This just a really short post saying I’ll be away for a while as my beloved Amanda had a heart attack yesterday she thankfully survived but obviously reading and the blog are the last things on my mind in the next few days at least .Thankfully I was at home when it happen and we got straight to Sheffield and she had wonderful treatment there so it’s a reminder to keep those you love close as you never know what is around the corner in life.
Category: winston speaks
Winstonsdad running out of steam
Over the last few months, since the international booker, I have run out of steam both blogging-wise and reading-wise. You know, when you get that thing where you just start this and that book so excited to try and find rthat beat thatg moment again to bottle the thing that you lover in your reading but then I turned around yesterday and saw I must have a dozen books with sort of base camps in them that first hundred pages read a marker in the sand but then mislaid and forgotten as I grabbed the next book that next chance of capturing and bottling the joy I often find in books. I have this ever so often, that moment of self-doubt, of worry about my reading tastes. I feel this is never helpful, where every person on social media seems to be posting their books, and you either feel you are out of the loop or you are under-read. However, in recent years, I have not felt that way, as I now view my reading as a reader who sees my reading journey as a sailing boat on the waters of world literature. So this is my doldrums period, that place in the middle of the Atlantic where there is no breeze. You just have to sit and wait to you catch the breeze or steam up again whether that is reading some of the wainwright longlist that came out yesterday and triggered this post when I saw how many books I had to finish or a gem I find next week I have a few days in Suffolk with Amanda I have an aunt that lives there I will be seeing. Other than that, I hope to visit Southwold and Aldeburgh while I’m there, both of which have bookshops, and I am like a bloodhound when it comes to finding bookshops in the wild. Anyway, I just wanted to post that I’m in the reading doldrums; no need to panic, regular service will resume next week after my holiday. How do you overcome these little dips in reading or enjoyment and wanting to read?
Winstonsdads dozen for 24
I’ve decided to draw a line under the year review-wise and do a round-up of my favourite books and then one of the other things IÂ like: Film, TV shows and Music. Then, a post looking forward to 2025 and a year of classics; although I will have a few from this year to review or am not yet not quite sure what to do, just leave them unreviewed and do all classics from pre-1972 next year. So, I managed 103 books that were reviewed in 24 countries. I need keep a better track of starts like that next year. Anyway, I am picking 12 favourites from the year, in no particular order, just 12 books I have loved over the last 12 months. I am not swayed by anyone else view on these books or tastes. So as ever, I hope to bring a fresh list of 12 books
1, Ædnan an Epic by Linea Axelsson
First up is a verse epic of the Sami community, I was just thinking of this earlier today as I watched someone ride the Inlandsbanan an old rail line through Sami lands to the south of Sweden
2 Star 111 by Lutz Seiler
This epic book should have had a wider readership for me as it captured those post-war years in Germany when we followed the path of Carl and his parents! A wild ride of a book from one of the great German writers.
3. What is Mine by Jose Henrique Bortoluci
A son recalls his father’s years as a truck driver around Brazil in those turbulent years of the 80s. It reminds me of how great nonfiction in translation can be.
4. A Terrace in Rome by Pascal Quingard
The story of one man’s life, Geoffrey Meaume, an engraver, is scarred early on in the book when acid is thrown at him. We see the effect of that on him and his art. A writer I have been meaning to get to for many a year.
5.Engagement by Ciler Ilhan
I read two excellent novels with similar themes from Turkey this year, but this, although less well-known, captures the brutal aftermath of a falling out between two villages as well, if not better than the other Turkish book I read this year.
6.Out of Mind by J Bernlef
A book lost to time, which is a shame. It captures his descent into Dementia so well as we see him struggling with a clever recurring thread around a book by Graham Greene, considered one of the best Dutch books of all time.
7.Götz and Meyer by Daivd Albahari
One, I have the Mookse and gripes podcast as they mentioned it in an episode a while ago, and since then, it was just a matter of finding a copy, which I did this year and then read straight away and wasn’t disappointed a man connects to the lose of his family in the world war in the holocaust by the name of two drivers that drove his family to their deaths.
8.Brandy Sour by Constantia Soteriou
One of the greatest discoveries of the year was Foundry Editions, with this first book that had a history of Cyprus tied into the characters of a hotel and the drinks they all drink. It was a very clever little book that made me want to make some of the drinks mentioned.
9.My favourite by Sarah Jollien-Fardel
This powerful book follows a daughter from a small village ith an abusive father and how all in the village turned a blind eye to what he did a compelling book
10.Dendrites by Kallia Papdaki
A Greek novel sent in the US follows the collapse of industrial America through the Greek families that moved to New Jersey to work in the factories. If Springsteen had been Greek, this would be his family’s story !!
11.Beloved by Empar Moliner
Another favourite press three-time rebel and sadly the last of their iconic cover art as the artist who did them passed away to cancer. All monies from this book went to charity. A woman sees a flicker between her husband and a violinist in the orchestra he is in, and before he knows it she knows he will leave her.
12. Your Little Matter by Maria Grazia Calandrone
A second book from Foundry Press is probably my book of the year. It blew me away a heart-wrenching story of a woman looking into her own past as an abandoned baby and the mother she never knew who abandoned her as a baby. It is just a look at how hard it would be for a woman in a small village to escape a broken marriage and find love.
Honourable mentions
Night of the Crow by Abel Tomé
The Fire by Daniela Krien
Caesaria by Hanna Nordenhök
In the last few years, I have been drawn more to great female writers in translation. Seven of the twelve are females, and eight are from small presses.
Better days ahead I hope
Some of you may have seen me on Twitter yesterday saying I was low and had a bad day. I am off work at the moment. This all started with a change of routines and other things at work that sent me into a real spiral several things all happening at once is to much for me to cope with, so I have been off for a few weeks. I had seen an event and other stories in Sheffield. I rarely go to Sheffield, but we have been going early morning as I struggle with crowds and have been getting the tram, so I decided in my silly wisdom I may drive park up, and there is a new food hall I want to try at some point. But it had opened a week or two ago. Anyway I even paid for the parking but woke up yesterday and my mood has been low I also was struggling with the factor how busy it would be. If I go places alone, I always zone out with headphones and avoid crowded places, as I recall struggling with them. So I decide to cancel the trip which I was real annoyed with as I had let myself down so that was maybe the final straw on mental health yesterday was a tough day I was struggling all day. Hence, post on Twitter. In hindsight the fact I am putting in for an autstic diagnosis will explain a lot my routine in going places which is tend to be very early and going before the crowds get there. Changing too much is why I am off work, struggling to cope with work changes. Anyway. I sat and let amanda know how low I was which helped a bit I am going try get talking therapy with work. I struggle in most social situations I always thought it was just natural shyness, but in hindsight, it was maybe just the fact I am autistic and small talk is something I struggle with. I feel since I decided to talk about how I struggle with things like changes, breaking a routine like going on the tram but then think it is ok to drive to Sheffield like that. Then there is also how I struggle to talk in social situations. I may have worn a mask until I saw how much it affected me. I am constantly overwhelmed and often struggle with many small things. Anyway, I told Amanda I would try to say more; she is my rock. So I hadn’t sleep well but I want to make up for yesterday we head to Southwell a small town about an hour from us my best friend said He liked going there isn’t a lot there but a few shops the Minister and it is where the first Bramley apple was grown. It was also where Charles the first spent his last night, and Byron lived there for a while. It also had a nice little second-hand bookshop. Anyway, we headed over, had a look in the bookshop books below, and also visited the minister’s, originally built in 1099 and extended over the years. Amanda brought me an angel keyring as she feels I need a guardian angel at the moment I think I do but today was better than yesterday. I will be trying to do some more reviews for Woman in translation month but I have cut my good reads and storygraph target back this may help.I just wanted to explain what is going on. This isn’t me looking for pity. I just want to clarify, as a man at a later age, that you may have had a condition your whole life that meant a lot of things in my past. Would have been easier and explain situations and just the way my life has panned out any way I am on the start of the journey to be diagnosed I have done all the tests out there which clearly show the tendency for being autistic. I am taking life one day at a time at the moment.
Sunday Musings Booktown visit , looking forward blog wise
I’ve not done a chatty post like this for a good while. I was just saying on Twitter that I miss a lot of bookish chat; I don’t have anyone in my sphere of friends who is particularly as bookish as me. I loved Twitter, but it has died, and I am a dreadful blog commenter; I go in spits and spurts. But the thing I have found with seeking an Autism diagnosis is I struggle even online to open conversations up. If anything, this has become a real problem alongside a feeling of being the most under-read person around (I know in a way this isn’t the case, but I often feel it\). Anyway, I am just saying I am here and willing to chat. I’ve been thinking as I head towards 140 reviews, but more so, there are 1500, which I aim to get to at some point next year. I’ve been doing that gap-filling exercise in. my mind. What I have missed from around the world is a lot of classic books. I must try to get some reading over the next year. The new OUP Proust appeals, and I must read a Zola or two. Also, a few more countries from Africa and Asia would be good. I heard a chap in the recent Mookse podcast talking about when folks get excited about the next book from a place, he thinks, what about this place, another country’s, places never mentioned. I was thinking about how little Central American literature is mentioned from Mexico down to the tip of South America. Very little is mentioned, but I’m sure there are books about it.A rabbit hole for another day. I love a good rabbit hole and then a list. Even if the list is never finished, the making and finding of the list is the job. The other thing I need to try to do is change the format I review books in I have done it the same way for years but I need to break the moukld it is ease to do it to the current format as I know roughly so many words in each part makes 800 word plus quotes post. In a way, I used to be more fun about my reviews, and I miss that naive nature and not worrying about other thoughts ! One of the other things I want to do in the next 12 months is visit a booktown either Wigtown or Hy on wye . I’ve never been to either recommendation. On either. You are most welcome to suggest shops and places. As for reading, I have a few books left from this year’s Spanish Portuguese lit month to review. But move over into Women in Translation month with The Girl in the Photograph by Lygia Fagundes Telles the tale of three women in the middle of the dictatorship years in Brazil. A book from the Dalkey Archive from a few years ago. I am also slowly working through this collection of writing in Analog Sea Review, a magazine to bring you off your screens and read. This issue has a wonderful interview with Wim Wenders. Anyone else read this magazine?
A week in Norfolk and some books I brought
Sometimes you have the best intentions; I had brought my laptop away to write some posts whilst we were away. But I found I just relaxed in the evenings when we watched a film,I didn’t make much of a dent in the pile of books I brought. But we had chosen East Anglia as our summer holiday this year as my only living Aunt is there and so it was a chance to see them and a cousin that lives nearby, so we picked a rural cottage just outside a small village called Lodden. This was the perfect retreat of the road, about a quarter of a mile in the middle of fields. The owners had chickens and DUCKS, and there were woodpeckers just outside the cottage’s back door.
We called in Norwich on the way to the cottage. We had intended to go another day, but this was our only visit, and I managed to get to the Book Hive, an independent shop I had been told about. I brought four books, and they had a rather nice tote bag as well to buy.
For Spanish lit month, I brought two books in mind, The Simple Art of Killing a Woman, by Brazilian writer Patricia Melo, about oppressed women in the AMazion. It appealed as it was from Indigo Press, which has brought a few books that have caught my eye for months. Then Forty Years follows a woman who rises to be a dressmaker during the Franco era and covers the years of his rule in Catalan .and two others that I had seen good reviews about Yell Sam if you still can is about the last years of the Irish writer Samuel Beckett in France. Then Vladivostok Circus by Elisa Shua Dusapin is a writer I needed to read more of.
On our first full day, I had lunch with my Aunt and spent an hour in Lowestoft and Southwold. iI bought a single book at the Waterstones in Lowestoft a small shop like ours in Chesterfield I brought the latest books from Yoko Tawada just because the title made me smile.A short novella one imagines has Surreal edge with the title The bridegroom was a dog
Then we had a day in Norfolk on the Norfolk Railway , I love a ride on an old train line. It was only an old diesel pacer train from the 70s, but it was a good half-hour ride. They had five stations on the line we went to the end station at Wymondham Abbey. we meet a lovely chap in a cafe in the local church who we chatted with for over an hour and then had a picnic lunch in the Abbey grounds and back on the train.
Then we had a day in Yarmouth, which had a nice pier, but I found a little to buy for me and maybe not to my taste, but we got some rock to take home. Then we visited Aldeburgh on what is the hottest day this year. This has a pebble beach and a nice little high street. We got a lovely cake at a local baker called Two Magpies and walk on the beach plus they had two bookshops but I visited one as we only could for two hours the larger Aldeburgh books had a great selection infact a wonderful collection of travel writing books. I found two books here
Elias Canetti spent his life collecting a mixture of his own words and others around death in this collection from Fitzcarraldo. I recently picked a collection of his wartime writing. Then, Denis Theriault’s latest book, which I thought I had read his earlier books from several years ago, which a lot of people loved, The Peculiar Life of a Lonely Postman. But I may be read it but hadn’t reviewed it. But this cover just jumped out at me. We then head back to Southwold. Tried to park in the centre but had to go back to ear the pier we walked into the small town and had lunch at a small cafe; I can’t remember the name but it was just down from Southwold Books. I had wanted to look at this shop as it was one of those Waterstone bookshops that looks and does feel like a small local type bookshop which it did in a way. I brought two more books here
Mahmoud Darwish’s In the Presence of Absence, I got it because I wanted to try him. I think I do have about book by him, but this was an Archipelago book by a favourite publisher of mine with the lovely square books . Then, Another World tackles a migrant story. I hadn’t heard of this book. It just appealed from the blurb. We then played quirky games on Southwold Pier. The arcade has homemade arcade games such as Whack a Banker, bathysphere a Submarine under Southwold, and watch the Sewage and Fish in the local waters. Also, you can fly around as a fly trying to escape getting hit whilst in a human’s house. These are real fun games .We met up with my cousins, and their wonderful kids had a meal with them. It was good to connect with them after so many years. We will be back in this part of the world; we want to see a lot more so another visit is on the cards.
Sunday catch up
One of the things I wanted to do this year more is a sort of chatty catch-up post of life, sometimes about books but also about life in General. It is that time a couple of weeks after the new year we all feel slow down after the excess of the Christmas period. We had a very quiet Christmas this year; Amanda had lost her job in the run-up to Christmas which rather put a spanner in our plans it is our first Christmas in a new house but we had a smaller Christmas and it was lovely. We had time together. So, like many guys my age I was shocked when at work we weight ourselves, this time last year we had all in our work team tried to lose weight and I had since last year put 10kg on,so I am pleased to say in the last two weeks I have lost 4 kgs of that but it was a wake-up call I had planned to make a few diet changes in the new year I am a carb eater iI love potatoes (with an Irish heritage going back 500 years it may be genetic at least that is what my dad says) . So I am cutting back swimming again and going to the gym and hope to build habits by slowly building them rather than making huge changes all at once. So we have not been far this year, just around Chesterfield. But we do have a flourishing record fair every. month and that was on earlier today. One of my great loves of recent years is buying Vinyl I upgrade my record player a few years ago to a Sony one that had great reviews. I went today but had a small budget, but I managed to find a stand with a lot of new albums that were only ten pounds. I love a bargain. so I found three albums
I firstly found the latest album by Shearwater that came out last year. I have been a fan of this band that is an off shot , well it was at the start I think it may be a separate band no of the band Okkervil River to showcase there quieter more acoustic songs. I first really got into them with there album Rook, they members of the bands are birdwatching fans hence a lot of birds on there covers and album and band title in Shearwater. So I Â loved finding this one.
Then I found this collection of early songs and pieces from Beirut, a band I am aware of. I have a couple of the albums on CD, so this maybe will get me more into the band. They use a lot of world music rhythms in their music and often crop up in film soundtracks.
Then a real gem of a find a collection of b-sides and rarities from the one and only Bright Eyes. I first got into them with the album Lifted over 20 years ago. Conor Oberst is just a great songwriter and should be better known. I loved Lifted the first album. So not bad for 30 pounds three albums ok two off them are collections of songs rather than albums but will give me a few weeks of listening. I also had got just after chirstmas with some money I got for Christmas another favourite.
It is another of the records that had been rereleased of Tom Waits mid-career records. I have them all on CD, but I just want to get a few of them on Vinyl, and this is one of them. I loved Frank Wild Years is a song cycle about a man called Frank, a drinker like most of Toms’s characters. It is a stop-gap til we get a new album from him. Finger crisis it may be this year!
So that has been this weekend I have also been out with Amanda in the car. She is learning to drive it and I am helping her between lessons which is new being in the passenger seat but she is doing well she has had a dozen or so lessons and is doing better than I was at that stage, I hope she will pass it will give her such freedom like it did myself when I passed. We have been busy still working through The Crown. We have three series to watch and have left them in 1977 when we last saw it; I remember seeing the Queen as she came through Hazel Grove in 1977, and I used to have a commemorative coin from School for the Silver Jubilee. We are enjoying the series Amanda is enjoying learning about the time as she didn’t know as much history of the royals as I did. So that is a quick glimpse to my every day Life I back to work in the morning and will be back with a review on Tuesday and hope to have another catch up in a few weeks when I may have more to chat about and hopefully be a little lighter still.
A quick Hi on Easter Sunday
I hope to be back later this week as I had trouble with deliveries to the new house if I had been told this was going be an issue I may had got things delivered elsewhere so I am busy reading a couple of books for this week 1940’s club from Simon and Karen have been doing different years twice a year for the last couple of years. I hope to get a couple of the books I had ordered to read. But what did arrive and I had put together today made my Desk set up which will be the first time in all the year I have been blogging at winstonsdad I have an actual desk to write on instead of on my knee. it is similar to my desk at work as I am so tall it is easier to have a sit to stand desk which can go a little higher and i have a two monitor set up and a keyboard and mouse which is similar to my work set up. and a chair from Ikea. So just a couple of bookcase and the room will be finished and I will be back to normal blogging hopefully.
Saturday We become a teen 13 years blogging
I was notified yesterday that it was my blog anniversary I started Winstonsdad 13 years ago. I had been reconnecting with books and over a previous couple of years, I had been reading more and more and was drawn to world lit. I had been on Twitter for a year which had connected with book bloggers. I got my first laptop around 15 years ago has not been into computers until then. So I  decided as someone that left school without maybe seeing my full potential and had drifted for years. Until I reconnected with reading I had read lots of books, maybe till my late teens. But then I had perhaps read a book a  month until I rediscovered a passion for books. As this grew I found that I had always loved European fiction since living and working in Germany in my early twenties. I had a number of books from around the world I had been buying. That was the Kernel of what is here. I got drawn into reading Translated fiction more and the idea of the blog was 52 books from around the world well 13 years later and 1100 plus books later the blog has become teen and actually I am in a purple patch of blogging I have over the last 13 years seen the blog go up and down much as my life has in the previous few 13 years. Anyway, let’s see what the teen years of Winstonsdad hold. The journey carries on I set sail on the sea of world lit. The plan is to carry on as I am I hope to eventually work a simple guide to world lit a simple book from me an open guide to encourage readers to try and discover and start their own journey around the world. So as I am currently in Brazil with the latest from Charco Press. One of the great joys in the time I have blogged is how many people now read translated fiction and how many wonderful small press have sprung up. The booker international seems to have sparked a wider audience for the listed books !! I love how it has grown and hope it carries on as is great to have lots more books to choose from. Thanks for all the comments and changes over the last 13 years here is to the coming years and let’s hope we just get more and more books in translation to discover and promote.
That was the month that was Feburary 2022
- Geography of an Adultery by Agnes Riva
- The End of Eddy bt Edouard Louis
- Jealousy by Alain Robbe-Grillet
- The Voice imatator by Thomas Bernhard
- Marzhan ,mon Amour by Katja Oskamp
- One in Me I never Loved by Carla GuelfenBein
- Necropolis by Boris Pahor
I am on too 16 books reviewed on the blog which is just under my target of 100 reviews for the year I have currently read 26 book this year so am on target to read over a 100 books. I started my reading this month in France with three french novels two about aultery one real and told with a sparce use of emotions a more clinical nature to the affair in Riva’s Geography of an Adultery. Then in Jealousy we saw what could have been imagined affair in Robbe-Grillet novel that sees a husband glimpse on his wife and fill in the gaps. Then my other french book saw a hard childhood described from a son that is different to his family. Then we have Thomas Bernhard his flash fiction culled from news headlines remind me of ALexander Kluge somewhat, Then In Berlin we meet a podiatrist a writer retrains and sees a community through there feet. Then a divorce and an affair from two different eras are told in One I never loved. Then we ended the month with a powerful description of s[lovenian writer Boris Pahor and his time in c=various concentration camps as a prisoner then as a medical orderly.My reading has slowed this month as it usually does I always race through books in the new year and then hit the wall. I have written a lot more words than this time last year as my reviews are slowly growing. How has your month been ?
Book of the month-
Necropolis is a powerful telling of the horrors of the Holocaust from the perspective of being a slovenian and the various camps he went to during the war. As I said it is a book everyone should read.
Non book event this month
It has been a very quiet month for me I am off work at the moment so have been at home a lot we have had our usual walk in the peaks and trips to Bakewell and town for coffees. I have listen to a lot of comfort music mostly shoegazing which is a genre I love and bands like the cure and REM the sort of musical equivalent of comfort reading there is something reassuring in these bands also I drift away with the likes of Slowdive and My bloody valentine. I also went for comfort tv things like new tricks also been indulging in youtube videos I like book tube but also vanlife, cottage core, productivity and pen and stationary vlogs it is a rabbit hole that I hadn’t watch a lot til this last few months. Do you have comfort music ?
Next month-
Well it is Man booker longlist time in March. I have read a few books I think may be there that I have to review yet as I usually do in the weeks before. As we have 10 days to wait and see what will make this years list it is always a highlight of my year the longlist coming out and seeing what the Judges have chosen there is so many books out there it will be a hard call to chose just 12 or 13 books from the selection that is out there I imagine. I am doing the shadow Jury again. Which I will be doing again this year it is always a highlight for me as a reader and last year the chance to chat with everyone on line was amazing. As for the blog Til the list is out it will be a mix of what I am reading at moment and what \I have read including Grey bees by Andrei Kurkov which has been on my tbr since I was sent it last year and now seems the right time to read it I am also in the middle of The morning star I also would love to get a couple of Arab books in this month as it has been a while since I have reviewed any. I had tried to stop reading multiple books but I needed to read grey bees so made an exemption. from the 10th it will be what ever I haven’t read of the longlist and can get when the list is released I know in recent years there have been books not available when the list comes out which is annoying especially when I can’t get them. I hope to review a few more books this month. What are your plans for next month ?
Merry Christmas From Me Stu

Well, it is Christmas 2021, I am working this afternoon and Boxing day morning I have worked most of the last 20 years at Christmas So I am use to adjusting what we do so we will be having our big meal Boxing day night. Today I finished a great Norweigan modern classic today which Iw ill be reviewing in the next few days. I hope all of you are all having a bookish Christmas I am looking forward to the new year and trying to bring you all more books in Translation in 2022. What have you been up to this Christmas ?
A very Merry Christmas from ME Stu !!!
That was the month that was July 2021
- Ramifications by Daniel Saldaña ParÃs
- Working Woman by Elvira Navarro
- Death at Intervals by Jose Saramago
- None so Blind by J A Gonzalez Sainz
This month I wasn’t on form a real reading slump so I only managed four reviews all month we started in Mexico with a young man looking back at the loss of his mother as he is sick in the same bed as his parents slept in. Then a flatshare happens or is it two women or one woman imaging a flatmate as her editing job shrinks down. Then Death takes a break from her job and all through everyone is happy at first the consequences of no deaths soon sinks in and a cellist then avoids the call of death Then a man moves to the basque region and sees his family drawn into the Basque problems in the 80s a quiet man’s life turns. So I managed three countries not any new publisher.
Book of the month
I hadn’t read Saramago for a decade and this reminded me what a talented writer he was and how he had lots of recurrent themes in his works such as religion, the Salazar regime, and dystopian worlds. It won’t be this long next time too IÂ read him.
Non-book events
I watched the Shane Meadows film Dead man’s shoes which I have watched a few times as a revenge thriller mostly set in Matlock as a brother returns to take revenge on the druggy gang that killed his disabled brother killing them one by one. It has him talking with his brother reliving what happened to him I like Meadows’s work as they are mostly set in place I know around Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. In the opposite to that was watching Terry Gillian’s dystopic film Brazil with Jonathan Pryce as a man caught up in a kafkaesque world of things going wrong after a mistake means the wrong man is arrested. But on the whole, It has been a quiet month otherwise really fairly hot for most of it. we tidied our garden but have a bit more to do but now have a few days off to do some more work in it. This also saw the seventh anniversary of losing Winston, not a week goes by that I don’t miss him.
The month ahead well with the lack of reviews for the last month I have extended Spanish lit month and intend to review a few more books for there I have two already read ready for review and then I will also try a couple for Woman in translation month a couple will cross with Spanish lit month then I have review copies piling up. that I need to get to. So a busy month I hope. What plans have you for the next month?
April 2021 that was the month that was !!
- The Employees by Olga Ravn
- The war of the Poor by Eric Vuillard
- In Memory of Memory by Maria Stepanova
- Minor Detail by Adania Shibli
- The Perfect Nine by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o
- The Dangers of Smoking in Bed by Mariana Enriquez
- I Live in the Slums by Can Xue
I read all the books this month were on the Booker Longlist which came out at the end of March. So I went from Denmark with a sci-fi novel that questions humanity and what it is to be human through a series of interviews then a french novella about a german religious reformer The A Russian family and the artistic movements are remembered when aunts flat is cleared and a set of family memories pout out. Then a story of a women’s death is told from then and rediscovered in the now as just a footnote in history. Then tribal history is recalled in a novel in verse from a great writer in later work. The dark short stories that sometimes are very close to the bone from a Latin American writer that is a rising star. The collection of short stories that capture the ebb and flow of modern china and the migrant. The month saw one new publish Lolli editions no new countries. I had hoped to review more but time caught up with me a lot this month.
Book of the month
For one month only as these are on the longlist and we are discussing the list I will leave this let’s say there are two books from one publisher on the list and they would maybe be near the top.
Non book events
I have just caught the oscar-winning film Nomadland which I had been waiting all month to watch. A film that captured a sort of modern Steinbeck trip across the country like the grapes of wrath for a modern age The record shop opened this month so I have brought a number of new records some old favorite a Fall album a brilliant corners album. Then new records from BC Camplight and Katy J Pearson that I have heard championed on Mark Rileys radio show. THen A Marianne faithful spoken word poetry album and a retro of the works of the electro pop band Yello an interesting mix and a fair few CDs which is maybe why I have read a bit less As I had been listening to more music this month. We ventured out to the peaks a few times and I returned to swimming after a break due to lockdown. We have just had our first zoom meeting for the shadow booker which saw us join in from Australia, the US, India, and Here in the Uk but the great thing is to put a voice to people
Next month
I have a mountain of review books also just got a couple of Czech novels that have caught my eye so one of them will appear I’m sure we will be sorting the Booker shadow shortlist.
How was your month reading-wise?
That was the month that was Feb 2021
- Under the Glacier by Halldor Laxness
- Game of the Gods by Paolo Maurensig
- Our Circus Presents.. by Lucian Dan Teodorovici
- waiting by Goretti Kyomuhendo
- Why we love women by Mircea Cărtărescu
- The imagined land by Eduardo Berti
- Tower by Bae Myung-Hoon
- The pear tree by Nana Ekvtimishvilli
- A Musical Offering by Luis Sagasti
- The No World Concerto by A G Porta
- The art of Losing by Alice Zeniter
SO far I have reviewed 24 books this year. 11 in Feb where the journey started with a novel from Iceland about a church go stray and the man sent to see what had happened. Then a story of a man from a humble background that became a great chess player. Then a group of men and women that are trying to take their lives in the most elaborate way a blackly comic work from Bulgaria. I went to Uganda and a young girl recounting the war from her family’s point of view was also the first work from Uganda I have covered. Then the great Romanian writer Micrea Cărtărescu on some of his loves and women he has known. Then an imagine china from the Argentinean writer Eduardo Berti. We then have Korean sci-fi but is also social commentary in the tower a state in a supersize tower block. Then we go to Georgia and a school for learning disabilities that is falling apart and has abuse at its heart seen from a pupil that has taken a young boy under her wing. Then a book that has a v=collection of stories revolving around Bach Goldberg variations another from Argentina and then we had a Spanish writer that had been friends and written with Roberto Bolano his only work in English two intertwined lives but who is writing about who? Then a truly epic saga of three generations of an Algerian family that comes to France and returns when the granddaughter returns and shows her family snapshots of friends and family that have aged fifty years before their eyes. So I went to ten countries with Uganda being a new country to the blog a rare event these days. There was also a couple of new publishers the feminist press and Plymouth university press. I also made the decision to score my reviews on an a to e scale moving forward.
Book of the month
I loved Luis Sagasti first book he is a writer that seems to make the reader think beyond the stories he wrote but also draws you into them these all revolved around music the Bach Goldberg variations but also a bizarre tongue in cheek story of a giant organ being built that causes an avalanche. I did have to check up that story was only fiction, lets hope we get more from this writer.
Non-book-related events
Well, the lockdown has us all not doing a lot. Amanda and I have been catching up on the second series of Stranger things which we had fallen behind in watching. I still love all the 80s references and the nod to the films of the time in the show itself. I watched a short film by Guy Maddin the Canadian director is an underrated filmmaker. Apart from that, not a lot else to report. Rather same as with last month I am now on three nights so won’t return with a review to Thursday.
Month ahead
Well, I still haven’t read a book from Arabic this year so I will try to do that otherwise it will be mainly books to fill in the gaps of what I hadn’t that could be on the Man Booker International longlist which comes out at the end of this month. Any thought on what would make the longlist? What were your highlights last month?







































