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Hi. I’m Nicholas Whyte, a public affairs consultant in Brussels, political commentator in Northern Ireland, and science fiction fan. This is my blog on WordPress, but you can also find me on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, X/Twitter, Bluesky, Mastodon and Threads. You are welcome to follow me on all of those, but I usually won’t add you back unless we know each other personally. If you want to contact me I prefer email to nicholas dot whyte at gmail dot com, or at my work address if it’s something to do with my job.

Since late 2003, I’ve been recording (almost) every book that I have read. At 200-300 books a year, that’s over 5,000 books that I have written up here. These are the most recent; I also record the books I have read each week and each month. These days each review includes the second paragraph of the third chapter of each book, just for fun; and also usually a purchase link for Amazon UK. (Yes, I know; but I get no other financial reward for writing all of this.)

During the pandemic I developed an interest in family history and have been recording my research here.

This WordPress blog replaced my Livejournal in March 2022. I was able to copy across all of my old Livejournal posts; unfortunately the internal links in old posts will still in general point back to Livejournal, and though I was able to import images, I wasn’t able to import videos, so it’s a little imperfect.

Comments welcome.

Time Trials: The Wolves of Winter, by Richard Dinnick et al

Second frame of third issue:

The Doctor: … Susan … Ian … Barbara … Vicki … Steven …

Next of the Twelfth Doctor comics published by Titan. The title story is a tremendous tale of Vikings, Ice Warriors and Fenric himself, also featuring Bill Potts as companion for the first time in this series. A really good example of what comics can do for Who. Though those fifth and sixth Ice Warrior troopers seem very pleased to see us.

The other story in the collection is “The Great Shopping Bill”, which features aliens in a futuristic supermarket (“Übermarket”, says Nardole, who also appears here) and a lost little girl, and works out as you would expect.

You can get Time Trials: The Wolves of Winter here.

Next in this sequence is Time Trials: A Confusion of Angels, by Richard Dinnick et al.

House of Plastic, by Mike Tucker

This is one of the BBC’s original audio Doctor Who stories, which I only recently discovered and am gradually working through. In this one, released last year, the Seventh Doctor and Ace investigate the mysterious appearance of a plastic processing centre which turns out to be a front for the next Auton invasion. The story is very nicely set up with the viewpoint character a retiree from the local senior citizens’ home, and the concept that the Autons would want to take advantage of the microplastics is a neat update of Auton lore. Terry Molloy is a good reader, with the rather grievous exception that his Scottish accent for the Seventh Doctor is poor. Nothing extraordinary, but solid. You can get House of Plastic here.

Mawdryn Undead, by Kara Dennison (and Peter Grimwade)

I will be at Gallifrey One next weekend, so I’m bunching reviews of my recent Doctor Who reading over the next few days. You have been warned.

I remember well watching Mawdryn Undead on its first broadcast in 1982, and enjoying the return of the Brigadier though a bit mystified by Turlough. When I rewatched it in 2008, I felt the same if not more so:

[I] found that now I had seen so many more Brigadier stories, and indeed listened to numerous audios featuring him, I enjoyed his resurrection in Mawdryn Undead much more than first time round when he was a vague childhood memory and a figure from the Target books. There are essentially two plots here, the Mawdryn plot which is good sf stuff, teleports, spaceships, time shifts and all, and the Turlough/Black Guardian stuff which seems to me as superfluous as Turlough himself. Really, if the Black Guardian wanted to kill the Doctor off, there might be better ways to do it than hiring an unreliable alien posing as a schoolboy! Nyssa and Tegan are good here though, and I really loved the Brigadier flashback which actually incorporates a clip of Hartnell as well as the other three.

In fact, before we go any further, let’s just revisit that superb flashback, and re-experience how it made us feel moored in 19 years of tradition.

I got back to this story in my Great Rewatch in 2011, shortly after the death of Nicholas Courtney, and wrote:

Watching Mawdryn Undead is a slightly wistful experience so soon after the loss of Nicholas Courtney; but it is a real delight to see him back again, playing two slightly different Brigadiers, and again we have the flashbacks which always gratify the heart of us old school fans. The other returning character is the Black Guardian, who for some reason is unable to manifest physically, even to equip his chosen agent with anything other than a prop crystal, but again it is nice to feel a re-connection with the Tom Baker era.

I was a little startled on rewatching it to realise that the plot only starts towards the end of the second episode, but until then we have had quite a lot of decent groundwork, and the actual explanation for what is going on is one of the better sfnal ideas in the whole of Who. Presumably the Doctor is exaggerating when he says that a millisecond either way would have been critical. And perhaps he has some comprehensible but private reason, never explained, for inviting Turlough along as a companion rather than just behaving like an idiot who opens the Tardis up to all comers. (I know that there are fanfic writers who have an answer to that.) Apart from that, it’s another reasonably satisfying tale.

Watching it again now, I appreciated slightly more the performance of David Collings, unrecognisable as Mawdryn, after his previous appearances as the anguished Poul and the treacherous Vorus. He also pops up in the final episode of Blake’s Seven as Blake’s new collaborator on Gauda Prime. On the other hand, the Black Guardian’s constraints feel even more handwavium than on my previous three watches. And speaking of hands, there are a couple too many scenes where the actors’ arms hang limply by their sides, showing a lack of rehearsal or direction or both.

The second paragraph of the third chapter of Peter Grimwade’s novelisation of his own story is:

Tegan didn’t trust Turlough an inch. As if anyone from Earth would just walk into a transmat capsule! Though Nyssa was quick to point out that that was exactly what she had done when she walked into the Doctor’s police box on the Barnet By-pass.

When I first read it in 2008, I was in forgiving mood:

I was bracing myself for another terrible book after the awfulness of Doctor Who – Time Flight. But in fact I was pleasantly surprised; I think it is a better story in the first place, but Grimwade is able to bring in a bit more characterisation to new companion Turlough and the Brigadier, and a bit more background to the public school. Not bad at all.

Nothing much to add to that, on re-reading; it does take me back to the days when the novelisation was the only way you could reliably expect to re-experience the story. I would also say that the cover is probably the least imaginative cover of any Doctor Who book of any era, simply a photograph of the Fifth Doctor in the TARDIS. You can get it here.

Kara Dennison’s monograph on Mawdryn Undead is quite a short Black Archive, at only 93 pages, but it’s good and meaty.

It starts with a personal introduction by Dennison, reflecting on becoming a editor of the series as well as a contributor.

I hope this Archive, like the ones before and the ones to come, helps you find new ways to love this show we all adore.

The first chapter, “The Turlough Dilemma”, looks at the problematic concept of Turlough as a companion, from beginning to end, which certanily tickedsome of my oxes about the story.

The second chapter, “‘Some Shocking Experience'”, looks at the Brigadier’s experience of PTSD, referencing also the 1980-81 BBC series To Serve Them All My Days and the Twelfth Doctor story In The Forest of the Night.

The third chapter, “Regeneration Crisis”, looks at the difficulties that regeneration brings for the faithful viewer. Its second paragraph is:

In an interaction that quickly went viral, Capaldi met with the young fan (who was wearing a Dalek costume at the time) to reassure her that, while his Doctor would be different, things would be all right. ‘[Matt Smith and Jenna Coleman] say it’s okay for me to be the Doctor. I hope you think it would be okay for me to be the Doctor, too.’2
2 McCarthy, Tyler, ‘Peter Capaldi Comforts Young Doctor Who Fan With Autism’.

The fourth chapter, “‘Our Endless Voyage'”, compares the travels of Mawdryn with The Flying Dutchman (which Grimwade himself cites as inspiration, quoting it at the start of the novelisation), and also the Marie Celeste and Prometheus.

The fifth chapter, “‘Life Without End or Form'”, looks at immortality in Doctor Who, Swift, Tolkien and manga.

The sixth chapter, “‘Very Much in the Present'”, looks at time paradoxes in Doctor Who with a reflection also on Robert A. Heinlein.

The brief conclusion, “The First Question”, asks “why does this serial feel so much more ‘modern’ than others of its time?” and gives a few answers arising from the topics of the previous chapters.

As I said, it’s a short Black Archive but it’s full of quality thought-provoking analysis. You can get it here.

The Black Archives
1st Doctor: The Edge of Destruction (67) | Marco Polo (18) | The Aztecs (71) | The Myth Makers (65) | The Dalek Invasion of Earth (30) | The Romans (32) | The Massacre (2)
2nd Doctor: The Underwater Menace (40) | The Evil of the Daleks (11) | The Mind Robber (7)
3rd Doctor: Doctor Who and the Silurians (39) | The Ambassadors of Death (3) | The Dæmons (26) | Carnival of Monsters (16) | The Time Warrior (24) | Invasion of the Dinosaurs (55)
4th Doctor: Pyramids of Mars (12) | The Hand of Fear (53) | The Deadly Assassin (45) | The Face of Evil (27) | The Robots of Death (43) | Talons of Weng-Chiang (58) | Horror of Fang Rock (33) | Image of the Fendahl (5) | The Sun Makers (60) | The Stones of Blood (47) | Full Circle (15) | Warriors’ Gate (31) | Logopolis (76)
5th Doctor: Castrovalva (77) | Kinda (62) | Black Orchid (8) | Earthshock (51) | Mawdryn Undead (80) | The Awakening (46)
6th Doctor: Vengeance on Varos (41) | Timelash (35) | The Mysterious Planet (79) | The Ultimate Foe (14)
7th Doctor: Paradise Towers (61) | The Happiness Patrol (68) | Silver Nemesis (75) | The Greatest Show in the Galaxy (66) | Battlefield (34) | The Curse of Fenric (23) | Ghost Light (6)
8th Doctor: The Movie (25) | The Night of the Doctor (49)
Other Doctor: Scream of the Shalka (10)
9th Doctor: Rose (1) | Dalek (54)
10th Doctor: The Impossible Planet / The Satan Pit (17) | Love & Monsters (28) | Human Nature / The Family of Blood (13) | The Sound of Drums / Last of the Time Lords (38) | Silence in the Library / The Forest of the Dead (72) | Midnight (69)
11th Doctor: The Eleventh Hour (19) | Vincent and the Doctor (57) | The Pandorica Opens / The Big Bang (44) | A Christmas Carol (74) | The Impossible Astronaut / Day of the Moon (29) | The God Complex (9) | The Rings of Akhaten (42) | Day of the Doctor (50)
12th Doctor: Listen (36) | Kill the Moon (59) | Under the Lake / Before the Flood (73) | The Girl Who Died (64) | Dark Water / Death in Heaven (4) | Face the Raven (20) | Heaven Sent (21) | Hell Bent (22)
13th Doctor: Arachnids in the UK (48) | Kerblam! (37) | The Battle of Ranskoor av Kolos (52) | The Haunting of Villa Diodati (56) | Ascension of the Cybermen / The Timeless Children (70) | Flux (63)
15th Doctor: The Devil’s Chord (78)

January 2026 books

Non-fiction 6
This Way Up: When Maps Go Wrong (And Why It Matters), by Mark Cooper-Jones and Jay Foreman
Friends: Understanding the Power of our Most Important Relationships, by Robin Dunbar
Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland, by Patrick Radden Keefe
Renaissance- en barokarchitectuur in België, by Rutger J. Thijs
The Cuddled Little Vice, by Elizabeth Sandifer
Charlie vs Garret: The Rivalry That Shaped Modern Ireland, by Eoin O’Malley

Non-genre 6
The Mystery of the Blue Train, by Agatha Christie
The Colony, by Audrey Magee
The Secret Adversary, by Agatha Christie
Kristin Lavransdatter: The Wreath, by Sigrid Undset
Peril at End House, by Agatha Christie
The Grail Tree, by Jonathan Gash

SF 7
Collected Folk Tales, by Alan Garner
River Mumma, by Zalika Reid-Benta
Deep Secret, by Diana Wynne Jones
The Forgotten and the Fantastical: Modern Fables and Ancient Tales: No. 2, ed. Teika Bellamy
Katabasis, by R.F. Kuang
Utterly Dark and the Face of the Deep, by Philip Reeve
Looking Glass Sound, by Catriona Ward

Doctor Who 10
House of Plastic, by Mike Tucker (audiobook)
Counterstrike, by Una McCormack (audiobook)
Agent of the Daleks, by Steve Lyons (audiobook)
The Domino Effect, by David Bishop
What Still Remains, by Adam Christopher (audiobook)
Frankenstein and the Patchwork Man, by Jack Heath
Doctor Who Annual 2026, by Paul Lang
Bessie Come Home, by Paul Magrs (audiobook)
London, 1965, by Paul Magrs (audiobook)
Sleeper Agents, by Paul Magrs (audiobook)

Comics 4
Best American Comics 2011, ed. Alison Bechdel
Time Trials: The Wolves of Winter, by Richard Dinnick et al
Bruxelles 43, by Patrick Weber and Baudouin Deville
Time Trials: A Confusion of Angels, by Richard Dinnick et al

~8,100 pages (counting 100 for each audiobook, and for the Sandifer essay)
13/33 by women (Sandifer, 3x Christie, Magee, Undset, Reid-Benta, Wynne Jones, Bellamy, Kuang, Ward, McCormack, Bechdel)
2/33 by writers of colour (Reid-Benta and Kuang)
4/33 reread (The Secret Adversary, The Grail Tree, Deep Secret, The Domino Effect)

186 books currently tagged unread, down 7 from last month, down 61 from January 2025.

Reading now
House of Open Wounds, by Adrian Tchaikovsky
Elfland, by Freda Warrington
Reckless Engineering, by Nick Walters
Red Planet, by Robert A. Heinlein

Coming soon (perhaps)
Doctor Who – The Ark, by Paul Erickson
The Ark, by Philip Purser-Hallard
Outpost: Life on the Frontlines of American Diplomacy, by Christopher R. Hill
Liberation: The Unoffical and Unauthorised Guide to Blake’s 7, by Alan Stevens and Fiona Moore
De gekste plek van België: 111 bizarre locaties en hun bijzondere verhaal, by Jeroen van der Spek
The Future We Choose, by Christiana Figueres
Drunk on All Your Strange New Words, by Eddie Robson
The Windup Girl, by Paolo Bacigalupi
The Dead Take the A Train, by Richard Kadrey
Killing Thatcher: The IRA, the Manhunt and the Long War on the Crown, by Rory Carroll
Stone and Sky, by Ben Aaronovitch
The Doors of Midnight, by R.R. Virdi
The Big Wave, by Pearl S. Buck
The Fifth Elephant, by Terry Pratchett
The Woman in White, by Wilkie Collins
Drome, by Jesse Lonergan
Oscar Wilde: A Biography, by Richard Ellmann
Sourire 58, by Patrick Weber and Baudouin Deville
Trouble with Lichen, by John Wyndham

The Forgotten and the Fantastical: Modern Fables and Ancient Tales: No. 2, ed. Teika Bellamy

Second paragraph of third story (“Grimm Reality”, by Ana Salome):

I live in a ninth floor flat at the Elephant and Castle. It was the coldest winter day for a decade and my boiler was broken. I had never seen my windows iced over before. Although I was cold to the bone I thought how pretty they were. Like a child I made pictures from the ice patterns. There was a long sharp nose and jagged ears; it could have been Jack Frost. And there was a tiny figure – I took a breath; it looked like a fairy, incredibly tiny and frozen to the window pane. How beautiful, how detailed and how impossibly real. As I looked more closely a wave of something like shock or panic passed through me. This wasn’t an interpretation, a Rorschach blot or Christ in a split aubergine, it was something real.

Another of the books sponsored by the La Leche League, this is an anthology of eighteen retellings of fairy stories – some of them traditional tales reworked from the female perspective, or updated to a modern context, or both; and some of them completely new stories. It was published in 2016 and I picked it up at Eastercon in 2022. None of the authors are well known – the most prominent is the editor herself, Teika Bellamy, who as Maria Smits has a couple of dozen published short stories to her credit, but ISFDB has not heard of most of the contributors.

None the less, this is all good stuff, and it was an interesting almost-paired reading with Alan Garner from a couple of weeks back. There’s a big difference to having one man process legends from all over the world, and a group of mostly women (there is one male controbutor) adapting mostly classic European tales, but at the same time there is a primal quality about all of the stories that comes through.

It begins and ends with two excellent and different takes on the same legend, “Rumplestiltskin” by Rebecca Ann Smith and “Trash into Cash” by Becky Tipper. Of the others, I will especially remember the adaptation of Snow White, “Mirror, Mirror” by Laura Kayne, which blames the mirror more than any of the human characters. But these are all good, especially considering that the writers are mostly at the very start of their writing careers.

The book is also blessed with lovely illustrations by Emma Howitt – little roundels for each story. Here is the first.

All in all, an impressive collection; I am not even sure if I paid for it. You can get The Forgotten and the Fantastical 2 here.

This was the shortest book on my shelves acquired in 2022. Next on that pile is De gekste plek van België, by Jeroen van der Spek.

Thursday reading

Current
House of Open Wounds, by Adrian Tchaikovsky 
Elfland, by Freda Warrington
Reckless Engineering, by Nick Walters

Last books finished 
Peril at End House, by Agatha Christie
Bruxelles 43, by Patrick Weber and Baudouin Deville
Doctor Who Annual 2026, by Paul Lang
Time Trials: A Confusion of Angels, by Richard Dinnick et al
Looking Glass Sound, by Catriona Ward
Bessie Come Home, by Paul Magrs

Next books
Doctor Who: The Ark, by Paul Erickson
Outpost: Life on the Frontlines of American Diplomacy, by Christopher R. Hill
Red Planet, by Robert A. Heinlein

Deep Secret, by Diana Wynne Jones

Second paragrap[h of third chapter:

“Posted to take you to General Dakros, sir,” the man said hoarsely.

My sister gave this to me years ago, and then borrowed it to read herself on her second last visit and returned it on her last visit, so I thought I should return to it as well – also spurred by conversations at a couple of science fiction conventions last year with Emily Tesh, whose Diana Wynne Jones podcast won the 2025 Hugo.

I think it’s the latest published of Jones’ books that I have read, published in 1997, just a year after The Tough Guide to Fantasyland. It entangles a magical dynastic struggle in a parallel world with a science fiction convention in the central England of the 1990s. One of the two protagonists is our Earth’s senior magical guardian, searching for a new junior partner, and arranges for all the potential candidates to attend the convention so that he can vet them, while also trying to resolve the Koryfonic Empire’s problems. Hilarity ensues.

To those of us who know conventions well, there’s a real shock of recognition at the book’s description human side of it; the oddest thing is realising how much of the old organisational technology which depended on surface mail has disappeared with the electronic age. But the portrayal of a big name writer guest of honour who is a nightmare to manage at the convention – I suspect that will never go out of date.

And Jones moves the plot very deftly. We think we know what is going to happen from an early stage, but she pulls off some impressive (and entirely fair) twists at the end. We know what is happening to whom, and why, despite the number of balls being juggled. It’s not especially an adult themed book, but I think the humour will appeal more to grown-ups than to younger readers. Definitely a happy return visit for me.

You can get Deep Secret here.

River Mumma, by Zalika Reid-Benta

Second paragraph of third chapter:

Her apartment building was only two minutes away, the mintgreen balconies within sight, but she couldn’t go home. Not until she did this first. She couldn’t explain it, but she knew she was wanted in the park. It was connected somehow to Oni, to the reading. The change was starting. Right now. Someone was waiting, someone was—

From last year’s Hugo packet (supplied by Diana M. Pho as editor), this is a great intrusive fantasy novel set in the Jamaican-Canadian community in Toronto. I’m used to fantasy novels with maps at the beginning, just not used to novels where that map is a sketch of the main arteries and landmarks of a major North American city. (Those that are set in US cities tend to assume that you already know the geography.)

The protagonist has a master’s degree but is working in retail rather than academe, and then finds herself confronted by the Jamaican water goddess River Mumma, whose golden comb has been stolen and threatens horrible vengeance against humanity if our protagonist does not retrieve it. There’s a very entertaining hunt through the freezing city on behalf of a tropical deity, with cultures, temperatures and intergenerational mores all clashing. I really appreciate a book with a good sense of place and where the background culture is well thought out, and this is one of them. You can get River Mumma here.

This was my top unread book by a writer of colour. Meanwhile I acquired Katabasis by R.F. Kuang, which goes to the top of that pile.

The Secret Adversary, by Agatha Christie; and Agatha on Ireland

Second paragraph of third chapter:

“I think you’ve given him too much, Tommy,” said Tuppence innocently. “I fancy he wants to give some of it back.”

This was Agatha Christie’s second published book, in 1922. Tommy and Tuppence, a young man and a young woman recently relieved of war duties, start their own business called “The Young Adventurers”, and are hired by the British secret service to thwart the shadowy mastermind behind various political agitations, such as the Bolshevik Revolution, and who threatens to unleash upon the United Kingdom the ultimate horror: a Labour government.

They go through various adventures including a vastly rich young American and a wily Scottish lawyer and MP, and eventually the Secret Adversary is unmasked, his identity not being a surprise to the attentive reader (there’s a moment at the end of Chapter 12 which narrows it down considerably). The motivation of the villain is fairly clear, but his means seem to be as fiendish as might be convenient for the plot. There is a romantic subplot also, which again won’t come as a surprise to the reader, and it gets the two protagonists to where they need to be.

I thought The Secret Adversary was very silly when I first read it at the age of twelve; and I still think it is very silly now that I am fifty-eight. You can get it here.

The book did make me wonder about Agatha Christie’s knowledge of Ireland. Clara Boehmer, Agatha Christie’s mother, was born in Dublin in 1854, but to a career army officer father (born in Martinique, died in Jersey) and and English mother (born and brought up in Chichester), and her father’s regiment moved to Malta, along with the infant Clara, before she was a year old. So I don’t think we can look for Irish sensibilities from that source.

The background incident which sparks the action of the plot of The Secret Adversary takes place on the Lusitania as it is sinking off the coast of County Cork in 1915, and there is then a hurried shuffle without incident across Ireland until Holyhead is reached and some action actually happens. The Secret Adversary is funding Sinn Fein in Chapter 8, and in Chapter 17 it turns out that he also has a prominent Irish Unionist MP on the team. As with the Bolsheviks, and as with labour disputes in England, in the world of The Secret Adversary the political problems of Ireland are entirely generated by external troublemakers.

Of course when Christie was writing The Secret Adversary in 1921, with its 1920 setting, the Irish situation would have been frankly confusing to the English newspaper reader. The War of Independence was in full flow, and the government was desperately and ultimately unsuccessfully trying to spin the situation in its favour to the British and international public.

In April 1921, in fact, the Lloyd George government attempted to discredit Sinn Fein by publishing a dossier “proving” that they were tools of the Bolsheviks; this failed to convince anyone, and King George V was asking the Irish for peace two months later. But that episode obviously resonated in Christie’s mind for the incident with the Sinn Feiner in Chapter 8. I did wonder if the wily Scottish lawyer and MP character was based partly on Edward Carson, but I think Christie would have been too sympathetic to Carson to create such an unflattering literary portrait.

More broadly, over the next fifty-plus years of her writing career, the Agatha Christe wiki lists only one short story, “The Apples of the Hesperides”, as actually set in Ireland (see analysis here), and another dozen characters across her entire œuvre as having Irish connections. The garden in Hallowe’en Party is explicitly based on the Italian sunken garden on Ilnacullin island in Bantry Bay. According to Irish expert John Curran, she did a tour of Great Gardens of Ireland in the 1950s (and Miss Marple then goes on a smilar tour of Famous Houses and Gardens of Great Britain in the late novel Nemesis).

But it rather looks like Ireland is a mere background detail for almost all of Agatha Christie’s work. There’s no reason why it should be more than that, of course, and no evidence that it could have been either.

I’m hopping through the Agatha Christie novels in my own special way. Next will be Peril at End House. Probably.

Agatha Christie:
The Mysterious Affair at Styles | The Secret Adversary | The Murder on the Links | The Man in the Brown Suit | The Murder of Roger Ackroyd | The Mystery of the Blue Train | The Murder at the Vicarage | Murder on the Orient Express | The A.B.C. Murders | Murder in Mesopotamia | Death on the Nile | Hercule Poirot’s Christmas | And Then There Were None | Evil Under the Sun | The Body in the Library | Five Little Pigs | A Murder Is Announced | 4.50 from Paddington | Hallowe’en Party

Renaissance- en barokarchitectuur in België, by Rutger Tijs

Full title: Renaissance- en barokarchitectuur in België: Vitruvius’ erfenis en de ontwikkeling van de bouwkunst in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden van renaissance tot barok = Renaissance and Baroque architecture in Belgium: Vitruvius’ legacy and the development of architecture in the Southern Netherlands from the Renaissance to the Baroque period.

Second paragraph of third chapter, with the quote that it introduces and footnote:

We weten ondertussen dat zijn eerste uitgave van de Generale reglen viel in 1539, onmiddellijk na de terugkeer van Lombard. We zien bovendien dat de tweede uitgave van het beroemde vierde boek van Serlio pas valt in 1549, tien jaar later. Deze tien jaar omspannen dus de hele periode waarin allicht ook Bruegel nog volgens Van Mander op doortocht kan geweest zijn bij Cocke. Bruegel werd immers kort daarna, in 1551, vrijmeester. De omschrijving waarin Carel van Mander de architecturale verdiensten van Pieter Cocke vertolkt, moet ons overigens wel wat tot nadenken stemmen. Bekijken we daarom eerst even de originele passage van Van Mander op folio 218:We now know that his first edition of the Generale reglen was published in 1539, immediately after Lombard’s return. We also see that the second edition of Serlio’s famous fourth book was not published until 1549, ten years later. These ten years therefore span the entire period during which Bruegel may also have been passing through Cocke’s workshop, according to Van Mander. After all, Bruegel became a master craftsman shortly afterwards, in 1551. Carel van Mander’s description of Pieter Cocke’s architectural merits gives us pause for thought. Let us first take a look at the original passage by Van Mander on folio 218:
‘In desen tijdt / te weten / in’t Jaer 1549. maeckte hy de Boeken van de Metselrije / Geometrije / en Perspective. En gelijck hy wel begaeft en geleert was / d’ Italiaensche Spraeck ervaren wesende / heeft de Boecke van Sebastiaen Serlij, in onse spraeck vertaelt en alsoo door zijnen ernstigen arbeydt in onse Nederlanden het licht gebracht / en op den rechten wech geholpen de verdwaelde Const van Metselrije: soo datmen de dingen / die van Pollio Vitruvio doncker beschreven zijn / lichtlijck verstaen can / oft Vitruvium nouw meer behoeft te lesen / so veel de ordenen belangt. Dus is door Pieter Koeck de rechte wijse van bouwen opghecomen / en de moderne afgegaen / dan t’is moeylijck datter weder een nieuw vuyl moderne op zijn Hoogh-duytsch in gebruyck is ghecomen / die wy qualijck los sullen worden: doch in Italien nemmeer anghenomen sal wesen. ⁴⁴(in archaic Dutch)
In this time, namely in the year 1549, he wrote the Books of Masonry, Geometry, and Perspective. And as he was well-endowed and learned, being experienced in the Italian language, he translated the books of Sebastiaen Serlij into our language and thus, through his diligent work, brought the light to our Netherlands and helped the lost art of masonry back onto the right path, so that the things described obscurely by Pollio Vitruvio can be easily understood, or Vitruvius no longer needs to be read, as far as the orders are concerned. Thus, Pieter Koeck has brought forth the correct way of building, and the modern way has been abandoned, so that it is difficult for a new, foul modern High-German way to come into use, which we will hardly be able to get rid of, but which will never again be accepted in Italy. ⁴⁴
⁴⁴ lets verderop staat dan nog: ‘want zijn Weduwe Maeyken Verhulst gaf zijn nagelaten Metselrije. Boeken uyt in ‘t Jaer 1553. – VAN MANDER 1603, fol. 218.⁴⁴ Further on it says: ‘for his widow Maeyken Verhulst published his bequeathed masonry books in the year 1553. – VAN MANDER 1603, fol. 218.

I got this ages ago, in the hope that it would shed a bit more light for me on the artistic context of the work of Jan Christiaan Hansche, the Baroque stucco artist who I am obsessed with. I did not really get what I wanted; the second last chapter has nine lovely full-colour photographs of his ceilings, but amazingly doesn’t actually mention him by name in the main text – the chapter is mainly about the Banqueting House in Greenwich, which last time I checked isn’t even in Belgium. (The captions to the photographs do credit Hansche.)

Architectural history isn’t really my bag, and although Dutch is probably the second language that I feel most comfortable reading, that’s not saying much, so I must admit I did not read it forensically. I got enough of it to learn that the individual travels to Italy of particular artists, especially (of course) Bruegel and Rubens, had a big impact on their work, and also that the publication of architectural textbooks, by or adapted from Vitruvius, in the bookish society of early modern Belgium, allowed the new/old architectural ideas to proliferate.

But none of that really matters, because the glory of the book is the hundreds of photographs of buildings and art, which surely must be a pretty comprehensive gazetteer of the surviving architecture of the period in Belgium. If we had that sort of coffee-table, this is the sort of book I’d be putting on it. I got it for only €30, and the going rate for slightly more loved copies is €20 – really good value for what you get. So I didn’t really find what I wanted, but I am happy with what I got.

Sample page showing, left to right, St James’ Church in Liège; the St Martin’s Church in Sint Truiden; the Hazewind house in Gent; and the Wenemarsgodshuis in Gent.

You can get it from various second-hand vendors (it was published by Lannoo in 1999, so it’s out of print). The ISBN is 9789020937053.

This was the non-fiction book that had lingered longest unread on my shelves. Next on that pile is Liberation: The Unoffical and Unauthorised Guide to Blake’s 7, by Alan Stevens and Fiona Moore.

The best known books set in each country: Honduras

See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in Honduras. 

These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
The Lost City of the Monkey GodDouglas Preston 62,6152,338
The CodexDouglas Preston21,1532,221
The Mosquito CoastPaul Theroux13,8952,413
Miss QuincesKat Fajardo3,856291
Jungleland: A Mysterious Lost City, a WWII Spy, and a True Story of Deadly AdventureChristopher S. Stewart1,580218
Don’t Be Afraid, GringoElvia Alvarado 642221
The Summer We Came to LifeDeborah Cloyed 76386
The Good Garden: How One Family Went from Hunger to Having EnoughKatie Smith Milway 246174

This week’s winner, The Lost City of the Monkey God by Douglas Preston, is a non-fiction book about archaeologists investigating the legendary lost White City, Ciudad Blanca, in the Honduran jungle. The Codex, by the same author, takes the same scenario but recasts it as a thriller.

The Mosquito Coast, this week’s LibraryThing winner, is about an American who decides to move his family to Honduras to escape the modern world, with disastrous consequences; it has been adapted for both film and television.

Most of these books are about Americans encountering Honduras. The only Honduran writer on the list is Elvia Alvarado. (One of Kat Fajardo’s parents is Honduran, but she herself was born and brought up in New York.) Alvarado’s Don’t Be Afraid, Gringos is non-fiction; the top novel that I found by a Honduran writer set in Honduras is Libertad, by Bessie Flores Zaldivar.

I disqualified more than twenty books. Most of them were about Hondurans in, or trying to get into, the United States. Some are by authors who have a link to Honduras but set their work elsewhere, most notably Augusto Monterroso, who was born in Tegucigalpa, but moved to Guatemala when he was 15, and did most of his best known work there and in Mexico.

This series is going to take a break for the next couple of weeks, as I will concentrate on Doctor Who posts at the beginning of February. After that, the next country is Cuba, which will be our last American jurisdiction for a while; after that come Tajikistan, Papua New Guinea, and a run of Europeans starting with Sweden.

Asia: India | China | Indonesia | Pakistan | Bangladesh (revised) | Russia | Japan | Philippines (revised) | Vietnam | Iran | Türkiye | Thailand | Myanmar | South Korea | Iraq | Afghanistan | Yemen | Uzbekistan | Malaysia | Saudi Arabia | Nepal | North Korea | Syria | Sri Lanka | Taiwan | Kazakhstan | Cambodia | Jordan | UAE
Americas: USA | Brazil (revised) | Mexico | Colombia | Argentina | Canada | Peru | Venezuela | Guatemala | Ecuador | Bolivia | Haiti | Dominican Republic | Honduras
Africa: Nigeria | Ethiopia (revised) | Egypt | DR Congo | Tanzania | South Africa | Kenya | Sudan | Uganda | Algeria | Morocco | Angola | Mozambique | Ghana | Madagascar | Côte d’Ivoire | Cameroon | Niger | Mali | Burkina Faso | Malawi | Zambia | Chad | Somalia | Senegal | Zimbabwe | Guinea | Benin | Rwanda | Burundi | Tunisia | South Sudan
Europe: Russia | Türkiye | Germany | France | UK | Italy | Spain | Poland | Ukraine | Romania | Netherlands | Belgium
Oceania: Australia

BSFA Long-list

So, the BSFA Awards Long List is out – I make it 368 nominees across 9 categories, an average of almost 41. I’ve said it before, but I do wonder to what extent a ‘Long List’ of this length is useful for readers or voters. Of course I am pleased for my friends and for the writers who I admire who are on the Long List; but how much does it really mean? Being on the Long List means that 1 (one) BSFA member nominated you; not being on the Long List means that your friends, if any, in the BSFA ignored you.

I also wonder if the BSFA needs nine award categories, and if so, if it has the right ones. (Plus the tenth, juried, Translation category.) I did think that four or five was too few, back in the old days. This is the third year since the number of categories was almost doubled; it would be interesting to see which of the new awards actually has traction with voters, but I’m not aware that the voting numbers for any stage of the process have been made public.

We do know at least how many works are on each category’s long list. There is some variation, to put it mildly.

Best Fiction for Younger Readers – 17
Best Audio Fiction – 18
Best Non Fiction (Long) – 18
Best Short Non-Fiction – 28
Best Art Work – 37
Best Collection – 41
Best Shorter Fiction – 51
Best Short Fiction – 76
Best Novel – 82

While I’m on the topic of If I Ran The BSFA Awards, I find the ordering of the categories both weird and inconsistent. This week’s long-list announcement has them roughly in alphabetical order, with “Best Non Fiction (Long)” three places away from “Best Short Non-Fiction”, and Best Fiction for Younger Readers at the end. The BSFA website, however, lists the categories roughly in the order that they were created.

Long-list announcement order:Order on the BSFA website:
Best Audio Fiction
Best Artwork
Best Collection
Best Non-Fiction (Long)
Best Novel
Best Short Fiction
Best Short Non Fiction
Best Shorter Fiction
Best Fiction for Younger Readers
Best Novel
Best Short Fiction
Best Shorter Fiction
Best Artwork
Best Short Non-Fiction
Best Long Non-Fiction
Best Fiction for Younger Readers
Best Collection
Best Original Audio Fiction

I think it would be clearer and more helpful for voters and commentators to group like with like, and to adopt something like the following canonical order for the BSFA award categories, with the announcement at the ceremony going through them in reverse:

Best Novel
Best Short Fiction
Best Shorter Fiction
Fiction (traditional categories)
Best Collection
Best Fiction for Younger Readers
Best Original Audio Fiction
Fiction (newer categories)
Best Long Non-Fiction
Best Short Non-Fiction
Best Artwork
Non-fiction and art

The sequencing of the Hugo categories has been developed and honed over the decades, most recently changed by swapping the order of “Best Related Work” and “Best Graphic Story or Comic” in order to group all the fiction categories together.

Anyway. This main point of this post is the analysis of each category, in terms of how well the nominated works score among users of the main book-tracking sites. This isn’t a measure of quality; it’s not a strong predictor of the outcome of the second round voting either; but it is an indication of the extent to which nominees reflect wider popular taste.

I’m bringing in something new – as well as Goodreads and LibraryThing, I’m adding the number of reviewers from Storygraph, which is perhaps a bit more fannish than the other two. In general the Storygraph numbers are four or five times less than the Goodreads numbers, and ten or twenty times more than the LibraryThing numbers. It’s all useful data. (If you find this analysis useful at all.)

I found 158 of the nominees on all three systems, and another 34 on at least one of them. There are six which are presented as separately published works, but don’t have anyone rating them on Goodreads, logging them as owned on LibraryThing or reviewing them on Storygraph. They can all now describe themselves as BSFA long-listees, because one person voted for them.

At the top end of the scale, the most logged book on all three systems is the Hunger Games prequel, Sunrise on the Reaping, by Suzanne Collins, in the Best Fiction for Young Readers category. Next, but a very long way behind, is Katabasis by R.F. Kuang, in Best Novel. Third on Goodreads and LibraryThing is The Buffalo Hunter Hunter, by Stephen Graham Jones, also in Best Novel; third on Storygraph is The River Has Roots, by Amal El-Mohtar, in Best Shorter Fiction.

Full numbers below.

Continue reading

The Colony, by Audrey Magee

Second paragraph of third chapter:

‘What?’

Thought-provoking novel set on an island off the west of Ireland in the summer of 1979. An English painter and a French linguist come to stay, one to capture the landscapes and peoplescapes, and the other to record the decline of the Irish language, which is helpfully translated diegetically every time it is used. The main narrative is interspersed with the real-time events of the Troubles, culminating in the Mountbatten and Narrow Water bombings, which are geographically not all that close to the setting of the story, but have a big psychological impact on the people who live there. It’s a vivid depiction of an isolated community whose engagement with the outside world is limited, but also a book that looks at what is effectively raiding of its cultural resources by artist and linguist (who naturally dislike each other). A good read.

You can get The Colony here.

Thursday reading

Current
Looking Glass Sound, by Catriona Ward
House of Open Wounds, by Adrian Tchaikovsky 

Last books finished 
Frankenstein and the Patchwork Man, by Jack Heath
The Cuddled Little Vice, by Elizabeth Sandifer
Katabasis, by R.F. Kuang
Charlie vs Garret: The Rivalry That Shaped Modern Ireland, by Eoin O’Malley
Kristin Lavransdatter: The Wreath, by Sigrid Undset
Utterly Dark and the Face of the Deep, by Philip Reeve

Next books
Lost In Time, by A.G. Riddle
Bruxelles 43, by Patrick Weber and Baudouin Deville
Red Planet, by Robert A. Heinlein

Collected Folk Tales, by Alan Garner

Second paragraph of third story (“Vukub-Cakix”):

Vukub-Cakix, the Great Macaw, was nothing but trouble. He shone with the brilliance of gold and silver, and his teeth were emeralds, and he owned the nanze-tree of succulent fruit. He was a boaster, and his sons were no better. Their names were Zipacna the Earthmaker and Cabrakan the Earthshaker. The sons made mountains and then toppled them, and the father guzzled the harvests, so that between them they were a plague in Guatemala.

This is a collection of fifty-odd folk tales from various cultures – I did not count, but I think at least half are English or at least British, and slightly more than half were first published in another collection in 1969 (this one dates from 2011). They are all a bit enigmatic, pricking complacency about the universe. The best are short. A 47-page extract from the Ramayana was the one piece which I felt rather misfired. And it includes also some poetry by Garner himself:

Mist

The mist will always come from the fen.
It bore on its breath the boating men,
Saxon, Viking, iron swords,
Burning thatch and crystal words.
And their sons’ sons and grandsons still
Built house upon house in the lee of the hill.
And the latest house shows on the wall
How they shuttered and barred the lord’s great hall
From the mist and what the mist must hold;
And what it is must never be told.
For the mist will always come from the fen.
And now it is killing the motorway men.

A book to sip slowly from rather than to rush through. You can get Collected Folk Tales here.

Presidential and Vice-Presidential Babies

The news that J.D. Vance and his wife Usha are expecting a baby in July spurred me to research previous cases of babies born to incumbent Vice-Presidents (four boys, to three Veeps) and Presidents (three, two girls and a boy, to two POTUSes).

It has been inaccurately stated in some sources that Floride Calhoun (1792-1866) was the only previous Second Lady to have a baby during the Vice-Presidential term of her husband, in this case John C. Calhoun (1782-1850, Veep 1825-1832). She was the first but not the last.

The Calhouns’ ninth and tenth children (of ten) were born during his term, James Edward Calhoun (1826-1861) and William Lowndes Calhoun (1829-1858). Both were born in South Carolina. James became a lawyer and went to California. He died aged 36 and is not known to have had children.

William stayed in South Carolina, married twice and had three sons with his second wife (incidentally she was the widow of one of their older brothers) before dying aged 29. I think he has living descendants.

Floride Calhoun outlived all but one of her ten children, including John and William.

Frank Hamlin (1862-1922), son of Hannibal Hamlin (1809-1891, Veep 1861-1865) and his second wife Ellen Hamlin née Emery (1835-1925), was the longest lived (so far) of the Vice-Presidential babies. He was born in Maine, became a lawyer and moved to Chicago. I don’t know that he had any children.

The most recent Veep baby was Schuyler Colfax III (1870-1925), only child of Schuyler Colfax (1823-1885) and his second wife Ellen née Wade (1836-1911). He became Mayor of South Bend, Indiana at 28, and then worked for Kodak. Two of his three children died young but the third has living descendants.

The three Presidential babies were all born more recently. Grover Cleveland (1837-1908, POTUS 1885-89 & 1893-97) married Frances Folsom (1864-1947) in 1886 during his first term and they had two of their five children during his second term.

Esther Cleveland (1893-1980) was the second of her parents’ five kids. She married a British army officer and had two daughters, one of whom was the philosopher Philippa Foot, the co-inventor of the Trolley Problem. (Her photo illustrates this post)

Marion Cleveland (1895-1977) married twice and had four children. Her second husband was John Harlan Amen, the chief interrogator at the Nuremberg tribunal.

Both Cleveland sisters have living descendants – indeed four of their six children lived into this century.

Last and saddest, the fourth child of John F. Kennedy (1917-1963, POTUS 1961-63) and his wife Jacqueline née Bouvier 1929-1994) was Patrick Bouvier Kennedy (1963-63), who was born prematurely and lived for only two days.

Coincidentally Marion Cleveland and Patrick Kennedy were born quite close to each other geographically (if 68 years apart), she in Buzzards Bay at the base of Cape Cod and he in the nearby Otis Air Force Base.

Of the seven babies on my list, only two were born in Washington DC were Schuyler Colfax in 1870, and Esther Cleveland in 1893. Perhaps the Vances will add a third.

Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland, by Patrick Radden Keefe; and the TV series

Second paragraph of third chapter:

She was born Jean Murray, in 1934, to Thomas and May Murray, a Protestant couple in East Belfast. Belfast was a sooty, grey city of chimneys and steeples, flanked by a flat green mountain on one side and the Belfast Lough, an inlet of the North Channel, on the other. It had linen mills and tobacco factories, a deepwater harbour where ships were built, and row upon row of identical brick workers’ houses. The Murrays lived on Avoniel Road, not far from the Harland & Wolff shipyard, where the Titanic had been built. Jean’s father worked at Harland & Wolff. Every morning when she was a child, he would join the thousands of men plodding past her house on their way to the shipyard, and every evening he would return as the procession of men plodded home in the opposite direction. When the Second World War broke out, Belfast’s linen factor produced millions of uniforms and the shipyards churned out navy vessels. Then, one night in 1941, not long before Jean’s seventh birthday, air raid sirens wailed as a formation of Luftwaffe bombers streaked across the waterfront, scattering parachute mines and incendiary bombs, and Harland & Wolff erupted into flame.

This is a tremendous book about one particular aspect of the Northern Ireland conflict, tracking two intertwined stories through the decades: first, the history of sisters and IRA members Dolours and Marian Price, and second the mystery of Jean McConville née Murray, who was abducted and murdered by the IRA in 1972. Keefe has interviewed, and read interviews with, many of the surviving protagonists, and of course the story was made into a major Disney+ TV drama. It’s a chilling narrative of violence and death, sometimes political and sometimes just thuggery.

It is a book that has evoked sharp reactions. One person on social media responded to my note that I had read the book by fuming that it was “IRA propaganda. Complete bullshit”, though he later admitted that he had not actually read it himself. On the other hand, mainstream Republicans find both book and series sensationalist and unduly hostile to Gerry Adams. (Links are to two separate reviews by Tim O’Grady on Danny Morrison’s blog.)

By telling one particular set of stories, others are not told. Of course, everyone must write the book that they want to write; but the fact is that Northern Ireland is a lot wider than the dynamics of Republican West Belfast, and the experiences of the Prices and McConvilles, awful as they were, are representative of a part of society but not the whole. Keefe does make the occasional effort to acknowledge this, but I think a reader who knew nothing about the Troubles might get the impression that there was nothing else happening. Lost Lives would be a very good corrective.

The question is, what does one want to make of the past? At the end of the peace process, both the Prices and McConvilles felt cheated for different reasons. The McConvilles eventually did get closure with the discovery of their mother’s body, but that came about by chance rather than by any help from political factors. The Prices on the other hand felt that if the British remained in Northern Ireland, the entire armed struggle looked pointless, and they were revolted by that thought.

But the armed struggle was pointless; and it was evil. This is my analysis, not Keefe’s. The 1998 Good Friday Agreement was much the same as the 1974 power-sharing structure. The most significant differences were the provisions for ex-paramilitary prisoners, and police reform. (Some would argue that the D’Hondt coalition government is also a major change, but I would say that the forced coalition was there in 1974 and the D’Hondt process is a detail of implementation.) Was that worth the lives lost and devastated over thirty years?

This of course does not excuse or minimise the role of the British and Unionists in the story. If Unionists had run Stormont better in the first place, especially if the British had leaned on them to do so, there would have been no conflict. Loyalist violence, directed by Unionist leaders, was the initiating factor in the Troubles (as shown in the early episodes of Say Nothing), and Loyalists killed more civilians than either Republicans or the British Army. Bloody Sunday was an atrocity, and the cover-up was a crime (though Bloody Friday was an atrocity too). The Price sisters were brutalised in jail, and they were not the only ones.

Books like Say Nothing are very valuable to help understand the past – especially so if the reader keeps in mind that they show only part of the whole story.

I had occasional shocks of personal connection. In 1996, I was an election candidate in North Belfast as was Gerry Kelly, one of the Price sisters’ colleagues in the 1973 London bombings. He won, I lost; I have particular memories of a hustings in the Ardoyne where the audience was basically deciding between voting for him or not voting at all, and I left in such a rush that I had to go back the next day to collect my coat. (He doesn’t get a named speaking part in the TV show.)

A couple of the minor characters in the story mentioned are on my Facebook friends list – I won’t embarrass them by naming them, but they are played in the TV series by Seamus O’Hara and Charlotte McCurry. The idea behind the Boston College archives, on which more in a moment, came from Paul Bew, who I have known since I was roughly thirteen. Northern Ireland is a small place.

The Boston College archives play a large part in how much of the story came to light. These were a set of taped interviews with paramilitaries which unexpectedly became a source of evidence for the police investigating the murder of Jean McConville. I had a lot of respect and affection for Ed Moloney, the director of the project who died last year, and I corresponded warmly and sympathetically with him in 2011 when it started seriously running into trouble. But I have to say that he does not appear to have done the necessary due diligence on the extent to which his carefully gathered records could be used in future criminal investigations, and relied unwisely on the doctrine of the protection of journalistic sources. Expert legal advice was simply never sought, and that is a big error – on Keefe’s telling, Ed Moloney’s error rather than anyone else’s.

Whatever you make of the political intentions of the author, it is a well told story. I groaned a bit when I looked at 404 pages of dense text, with 93 pages of footnotes, but it really slips by quickly – even when you know what happened in the end. And here Keefe’s choice to focus on the McConvilles and the Prices does make sense, because by focusing on the human cost of the conflict to two families, you turn historical facts and statistics into stories that can be related to by any reader.

Published in 2018, the book got a new lease of life with the 2024 drama, which I finally got around to watching at the end of last year. I think it’s very well done. In particular, Lola Petticrew and Maxine Peake excel as Dolours Price in her youth and in her middle age, and Rory Kinnear is very memorable as Frank Kitson. I was surprised to see Josh Finan, who plays the young Gerry Adams here, pop up again as Dan, the philosophy teacher whose students are convicts, in Waiting for the Out, which we have been watching more recently.

On the downside, the early episodes tastelessly play the Prices’ IRA activities for laughs, and the whole thing is more sympathetic to the Prices than perhaps they deserve. The darkness is acknowledged too, but I felt the balance could have been put in a better place.

Watching it with my son, who was born in 1999 and has never lived in Northern Ireland, was also instructive. The two standout episodes are the sixth, which centres on the brutal force-feeding of the Price sisters on hunger strike in Brixton, and the eighth (of the nine) which concludes with the McConville children, now thirty years after their mother was taken from them, clustering together in the hope that her body will be found. With the caveats above, it’s very watchable.

You can get Say Nothing (the book) here.

This was the top non-fiction book on my unread shelf. Next is Oscar Wilde: A Biography, by Richard Ellmann.

The Mystery of the Blue Train, by Agatha Christie

Second paragraph of third chapter:

“Pleased to see you back again, Mr Van Aldin,” he said.”

Yeah, I’m working through the less celebrated novels of Agatha Christie (having read all the best known ones in 2013). This one dates from 1928, and features Poirot dragged into the investigation of a murder and jewel theft on Le Train Bleu, which used to run direct overnight from Calais via Paris to the French Riviera. (No point in such a route now that you can get from Paris to Nice in five hours by TGV, or a bit less by air.)

Some of this environment has become familiar to me as I work through my grandmother’s memoirs. The victim here is a rich young American woman moving between England and France (as was my grandmother), and there is another older rich woman living in the Riviera who ran a hospital during the Great War (as did my grandmother’s aunt). It’s also notable that all characters are expected to be fluent if not perfect in French.

Agatha Christie herself was reportedly dissatisfied with this book, and I can see some of the flaws that she possibly was conscious of, and some that she possibly was unaware of. There’s some gratuitous anti-semitism. She doesn’t have a good ear for names – “Van Aldin” doesn’t work for a New Yorker with Dutch ancestors; nor does “Papopolous” for a Greek, especially a Greek Jew. The actual murder plot is hilariously convoluted and Poirot’s solution to it is spun almost out of thin air.

But there’s one very well drawn character, Katherine Grey, who benefits from a recent inheritance and gets sucked into the mystery on her way to the Riviera – she reminded me a bit of Anne Beddingfeld in The Man in the Brown Suit, who heads off to Africa in similar circumstances, but a bit older and perhaps more rooted in reality. She is romantically pursued by The Wrong Chap but ends up with The Right Chap, to the frustration of the Teenage Girl – who herself is a standard Christie trope, done a bit better than usual here.

So it’s unusual for me to say this, but I think it actually works better as a Bildungsroman about Katherine than as a detective story. You can get The Mystery of the Blue Train here.

Agatha Christie:
The Mysterious Affair at Styles | The Secret Adversary | The Murder on the Links | The Man in the Brown Suit | The Murder of Roger Ackroyd | The Mystery of the Blue Train | The Murder at the Vicarage | Murder on the Orient Express | The A.B.C. Murders | Murder in Mesopotamia | Death on the Nile | Hercule Poirot’s Christmas | And Then There Were None | Evil Under the Sun | The Body in the Library | Five Little Pigs | A Murder Is Announced | 4.50 from Paddington | Hallowe’en Party

Friends: Understanding the Power of our Most Important Relationships, by Robin Dunbar

Second paragraph of third chapter:

In the early 1990s, I turned my attention to what I thought at the time was a very trivial, albeit rather irritating, problem, namely why primates spend so much time grooming each other. The conventional view at the time was that grooming was simply about hygiene – removing burrs and other bits of vegetation from the fur and generally keeping the skin clean and healthy. Grooming certainly does that, but after many years watching monkeys in the wild I had been deeply impressed by the fact that they groomed far more than they ever needed to for purely hygienic purposes. It seemed obvious that grooming was intensely social and pleasurable.

Robin Dunbar is famous for the “Dunbar number”, the number of people with whom one can maintain stable social relationships, which he says research has borne out as the average size of human communities from prehistory to the present day. This book looks at the nature of friendship, including its roots in primate behaviour and its future in the online world.

Dunbar is very big on his own research, though he does mention other researchers too (with occasional asides about the fate of his PhD and doctoral students). I found the prose a bit dry, to be honest, and no space is given to any critique of his findings, or alternative explanations. Maybe there isn’t any, but I recently also read Proto by Laura Spinney which does make space for alternative theories.

I also wondered about the people and societies at the ends of the bell curve. Dunbar is very pleased that all of the studies he cites find that people to have 5-ish close friends and an extended circle of 150-ish; but what’s the variation? What can we learn from and about super-connectors, or from people who are socially isolated? The dragging towards the mean got a bit tiring.

So, yes, lots of interesting stuff here, but it raised questions as well as answers. You can get Friends here.

The best known books set in each country: United Arab Emirates

See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in the UAE.

These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
The DogJoseph O’Neill2,371351
Layover in DubaiDan Fesperman 894186
Temporary PeopleDeepak Unnikrishnan1,025135
City of Gold: Dubai and the Dream of CapitalismJim Krane 764122
The Sand FishMaha Gargash820109
Desperate in DubaiAmeera Al Hakawati1,46433
From Rags to Riches: A Story of Abu DhabiMohammed Al Fahim36261
Sleepless in DubaiSajni Patel88224

It was surprisingly tough to find books set in the UAE – using my usual methodology, I checked for ‘uae’, ‘dubai’ and ‘abu-dhabi’ tags on both GR and LT, and found rather a limited output. (Yes, I did check for the smaller emirates on Goodreads, and didn’t find much; I didn’t bother checking them on LibraryThing.) This week’s winner, The Dog, by Joseph O’Neill, has the lowest aggregate score for any of the winners for any of the countries I have covered. (Other contenders: Niger and Benin.)

The Dog is about a chap from New York who moves to Dubai and finds himself perpetually in the metaphorical doghouse for one reason or another. It got a couple of award nominations (including the Booker Prize longlist) but doesn’t seem to have resonated strongly with the market. The author is much better known for his New York-set novel, Netherland.

I excluded a lot of books without hesitation, but I will note two here that gave me a moment or two’s pause for thought. Omar Saif Ghobash, the author of Letters to a Young Muslim, is a senior UAE diplomat; but the book is written from the vantage point of the Emirati embassy in Moscow, and also apparently has a global scope in its content, so I don’t think it qualifies under my criteria. And Arabian Sands, by Wifred Thesiger, has troubled me before (see Saudi Arabia and Yemen) but unfortunately it seems to be split between several countries without being more than 50% in any one of them (and anyway more in Oman than in the UAE).

Coming next: Honduras, Cuba, Tajikistan and then Papua New Guinea.

Asia: India | China | Indonesia | Pakistan | Bangladesh (revised) | Russia | Japan | Philippines (revised) | Vietnam | Iran | Türkiye | Thailand | Myanmar | South Korea | Iraq | Afghanistan | Yemen | Uzbekistan | Malaysia | Saudi Arabia | Nepal | North Korea | Syria | Sri Lanka | Taiwan | Kazakhstan | Cambodia | Jordan | UAE
Americas: USA | Brazil (revised) | Mexico | Colombia | Argentina | Canada | Peru | Venezuela | Guatemala | Ecuador | Bolivia | Haiti | Dominican Republic | Honduras
Africa: Nigeria | Ethiopia (revised) | Egypt | DR Congo | Tanzania | South Africa | Kenya | Sudan | Uganda | Algeria | Morocco | Angola | Mozambique | Ghana | Madagascar | Côte d’Ivoire | Cameroon | Niger | Mali | Burkina Faso | Malawi | Zambia | Chad | Somalia | Senegal | Zimbabwe | Guinea | Benin | Rwanda | Burundi | Tunisia | South Sudan
Europe: Russia | Türkiye | Germany | France | UK | Italy | Spain | Poland | Ukraine | Romania | Netherlands | Belgium
Oceania: Australia

The BSFA Best Novel Award and the Arthur C. Clarke Award: the best of the best

Back in November 2012, I decided to read all of the winners of the BSFA Award for best Novel, the Arthur C. Clarke Award and the James Tiptree Jr. Award, now the Otherwise Award. I started with Non-stop, by Brian Aldiss, which was given a retrospective BSFA Award in 2008, and thought I had finished with Annie Bot, by Sierra Greer, which (rather surprisingly) won the Clarke Award last year.

It took me thirteen years, in the course of which the Tiptree Award renamed itself the Otherwise Award and then had a hiatus, and I myself was a Clarke Award judge twice and physically counted the BSFA Award votes several times. (I was also involved with Hugo administration for seven of the intervening Worldcons.) I flipped back and forth between reading the books one by one, and reading and reviewing all the books from one particular year in a single go. Links in this post are to this blog archive; more recent entries include purchase links at the end of each post.

In some years it was simpler because two or even three of the awards went to the same book. The Sparrow, by Mary Doria Russell, and Air, by Geoff Ryman, scooped all three. There have been several Clarke / BSFA doubles as well: Take Back Plenty by Colin Greenland, The Separation by Christopher Priest, The City & the City, by China Miéville, and Ancillary Justice, by Ann Leckie, the last of which also won both the Hugo and the Nebula.

I have learned that like everything, the awards go through phases. The BSFA gave the Best Novel Award to twenty-seven books by men before they chose one by a woman (The Sparrow, by Mary Doria Russell), and fourteen of the next fifteen winners were also by men (the exception is Ash, by Mary Gentle). Starting with 2013, however, the picture is more balanced, with seven winners by women and six by men – six different women, including two women of colour, and three different men. All the male winners so far have been white. Christopher Priest won it four times, Brian Aldiss, Ian McDonald and Adrian Tchaikovsky three times (so far); Ann Leckie is the only woman to have won twice. (Full list of winners and finalists on Wikipedia.)

The BSFA seems to be currently in a phase of recognising books which are less well known to the reading public. The Best Novel winners of the last two years have the fewest and third fewest number of owners on LibraryThing – 2024’s The Green Man’s Quarry, by Juliet McKenna with only 27, followed by 1987’s Gráinne, by Keith Roberts with 39 and then 2025’s Three Eight One, by Aliya Whiteley with 54. The top winner by LibraryThing ownership, perhaps not surprisingly, is Pyramids by Terry Pratchett, at 11,788, just ahead of Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke at 11,078. The Goodreads stats will no doubt have a slightly different ranking.

I think my favourite BSFA winner is Ash: A Secret History, by Mary Gentle, and of the ones I really like, the most obscure by LibraryThing ownership is The Night Sessions by Ken MacLeod. The worst by my reckoning was The Ragged Astronauts, by Bob Shaw.

The Arthur C. Clarke Award has been going since 1987. It is decided by different judges each year; the panels have included the likes of Neil Gaiman, John Gribbin and, er, me. It’s therefore much more difficult to identify trends, since each year’s panel makes its own decisions. I count sixteen winners by women, twenty-one by men, and one by a non-binary writer, which is not too bad. Four winners, as far as I know, are by writers of colour, one woman and three men. Novels by China Miéville have won three times, by Pat Cadigan and Geoff Ryman twice. (List of winners and shortlisted novels on Wikipedia.)

The top Clarke winner by LibraryThing ownership is the very first, 1987’s The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, on a whopping 48,684, helped no doubt by its TV serialisation. Next are two others that were also adapted for television, 2015’s Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel, on 14,175, and 2017’s The Underground Railroad, by Colson Whitehead, on 10,809. The one with fewest LibraryThing owners is 2018’s winner Dreams Before the Start of Time by Anne Charnock, on 119, followed by the 2023 winner Deep Wheel Orcadia by Harry Josephine Giles, on 144.

My favourite is probably The Handmaid’s Tale, though I also think we made a very good call with Station Eleven. Both have turned out to be somewhat prophetic in different ways. At the more obscure end, I really liked Deep Wheel Orcadia. On the other hand, I thought the 2007 winner, Nova Swing by M. John Harrison, was unmemorable and uninteresting.

I had intended to compare the history of the BSFA, Clarke and Tiptree/Otherwise awards here. But I have discovered while drafting this that the Otherwise Award was presented to three novels and a short story last year, after a four-year hiatus, so I’m going to save my analysis of its history and my personal recommendations and disrecommendations until I’ve read the latest winners. It’s also a bit more difficult to assess, because it has gone to short fiction as well as novels. So, stand by. Meanwhile you can get Ash: A Secret History here and The Handmaid’s Tale here.

The Best American Comics 2011, ed. Alison Bechdel

Second frame of third section: (“New Year’s Eve, 2004”, from Monsters by Gabby Schulz [Ken Dahl]):

I picked this up when I was in Portland in 2016, and somehow forgot to log it in my system, but realised that it was still on my shelves, years after I had read all the other books I got in 2016. I should not have left it so long; it’s a great collection of work by a very diverse group of creators, and literally the only piece I had read before was an extract from Joe Sacco’s Footnotes in Gaza, which was my book of the year last year.

There is a lot of very strong work here, starting with Bechdel’s editorial introduction, about her own relationship with comics over the years and her criteria for choosing. The very first piece, “Manifestation” by Gabrielle Bell (a new name for me) is a hilarious and pointed account of her research into the political thought of Valerie Solanas (best remembered, alas, for her attempt to murder Andy Warhol). Joe Sacco’s piece is also very strong. There’s an interesting format-breaking story, “Soixante-Neuf”, about Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin by David Lasky and Mairead Case. Lasky is back for the single-page “The Ultimate Graphic Novel (in Six Panels”, which closes the book. I must also mention Jeff Smith’s “The Mad Scientist”, about Nikola Tesla, and Paul Pope’s “1977” about encountering David Bowie in the early days. But really, it’s all pretty good stuff, and the above named are excellent. Glad I finally got around to it. You can get The Best American Comics 2011 here.

Thursday reading

Current
Kristin Lavransdatter: The Wreath
, by Sigrid Undset
Frankenstein and the Patchwork Man, by Jack Heath
Katabasis, by R.F. Kuang

Last books finished
Renaissance- en barokarchitectuur in België
, by Rutger J. Thijs
The Secret Adversary, by Agatha Christie
The Domino Effect, by David Bishop
What Still Remains, by Adam Christopher
River Mumma, by Zalika Reid-Benta
Deep Secret, by Diana Wynne Jones
The Forgotten and the Fantastical: Modern Fables and Ancient Tales: No. 2, ed. Teika Bellamy

Next books
Utterly Dark and the Face of the Deep
, by Philip Reeve
Looking Glass Sound, by Catriona Ward
Bruxelles 43, by Patrick Weber and Baudouin Deville

This Way Up: When Maps Go Wrong (And Why It Matters), by Mark Cooper-Jones and Jay Foreman

Second paragraph of third chapter:

If you have Spotify, snap the handy QR code below for a carefully curated playlist.

I confess that I wasn’t previously aware of the Map Men, who have a popular YouTube channel about the making of maps. This is one of their latest videos, including lots of (reasonably well pronounced) Dutch, about the making of the Netherlands:

Their book boils down sixteen cases of maps that were, are, or became incorrect, and has a jolly look at the history of each case. To be honest I prefer my history and cartography without extra tinsel, and in particular the fifty pages devoted to the story of the Donner Party dramatised as a debate between a fictional American and his high-school teacher seemed rather self-indulgent. (Not to mention the fictionalised debate between different parts of President Truman’s brain in the last chapter.)

However there’s some brilliant stuff here too. Chapter 5, on the UK’s ‘regions’ for Independent Television broadcasters, truly informs and entertains; I knew that the map was wonky, but I had no ide just how wonky, with King’s Lynn and Leeds getting the same ‘local’ news. Actually, let’s have a musical interlude in honour of the one UK region whose borders were pretty fixed, Ulster Television:

Chapter 14, on the development of the satnav and why we should not forget about more traditional ways of navigation, has lots of lovely details that I was unaware of. And despite the Truman’s brain joke, the final chapter, on the Marshall Islands, is tragic (I have some experience of that country).

Me and the Marshall Islands’ special climate envoy and equivalent of vice-president, the late Tony deBrum, relaxing at the Beer Factory on Place du Luxembourg in April 2013

Anyway, there’s much more here to love than to dislike. You can get This Way Up here.

This was the first book that I finished reading this year.

Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global, by Laura Spinney

Second paragraph of third chapter:

Hrozný had just broken the code of the first Indo-European language ever to be written down: Hittite. Though he didn’t know it at the time, the document that had given him the key was the last will and testament of an early Hittite king, Hattushili I, who had ruled in north-central Anatolia in the seventeenth century BCE. Hattushili was a master of spin, especially when it came to himself: ‘his frame is new, his breast is new, his penis is new, his head is of tin, his teeth are those of a lion, his eyes are those of an eagle, and he sees like an eagle’. But he was also an accomplished warrior who had laid the foundations of one of the great empires of the preclassical world. As he lay dying he dictated his plan for his succession, but in the ancient equivalent of the microphone being left on after the interview has concluded, an over-enthusiastic scribe kept scribbling and captured his last words.’ As death rushed up to meet him, Hattushili the Lion was seized by terror: “Wash my corpse well! Hold me to your bosom! Keep me from the earth! Three thousand years after its ancestor was first spoken on the shores of the Black Sea, the first Indo-European cry to reach us is heartrending in its humanity.

I’ve always been fascinated by linguistics, especially the evolution of languages over the millennia, and a friend very rightly recommended this book to me for Christmas. It looks at the history of the Indo-European languages, cross-referencing the evidence from the languages themselves with the latest archaeological findings and, crucially, DNA evidence about the people who lived and died in various places and times.

I just love the concept of Proto-Indo-European, from which six of the top seven languages in the world are descended (not Chinese, obviously, but Spanish, English, Hindi, Portuguese, Bengali and Russian), spoken 5,000 years ago, and some of whose words are eerily similar to ours and some startlingly different.

Spinney goes with the standard theory which has been around for decades, that the speakers of PIE were the Yamnaya culture, a subset of the Kurgan culture, north of the Black Sea, and named after their burial practice of funeral pits (яма, yama) with tumuli on top (курган, kurgan). The latest DNA research strongly supports this, though she gives time to other explanations as well (notably the Anatolian and ‘Out Of India’ theories), and gives personal glimpses of Gimbutas and Renfrew in their debates, also citing David Anthony whose book I enjoyed a few years back.

The movements of population and language were initially driven by climate change as Eurasia recovered from the Ice Age, and then by technology as the horse was domesticated, the wheel was developed and agriculture began to be adopted. (NB that in the story of Cain and Abel, Cain is the bad guy and the farmer, Abel is the good guy and the herder.)

She follows up with individual chapters, each prefaced by a helpful map, on the extinct Anatolian and Tocharian languages, on the western Celtic/Germanic/Italic branch, on the eastern Indo-Iranian languages, on the northern Baltic and Slavic groups, and on the isolated Albanian, Armenian and Greek, the last of which has the longest continuous literary tradition. I love little snippets like the extinct Venetic language, known from a few hundred inscriptions, most of which are dedications to Reitia, the goddess of writing.

There’s interesting stuff in the DNA too. Apparently when the Beaker People arrived in Britain in 2450 BC, the result was that they took over 90% of the British gene pool and 100% of British Y-chromosomes, and the same when they reached Ireland 200 years later. Did they speak Celtic? It’s a little too early from the linguistic change point of view, but otherwise it’s not clear how Celtic language came to Ireland. I actually bought J.P. Mallory’s book to find out more.

This is a great book, filled with history, science and literature. Spinney has gone light on the technicalities of linguistics, so as not to deter the faint-hearted, though I would have been happy with more detailed reconstructions; still, these are easy enough to find. Lots to learn. You can get Proto here.

This was the last book that I finished in 2025, so it’s good to end on a high note. Thanks to Aoife White for the recommendation.

Five Little Pigs, by Agatha Christie; and Bloody Sunday

Second paragraph of third chapter:

“Have I convinced you that it was a straightforward case?” he said.

You’ll have noticed that I’m going through a bit of an Agatha Christie thing recently. I read maybe half of the total œuvre when was twelve or thirteen, and am fairly sure this was one of them, but I had completely forgotten the details. Poirot is called in to re-investigate a murder of sixteen years earlier (the book was published in 1942, so that would be 1926), by the daughter of the woman who was jailed for the crime. The murder weapon is hemlock, strictly speaking coniine, used to dispatch an unpleasant artist who was flaunting his affair with his latest model in front of his wife and their house guests.

Poirot gets each of the five suspects to write down their memories of the day of the murder. Christie breaks each of those accounts across chapters, which is convenient for keeping up the narrative pace but a bit annoying for the historically trained reader whose instincts are to give each source its own place in the sun. In a dramatic denouement he reveals why the artist’s widow allowed herself to be convicted for a crime she did not commit, and also who the real murderer was, though there is a strong implication that justice will never be served due to the passage of time and paucity of firm evidence.

I have to admit that it did make me go back to the court ruling quashing the prosecution of Soldier F for several of the Bloody Sunday killings, on the grounds, similarly to the witness statements in Five Little Pigs, that the statements of F’s fellow soldiers made at the time and to the Savile Inquiry were not admissible evidence – although the judge condemns Bloody Sunday in the strongest terms. It still doesn’t explain to me why Soldier F was prosecuted for the wrong crimes.

You can get Five Little Pigs here.

Agatha Christie:
The Mysterious Affair at Styles | The Secret Adversary | The Murder on the Links | The Man in the Brown Suit | The Murder of Roger Ackroyd | The Mystery of the Blue Train | The Murder at the Vicarage | Murder on the Orient Express | The A.B.C. Murders | Murder in Mesopotamia | Death on the Nile | Hercule Poirot’s Christmas | And Then There Were None | Evil Under the Sun | The Body in the Library | Five Little Pigs | A Murder Is Announced | 4.50 from Paddington | Hallowe’en Party

The Leviathan, by Rosie Andrews

Second paragraph of third chapter:

I did not know, then, that fear itself could take form, could become a tangible thing. That lesson lay ahead.

One of the leftovers from the 2023 Clarke Award submissions list which was obviously fantasy rather than sf, but I though might be worth hanging onto for later reading. Unfortunately it put me off at the very beginning, with an intense attempt to portray England in the 17th century which totally failed to convince me on many of the circumstantial details. I gave it fifty pages but no more. You can get The Leviathan here.

The Moon of Gomrath, by Alan Garner

Second paragraph of third chapter:

“Do you think there was anything in the quarry?” said Susan.

I had read this years ago, of course; it is the sequel to Garner’s first book, The Weirdstone of Brisingamen. I see a lot of online reviewers saying that they like The Moon of Gomrath better; I must admit that I still have sharp memories of The Weirdstone of Brisingamen, and it must be thirty years since I last re-read it. Still, The Moon of Gomrath is a great fantasy story, with the young protagonists sucked into epic battle with ancient magical forces across the richly depicted landscape of Alderley Edge and Macclesfield. It’s not long since I was near that part of the world myself. You can get it here.

The best known books set in each country: the Dominican Republic

See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in the Dominican Republic. 

These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
In the Time of the ButterfliesJulia Alvarez79,1014,961
Clap When You LandElizabeth Acevedo109,4181,869
The Feast of the GoatMario Vargas Llosa 42,4623,596
The Farming of BonesEdwidge Danticat9,9071,510
Before We Were FreeJulia Alvarez9,4741,427
Pirate Hunters: Treasure, Obsession, and the Search for a Legendary Pirate ShipRobert Kurson11,821591
The Cemetery of Untold StoriesJulia Alvarez15,639439
The Color of My WordsLynn Joseph 2,109650

The dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo, from 1930 to 1961, looms large over the Dominican Republic. This week’s winner, In the Time of the Butterflies, is about the four Mirabal sisters, who fought back against the regime, which then killed three of them. It has been adapted into a film produced by and starring Selma Hayek. The Feast of the Goat is about the assassination of Trujillo in 1961. The Farming of Bones is about the Trujillo regime’s 1937 Parsley massacre of tens of thousands of resident Haitians. Before We Were Free is set at the end of Trujillo rule in 1960-61. The Cemetery of Untold Stories is about a writer in the 2020s who is researching the life of one of Trujillo’s wives. The Color of My Words is also set during the Trujillo regime, though as far as I know the precise date is not specified.

The other constant in the literature of the Dominican Republic is the relationship with the United States, and in particular the emigrant experience. This week’s Goodreads winner, Clap When You Land, is about two girls, one in the Dominican Republic and one in New York, who discover that they have the same father when he suddenly dies.

Most of the books by Dominican writers about the emigrant experience are set mainly in the USA. I disqualified no less than sixteen books for that reason – six more by Julia Alvarez, four by Junot Diaz (including The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao), and two by Angie Cruz, another two by Elizabeth Acevedo, and two by other writers. I also disqualified Wide Sargasso Sea, by Jean Rhys, which is set in Jamaica, and Collapse, by Jared Diamond, whose remit is worldwide.

Although Pirate Hunters is set off the coast of the Dominican Republic rather than on the country’s land territory, it seems to be close enough to the shore to qualify for the list by my criteria.

Next week’s country is the United Arab Emirates, which provides a challenge to my research strategy, followed by a return to Latin America for Honduras and Cuba, and then over to Central Asia for Tajikistan.

Asia: India | China | Indonesia | Pakistan | Bangladesh (revised) | Russia | Japan | Philippines (revised) | Vietnam | Iran | Türkiye | Thailand | Myanmar | South Korea | Iraq | Afghanistan | Yemen | Uzbekistan | Malaysia | Saudi Arabia | Nepal | North Korea | Syria | Sri Lanka | Taiwan | Kazakhstan | Cambodia | Jordan | UAE
Americas: USA | Brazil (revised) | Mexico | Colombia | Argentina | Canada | Peru | Venezuela | Guatemala | Ecuador | Bolivia | Haiti | Dominican Republic | Honduras
Africa: Nigeria | Ethiopia (revised) | Egypt | DR Congo | Tanzania | South Africa | Kenya | Sudan | Uganda | Algeria | Morocco | Angola | Mozambique | Ghana | Madagascar | Côte d’Ivoire | Cameroon | Niger | Mali | Burkina Faso | Malawi | Zambia | Chad | Somalia | Senegal | Zimbabwe | Guinea | Benin | Rwanda | Burundi | Tunisia | South Sudan
Europe: Russia | Türkiye | Germany | France | UK | Italy | Spain | Poland | Ukraine | Romania | Netherlands | Belgium
Oceania: Australia

Books of 1976, 1926, 1876 and 1826; and a look at 1776

As usual, I’m looking back to the best known books (by Goodreads and LibraryThing numbers) published 50, 100, 150 and 200 years ago. Unusually, I have actually read, or at least attempted, the top book on each of the four lists – I liked two of them and not the other two – so this isn’t going to inform my 2026 reading in the way that it has done in previous years. I’m also flagging up some interesting 1776 publications.

I’ve set up my habitual tables, ranking the books by the aggregate of their number of raters on Goodreads and owners on LibraryThing, with all the bias that implies. For 1976, I am listing the top 20 on that system; for 1926, the top 15; for 1876, the top 10; and for 1826 just the top 3. I’ve also noted a few works of 1776. Where I have read other books published in that year, I note them below.

How many of the below have you read? (Back in the old LJ days I would have run a poll which would have had dozens of respondents; those days are gone for ever, I think.)

Links below are to my online reviews of the books in question.

Books of 1976

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
Interview with the VampireAnne Rice 641,46024,652
Children of Dune Frank Herbert 243,68115,665
The Selfish GeneRichard Dawkins 190,83611,559
Roll of Thunder, Hear My CryMildred D. Taylor129,48413,292
Roots: The Saga of an American FamilyAlex Haley 164,2127,339
DragonsongAnne McCaffrey 58,5457,552
Even Cowgirls Get the BluesTom Robbins 56,9435,398
Frog and Toad All YearArnold Lobel 37,7067,221
Eaters of the DeadMichael Crichton 46,1625,446
Sleeping Murder Agatha Christie 51,6564,818
On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing NonfictionWilliam Zinsser 30,5427,546
Slapstick, or Lonesome No More!Kurt Vonnegut Jr. 44,3304,974
The History of Sexuality, Volume 1: An IntroductionMichel Foucault 25,2976,213
A River Runs Through It and Other StoriesNorman Maclean 30,0543,464
Raise the Titanic! Clive Cussler 29,8403,422
GnomesWil Huygen and Ren Poortvliet37,0162575
Not a Penny More, Not a Penny LessJeffrey Archer 44,8682072
Letters from Father ChristmasJ.R.R. Tolkien 26,7223477
The Boys from BrazilIra Levin 40,4892217
The OmenDavid Seltzer69,5241169

I described Interview with the Vampire as “the most utter tosh” when I read it in 2008. Apart from Letters from Father Christmas, I am sure that I have also read Roots and Slapstick, or Lonesome No More, and fairly sure that I have read Children of Dune, The Selfish Gene, Dragonsong, Sleeping Murder, Raise the Titanic! and Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less (though all the Jeffrey Archers kind of merge into one in my mind).

The Hugo Award for Best Novel that year went to Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang, by Kate Wilhelm, and the Nebula to Man Plus, by Frederik Pohl.

Other 1976 books that I know I have read: The Complete Saki, by H.H. Munro; The Magic Mirror of M.C. Escher, by Bruno Ernst; Woman on the Edge of Time, by Marge Piercy; Ordinary People, by Judith Guest; The Alteration, by Kingsley Amis; Mindbridge, by Joe Haldeman; The Hand of Oberon, by Roger Zelazny; Doorways in the Sand, by Roger Zelazny; The Woman Warrior, by Maxine Hong Kingston; The Malacia Tapestry, by Brian W. Aldiss; Power of Three, by Diana Wynne Jones; A Wreath of Stars, by Bob Shaw; The Borribles, by Michael de Larrabeiti; and King and Joker, by Peter Dickinson.

Of the lot, I’d say that my favourite is Roots, which I read when I was unsuitably young but which left a strong impression.

The best-selling book of 1976 in the USA, according to Publisher’s Weekly, was Trinity, by Leon Uris, an Irish-set saga that just missed my cutoff, followed by Sleeping Murder.

I’m not going to go back and re-read Interview with the Vampire, but I might give Children of Dune another go some time.

Books of 1926

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
The Sun Also RisesErnest Hemingway488,19424,755
Winnie-the-PoohA.A. Milne392,33015,233
The Murder of Roger AckroydAgatha Christie337,21311,365
The Richest Man in BabylonGeorge S. Clason238,2064,384
The CastleFranz Kafka 73,8979,066
The Blue CastleL.M. Montgomery 54,4343,353
Art Through the AgesHelen Gardner44,7402,539
Clouds of WitnessDorothy L. Sayers 25,2203,923
Dream StoryArthur Schnitzler 20,6112,000
Lolly WillowesSylvia Townsend Warner 12,8731,782
Oil!Upton Sinclair 7,2611,495
MaryVladimir Nabokov 8,8171,160
Microbe HuntersPaul de Kruif 4,4071,158
You Can’t WinJack Black 4,774723
The Mad ToyRoberto Arlt 7,358392

Apart from The Sun Also Rises, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd and The Castle, I have also read Winnie-the-Pooh and Clouds of Witness.

Other books published in 1926 that I have read and enjoyed: Seven Pillars of Wisdom, by T.E. Lawrence; Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees; The Casuarina Tree, by Somerset Maugham; and for Ulster interest, Apostate, by Forrest Reid.

None of the above features on the Publishers’ Weekly list of best-selling books of the year, which is topped by two books published in 1925: The Private Life of Helen of Troy, by John Erskine, and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, by Anita Loos.

I’m willing to admit that The Sun Also Rises is a great work of literature, and Winnie-the-Pooh has certainly demonstrated staying power, but I have had very few reading experiences like the shock I got from Agatha Christie at the end of Roger Ackroyd.

Books of 1876

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
The Adventures of Tom SawyerMark Twain1,013,29737,046
Daniel DerondaGeorge Eliot 26,8124,080
Rose in BloomLouisa May Alcott 24,1422,968
L’AssommoirÉmile Zola 19,2532,610
The Gentle SpiritFyodor Dostoevsky 28,980773
Miguel StrogoffJules Verne 10,7872,028
The Prime MinisterAnthony Trollope 3,2051,378
The Hand of EthelbertaThomas Hardy 3,746583
Doña PerfectaBenito Pérez Galdós 3,727416
HelenaMachado de Assis 3,813323

Well ahead of any other book mentioned in this post, including Hemingway and Rice, 1876’s winner is definitely Tom Sawyer, and I have to say that although I admire George Eliot for Daniel Deronda, Mark Twain is much more fun. I have not read any of the others, or, I think, any other book published in 1876. The Prime Minister sounds intriguing, The Hand of Ethelberta also sounds entertaining, and Adam Roberts has piqued my interest with an essay on L’Assommoir.

Books of 1826

There are three books published in 1826 which have shown anything resembling staying power: The Last of the Mohicans, by James Fenimore Cooper; The Last Man, by Mary Shelley; and Life of a Good-for-Nothing, by Joseph von Eichendorff. The Last of the Mohicans is far ahead of the other two on both LT and GR, but I could not get into it when I tried many years ago. The Last Man on the other hand is great.

Books of 1776

Four non-fiction works of 1776:

So that’s it for this year – plenty of food for thought.