Review – The Book of Were-Wolves

Posted November 27, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Book of Were-Wolves

The Book of Were-Wolves: Were-Wolf History and Folklore

by Sabine Baring-Gould

Genres: Crime, History, Non-fiction
Pages: 142
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

First published in 1865, Sabine Baring-Gould’s "The Book of Were-Wolves" is the first serious academic study and one of the finest ever done on the subject of lycanthropy and werewolf lore.
With the shocking histories of 10 famous cases, this classic blends science, superstition, and fiction to tell the full story of the were-wolves among us.

Not relegating the were-wolf just to a secular and sceptical study, nor simply to spiritual banter, Baring-Gould manages to compress an enormous span of historical material into his work; a work which is no doubt of value to the academic and those involved with the occult at the same time.

Sabine Baring-Gould’s The Book of Were-Wolves was a bit of a random choice from the Serial Reader catalogue, solely because it was kinda apropos for spoopy season. Baring-Gould was an antiquarian and collector of folk lore, and this book is a collection of folklore about lycanthropy, along with some of his musings about where such stories may come from.

He dug into a bunch of texts for this, and I found his discussion of shape-changing (not always into wolves) in Norse mythology pretty interesting — I know the texts, but hadn’t really looked at them from that point of view before.

However, he also theorises about what gives rise to talk of lycanthropy, blaming mental illness, and starts discussing real-life cases of horrific murder, etc, etc. That bit gets a bit long and to my mind irrelevant, and doesn’t really have any conclusions.

Still, kinda interesting!

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – The House Dress

Posted November 27, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The House Dress

The House Dress: A Story of Eroticism and Fashion

by Elda Danese

Genres: Fashion, History, Non-fiction
Pages: 150
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

The idea of the house dress is closely related to the concept of housework and domesticity. At the same time, it is distinguished by not being a uniform, thanks in particular to the decorations of the fabric. Starting in the late 1940s, a whole series of movies contributed to its image through a gallery of remarkable female characters, the latest of which is Pedro Almodovar’s film Volver, with a female lead who is equipped with a wardrobe full of beautifully ornamented house dresses. After taking into account its distinctive and expressive features, author Elda Danese traces the circumstances that led to the success and the worldwide use of the house dress over a period spanning from the 1920s to the present.

Elda Danese’s The House Dress is a pretty dry and academic discussion of the evolution, use and meaning of the house dress, digging into a bit of the history of it, the words used for it, and how it’s been used in cinema as well.

It’s not a subject I know a lot about; a bit from the various fashion history books I’ve read, and a bit from the Great British Sewing Bee (at least, definitely last season’s tribute to Diane von Fürstenberg, but I’m pretty sure I remember other wrap dress/house dress challenges), so this did fill in some gaps, but it was also probably a bit too scholarly for me — where fashion history is concerned, I know very little, enjoy reading about it, and for the most part let the knowledge go again, ahaha.

So overall probably not one for the casual reader, though it does include a lot of reference images!

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – Jumping Jenny

Posted November 26, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Jumping Jenny

Jumping Jenny

by Anthony Berkeley

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 240
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

At a costume party with the dubious theme of "famous murderers and their victims," the know-it-all amateur criminologist Roger Sheringham is settled in for an evening of beer, small talk, and analyzing his companions. One guest in particular has caught his attention for her theatrics, and his theory that she might have several enemies among the partygoers proves true when she is found hanging from the "decorative" gallows on the roof terrace.

Noticing a key detail that could implicate a friend in the crime, Sheringham decides to meddle with the scene and unwittingly casts himself into jeopardy as the uncommonly thorough police investigation circles closer and closer to the truth.

Anthony Berkeley’s Jumping Jenny shows both his playfulness with the expectations of the genre and his tendency toward misogyny, making it an interesting read that’s also pretty darn frustrating. The man had a problem with women, and a fetish about spanking them to “fix” them, and this wasn’t quite as obtrusive as in some of his books, but did flit in and out of the story.

It doesn’t help that I don’t like Berkeley’s “detective”, Roger Sheringham, at the best of times — and here he’s suspecting everyone of murder except the right person, and trying to shield everyone from looking like murderers, while getting everything absolutely wrong and making everything worse. The structure amuses for a while, but it starts to really get frustrating.

In the end, “interesting but not enjoyable as a whole” would be my verdict, even without Berkeley’s misogyny.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted November 26, 2025 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Cover of One Night in Hartswood by Emma DennyWhat have you recently finished reading?

One Night in Hartswood, by Emma Denny. It was… okay. There was nothing in it that I outright bounced off, other than the fairly genre-typical lack of communication/lying about identity, but I didn’t super click with it either. Sometimes that kind of predictability is comforting, but usually something else (like characters I adore) compensates for it to pull me in, and that didn’t seem to happen here for me.

Cover of Swordcrossed by Freya MarskeWhat are you currently reading?

I’m in the midst of two books: Freya Marske’s Swordcrossed, and T. Kingfisher’s Paladin’s Faith. I haven’t totally gotten into the former yet, though there’s nothing so far to dislike beyond a worry that Luca’s lies are going to fuck things over in a way that I find both predictable and annoying.

As far as Paladin’s Faith goes, Kingfisher’s usual wit makes this fun, but I’m not sure about the match-up of Shane and Marguerite, or indeed about spending much time with this particular flavour of self-hating guilty paladin. All Kingfisher’s paladins seem to run basically the same software, and that can get frustrating.

Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation vol 4 by MXTXWhat will you read next?

Volume four of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, pretty certainly. I was very tempted to start it already, but I’m trying to focus on finishing up my Book Spin Bingo reads first — especially since I have only two left to finish (the books I’m currently reading), so I’m really close to a blackout that isn’t super last minute, for once!

Anyway, I don’t adore MDZS as much as many seem to, but I’m having fun, and I kinda want to strike while the iron is hot after finishing volume three on Monday. But we’ll see!

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Review – Paladin’s Hope

Posted November 25, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – Paladin’s Hope

Paladin's Hope

by T. Kingfisher

Genres: Fantasy, Romance
Pages: 254
Series: The Saint of Steel #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Piper is a lich-doctor, a physician who works among the dead, determining causes of death for the city guard's investigations. It's a peaceful, if solitary, profession... until the day when he's called to the river to examine the latest in a series of mysterious bodies, mangled by some unknown force.

Galen is a paladin of a dead god, lost to holiness and no longer entirely sane. He has long since given up on any hope of love. But when the two men and a brave gnole constable are drawn into the maze of the mysterious killer, it's Galen's job to protect Piper from the traps that await them. He's just not sure if he can protect Piper from the most dangerous threat of all...

I absolutely sped through Paladin’s Hope, perhaps because it’s fairly self-contained and feels tighter than the previous books (with a lower word-count, too). It’s a romance for Galen and Piper, who’ve both appeared in the story before, and while there’s a samey-ness to the brooding and suffering nobility of Kingfisher’s paladins, overall it was still cute and effective (and honestly I found Galen’s worries about it among the most realistic, compared to Istvhan’s and Stephen’s).

I really enjoyed the monster-of-the-week nature of this book, somehow: Piper and Galen help out a gnole, Earstripe, in trying to get to the bottom of a bunch of dead bodies that have some kind of undefinable sameness about them. In so doing, they get themselves into a trap, a labyrinth that they have to work their way out of by handling what is basically an obstacle course — and of course the close proximity stirs up the chemistry between Piper and Galen, and the situation stirs up Galen’s nightmares…

Earstripe is a great third for their merry band; we get quite a bit of time with gnoles in this one, which for people who liked The Wonder Engine should be a draw (unless you’re a monster and find them annoying or something). Piper’s scientific fascination with all kinds of things is lovely, and particularly his interest in gnole anatomy and gnole culture.

As ever, Kingfisher’s storytelling is fun and her ideas fascinating. I wasn’t very happy about that epilogue, though, just because… how could you end there?! This big mystery that’s hovered around each book, and that’s where you end this one!? Is there going to be more about this?!

Yes, I just used up my entire quota of question marks and exclamation marks for the day.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Solo Leveling, vol 8

Posted November 25, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling, vol 8

Solo Leveling

by Dubu, Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Manga
Pages: 304
Series: Solo Leveling #8
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Sweeping the ants on Jeju Island put Jinwoo on the map. The top guilds in Korea are all clamoring to recruit Jinwoo—but why join one when he can establish his own?

Volume eight of the Solo Leveling manhwa positively sped by, with lots of action scenes and less politicking than some of the other volumes. I loved that even in a dungeon, Jinwoo was immediately ready to return to his sister and help her, even though he can’t let the people he’s working with down either.

I’d love to see a bit more of his sister and his mother now, but it’s also clear that hunting isn’t something Jinwoo’s going to give up, and that the primary focus remains how strong he is. His minions are ridiculously powerful at this stage, and I find myself surprisingly 100% behind it. It might not sound fun to have little at stake because Jinwoo’s always gonna beat everything, but it becomes entertaining just to watch his constant ascent.

Also… poor Haein Cha. He’s so oblivious, so confused about her feelings. Yeesh.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Seeing Stars

Posted November 24, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Seeing Stars

Seeing Stars

by Simon Armitage

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 74
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

A thrilling new collection from the hugely acclaimed British poet Simon Armitage. With its vivid array of dramatic monologues, allegories, and tall tales, this absurdist, unreal exploration of modern society brings us a chorus of unique and unforgettable voices.

All are welcome at this twilit, visionary carnival: the man whose wife drapes a border-curtain across the middle of the marital home; the black bear with a dark secret; the woman who oversees giant snowballs in the freezer. "My girlfriend won me in a sealed auction but wouldn't / tell me how much she bid," begins one speaker; "I hadn't meant to go grave robbing with Richard Dawkins / but he can be very persuasive," another tells us. The storyteller behind this human tapestry has about him a sly undercover idealism: he shares with many of his characters a stargazing capacity for belief, or for being, at the very least, entirely "genuine in his disbelief." In these startling poems, with their unique cartoon-strip energy and air of misrule, Armitage creates world after world, peculiar and always particular, where the only certainty is the unexpected.

The poems in Simon Armitage’s Seeing Stars are prose-poems, which I’d forgotten; I liked this more than the other collection of his work I read recently, though I can’t say I was a huge fan even so — it’s just that I found this one a bit less insular, I guess? Less rooted to a particular place, and thus more accessible.

There were a couple of pieces that I quite liked, and they’re all pretty inventive and vivid, but I’m not sure it left a huge impression on me, all the same. It’s funny how ambivalent I am about Armitage’s poetry when I love his translation work on Sir Gawain and the Green Knight so much… but there you have it.

I’m still sure that somewhere there was at least one of his poems that I really liked, so the search continues — but only when the library has copies.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside

Posted November 24, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside

Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside: Treasure and Ghosts in the London Clay

by Victoria Shepherd

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 400
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

June 1912. A pair of workmen deposit a heavy ball of clay in the antiques shop of George Fabian Lawrence, or ‘Stony Jack’ as he's better known. As Lawrence picks through the mud, a speck of gold catches his eye. A pearl earring tumbles into his hand, then another. A Burmese ruby follows; then Colombian emeralds, lapis lazuli from Afghanistan and turquoise from Iran; tankards; watches; topaz; amazonite.

Stony Jack has discovered the greatest single cache of Elizabethan treasure.

Diving into London’s bustling, sometimes lawless, antiques trade at the turn of the century, Victoria Shepherd provides a compelling portrait of the city at the height of empire. A thrilling ride through Edwardian London, from the marble halls of the British Museum to the East End's maze of tenements and alleyways, Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside oversees the transformation of the city into a modern metropolis.

Victoria Shepherd’s Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside digs into the story of the Cheapside Hoard, a cache of jewellery and gems from the 16th-17th century found during building work in 1912. “Stony Jack” was the navvies’ name for G.F. Lawrence, an antiquarian-cum-pawnshop owner who did work for various museums and spent most of his life hanging around construction sites hoping to swoop on interesting finds (including but not limited to jewellery). Shepherd traces the fate of the hoard, tries to figure out to whom it belonged, and discusses the lives of various people who were involved with it in some way.

There are a few problems with it, fascinating as I find that. The first is that Shepherd never met a digression or a wild supposition that she didn’t love. Everything is “maybe Queen Mary was in a car accident somewhere near Stony Jack’s shop because she wanted to go look at it”. And maybe not?! This isn’t fact, unless there’s some shred of evidence other than geographical closeness. There’s loads about Howard Carter, who had nothing to do with the hoard itself, beyond knowing Lawrence. And yet for all that, she chooses not to dig into the sordid details of the paedophilia that one of the major players was involved in, explicitly eliding it to focus on her narrative, and allowing you to forget the man was total scum who abused children.

She also commits astonishing errors of fact in at least one field I know something about, Egyptology. Here’s one of her (very characteristic) run-on sentences, which contains so many errors it’s difficult to know where to start:

Now the world would know about the later kings of Egypt of the Eighteenth Dynasty, and Tutankhamun specifically, who, with his father, had reverted to the worship of one deity, Amun, the sun god, ending Egypt’s long-standing polytheism.

Akhenaten, who was probably (but not certainly) Tutankhamun’s father, worshipped the Aten, very much not Amun. The clue is in his name. Although his court at Amarna converted to monotheism, some no doubt more for political reasons than religious, the rest of Egypt didn’t instantly drop polytheism. This was not a “reversion”, either: Egypt hadn’t been monotheistic previously. You can’t revert to something you’ve never been.

Tutankhamun then later reverted to the worship of Amun, against his father rather than with him, and Amarna was abandoned. Polytheism in Egypt didn’t end: at best, it took a very, very short pause. Tutankhamun probably worshipped the Aten with his family when he was young, but he definitely didn’t “revert to the worship of one deity” with his father.

I unpack all that to give you the idea of how wildly bad Shepherd’s very basic scholarship is, so that you can take the book with appropriate heapings of salt on everything else. It’s just wrong in so many ways. And sure, maybe she’s better on her own ground, but the facts of the Amarna Period in Egypt are so easy to discover that her ability to do basic fact checking seems suspect.

It’s a mildly entertaining read, but I fear that vast chunks of it are absolute fiction, even if it’s plausible fiction, and Shepherd’s scholarship is untrustworthy based on the aspects of it I can fact-check. It gets two stars because I did find it interesting enough to finish, but I can’t in good conscience give it more when it’s so very, very bad.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers

Posted November 23, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers

Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers

by Jesse Q. Sutanto

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 338
Series: Vera Wong #1
Rating: one-star
Synopsis:

A lonely shopkeeper takes it upon herself to solve a murder in the most peculiar way in this captivating mystery by Jesse Q. Sutanto, bestselling author of Dial A for Aunties.

Vera Wong is a lonely little old lady--ah, lady of a certain age--who lives above her forgotten tea shop in the middle of San Francisco's Chinatown. Despite living alone, Vera is not needy, oh no. She likes nothing more than sipping on a good cup of Wulong and doing some healthy detective work on the Internet about what her Gen-Z son is up to.

Then one morning, Vera trudges downstairs to find a curious thing--a dead man in the middle of her tea shop. In his outstretched hand, a flash drive. Vera doesn't know what comes over her, but after calling the cops like any good citizen would, she sort of . . . swipes the flash drive from the body and tucks it safely into the pocket of her apron. Why? Because Vera is sure she would do a better job than the police possibly could, because nobody sniffs out a wrongdoing quite like a suspicious Chinese mother with time on her hands. Vera knows the killer will be back for the flash drive; all she has to do is watch the increasing number of customers at her shop and figure out which one among them is the killer.

What Vera does not expect is to form friendships with her customers and start to care for each and every one of them. As a protective mother hen, will she end up having to give one of her newfound chicks to the police?

I haven’t read anything by Jesse Sutanto before, but Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers sounded like fun, and several people I follow were really enthused about it. It is wittily written, with a fun found-family dynamic, but I did find that it leaned very heavily into stereotypes, and it wasn’t always clear whether Vera was misunderstanding things because she’s “old” (she isn’t that old, but she’s written like she’s eighty) or because she’s Chinese. It is subverted at times, but she matched up so well to what I know about stereotypes of older Chinese women that I was kind of put off, even though I think it’s done affectionately (and I know that it’ll be viewed with amused recognition from some readers).

I think that could’ve been used really well to make people underestimate her, but I don’t think that really happened — and her meddling genuinely caused massive problems, and could’ve ruined at least one person’s life (and possibly more). It’s not that cute when you look at it that way. I found it honestly a bit cringe, at times.

I did also figure out who the murderer was just from the shape of the story, not from internal clues (apart from, I guess, one). The ending felt… a bit too easily earned, and I didn’t enjoy Vera’s manipulations. So overall I guess we’ll have to chalk this one up to “not for me”.

Rating: 1/5 (“didn’t like it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted November 22, 2025 by Nicky in General / 16 Comments

Wooo, weekend! This one feels much-needed.

Books acquired this week

Just one this week! I’ve been waiting for this book for a bit, so hurrah for its arrival:

Cover of The Beauty's Blade by Feng Ren Zuo Shi

I need to read it soon because I’m considering it as a Christmas gift for someone, so I might get started very soon.

Reviews from this week

I’ve continued posting extra reviews from the backlog of (ready-written) reviews I have to post, catching myself up a bit on the backlog. So a roundup definitely seems like a good idea! As ever, click the links to read the full review.

Reminder: I read most of these months ago, my ratings here don’t indicate whether I had a good or bad reading week!

What I’m reading

I’ve had a pretty slow reading week! I had quite a few books in progress at once, but I didn’t finish a lot, since I wasn’t really in the mood (in part because my attention got swallowed by playing the game Dispatch). Ah well! Here are the books I did finish and intend to review on the blog:

Cover of Church Going: A Stonemason's Guide to the Churches of the British Isles, by Andrew Ziminski Cover of Death in High Heels by Christianna Brand Cover of Finding My Elegy by Ursula Le Guin

I’m not sure what I’ll be reading this weekend, to be honest. I have several books on the go, so I’d like to finish some of them! First target: probably As If By Magic, a collection of classic crime stories. But we’ll see how it goes.

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, and the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz.

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