Top Ten Tuesday: Book Titles That Describe Me

Posted April 14, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is “book titles that describe me/my life”… and I’m not sure where to start, but it sounds like a fun one. Let’s see what I can come up with!

Cover of I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf, by Grant Snider Cover of Book Lovers by Emily Henry Cover of The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde Cover of A Palace Near the Wind by Ai Jiang Cover of Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green

  1. I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf, by Grant Snider.
    To be fair, I didn’t love this book and I don’t actually judge people for what they like to read… but I do like to get an idea of a person based on what they read, if anything!
  2. Book Lovers, by Emily Henry.
    Not a favourite book, but it was fun… and the title is irresistible when trying to describe me. I’m a little worried about how much of my personality this list is implying revolves around books, but it’s not terribly wrong, and also it’s just easy to find titles of books about books.
  3. The Constant Rabbit, by Jasper Fforde.
    Admittedly I haven’t read this one, but I couldn’t resist the title; my rabbits Eclair and Biscuit are never far away, particularly Biscuit.
  4. A Palace Near the Wind, by Ai Jiang.
    One of my current reads, which I’ve been enjoying. I don’t quite live in a palace, admittedly, but I live in Yorkshire and it can be very windy here!
  5. Everything is Tuberculosis, by John Green.
    Tuberculosis has been a major interest of mine ever since I read Catching Breath (Kathryn Lougheed), and John Green’s book is an excellent update to that. And friends can attest that I am far too good at dragging TB into conversations somehow…
    In my defence, write a dissertation about something and you’ll never stop seeing it everywhere.
  6. The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books, by Martin Edwards.
    By this point, you could possibly tell that story from my own shelves, ahaha. I studied the development of crime fiction as a genre in my undergrad, and maintained an interest, collecting almost all the British Library Crime Classic reissues and various others.
  7. Solo Leveling, by Chugong.
    Okay, I’ll never be even a tenth the badass that Jinwoo Sung is, but I play video games a lot, and often solo! The only multiplayer games I usually play are co-ops like Split Fiction with my wife, or of course, the MMORPG Final Fantasy XIV… otherwise it’s mostly solo leveling… 😉
    Yeah, okay, I know, I’m not that funny.
  8. Paladin’s Hope, by T. Kingfisher.
    Speaking of Final Fantasy XIV! My main class is Paladin, which I play in high-end content, so it can hardly be left out of an autobiography of myself in book titles. I promise I don’t go berserk like Kingfisher’s paladins, though, and I don’t have the same degree of guilt complex. I try not to make playing Final Fantasy XIV my whole personality, but I spend a lot of time with my raid group and other friends from the game, so it’s a significant part of my life, all the same.
  9. The Invisible Library, by Genevieve Cogman.
    I said I wasn’t going to keep banging on about books, but I was getting stumped, and I have so many ebooks that the physical books you can see in my house are only the tip of the iceberg.
  10. To Be Taught, If Fortunate, by Becky Chambers.
    One of the most important themes of my life has been learning, and continuing to learn… nope, more than that. My family feel it’s pretty inevitable that I will return to formal education before long; the only question is when, and what. I have two degrees in English literature, a degree in biology, and a degree in infectious diseases, so it’s probably time to break off on another tangent — maybe classical studies, with Latin? But who knows. Either way, I believe I have been very fortunate to have the opportunities to learn that I have, and hope never to take it for granted.

Cover of The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books by Martin Edwards Cover of Solo Leveling vol 1 by Chugong Cover of Paladin's Hope by T. Kingfisher Cover of The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman Cover of To Be Taught, if Fortunate by Becky Chambers

Oof, that took me forever to put together; I probably put waaaaay too much time into it. Very curious what other people will choose this week!

Tags: ,

Divider

Review – Murder Offstage

Posted April 13, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Murder Offstage

Murder Offstage

by L.B. Hathaway

Genres: Crime, Historical Fiction, Mystery
Pages: 220
Series: Posie Parker Mystery #1
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Like your mysteries cozy and set during the Golden Age of Crime? This is the first book in the Posie Parker mysteries, although this novel can be enjoyed as a stand-alone story in its own right. Set in London in 1921, 'Murder Offstage' is full of intrigue and red herrings. This is a classic murder mystery which will appeal to fans of Agatha Christie and Downton Abbey.

When Posie Parker’s childhood friend is robbed of a priceless jewel and becomes a suspect in a cold-blooded murder case, budding detective Posie vows she will clear his name. Aided by her seriously gorgeous assistant Len, Posie soon realizes things are not quite as they seem, and the darkly-glamorous world of London’s theatre and glittering nightclubs prove far more dangerous than she ever could have imagined.

Just who exactly is the dangerous Lucky Lucy Gibson? And who is it she has killed in the lobby of the Ritz Hotel? And more importantly, what on earth has happened to Mr Minks, the much-loved office cat?

I must admit I don’t quite remember why I picked up L.B. Hathaway’s Murder Offstage — possibly just when in a mood for mysteries, or looking for something to fill the Phryne Fisher-shaped void — but it definitely hung around on my shelves awaiting the right moment for quite a while. Even now, I actually picked it up on a bit of a whim, wondering whether maybe it was going to be an easy way to clear out a spot on my shelf with a DNF.

I found it was more compelling than I’d feared from reading a couple of reviews. I have a high tolerance for anachronism, which is what I’d seen other people complain of, and I was quickly curious how the mystery was going to work out… something about the friendly relationship between Rufus and Posie, the way she cared about him despite him being a bit of a wreck, I think. (I was less interested in the romantic relationship between her and Len, though.)

There were several factors that were annoying — rank lack of caution on Posie’s part, for example, taking risks and being taken in easily mostly for the sake of moving the plot to a conclusion rather than because they were sensible risks that a businesswoman/detective would take if they thought about it for two seconds. And of course the obvious problem with Babe, her secretary, plus the way she reacts at the end: acting deeply hurt and betrayed, even though she’d known all along there was something off? And on the other hand, her fervent and immediate defence of Dolly, despite not really having any history to base it on.

It just feels a little unpolished, disconnected, at times. That said, I was never tempted to DNF or skim, so it does have something going for it! I probably wouldn’t read more in the series, but it was a fun distraction.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

Tags: , , , , ,

Divider

Fantasy with Friends: High or Low Fantasy

Posted April 13, 2026 by Nicky in General / 4 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

It’s Fantasy With Friends‘ weekly discussion time (prompts hosted at Pages Unbound), and this week’s prompt is about high vs low fantasy:

Do you prefer low or high fantasy? Or both?

For those who aren’t super into the genre (since I know I have a few of you around here), the archetypical “high fantasy” would be J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. It’s usually set entirely in an alternate world (though I would argue that Guy Gavriel Kay’s The Summer Tree remains pretty high fantasy despite also being a portal fantasy), and involves the typical fantasy trappings — swords and sorcery, elves, dwarves, etc. Low fantasy would cover stuff set in our own world and which feels less immediately epic in scope, like urban fantasy (though series like Ilona Andrews’ Kate Daniels books are ultimately pretty epic in scope despite the apparent “real-world” setting, it takes a while to realise just how big the scope is).

I’m honestly not sure how useful the high/low distinction is for my purposes; I guess if you draw a firm line that you only want to read secondary world fantasy (like The Lord of the Rings) then it might be alright, but even then I think it’s a poor guide to many important aspects of a book. High fantasy just covers so much. In part, I think it’s a high-level label that we’ve pretty much outgrown as a genre, with more and more subgenres to explore and narrow down what you’re interested in: consider cosy fantasy, for instance. It’s often set in wholly different worlds, like Travis Baldree’s Legends & Lattes — but the concerns are everyday, not epic, and I don’t think someone who only wants books like The Lord of the Rings would be very happy if they picked it up because it’s “high fantasy”.

And then there’s stuff like Freya Marske’s Swordcrossed, which I mentioned last week too: it’s set in a fantasy world, but there’s no magic, and the stakes are small and personal. Again, it doesn’t seem like what people are going to be looking for when they want “high fantasy”, but it also doesn’t really meet the definitions of low fantasy. There have always been exceptions… but there are labels now that explain them well, and give you a better idea of a book’s contents.

I am generally the sort of person who likes things to be more of a continuum than a set of tightly defined boxes, so it’s probably no surprise that I love both high and low fantasy, and many books that fall somewhere between. It’s not the kind of criteria I use when deciding what to read overall, though sometimes I might be more in the mood for one than the other (e.g. hankering for something with good world-building).

Tags: , ,

Divider

Review – The Hedgewitch of Foxhall

Posted April 12, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 3 Comments

Review – The Hedgewitch of Foxhall

The Hedgewitch of Foxhall

by Anna Bright

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 389
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Ffion is the last hedgewitch in Foxhall. To work her magic, she takes only what nature can spare, unlike the witches of the powerful Foxhall coven, who sacrifice whole forests to fuel their spells. But across the warring kingdoms of Wales, all magic is fading. Even the dragons have vanished.

Prince Taliesin would love nothing more than to watch magic die. But when his father charges Tal and his brother, Dafydd, with destroying King Offa’s dyke—the massive earthen wall raised by their Mercian enemies to the east, which may be the cause of magic’s disappearance—he begrudgingly seeks aid from a witch.

Because whichever prince succeeds in destroying the dyke will win the throne, and Tal is willing to do whatever it takes to become king. Even if the Foxhall coven refuses to help him. Even if he’s forced to team up with a spitfire hedgewitch who hates him almost as much as he hates her magic. And even if Dafydd proves to be a worthier rival than he anticipated…for the crown, and for Ffion’s heart.

Anna Bright’s The Hedgewitch of Foxhall caught my attention because it’s set in a historical-fantasy Wales, with Offa’s dyke presenting a huge problem because it affects magic. The main characters are Ffion, Taliesin and Dafydd, and yes… there’s a love triangle, alas.

In many ways it’s a very typical quest narrative, not very surprising, but the very Welsh setting adds some grounding to it. I mostly enjoyed that aspect, though I wasn’t always absolutely certain about the Welsh stuff. (E.g. does it make sense to ask another Welsh person, in Welsh, if they feel hiraeth, and then have to define hiraeth? Well… maybe, yeah, maybe you just hear the word and you don’t really know the full definition other than “homesickness, sort of”, so I’ll give it a pass. It did feel more like Welsh people speaking in English, though — I have absolutely asked another Welsh person if they feel hiraeth, and been asked too.) The historical grounding was probably all over the place, but I actually don’t know that much about that sort of period or Offa’s dyke, so that all got a pass from me, even though it might annoy others to no end.

There are some interesting concepts and interesting ways of handling the witchcraft, plus the various magical creatures; nothing groundbreaking, though I liked the fact that it was based on folksy songs etc. My main quibble was the constant POV-switching, and the love triangle. I just wasn’t into it and didn’t really believe in it as-given.

Warning: the pet fox Cadno dies in the first few chapters. It’s story relevant, and it’s not all it appears (trying not to spoiler), but Ffion grieves intensely, so it’s worth knowing about.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 1

Posted April 11, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 1

Solo Leveling

by Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Light Novels
Pages: 350
Series: Solo Leveling (light novel) #1
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

THE WEAKEST HUNTER OF ALL MANKIND!

E-rank hunter Jinwoo Sung has no money, no talent, and no prospects to speak of-and apparently, no luck, either! When he enters a hidden double dungeon one fateful day, he’s abandoned by his party and left to die at the hands of some of the most horrific monsters he’s ever encountered. But just before the last, fatal blow… PING! [Congratulations on becoming a Player.]

Having read the manhwa adaptation of Chugong’s Solo Leveling, I decided I wanted to give the light novel a try and just start with getting volume one. This might’ve been a mistake: I started it on Christmas morning and instantly knew I was going to want to read the whoooole series in pretty short order. Luckily, I was saved: someone bought me volumes two and three for Christmas.

As that story suggests, it’s a pretty quick read, and not that different from the manhwa if you’ve read that first. You get a little bit of extra insight into Jinwoo’s thoughts, but it’s amazing how much the manhwa manages to directly translate into that format. You get maybe a liiiittle bit more of the side characters as well in volume one.

Honestly, this first volume is probably the most I ever felt Jinwoo facing real peril, which makes sense. Once he’s figured out the system and started leveling up, he’s got the protagonist’s halo. When he’s still just an E rank hunter — the worst hunter of all mankind — then he could genuinely die.

Mostly, the fun of this series is watching Jinwoo go from zero to hero to obscenely overpowered, and enjoy the nods to typical video game systems as you go. It’s really not that deep, it’s just fun. That’s the same in both the light novel and the manhwa, but it’s fun to experience it again in another format, and actually more so than I thought it might be.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted April 11, 2026 by Nicky in General / 19 Comments

It’s the weekend again, wooo!

Books acquired this week

First up, let’s have the library books! It’s been a few weeks since I checked out any poetry, but I found myself turning to it this week, hoping for more of Mary Oliver’s work and thus inclined to click on other stuff that looked interesting.

Cover of Winter Hours by Mary Oliver Cover of A Dress of Locusts by Safa Khatib Cover of An Interesting Detail by Kimberly Campanello

I also got a new book that genuinely arrived this week — this month’s British Library Crime Classic. The author wrote the Sergeant Beef short stories, if I understand rightly, so I’m not sure if I’ll like this one; it’s not about Sergeant Beef, but still, I don’t think I enjoyed the style. Still, novels and short stories can be quite different, as can different characters by the same author! So we’ll see.

Cover of Jack on the Gallows Tree by Leo Bruce

We’ll see, anyway! And now it’s time to get back to the books I got in London. We’re now onto the Forbidden Planet section of the “report”! First up, the SF/F. I’d heard of a couple of these from other bloggers, or seen them around for ages (like Wooing the Witch Queen), but a couple were more random choices, like The Palace Near the Wind.

Cover of The Astral Library by Kate Quinn Cover of Wooing the Witch Queen by Stephanie Burgis Cover of Strange Animals by Jarod K. Anderson Cover of A Palace Near the Wind by Ai Jiang

Cover of Books and Bewitchment by Isla Jewell Cover of The Maiden and her Monster by Maddie Martinez Cover of Seasons of Glass & Iron by Amal El-Mohtar

I definitely tried to let myself just browse pretty freely and go with whatever jumped out, without looking it up too much or hesitating. Sometimes the unexpected will jump out at you that way… but honestly the selection at Forbidden Planet was pretty overwhelming and I mostly found myself gravitating to titles I recognised from somewhere, ahaha.

And now onto the danmei, the very last section to explore. Most of the danmei is technically also SF/F, but they also fit together well:

Cover of The Villain's White Halo vol 1 by Hao Da Yi Juan Wei Sheng Zhi Cover of Case File Compendium vol 1 by Rou Bao Bu Chi Rou Cover of Silent Reading vol 1 by Priest

Cover of Dinghai Fusheng Records vol 1 by Fei Tian Ye Xiang Cover of The Wife Comes First vol 1 by Lv Ye Qian He Cover of After the Disabled God of War Became My Concubine vol 1 by Liu Gou Hua

The sharp-eyed and strong of memory will remember that I’ve been hankering after The Wife Comes First and After the Disabled God of War Became My Concubine for a while, so I’m curious to get stuck into them.

If you’re curious about the indie bookshops I visited, the books I got there are in part one of my London trip STS report, while part two has the non-fiction books I found at Waterstones Piccadilly (the biggest bookshop in Europe). I definitely had myself a good time for my graduation treat, ahaha, but how often does one get a master’s degree?

(Well, for me it’s happened twice, admittedly. Shush and don’t ruin my excuse.)

Posts from this week

First up, the reviews:

And quite a few other posts!

It’s been nice to get out and about doing more discussion posts, lately!

What I’m reading

This week still involved less reading than I would’ve liked, since I didn’t settle down to it very well… but I did still have some fun reads. Let’s have a peek at what this week and what might be coming up for review on my blog (sooner or later, depending on the genre — Murder Like Clockwork’s review is already up because I haven’t read a lot of crime fiction lately!):

Cover of Murder Like Clockwork by Nicola Whyte Cover of An Interesting Detail by Kimberly Campanello Cover of Murder Offstage by L.B. Hathaway Cover of A Dress of Locusts by Safa Khatib

A very small number read for me, but oh well. Maybe this weekend? Or maybe not! Whatever’s fine, really — I don’t want to force myself.

As for this weekend, I’m not sure what I’ll read exactly, but I’d like to get further into Finn Longman’s The Wolf and His King, and I also started reading Jess Kidd’s The Murder at Gulls Nest since it’s due back at the library. Ditto There is No Antimimetics Division. So maybe those!

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, and It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? at The Book Date.

Tags: , ,

Divider

Review – Tied to You, vol 3

Posted April 10, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Tied to You, vol 3Genres: Fantasy, Manga, Romance
Pages: 308
Series: Tied to You #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Wooseo has finally found a way to remove the Ring. The catch? Doing so erases all memories related to one’s fated partner. While he loathes being a burden to Jigeon, for some reason, the thought of losing him hurts just as much…In the face of Wooseo’s uncertainty, Jigeon decides to make a gambit—by revealing he is irrevocably in love with him! But all risks come with consequences, and Jigeon’s actions have pushed his brother over the edge. No more sitting on the sidelines…Jiseok refuses to let his best friend be stolen away, even if it means dropping a truth bomb of his own!

Volume three of WHAT/Chelliace’s Tied to You keeps rattling on, with Wooseo wrestling with the idea of getting the ring removed and losing all his memories of Jigeon, and Jigeon still carefully manipulating the situation to force Wooseo to ultimately see and accept that he’s his fated partner, and nothing else compares…

And of course, even Jiseok’s part of that plan, his confused jealousy boiling up and making him rash — I would sympathise more with him and think that Wooseo probably would be better with him, if he hadn’t physically hurt Wooseo because of the rivalry between himself and his brother. That’s just not okay: it’s clear that Jigeon, too, would resort to violence — but he’s never behaved that way toward Wooseo, his desired romantic partner, while Jiseok has.

You end up kind of rooting for Jigeon, despite the manipulation and stalking. He would take care of Wooseo and make him happy, because he’s so desperate for Wooseo’s love. It’s impossible to feel totally at ease in rooting for that, though, because… well… manipulation and stalking.

I wanna be really clear that I am absolutely not recommending this as a romance, for that reason. It’s intense and fascinating, but definitely not any kind of fluffy romance, despite the soulmates concept.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

Tags: , , , , , ,

Divider

Let’s Talk Bookish: Casting in Adaptations

Posted April 10, 2026 by Nicky in General / 7 Comments

Graphic for Let's Talk Bookish, created by Rukky @ Eternity Books, Hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads

Let’s Talk Bookish is a weekly bookish meme created by Rukky @ Eternity Books and co-hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads! Every Friday they have a different topic for participants to write about and discuss, e.g. like this post.

This week’s theme is about casting in (movie?) adaptations of books:

Casting in book-to-film adaptations is always a big topic, and recently, the Wuthering Heights movie starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi has been the source of a lot of controversy. Other 2026 high-profile adaptations include Project Hail Mary, out March 20th, and the new Hunger Games movie, set to release in the fall, both for which the casting has been received more positively. What is most important to you with casting for book-to-film adaptations? Is the perfect hair color, or right height or eyes always a must, or is personality more important? When are book-accurate looks in casting most important? What are your favorite—and least favorite—book-to-film adaptations when it comes to casting?

I must admit I don’t have a lot of skin in the game (again) because I don’t really watch movies very often — nor TV, to be fair. I have surprisingly seen Knives Out and Glass Onion, because I got curious enough about the classic mystery type setups they had going on, but otherwise I’m hard pressed to name anything particularly recent that I’ve seen. I still name Pacific Rim as a recent-ish movie I’ve seen and, uh, well…

It also doesn’t help that I don’t have a visual imagination at all: I’m completely aphantasic, right on the “5” end of the apple test scale, so I don’t really imagine characters in the way described. Instead I get more of a sense of them: you know how birdwatchers get the “jizz” of a bird? Something like that, I think.

I do love the old BBC adaptations of Dorothy L. Sayers’ Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries, so let’s turn to those for an idea of what I think about casting. The main players here are Ian Carmichael (in the black-and-white era) and Edward Petherbridge (in 1987) — I don’t know of any other adaptations, and I don’t know if I want to, because between them Carmichael and Petherbridge set a pretty high bar. Neither of them is quite the right physical type, but they each manage to capture different aspects of Peter’s manner perfectly. I can see Peter right away when I look at Petherbridge, but for Carmichael it takes seeing him in motion and hearing his voice.

The same is pretty much true of the way they speak, to be fair, but reversed: Carmichael needs only speak and immediately he sounds like Peter, while for Petherbridge it’s more the combination… But really, both of them are wonderful Lord Peters, and I delight in their performances.

Ian Carmichael also voices Lord Peter in the BBC radio adaptations, and they’re really good. The BBC often hits it out of the park on radio adaptations, or they did a few decades ago: The Lord of the Rings had a glorious adaptation, and even Andy Serkis (who did a great job as Gollum) can’t quite dislodge my conviction that the radio adaptation’s Gollum is the Gollum. On the other hand, the radio adaptation voice of Aragorn strikes me as wrong every time, though I do get into it as the adaptation rolls along. When it comes to the movie, by contrast, Viggo Mortensen was instantly Aragorn to me: manner, voice, clothes, the way he held himself… Perfect.

(That said, I was disappointed by the movie version of Faramir and never really reconciled with that portrayal, particularly with the changes made to the character for the sake of screen adaptation. Something too “soft” about him, and no, I can’t explain that statement any further.)

There are also times when I’m very sceptical of casting, like casting David Tennant as Crowley and Michael Sheen as Aziraphale in the Good Omens series, but makeup, costuming and pure skill from the actors make it fit like they were perfect all along. I’ve heard the same about the adaptation of Martha Wells’ Murderbot, where Alexander Skarsgård has been able to win over people who were deeply sceptical; I’m definitely curious what I’ll think when I get round to it, if I ever do.

(NB: I’m aware of the allegations against Neil Gaiman. Good Omens was also Terry Pratchett’s — some say the majority of it was Terry Pratchett’s — and I think the TV show was also so much more than Gaiman, though I acknowledge his heavy involvement. I’m not sure if I’ll watch the remainder or rewatch the first two series, and at the moment I don’t expect to. All the same, David Tennant’s Crowley was perfect to me, and I don’t want Gaiman’s misdeeds to take that achievement away from Tennant. Still, I think making this acknowledgement is important.)

All in all, I think I can forgive a lot of infidelity to details like hair colour, eye colour, skin colour, etc, as long as the actors can capture something fundamental about the character. Some can do both, like Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn or Essie Davis as Phryne Fisher, while some can carry the day with voice and mannerisms like Ian Carmichael as Peter Wimsey.

Sorry, though, David Wenham. You just aren’t Faramir. I’m sure you’re perfectly nice, but you’re not Faramir.

Tags: ,

Divider

Review – The Shortest History of the Dinosaurs

Posted April 9, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Shortest History of the Dinosaurs

The Shortest History of the Dinosaurs

by Riley Black

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 236
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Despite their cultural influence, the grand narrative of the dinosaur story is rarely told. Most of us have heard of Stegosaurus and Tyrannosaurus, for example, but these two dinosaurs lived more than eighty million years apart--a greater span of time than the entire post-T. rex history of the planet. Furthermore, we often know even less about the environments these animals lived in--the other animals and plants inhabiting a dramatic changing Earth alongside the dinosaurs.

The Shortest History of the Dinosaurs tells the full story, a 230-million-year epic of small beginnings, spectacular golden periods, and eventual global domination--before an unthinkable asteroid event brought everything to a screeching halt, covering the major moments in evolution, extinction, and ecology. We learn that, for millions of years in the Triassic, dinosaurs were dog-sized--but slowly developing evolutionary traits like feathers and warm-bloodedness that would set them up for future success. In the Jurassic Period, these traits--and others like laying eggs and growing specialized air sacs--led to an era of rapid growth in dinosaur population and physical size. As Pangea continued to break apart, during the Cretaceous Period, dinosaurs traversed the globe, adapting to air and water--before a six-mile-wide asteroid hit Central America and brought the age of dinosaurs to a fiery end.

Using countless recent fossil discoveries, fresh understandings of genetics and evolution, and over fifty illustrations and maps, author Riley Black reveals the startling relationships dinosaurs shared with each other, the land they lived on, other animal species, and the earth as a whole.

You’d think I wouldn’t need a general history of dinosaurs — after all, I’ve read a bunch of books about dinosaurs, including highly specific ones like Spinosaur Tales (by David Hone and, unsurprisingly, about spinosaurs). But the consensus among palaeontologists changes swiftly, and in fact has changed since this was published last year… so I was eager to read Riley Black’s The Shortest History of the Dinosaurs, especially as I’ve enjoyed Black’s other books.

One part I found really interesting was the suggestion that Tyrannosaurus rex dominated its ecosystem, with T. rex individuals of different ages occupying different niches. What did I read today but an article in New Scientist saying that, well, actually we’ve probably gone back to thinking that Nanotyrannus is a different species, because we’ve found a small one that shows signs (in the bone) of being fully grown, while much smaller than a T. rex adult.

Palaeontologists will probably argue back and forth about this one for a while longer, because I was actually aware of the Nanotyrannus debate and as far as I know it’s swung between the two poles of opinions a couple of times now.

Regardless, the point is that even a general history of the dinosaurs can change quite quickly, and Black does a good job of presenting current consensus (while referencing the fact that there’s much we aren’t sure of, and that dinosaurs are actually a fast-moving area of research).

It’s very clearly presented in themed chapters, with black-and-white illustrations included, and doesn’t go too deep into technical detail, while explaining some mechanics of things like dinosaur chewing and digestion — it’s a good balance, I think.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

WWW Wednesday

Posted April 8, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

This post is being scheduled instead of published immediately, as an experiment! A while ago, Jetpack stopped sending emails when I scheduled posts, despite working fine when I manually published them. Let’s find out if that’s still the case or if they’ve fixed their bug…

Cover of Murder Like Clockwork by Nicola WhyteWhat have you recently finished reading?

Kimberly Campanello’s An Interesting Detail, a collection of prose-poems which drove me up the wall. Each one is a handful of scattered imagery linked by non-sequiturs, and I hated finding it perfectly readable and at the same time totally incomprehensible.

Before that, it was Nicola Whyte’s Murder Like Clockwork, which I found serviceable but not compelling. My review is already up here.

Cover of There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntmWhat are you currently reading?

I just started qntm’s There is No Antimemetics Division, which I requested from the library more or less on a whim and started today on even more of a whim. I find the idea mindboggling and possibly like it’s going to trigger existential dread, and I’m very curious how it plays out.

I have quite a lot of other books on the go, but the other thing I’m most actively reading is Stephanie Boonstra and Campbell Price’s Ancient Egypt in 50 Discoveries, which I got at the Petrie Museum and is scratching my itch for histories that are X in Y objects.

I also very recently started Gareth Russell’s Queen James, but I’m not far into it.

Cover of The Water Outlaws by S.L. HuangWhat will you be reading next?

Nobody knows, particularly not me. I have a bunch of books on the go already, so I’ll probably focus on some of that, like reading more of Queen James. My DoubleSpin choice for the Litsy BookSpin challenge is S.L. Huang’s The Water Outlaws, though, so perhaps that?

Tags: ,

Divider