6 July books

Non-fiction
The Making of Doctor Who, by Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks (2007)
Self-Portrait, by Anneke Wills (2015)
Naked, by Anneke Wills (2015)

Non-genre
Housekeeping, by Marilynne Robinson (2013)

Script
Le Mariage de Figaro, by Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais (2018)

SF
The Prisoner, by Thomas M. Disch (2006)
The Mind of Mr Soames, by Charles Eric Maine (2007)
Farthing, by Jo Walton (2008)
Frankenstein Unbound, by Brian Aldiss (2016)
De piraten van de Zilveren Kattenklauw, by “Geronimo Stilton” (2017)
“Bears Discover Fire”, by Terry Bisson (2023)
“The Hemingway Hoax”, by Joe Haldeman (2023)
Titan Blue, by M.B. Fox (2023)

Doctor Who
Hunter’s Moon, by Paul Finch (2013)
Something Borrowed, by Richelle Mead (2013)

Comics
Afspraak in Nieuwpoort, by Ivan Petrus Adriaenssens (2013)
De dag waarop de bus zonder haar vertrok, by Béka, Marko, and Maëla Cosson (2020)
De dag waarop ze haar vlucht nam, by Béka, Marko, and Maëla Cosson (2020)

The Best
Farthing, by Jo Walton, is a great what-if-Hitler-won alternate history; an alternate 1948, where Britain made peace with Germany in 1941 after Rudolf Hess’s mission. It is a crime novel that turns into a political parable. I couldn’t put it down. (Review; get it here)

Honourable mentions
Housekeeping, by Marilynne Robinson, another of her very humane tales of middle America. (Review; get it here)
The Making of Doctor Who (first edition), by Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks, was the book whose second edition pushed a much younger me into fandom. (Review; get it here, at a price)

The one you haven’t heard of
Self-portrait, a charming and (I think) honest autobiography by Who actress Anneke Wills, bringing to life the Swinging Sixties. (Review; get it here)

The ones to avoid
Titan Blue was one of the least impressive books I looked at for the Clarke Award, real Nutty Nuggets stuff where the first female character to speak does so on page 48, and again on page 60. (Review; get it here)
Also to mention Doctor Who novel Hunter’s Moon (review; get it here), and mid-20th century British SF novel The Mind of Mr Soames (review; get it here) which were both rather poor.

Fear Death By Water, by Emily Cook

Second paragraph of third chapter:

Thankfully, her bedroom was on the third floor of Longstone Lighthouse. Flooding had been an unfortunately frequent occurrence in her downstairs bedroom at their old lighthouse on Brownsman Island. The windows often failed to withstand storms, meaning large waves would cascade through the broken frames and shattered glass. On one occasion, when she was a young girl, Grace came close to drowning as the room filled with seawater and forced the door shut. The memory of it still sent shivers down her spine with every subsequent storm that passed.

The first original Fifteenth Doctor novel, by Emily Cook, who organised the memorable Twitter watchalongs during lockdown in 2020. Set between the two Fifteenth Doctor seasons, it’s a straightforward aliens-intervene-in-celebrity-history story, the celebrity being lighthouse heroine Grace Darling (apparently a relative of Cook’s; Cook writes herself into the book as well) and the aliens turning out to have some complexity. Gorgeous characterisation of Ncuti’s Doctor, not massively original plot. You can get it here.

5 July books

Non-fiction
The Medieval Cookbook
, by Maggie Black (2007)
Why I am not a Christian, and other essays on religion and related subjects, by Bertrand Russell (2008)
Hope-In-The-Mist, by Michael Swanwick (2010)
The Bloody Sunday Report, Volume II (2010)
Carrying the Fire, by Michael Collins (2021)
Face the Raven, by Sarah Groenewegen (2022)
Franco-Irish Relations, 1500-1610: Politics, Migration and Trade, by Mary Ann Lyons (2023)

Non-genre
Mating, by Norman Rush (2015)
The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, by Nicholas Meyer ((2015)

Speculative fiction
Collected Short Stories, by E.M. Forster (2008)
Dune, by Frank Herbert (2017)
Moominvalley in November, by Tove Jansson (2018)
If Found Return to Hell, by Em X. Liu (2024)
The Death I Gave Him, by Em X. Liu (2024)

Doctor Who, etc
Turlough and the Earthlink Dilemma, by Tony Attwood (2009)
Loving the Alien, by Mike Tucker and Robert Perry (2017)
Doctor Who Annual 2020 (2020)

The Best
There are a lot of good books today, but the standout winner is Carrying the Fire, the memoir of astronaut Michael Collins, which was my book of the year for 2021. (Get it here.)

Honorable mentions
Dune, of course. (Get it here.)
Forster’s Collected Short Stories – you may be surprised that I list it under “Speculative fiction”, but ten of the twelve stories have fantasy elements. (Get it here.)
Loving the Alien concludes a nice set of Doctor Who novels by Tucker and Perry. (Get them here, here, here, here and here.)
Why I am not a Christian, and other essays is rather humane, and I agree with it more now than I did then. (Get it here.)

The one you haven’t heard of
Even though it was a Hugo finalist for Best Related Work that year, Hope-In-The-Mist, Michael Swanwick’s biography of Hope Mirrlees and explanation of her fantastic story Lud-in-the-Mist, doesn’t seem to have scored on the book ownership sites. It’s great though. (Get it here.)

The ones to avoid
The 2020 Doctor Who Annual is disappointingly lazy stuff. (Get it here.)
Also unimpressed by Mating and The Seven Per Cent Solution. (Get them here and here.)

Ireland in the Renaissance, 1540-1660, ed. Thomas Herron and Michael Potterton

Second paragraph of third chapter (‘The name of the country I have forgotten’ – remembering and dismembering in Sir Henry Sidney’s Irish Memoir (1583), by Willy Maley) – this is a long one!

In recent years, with the advent of the new historicism, local and topographical readings of early modern Ireland have been supplanted by more theoretically sophisticated work on mapping.⁵ This refinement of the relationship between literary culture and geographical understanding has been accompanied br a questioning of the extent to which accurate depiction of place was an essential prerequisite for conquest and colonization.⁶ Maps have gaps, just like texts, and their silences may be as eloquent as their inclusions.⁷ Perhaps the most famous mapping moment, the most remarkable unfolding of a chart in Renaissance literature outside of King Lear, is Spenser’s View of the Present State of Ireland (1596), when Eudoxus interrupts Irenius to say:

I see now all your men bestowed, but what places would you set their garrison that they might rise out most conveniently to service? and though perhaps I am ignorant of the places, yet I will take the mappe of Ireland before me, and lay it before me, and make mine eyes (in the meane time) my schoole-masters, to guide my understanding to judge of your plot.⁸

⁵ R.B. Gottfried’s ‘Irish geography in Spenser’s View‘, English Literary History, 6 (1939), 114-37, is an example of the earlier tradition. The recent criticism includes Bruce Avery, ‘Mapping the Irish Other: Spenser’s A view of the present state of Ireland, English Literary History, 57:2 (1990), 263-79; David Baker’s ‘Off the map: charting uncertainty in Renaissance Ireland’ in Brendan Bradshaw, Andrew Hadfield & Willy Maley (eds), Representing Ireland: literature and the origins of conflict, 1534-1660 (Cambridge, 1993), 76-92; Bernhard Klein’s ‘English cartographers and the mapping of Ireland in the early modern period’, Journal for the Study of British Cultures, 2:2 (1995), 115-39; Julia Lupton’s ‘Mapping mutability: or, Spenser’s Irish plot’ in Bradshaw et al. (eds), Representing Ireland, 93-115; and Joanne Woolway Grenfell, ‘Significant spaces in Edmund Spenser’s View of the present state of Ireland,’ Early Modern Literary Studies, 4:2, Special Issue 3 (September 1998), 6:1-21 URL:http://purl.oclc.org/ emis/04-2/woolsign.htm.
⁶ Peter Barber is among those who have questioned the obsession with cartographic evidence in reading the culture of the early modern period See ‘Was Elizabeth interested in maps – and did it matter?”, TRHS, 14 (2004), 185-98
⁷ J.B. Harley has argued along these lines in ‘Silences and secrecy: the hidden agenda of cartography in early modern Europe’, Imago Mundi, 40 (1988), 57-76. I am grateful to Thomas Herron for this reference. While I have some sympathy for Harley’s position, and find his use of Foucault persuasive, I am also partial to Foucault’s distinction between the ‘repressive hypothesis’ and an ‘incitement to discourse’. See ‘We “other” Elizabethans’, the introduction to Willy Maley, Salvaging Spenser: colonialism, culture and identity (Basingstoke, 1997), 1-10. I come closer to Harley in my ‘Forms of discrimination in Spenser’s A view of the state of Ireland (1596; 1633): from dialogue to silence’ in Willy Maley, Nation, state and empire in English Renaissance literature: Shakespeare to Milton (Basingstoke, 2003), pp 63-91. Cartography in a colonial context carries many dangers. Sir John Davies, writing to the privy council on 28 August 1609, reported the fate of a mapmaker in Ulster, where ‘the enhabitants tooke of his head, by cause they wouid not have their cuntrey discovered’. Cited in Brendan Bradshaw, Andrew Hadfield & Willy Maley (eds), Representing Ireland; literature and the origins of conflict, 1534-1660 (Cambridge, 1993), 13.
⁸ Andrew Hadfield & Willy Maley (eds), Edmund Spenser, A view of the state of Ireland (1633): from the first printed edition (Oxford & Malden, 1997), p. 96. All subsequent references are to this edition by page number in the text.

I’m still hoping to get around to my project on Irish history in the Tudor period at some point, and I will really not complain if that aspiration sometimes leads me to read brilliant books such as this.

There are sixteen substantial essays here, with an introduction by co-editor Herron, and none of them is a dud, which is really unusual for any book with separately commissioned pieces by that many authors. All of them address the proposition that there are many interesting things to say about Ireland and the Renaissance, two words that are not often used in the same sentence.

Eight of the chapters are about learning and literature (including one about the Counter-Reformation). Topics covered include the teacher Peter White (who I suspect may have been a distant relative of my family), Sir Henry Sidney of course, and the contemporary literary treatment of the glamorous Thomas Stukley.

Six chapters then look at artefacts, mostly architecture – the front cover features Sir Walter Ralegh’s place in County Cork, which still survives as a private residence! – with a bit of art as well, including Bartlett’s maps of the Nine Years War. The standout chapter for me was on the bridge at Athlone constructed by Sir Henry Sidney and demolished in 1844, or rather on the sculptures and inscriptions that adorned it.

Two final chapters examine the personal accounts of two aristocratic women who unsuccessfully defended their castles in 1641, and the celebrations in Dublin of the restoration of Charles II twenty years later. (Your regular reminder that the first recorded Indian immigrant to Ireland was burned out of his home by Irish nationalists.)

One last comment – this is a particularly heavy book, with lovely plates and illustrations, well produced from Four Courts Press. It will last for the ages. A grim comparison with the previous book I finished, Not So Quiet… by Helen Zenna Smith.

You can get it here.

This was the non-fiction book that had lingered longest unread on my shelves. Next on that list is The Making of Martin Luther, by Richard Rex.

4 July books

Non-fiction
Virgins, Weeders and Queens, by Twigs Way (2018)
A Handful of Earth, A Handful of Sky: The World of Octavia E. Butler, by Lynelle George (2021)
The Pandorica Opens / The Big Bang, by Philip Bates (2023)

Scripts
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, by J. K. Rowling, John Tiffany and Jack Thorne (2017)

Poetry
Beowulf, translated by Maria Dahvana Headley (2021)

Speculative fiction
Deep Dive, by Ron Walters (2023)

Doctor Who, etc
The Price of Paradise, by Colin Brake (2009)
The Shakespeare Notebooks, by Goss, Morris, Richards, Richards & Sweet (2014)
Fear of the Dark, by Trevor Baxendale (2024)

Comics
Pussey!, by Daniel Clowes (2007)

Not as many as usual today. I will trim the Honorable Mentions, but I’ll also say that all three of the Doctor Who books are rather good (you can get them here, here and here)

The Best
Beowulf, translated by Maria Dahvana Headley, won the Hugo for Best Related Work that year; I didn’t vote for it, but it’s a great new take on an old story. (Get it here.)

The one you haven’t heard of
My old friend Twigs Way is a historian of gardening, and while I am not a gardener myself, Virgins, Weeders and Queens is a great historical miscellany. (Get it here, republished as A History of Women in the Garden.)

The one to avoid
Deep Dive was one of the Clarke submissions that year which failed to gel with me. (Get it here.)

Ship of Fools, by Dave Stone

Second paragraph of third chapter:

This arrangement, however, was strictly for the hoi polloi. If one were rich enough, one could use the docking facilities at the hub of the Mons Venturi wheel for private shuttle craft. Benny hauled herself through the airlock of one such of these, reflecting that all of this seemed to be a needlessly expensive method of transferring her back to the point from which she’d started, albeit several thousands of kilometres above it.

Next in the sequence of Bernice Summerfield novels, this was an interesting paired reading with Freya Marske’s A Restless Truth because it’s also an sfnal murder/crime mystery on a ship; a spaceship this time, with Bernice Summerfield pitted against the assembled wiles of the galaxy’s best / worst detectives to try and solve the identity of the mysterious thief known as the Cat’s Paw. (Who was prefigured in the previous three novels, though I didn’t notice.)

It’s generally funny and witty, and a good parody of the mystery genre with also some decent characterisation of Benny. As one reviewer puts it, Stone is “operating in a league entirely his own, even if nobody – himself included, one suspects – is quite certain exactly what sport he’s actually supposed to be playing.” Could have done without the digs at autism though, which really bring the book down a couple of points for me.

You can get it here.

3 July books

Non-fiction
No-Nonsense Guide to Global Media, by Peter Steven (2022)

Non-genre
Dead Souls, by Ian Rankin (2010)
Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison (2011)
The English Patient, by Michael Ondaatje (2021)

Speculative fiction
The Holy Machine by Chris Beckett (2004)
The Book of the New Sun (four books), by Gene Wolfe (2005)
The Hidden War, by Michael Armstrong (2016)
The Area X trilogy (three books), by Jeff VanderMeer (2017)
Politically Correct Bedtime Stories, by James Finn Garner (2018)
Mickey⁷ by Edward Ashton (2023)
Linghun, by Ai Jiang (2024)

Comics
De Apenkermis, by Willy Vandersteen (2014)
Amoris van Amoras, by “Willy Vandersteen” [Paul Geerts] (2014)
Het Aruba-dossier, by “Willy Vandersteen” [Paul Geerts] (2014)

A slight change of format today.

The Best
Dead Souls is one of the better of the generally excellent Inspector Rebus novels. (Review; get it here)

Honorable mentions
Linghun, by Ai Jiang (review; get it here)
Mickey⁷ by Edward Ashton, now filmed as Mickey 17 (review; get it here)
The Holy Machine by Chris Beckett (my review on Infinity Plus; get it here)

Books that I rather bounced off though most other people thought they were great
The Book of the New Sun (four books), by Gene Wolfe (review; get it here and here)
The Area X trilogy (then three books, now four), by Jeff VanderMeer (review; get it here)
The English Patient, by Michael Ondaatje (review of film and book; get it here)

The ones to avoid
No-Nonsense Guide to Global Media, by Peter Steven – out of date and ranty. (Review; get it here)
The Hidden War, by Michael Armstrong – I didn’t last fifty pages. (Review; get it here)

Wednesday reading (late)

Forgot about this last night!

Current
Fractures, by Robbie Morrison et al
Beautiful Star, by Yukio Mishima
The Coming Wave: AI, Power and Our Future, by Mustafa Suleyman

Last books finished
The Green Man’s Quarry, by Juliet E. McKenna
Spent, by Alison Bechdel
The Gallant Edith Bratt: J.R.R. Tolkien’s Inspiration, by Nancy Bunting and Seamus Hamill-Keays
The Wren, The Wren, by Anne Enright
The Making of Martin Luther, by Richard Rex
F**k Work, Let’s Play: Do What You Love and Get Paid for It, by John Williams

Next books
Down, by Lawrence Miles
The Revenant Express, by George Mann
The Iliad, by Homer, tr. Emily Wilson

Not So Quiet…, by Helen Zenna Smith

Second paragraph of third chapter:

The stench that comes out as we open the doors each morning nearly knocks us down. Pools of stale vomit from the poor wretches we have carried the night before, corners the sitters have turned into temporary lavatories for all purposes, blood and mud and vermin and the stale stench of stinking trench feet and gangrenous wounds. Poor souls, they cannot help it. No one blames them. Half the time they are unconscious of what they are doing, wracked with pain and jolted about on the rough roads, for, try as we may—and the cases all agree that women drivers are ten times more thoughtful than the men drivers—we cannot altogether evade the snow-covered stones and potholes.

Powerful novel about the experiences of a woman ambulance driver on the front during the First World War, by Evadne Price, Australian-born writer and playwright, who in the last part of her career was a writer of astrology columns for magazines (more fiction, I guess). She had not actually been a V.A.D. driver herself, but drew heavily from a friend’s diary. It was commissioned as a satirical riposte to All Quiet on the Western Front, but ended up as something very different.

The key thing about the book is the visceral description of misery, trauma and death on the battlefield – and I am struggling to remember reading any other portrayal of trench warfare that is quite so explicit about the daily horror of it all. Most accounts dwell on the awfulness of death, without giving much attention to the awfulness of life in that situation.

But tied in with this is a constant reflection on class and gender. The narrator is an upper class woman, and class divisions do not completely dissolve on the battlefield. There is a memorably psychopathic supervisor. The relatives at home have no understanding of what is being done in their name.

And there is plenty of sex as well, though much less explicit than the body horror of the trenches. The narrator has a couple of flings. Her fiancé is grievously injured and cannot have children. There is a particularly memorable passage where the narrator lies to her rich aunt to get money for her sister’s abortion.

My edition has a 50-page afterword by Jane Marcus, who puts the book in context with other writing about the war by both women and men, and mentions a few other figures that I have bumped into in my explorations, notably Mary Borden, who later ran the WW2 hospital founded by my grandmother’s aunt and F.T. Jesse, who my grandmother met in 1926. And the whole story is interesting context for my great-great-aunt’s efforts. But even without that personal element, it is gripping. You can get it here.

My edition has a striking cover, a portrait of a V.A.D. driver by Gilbert Rogers. Unfortunately it does not seem a very robust publication, and after a few days of carrying it around in my bag, the pages and binding began to warp. I see that Virago have also done an edition, which may be longer lasting (but won’t have the Jane Marcus afterword).

2 July books

Non-fiction
Saki: A Life of Hector Hugh Munro, with six short stories never before collected, by A. J. Langguth (2004)
Vicious Circles and Infinity: An Anthology of Paradoxes, by Patrick Hughes and George Brecht (2007)
Manufacture and Uses of Alloy Steels, by Henry D. Hibbard (2011)
Legacy: A story of racism and the Northern Ireland Troubles, by Jayne Olorunda (2014)
Europe in the Sixteenth Century, by H.G. Koenigsberger and George L. Mosse (2017)
The Eleventh Hour, by Jon Arnold (2022)

Speculative fiction
Camouflage, by Joe Haldeman (2006)
I Am Not A Serial Killer, by Dan Wells (2011)
Roger Zelazny’s The Dawn of Amber: Book 1, by John Gregory Betancourt (2021)

Doctor Who, etc
Doctor Who Files 1: The Doctor, by Jacqueline Rayner with a story by Stephen Cole (2009)
Doctor Who Files 2: Rose, by Jacqueline Rayner (2009)
Doctor Who Files 3: The Slitheen, by Jacqueline Rayner (2009)
Doctor Who Files 4: The Sycorax, by Jacqueline Rayner with a story by Stephen Cole (2009)

The Best
Jayne Olorunda’s autobiography of growing up in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, before and after her Nigerian father was killed by an IRA bomb, is essential reading. (Review; get it here)

Honorable mentions
A.J. Langguth’s biography of Saki has a lot of fascinating material. (Review; get it here)
Joe Haldeman’s Camouflage takes the veteran author in some surprising directions. (Review; get it here)

The one you haven’t heard of
Jon Arnold’s Black Archive on The Eleventh Hour teases out a lot more about the Eleventh Doctor’s first story. (Review; get it here)

The one you can skip
I only read H.D. Hibbard’s pamphlet on alloy steel because he was my great-grandfather. It was already six years out of date when it was published in 1919. (Review; get it here)

The Dalek Invasion of Winter

Another in my sequence of First Doctor audios which I got back in January, this one dating from September 2018. This is really rather good. It’s a look at a society which has done a deal with the Daleks – or rather whose rulers have done a deal, at the expense of the ordinary citizens. The narrative of the Doctor and friends (here Vicki and Stephen) leading a rebellion against oppression is an old one (indeed at one point Vicki notes that she’s done this before), but the contrasting performances of Robert Daws as the evil collaborator Majorian, and Sara Powell (ex-War of the Sontarans), Shvorne Marks and Matthew Jacobs Morgan as the exploited populace is just tremendous; plus of course Nick Briggs as the Daleks, and Peter Purves and Maureen O’Brien doing both their own characters and Hartnell’s Doctor when necessary. I generally enjoy Big Finish audios (and I whine like anything when I don’t) but this is a particular high point.

The author is David K. Barnes, who also wrote the brilliant First Doctor / Second Doctor mashup Daughter of the Gods and one of the creepier Ninth Doctor audios. That’s three hits out of three for me, and I’ll look out for his work in future. Directed by the excellent Lisa Bowerman who rarely misses the mark.

You can get it here.

The next in this sequence is An Ideal World, with the same classic actors, but I’m going to divert to a short story before I get there.

1 July books

Just as an experiment, I’m collating all the reviews I have blogged on this particular date over the years, on my usual end-of-month, end-of-year system: grouped by category, and then with recommendations and disrecommendations. I’ve written a week of these in advance, and we’ll see how it goes from there.

Non-fiction
Nomadland, by Jessica Bruder (2023)

Non-genre
Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck (2009)
The History of Tom Jones, by Henry Fielding (2012)
Death in Venice, by Thomas Mann (2014)

Speculative Fiction
Foundation, by Isaac Asimov (2006)
Foundation and Empire, by Isaac Asimov
(2006)
Second Foundation, by Isaac Asimov
(2006)
Something Rotten, by Jasper Fforde (2007)
Children of the Atom, by Wilmar H. Shiras (2008)
The Humans, by Matt Haig (2017)
The Happier Dead, by Ivo Stourton (2022)
Queen of the States, by Josephine Saxton (2022)

Doctor Who, etc
Torchwood: The Sin Eaters, by Brian Minchin (2009)
The Brilliant Book 2011 (2011)
The Fall of Yquatine, by Nick Walters (2012)
Code of the Krillitane, by Justin Richards (2012)
Joyride, by Guy Adams (2017)
The Stone House, by A.K. Benedict (2017)
What She Does next Will Astound You, by James Goss (2017)
Ruby Red, by Georgia Cook (2024)

Comics
Keys to the Kingdom (Locke & Key Vol 4), by Joe Hill (2012)

The Best
Nothing else on the list will quite manage to top John Steinbeck’s gruelling Of Mice and Men. (Review; get it here)

Honorable Mentions
Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century, by Jessica Bruder, is the disturbing anthropological study on which the Oscar-winning film was based. (Review of book and film; get it here)
Asimov’s Foundation trilogy, for all its flaws, is a bedrock of sf. (Review; get it here)
The Brilliant Book 2011 is a Doctor Who annual-type book which features the one and only Doctor Who story by Brian Aldiss, who was also probably the oldest person ever to write anything for Who. (Review; get it here, at a price)

The one you haven’t heard of
What She Does Next Will Astound You, by James Goss, is the best of the spinoff novels from the all-too-short-lived Class. (Review of all three Class books; get it here)

The one to avoid
I was unimpressed by The Humans, by Matt Haig. (Review; get it here)