For 2026 the aim remains to post a review at least every other Friday and to progress the Book-et List reading journey.

28 January 2022

The Far Corner – Harry Pearson

If England was a football pitch, then the top right hand corner flag would be firmly placed in the far northeast, and that is where Harry Pearson spent the 1993/94 season criss-crossing the region to watch football. Geographically, the grounds span Middlesbrough to Ashington. In terms of league profile, the spread is much wider, from Newcastle in the recently formed Carling FA Premiership to Willington in the Federation Brewery Northern League Division Two.

The match reports are incidental. It is all about the match day experience – the travel to the towns, impressions of the grounds, interaction with the fans – and the rich history connected with the clubs. That history includes West Auckland’s historic world cup win in the 1900’s, the ‘Crook affair’ that exposed the shamateurism of the 1920’s, and a multitude of characters that graced the game in the region. Some are legends – Raich Carter, Jackie Milburn, Len Shackleton, Don Revie, Brian Clough, to name but a few – others are only legendary as local heroes for the fans of the minnows.

Whatever he is describing, Pearson’s turn of phrase is often laugh out loud funny, puncturing egos and exposing all too familiar stereotypes. But underneath the grade-A northern humour is a deep affection for the traditional culture of the game, nowadays found nearer the bottom of the football pyramid than the money-grabbing top.

Funny, informative, perceptive, and nostalgic, this is a book for the grassroots fan who enjoys the game whatever the level.

14 January 2022

Review of 2021 Reading Year

Reading continued to benefit from the lockdown and social distancing effects of the pandemic with 37 books read in the year. An increasing proportion (59%) were by ‘new to me’ authors. The gender balance remained even with male authors edging it this year by 19 to 18. However, men dominate the best reads list by 6 to 3. The lack of a reading group enabled the ‘bookpacking’ reading journey to progress with three books, hopping from Africa via Australia and Hong Kong to Japan (though none of them get a place at the top table).

My nine best books of the year are by authors either new to me or for whom this is only a second read. (Month of full review in brackets.)

 

Into the Silence – Wade Davis: Comprehensive and fascinating account of the first three attempts to climb Everest between 1921 and 1924, covering biographical backgrounds, motivations, and characters of those who took part, and in some cases did not return. (Mar)

 

Elizabeth is Missing – Emma Healey: Sensitively written tragi-comedic tale of dementia-suffering Maud, concerned for a friend she is convinced is missing, and whom she gets confused with someone who similarly disappeared decades earlier. (Apr)

 

The Last Thing to Burn – Will Dean: Increasingly horrific but nuanced story of control, imprisonment, and cruelty imposed on an immigrant woman by a reclusive farmer in deepest Norfolk. (Jun)

 

The Bell in the Lake – Lars Mytting: Atmospheric slow-burner set in late nineteenth century, rural Norway, where Astrid Hekne finds herself in a love triangle with the new young priest and an architectural student; at the centre of the triangle are the church’s iconic bells. (Sep)

 

Heroes – Stephen Fry: Masterly re-telling of the exploits of Heracles, Perseus, Theseus, Jason, and their ilk, treading the fine line between archness and erudition. (Sep)

 

A Thousand Splendid Suns – Khaled Hosseini: Harrowing story of two women caught up in the maelstrom of events in Afghanistan between 1960 and 2001 that despite tragedy galore also manages to be uplifting. (Sep)

 

Olive Kitteridge – Elizabeth Strout: Retired teacher Olive’s role as wife, mother, mother-in-law, grandmother, friend, hostage, and airline security hazard all feature in this charming, humorous, and perceptive collection of episodes that hang together beautifully. (Dec)


The Girl with All the Gifts – M R Carey: Eerily believable post-apocalyptic science fiction that examines familiar human traits in a new challenging environment where five characters must put their differences aside to work for mutual survival. (Dec)


The Five – Hallie Rubenhold: The five women whose murders are attributed to Jack the Ripper become more than nameless victims in this fine piece of non-fiction writing that reveals them as rounded, if flawed, daughters, wives, and mothers caught in spirals of deprivation common in their social context. (Dec)

 

07 January 2022

The Cranes that Build the Cranes – Jeremy Dyson

The nine short stories that make up this collection are notable for their diverse subject matter and style of delivery. Though grounded in everyday life, mainly contemporary, they generally have a supernatural element that raises them out of the ordinary and engages the attention.

In ‘Isle of the Wolf’ a super-rich businessman indulges his obsession with personal security to an extraordinary degree with unforeseen consequences. Similarly, a man who strives for membership of the exclusive ‘Challenge Club’ finds acceptance comes at a price.

Two stories feature superpowers: ‘Yani’s day’ features a man who can kill with a glance; in ‘Come April’ a woman sex worker’s ability to transport punters into raptures attracts an unusual client.

There are spooky stories: in ‘Out of Bounds’ boys in a deserted prep school explore a forbidden cellar; in ‘The Coue’ a collector of macabre artifacts acquire one he wishes he had not; in ‘Michael’ a shy seventeen-year-old boy is lured to a sexual encounter by a strange girl in the woods; and in ‘The Bear’ an up and coming young executive’s determination to make an impression at a corporate fancy dress party succeeds at some cost.

Finally, ‘Bound South’ is set in 1913 when a man on a train journey from Edinburgh to London is told a tale by a fellow passenger that leaves him chilled.

The stories are uniformly good. Well told and interesting enough to lead the reader on to their conclusions, some surprising, and others foreseen but still compelling as an inevitable end-game unfolds.

31 December 2021

The Five – Hallie Rubenhold

The Five are the five women murdered in the Whitechapel area of London between August and November 1888. They are known collectively as the victims of Jack the Ripper and are generally dismissed as ‘just prostitutes’ who if not asking for their fate, put themselves in harm’s way through their choice of lifestyle.

Hallie Rubenhold dismantles this misconception, victim by victim, by forensic examination of their lives and times. One by one, she tells their stories, cradle to grave, and it is often the early years that set them on a track to their tragic end in a late-Victorian world where working class women had few options. Employment in service, marriage, childbirth, and household drudgery was as good as it got. To lose a job, or worse a husband, or a husband’s job, invited financial hardship and homelessness. To ease the pain and drudgery with a sip of medicinal gin was often the start of a slippery slope to addiction, disownment, and ruin.

This broad trajectory was followed, in various forms, by Polly Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, and Catherine Eddowes, who all struggled through to their mid-forties before they were killed. None of these were actively involved in the sex trade. They were, however, homeless and formed transitory relationships with men – how else to get protection on the street, a bed for the night and something to eat? Between such times they were on their own and resourceless. But for the Victorian police and press, no distinction was made between women who walked the street at night because they had nowhere to sleep and those who did so to drum up trade. Only the last victim, Mary Jane Kelly, killed aged twenty-five, was an acknowledged sex worker.

The book gives a fascinating and highly readable insight into the social conditions in parts of late nineteenth century London, where poverty, drink, and homelessness characterised most lives. The lives of the Five are placed in this historical context and given a sympathetic airing as human beings, flawed certainly, but no less deserving to be seen and known in life as much as in death.

24 December 2021

The Girl with All the Gifts – M R Carey

Ten-year-old Melanie lives in a post-apocalyptic England that is all she has known. The end of the world that the surviving grown-ups knew came twenty years ago in the form of a virulent fungus that attacks the human brain and central nervous system. The hi-jacked body becomes zombie-like, with hunger for the flesh of the uninfected. Hence their name – the hungries. Anyone bitten but not killed becomes a new host, so picture a cross between athlete’s foot and a vampire!

The uninfected humans that survive, manage as best they can. Some, the ‘junkers’, follow an itinerant life, scavenging food, shelter, and technology from the remains of civilisation. Others are more proactive and have retreated into a fortified enclave, the Beacon, where they work to find a solution to eradicating the hungries. As part of that effort, an outstation has been established to enable scientists to research the precise effect the fungus has on the brain. This is where Melanie comes in.

Some post-apocalyptic children like her are clearly infected but have not yet developed the zombie-like symptoms. A sample has been rounded up in the hope they could provide a clue to researchers, who have two approaches. Educational psychologist, Helen Justineau, gives them lessons to assess their capacity to learn, which is impressive. Neurosurgeon, Caroline Caldwell, removes their brains and slices them up for analysis. The security of the base is the responsibility of Sergeant Parks who must be alert to the threats from hungries and the junkers outside the fence, and of the children whom he regards as the enemy within.

Melanie is seen as a vulnerable child by Justineau, a dangerous animal by Parks, and a specimen by Caldwell. When the base is attacked and overrun, the four escape in a damaged Humvee vehicle and attempt to make it to the Beacon. Mutual loathing, distrust, fear, and incomprehension have to be managed in the face of the existential threat all around.

The narrative is shared between the main protagonists, which gives differing perspectives and depth. The post-apocalyptic landscape is vividly portrayed and once the premiss is accepted, the outcomes are credible enough. Though majoring in tension and action, there are enough ethical issues thrown up to make this more than just a very good thriller.

10 December 2021

My Sister, the Serial Killer – Oyinkan Braithwaite

Korede, the narrator, is a nurse, well versed in the cleaning properties of bleach and not fazed by handling the dead. That makes her the ideal person for her sister, Ayoola, to call when she has stabbed her boyfriend to death. It’s self-defence, she claims; again. In fact, he is the third, but when Korede tells Ayoola that this qualifies her as a serial killer, it is like water off a duck’s back. She’s right back on Instagram. It is left to Korode to do the worrying for both of them.

It is a responsibility she is accustomed to both while their abusive father was alive and since he died leaving their mother drifting in denial. When Ayoola goes astray, she shrugs and looks pretty, and Korede gets the blame for letting her get in trouble.

That is why Korede likes to keep home and work separate. In the hospital she is respected, if not liked, for her total professionalism. She is comfortable with that; except she would like Dr Tade Otumu to like her a bit more for herself as well as her work ethic. She holds a torch for him but realises she lacks the obvious feminine charms that her sister has in abundance. Lacking any other confidante, she unloads her romantic and criminal troubles onto the patient in room 313, Muhtar Youtai. He is in an irreversible coma and so in no position to judge her.

All seems fine, if not ideal, until two things happen. First, Ayoola turns up at the hospital for a social visit; Dr Otumu is smitten. Second, Muhtar Youtai miraculously exits his coma with perfect recall of Korede’s one-sided conversations. That all makes Dr Otumu a prospective corpse, and the sisters in danger of a life sentence.

The first person, present tense narrative gives the prose a pleasing immediacy, and the short chapters hurry it along too. The location is Lagos, and though the action mainly takes place indoors at the hospital or at home, the subsidiary characters bring in the flavour of the Nigerian setting.

It is good, dark humour that also has something to say on the nature of sisterhood.

02 December 2021

Olive Kitteridge – Elizabeth Strout

The tall figure of Olive Kitteridge, retired teacher of mathematics in Crosby, Maine, stalks the pages of this book. Sometimes she takes centre stage but as often she hovers in the background or just makes a cameo appearance in the loosely connected episodes.

Taken together, the chapters weave a portrait of contemporary lives in New England, with relationships to the fore. Olive’s role as wife, mother, mother-in-law (from hell), friend, ex-teacher, hostage, and airline security risk are all explored through gems of narration shot through with humanity, sensitivity, and understated humour.

Nothing much happens, but events and incidents that are small in the grand scheme of things are shown to be major in the impact they have on the individual. Olive’s character – spikey, self-reliant, and dismissive of the failings of others – is a delight.

A wise and insightful read.