a range of issues and shows brilliantly the importance and possibilities of historical analysis. It is deservedly lauded, even if some of the conclusions both in the book and especially outside are dubious.

After all that, fiction was easy. The best thing I read was Mahfouz's Palace Walk. The first of his Cairo trilogy, and the best, is captivating. I've been meaning to read them for ages, and I wish I'd done so earlier. 

Here's the list by month:

January: U.K. Le Guin, Rokannon's World (1966)
February: N. Mahfouz, Palace Walk (1956)
March: U.K. Le Guin, A wizard of Earthsea (1968)
April:N. Mandela, Long walk to freedom (1994)
May:R. Adams, Watership Down (1972)*
June: R.D. Putnam, Bowling alone (2000)
July: M.F.K. Fisher, The Gastronomical me (1943)
August: A. Bennett, These Twain (1918)
September: T. Piketty, Capital in the 21st century (2013)
October: J. Morris, Spain (1964. Revised 1979)
November: R. Irwin, The Alhambra (2004)
December: E. Hoffman, Lost in Translation (1989)

Wednesday 3 January 2018

Bibliography, December 2017

BOTM : E. Hoffman, Lost in Translation (1989)

G.K. Chesterton, Tremendous trifles (1909)
N. Mahfouz, Palace of Desire (1957)
M. Forsyth, A short history of drunkenness (2017)

This was easy. I liked everything I read this month. Any of them could have been Book of the Month at other times, but Hoffman's book is outstanding. It's easily the best memoir I've read all year. Possibly the best I've ever read. The base subject is good - an early life in post war Polish Jewry is fascinating - and well done. But it is lifted onto another level by her experience emigrating at thirteen to Canada and the dislocation and distance from her original culture that thus occurs. Astoundingly conceived and excellently done.

Monday 1 January 2018

Bibliography, November 2017

BOTM: R. Irwin, The Alhambra (2004)

E.M. Brent-Dyer, Exploits of the Chalet Girls*
Evliya Celebi, Book of Travels. Ed. & tr. E. Dankoff and S. Kim, An Ottoman traveller (2010)
C. Fisher, Postcards from the edge (1987)
A. Lurie, Real People (1969)
J. O'Neill, Netherland  (2008)
C.P. Snow, George Passant (1940)

Late. So a flurry of these will come at once. It was thin on quality, though a number of these are famous. A number of them are also dated, especially Snow, but also Fisher. I thought Lurie was dated too, but I only realised on completion that it was written in the 60s not the 80s. It nonetheless doesn't hold up so well now. Many of them had very good parts, but none quite held it together enough. Irwin on the Alhambra was the best of the bunch.