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january/february 2024 books…
Two Years Indoors (TeamSP): This is a book which tracks the
Covid-related government actions, restrictions and decisions over a two-year
period (January 2020-February 2022). Rather like the Blurb books I produced at
the time (March 2020-March 2021), this book provides a fascinating and stark
reminder of what we all went through. Not exactly bedtime reading, but hey!
The Forester’s Daughter (Claire
Keegan): Keegan is my
new favourite author! Her novella “Small Things Like These” was one of my
favourite books of 2023 and this short-story is the second book of hers I’ve
read this year. It tells of an Irish farmer-cum-forester (Victor) living in the
heart of the Wicklow countryside… with his wife (Martha), ‘three teenagers, the
milking and the mortgage’. The marriage followed a year of persistent courting…
but it’s an unhappy marriage. One day, Victor stumbles across a gun dog, which
he brings home and gives to his youngest daughter for her twelfth birthday.
Martha is fearful/apprehensive… “The evening is fine. In the sky a few early
stars are shining of their own accord. She watches the dog licking the bowl
clean. This dog will break her daughters heart, she sure of it”. Keegan is a
simply wonderful, mesmerising story-teller and this is a rather wonderful,
poignant tale.
Politics, But Better (Tatton Spiller): This is the third Spiller book I’ve
read this year. The cover claims it as “an A-Z guide to creating a more hopeful
future” (my goodness, how we need some hopeful pointers these days!). But, for
me, this book really didn’t do much to make me hopeful. Yes, Spiller talked a
fair amount of sense (but, frankly, so I do I quite a lot of the time!), but it
was hardly ground-breaking stuff and, inevitably perhaps, there were huge areas
that he didn’t cover. I found it all somewhat disappointing (and, frankly, a
bit boring!).
On Photography (Susan Sontag): This book, first published in 1977, is
our latest Bloke’s Books selection. It takes the form of seven essays – with
LOTS of references to lots of people I’d never heard of and lots of photographs
that I had no knowledge of (not all that surprising!). For me, the key and
obvious criticism about the book is that it didn’t contain a SINGLE photograph!!
Quite, quite ridiculous. Sontag was clearly a gifted academic and, no doubt the
likes of John Berger would disagree with me(!!), but I’m afraid I felt that it
read a bit like a verbose student might write in order to impress their
examiners – clogged full with quotations and references (but much somewhat out
of context and not particularly interesting).
I thought
the most noteworthy thing that arose from reading the book was that, because it
was written before digital photography, the internet and the like, it
absolutely highlighted how VERY different things had become in a matter of the
last 50 years – the manipulation of images, photoshop, smartphones, edited/cropped
images, fake images/AI etc. I love photography but I’m afraid I found this book
quite boring.
Driving Over Lemons (Chris Stewart): I first read this book 14 years’ ago (it
was first published in 1999). It
tells the story of the author and his wife setting up home in a remote,
dilapidated, peasant farm in the mountains of Andalucia, Spain – virtually on a
whim, with no farming experience and little in the way of practical know-how. The
scenery is clearly stunning; making a living is pretty tough, but the local
characters are hilarious and endearing (even though some are a bit scary!);
there’s an amazing sense of community – with people prepared to help each other.
It’s funny, optimistic, beautifully-written and has a refreshing innocence. I
have absolutely no desire to emulate him, but I found it absolutely enchanting…
and I loved it just as much (if not more?) the second time around.
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