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october-november 2025 books…
Brutal Bristol I+II (Tom Benjamin): I bought these illustrated books at the
excellent recent Brutal Bristol’ exhibition. As the title suggests, they focus
on Bristol’s Brutalist buildings (note: Wikipedia describes Brutalism thus: “a
style that emerged in the 1950s, characterized by a focus on raw, unfinished
materials like concrete, block-like forms, and simple, geometric shapes” –
although these books seem to have adopted a slightly wider definition). Public
housing projects, car parks and churches predominate (and the quality varies);
people clearly either love or hate them. Clifton Cathedral is the city’s
undoubted star (in my eyes, anyway). The second volume includes a Brutal
Bristol Walk Map (which is useful). The books provide a fascinating reminder of
the city’s ‘brutal’ architectural heritage. My only slight frustration (and
perhaps unsurprising, given that the books have been produced using details
from a number of contributors) is the inconsistency of presentation, information
and references… but, hey!
Where I Was From (Joan Didion): I love Didion’s writing (she died in
2021, aged 87) and have read a number of her books. Here (book first published
in 2003), she examines her life, work and heritage/family history. Lots of
interesting insights – especially about the growth and prosperity (and the
poverty) of California… what the railway; the industry (McDonnell Douglas
aviation etc); huge ranches (eg. 88,000 acres)… as well as incidental matters
such as California having the highest rate of commitment for insanity than any
other state in the nation (and some of the ridiculous reasons given for people
being sent to asylums (eg. a woman who had begun “to act silly, lost interest
in all things which interest women, could no longer crochet correctly as
formerly, takes no interest in anything at present”!). But, overall, not one of
my favourite Didion books (sometimes US history just doesn’t appeal!).
The Proof Of My Innocence (Jonathan
Coe): I’ve become a
great admirer of Coe’s books (I think this is the fifth book of his I’ve
consumed)… and I read this one on Moira’s recommendation (she was absolutely
right!). It’s a very clever, entertaining, complex, multi-layered, satirical
whodunit-cum-political novel set during Liz Truss’s premiership (you remember
her?). Somewhat typical of Coe, the novel is something of study of
the-way-we-live-now underpinned by, in my case, a love of nostalgia. It starts
in the present day (2022-24) and relates to the murder of an investigative
journalist at a right-wing conference held in a crumbling stately home – with
various links to former students and lecturers of a Cambridge College back in
the 1980s. One of these former students has been investigating a radical think
tank that’s been scheming to push the British government in an ever more
extreme direction (including selling off the NHS). Like I said, it’s
complicated (no spoilers!)… There are unexplained disappearances and a murder
(of an editor with a dull-but-respectable history magazine and a larger
commitment to his truth-telling political blog)… and, in due course, despite
the efforts of a somewhat eccentric detective, it’s left to the daughter and
adopted daughter of two former Cambridge students to try to solve the
mysteries. I thought it was quite, quite brilliant.
The Garden Party (Katherine Mansfield):
Picked up this book (first
published in 1922) of 15 short stories at the Tyntesfield second-hand
bookstore. Mansfield was born in New Zealand in 1888. She came to London to be
educated; returned to Wellington, but couldn’t settle down and left again for
Europe in 1908 (she died of tuberculosis in 1923). The stories explore themes
of social class, identity, and the intricacies of human relationships, set
against the backdrop of the changing world of the time. Some of the stories
relate to affluent families and their interactions with the working-class
individuals around them. Fascinating, subtle, sometimes funny and frequently
poignant (without being compelling!).
On Reflection (Richard Holloway): I find Holloway a fascinating and wise
writer and decided to use this book (a series of essays ‘Looking For Life’s
Meaning’) in connection with my early reflection time. As you are probably
aware, Holloway is the former Bishop of Edinburgh; he resigned in 2000 and is
now regarded (as described in Wikipedia) as “one of the most outspoken and
controversial figures in the church, having taken an agnostic worldview”. I
have to say that his views on religion rather mirror those of my view (although
I could never express them in his articulate way): “… my agnosticism is not a
weak, vacillating neutrality, it is a commitment to staying in a place of
passionate and curious uncertainty”. As
ever, Holloway’s intellect makes me feel somewhat inadequate at times(!)… but I
found his wise words incredibly helpful and thought-provoking.
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