vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Alongside lots of fiction books I read non fiction books, usually having one main one on the go alongside one or more novels. This book about the history of forensics studied through the lens of Agatha Christie stories is my latest read. And it was very enjoyable. Rating 4/5 stars. The author is the curator of a pathology museum and I believe worked for many years as a forensic technician, assisting with post-mortems.

Each chapter looks at a different aspect of forensics, and explains the context in which Agatha Christie's stories fit into, and how she depicts the techniques used in her stories. This use of her own stories is powerful, but would appeal more to someone who is very familiar with lots of her plots. The book is careful not to reveal major spoilers, but a sense of recognition would work best for the reader in these sections.

Alongside discussing forensics using Agatha's stories each chapter explains the history of the relevant aspect of forensics, discussing evolving techniques, and numerous real life cases. Many of these are very well known to the general audience (e.g. Dr Crippen), but others much less so. And all are well described, covering developments in forensics primarily up to and throughout Agatha Christie’s life.

I did skip quite a lot of the autopsy chapter, having lost my Dad relatively recently, and not least because he donated his body to medical science for anatomy students to learn from. But I hugely enjoyed what I read.

One slight disappointment for me was in the table of murder methods by story at the back of the book. This seems to just focus on Agatha's novels, not her shorter stories, of which there were so very many. So it presented a very incomplete picture. But the main section of the text is full of references to these.

However this is a slight quibble. The book could perhaps be trimmed a little for me as well, but is an effective read. To be fair I have read a lot of Agatha Christie's stories. But it would also work well for fans of TV programmes like CSI who want to know more of the real life history.

Book with an art deco style cover with a black background and objects in the foreground including a vial (of poison?) and a magnifying glass
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Checking in with another update re this. A bit ahead of the end of the month, because although I have several books well underway I won't finish any of them before April. I've just finished 2 more books since last time, and have included a cut over the earlier ones. The NHS book was good, but overly long for me, and some of the contributions seriously missed the point, and were far too self centred. It was also sad to read all the earnest thoughts about how much people appreciate the NHS (this book was written in the height of the pandemic), only for many thoughts like that, including government treatment of doctors and nurses etc. (especially in England) to plummet since. I loved the DWJ book, and read it for the book club I'm in.


    Read more... )
  1. Dear NHS: 100 Stories to Say Thank You edited by Adam Kay
  2. Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Here are the main books I'm reading at the moment, all on my Kindle. Gareth Brown's contemporary fantasy "The Book of Doors", "Murder Isn't Easy" about the forensics in Agatha Christie's stories, "50 Years of Text Games" and just started Wheel of Time book 8.

A 2x2 grid of the 4 book covers. The designs are (1) blue themed with books swirling across; (2) old style drawings of poison bottle, magnifying glass etc. surrounded by Art Deco detailing; (3) a very simple text inspired design; and (4) classic high fantasy art, with riders on horseback and banners raised.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Updating this with a couple of new additions at the end of the list.
  1. Wenceslas: A Christmas Poem by Carol Ann Duffy
  2. The Children of Hurin by JRR Tolkien
  3. The Incomplete Framley Examiner
  4. Once Upon A Tome: The Misadventures of a Rare Bookseller by Oliver Darkshire
  5. The Stardust Thief by Chelsea Abdullah
  6. The Art Thief by Michael Finkel
  7. What You Are Looking For Is In The Library by Michiko Aoyama
  8. The Ghost Cat: 12 decades, 9 lives, 1 cat by Alex Howard
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Going to start a running list of these, in case any of the titles interest others. Happy to answer questions. I'm expecting a modest list of books read this year, so this list isn't going to get gargantuan.
  1. Wenceslas: A Christmas Poem by Carol Ann Duffy
  2. The Children of Hurin by JRR Tolkien
  3. The Incomplete Framley Examiner
  4. Once Upon A Tome: The Misadventures of a Rare Bookseller by Oliver Darkshire
  5. The Stardust Thief by Chelsea Abdullah
  6. The Art Thief by Michael Finkel
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
I've just started reading The Art Thief by Michael Finkel about a particularly prolific thief of Renaissance paintings and other art works. The first theft of his that the book describes was the 1997 theft of an ivory sculpture of Adam and Eve from the Rubenshuis in Antwerp. Martin went there when we were in Antwerp for me to attend a book history conference in 2014. He was pushing me around the conference in my wheelchair, but exploring the city alone when I was having my rest days in between. And he got to Rubenshuis. And yes, he photographed that stolen item! It had been returned to the museum after the theft some years earlier. Small world.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Last year I finished 60 books. In some previous years I've finished more, sometimes less. For 2024 I'm setting myself a reading target of 25 books, though will probably smash it. But I want to focus on more longer books, albeit interspersed with and alongside shorter ones.

Long books that I plan to read include rereads of Lord of the Rings and Our Mutual Friend. But I also intend to read a couple more Wheel of Time books, which are pretty chunky, and can take some time.

I'm also intending to read more books in translation, including some long ones. Will be drawing up a list of those soon. It depends which ones I can get in Kindle format, so I can read them with an utterly gargantuan font. Due to my progressive neurological illness audiobooks haven't been a good option for me since the 1990s, but gigantic font ebooks work well for recreational reads.

And of course there will be lots of non fiction books read alongside the fiction. That is already underway, and I expect to keep that more flexible.

But yup, a year of quality reading over quantity this time.
vivdunstan: Muppet eating a computer (computer)
I'm reading Aaron A. Reed's 50 Years of Text Games book. This was based on a series of blogs, each looking at an important game for each of 50 years. But the published book expands on that content considerably. I have a hardback copy and an ebook.

I'm currently early on in the book, in the 1970s, and was just amused by some of the snippets of info from a general chapter about computer text games in that period, not just the main ones featured in the book. Here are some snapshots:
  • 1973 Lemonade Stand - 50 years old this year! This was one of the first computer games I played, in 1980 on an Apple II dad borrowed to bring home over the Christmas period.
  • 1977 Atom20 - a post apocalyptic (!) clone of The Oregon Trail. That must have been fun to play ...
  • 1977 Trek80 - a Star Trek game "with the twist that you could place an AM radio near your computer to get sound effects". Cor.
  • 1978 Empyrean Challenge - a play by mail game with 150 players and "turn results could be hundreds of pages long". I played a lot of play by mail games in the 1980s and 1990s, and even getting a turn through the letterbox that was 5 pages long could be exciting. But hundreds?! Wow.
Aaron's book is very good, somewhat US-centric in places, but still has good coverage of places and types of text games. It is currently not in print, but there is an ebook version currently available, and there will be a print on demand coming soon. And the original blogs about 50 key text games are still freely online to read.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Before my book club read for August I'm squeezing in another novel. This is alongside Wheel of Time book 7 and spread out Little Dorrit reading. Plus loads of non fiction.

The Stranger Times by C.K. McDonnell has the following publisher blurb:
There are dark forces at work in our world (and in Manchester in particular), so thank God The Stranger Times is on hand to report them . . .

A weekly newspaper dedicated to the weird and the wonderful (but mostly the weird), it is the go-to publication for the unexplained and inexplicable.

At least that's their pitch. The reality is rather less auspicious. Their editor is a drunken, foul-tempered and foul-mouthed husk of a man who thinks little of the publication he edits. His staff are a ragtag group of misfits. And as for the assistant editor . . . well, that job is a revolving door - and it has just revolved to reveal Hannah Willis, who's got problems of her own.

When tragedy strikes in her first week on the job The Stranger Times is forced to do some serious investigating. What they discover leads to a shocking realisation: some of the stories they'd previously dismissed as nonsense are in fact terrifyingly real. Soon they come face-to-face with darker forces than they could ever have imagined.
And for my book club in August The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean has the following blurb:
Out on the Yorkshire Moors lives a secret line of people for whom books are food, and who retain all of a book's content after eating it. To them, spy novels are a peppery snack; romance novels are sweet and delicious. Eating a map can help them remember destinations, and children, when they misbehave, are forced to eat dry, musty pages from dictionaries.

Devon is part of The Family, an old and reclusive clan of book eaters. Her brothers grow up feasting on stories of valor and adventure, and Devon—like all other book eater women—is raised on a carefully curated diet of fairy tales and cautionary stories.

But real life doesn't always come with happy endings, as Devon learns when her son is born with a rare and darker kind of hunger—not for books, but for human minds.
Here are the covers of the two books:

vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
A new month, time for another infographic showing the books I am mainly reading. A mix of fiction and non fiction, biography, computing and poetry.

The image shows 6 book covers, a row of 3 above another row of 3. All are vibrant and colourful. The books are Yellowface by Rebecca F Kuang, Little Dorrit (Penguin Classics edition) by Charles Dickens, There’s a Hole in My Bucket A Journey of Two Brothers by Royd Tolkien, iWoz by Steve Wozniak, Scottish Poetry 1730-1830 edited by Daniel Cook (Oxford World’s Classics), and the manga version of The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Inspired by posts elsewhere by some fellow book readers I thought it might be nice to look back on what I read this month. I probably won't manage this every month.

Here are the 10 books I finished in May:
  • Lord of Chaos (The Wheel of Time, #6) by Robert Jordan
  • Stardust by Neil Gaiman
  • Messy Roots: A Graphic Memoir of a Wuhanese American by Laura Gao
  • Doctor Who The Return of Robin Hood by Paul Magrs
  • Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief by Rick Riordain
  • Donald Duck, Duck in the Iron Mask by Disney (short comic)
  • I am Oliver the Otter by Pam Ayres (picture book)
  • The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas
  • Raw Spirit: In Search of the Perfect Dram by Iain Banks
  • Bowie on Bowie: Interviews and Encounters edited by Sean Egan (interviews collection)
It was honestly a relief to finish the first book, another long Wheel of Time one. But it's the best in the series for me so far, and really shakes things up. So looking ahead hopefully.

Stardust by Neil Gaiman was this month's book club choice for me, a lovely fairy tale book, albeit somewhat different from the movie. I have reread this several times over the years.

Messy Roots graphic novel was a recommendation from the paid TBR service I treated myself to a subscription of. It's really interesting, showing how a family adapted moving from China to the US. And then there's the spectre of Covid as well - they had come from Wuhan many years earlier. Recommended, though I think it was maybe a bit more light in places than it might be.

Paul Magrs' latest Doctor Who book is lovely, a melancholy tale of an older Robin Hood and outlaws, with a clever timey wimey plot. A little too many different character points of view in places for me, but overall it was a strong read.

Percy Jackson book 1 was a quick fun read. I'm not sure I'll read any more in the series, but this was breezy stuff. It reminded me in many ways of Neil Gaiman's American Gods, but aimed at a younger audience.

The Donald Duck comic book was a quick read in the Comixology app on my iPad. Very funny retelling of the Man in the Iron Mask.

We love watching Pam Ayres on the telly so when we chanced on a signed copy of her latest rhyming poem picture book in our local bookshop we snapped it up, even if we are way over the target age range! It's really sweet though, and educational. And gorgeous otter pictures!

The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas was a surprise. Given its very short length by his standards I didn't expect the depth and twists in store. A gripping historical novel set in late 17th century Holland at the time of Tulipmania. An absolute gem.

I'm Scottish but haven't tried too many whiskies over the years. I have my favourites, especially Balvenie Caribbean Cask. Iain Banks's book Raw Spirit is a sprawling travelogue around Scotland, going to lots of whisky distilleries with stories of history, the places and tasting notes about the drinks. I now have a very long list of whiskies I want to try! It was a bit too rambling in places, very political as well which even though I share his politics got somewhat exasperating. Probably also a bit long. But still a good read.

Alongside the Dumas book my other standout highlight of the month was the book of David Bowie interview transcripts edited by Sean Egan. I read this on my Kindle and it's very long, but a fascinating insight into his life and career. The interviews span the 1960s to the early 2000s, and seeing how things evolved for him was intriguing. I did not expect to be so gripped by this. And I now want to explore more of his back catalogue of music.
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
I’m nearly finished with the time travelling movie making scifi novel (it’s good!), so am looking ahead to what long fiction I will be reading next. Here are my main planned reads for early June 2023. Most of which are already underway. 1/ reread Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens; 2/ continue Patrick Troughton biography; 3/ continue family tale of two Tolkien brothers; 4/ continue Luther Arkwright graphic novel reread; 5/ read a rail travel book; and 6/ continue reading the large print Fall of Numenor book.

Grid of 6 book covers in 2 rows of 3. In the top row are the Dickens book with a black and white design, the Patrick Troughton book showing him as the Second Doctor playing the recorder, and two young Tolkien brothers side by side on their book cover. On the bottom row are a brightly coloured comic book cover for Luther Arkwright, a scarily hot orange looking cover to Not Cool Europe By Train in a Heatwave, and the Fall of Numenor book has a simple blue and white drawn design against a black background.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
I still have a few books on the go to finish off, but here are two more that I've just loaded onto my Kindle. Harry Harrison's sci-fi tale of Hollywood film makers filming real Vikings in the 11th century Orkney Islands. And Michael Troughton's biography of his dad. Which I have had in print for years, bought direct from Michael, but haven't been able to read much before. Now I have it on my Kindle, so should make better progress.

vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
Craving a short and fun read after the epic 1000+ page plus Wheel of Time book, and given I'm flaring neurologically, I've picked Stardust by Neil Gaiman for my next read. This is a reread for me. It's not my absolute favourite of his, but I really enjoy it. Made into a great film of course, but it was an illustrated storybook first. This also is the month's read for a book club run by a YouTuber I back on Patreon.

As well as that I’m nearly finished the graphic novel Messy Roots, am most way through Iain Banks’ whisky trip around Scotland, and am slowly reading the rather long Bowie on Bowie interview book.

vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Just finished a couple of books, so starting on a new novel, Wheel of Time book 6. Here’s a visual with it and the other two main books I’m reading at the moment: Iain Banks on a whisky road trip around Scotland, and a collection of interviews with David Bowie.

vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Here are my main current reads and expected to be for the next few weeks. I’m finishing off one novel, Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin, and shortly starting Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries for my book club. Also in pure fiction I’m reading the manga version of The Count of Monte Cristo. Which does have quite a challenge storytelling wise to condense that plot down. It’s interesting to see some of the choices they’ve made. In fictional non fiction I’m reading the large print Tolkien book The Fall of Numenor, and the Obverse Books Black Archive book about the recentish Flux series of Doctor Who stories. And finally I’m still reading and enjoying John Green’s The Anthropocene Reviewed.

A grid of 6 book covers, 3 on the top, 3 below. Tomorrow etc. has bold text against a famous Japanese style wave backdrop image. Emily Wilde’s Faeries book shows a book open and brightly coloured plants and fruits twining around the page. The manga Monte Cristo book shows a striking male figure in front of a looming castle backdrop. On the bottom row the Numenor book has a mainly black cover with what looks like the great destructive wave in blue and a tree image. The Flux Doctor Who book cover is mainly a brightly multi coloured mix of coloured flames and thread like things. And John Green’s book has a vibrant red, orange and purple cover.
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Continuing the Wheel of Time with book 5, and also reading fantasy / coffee shop mashup Legends & Lattes. For non fiction The White Mosque by Sofia Samatar, John Green’s The Anthropocene Reviewed, and Iain Banks on a whisky road trip. And continuing Loren Wiseman’s “Grognard” collection of Traveller RPG columns.

vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
I'm nearing the end of two solid 5-star reads to open the year with. Maritime archaeologist Mensun Bound's account of the discovery of the wreck of Shackleton's ship Endurance. And Rob Wilkins' biography of his boss Terry Pratchett. Both absolutely brilliantly written and total page turners. Both thoroughly recommended.



vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Slightly Foxed issue Winter 2020 (yes I have a bit of a backlog) and Kim Newman’s short book about Hammer’s Quatermass and the Pit movie.

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vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
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