Review – Ramesses the Great

Posted May 5, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Ramesses the Great

Ramesses the Great: Egypt's King of Kings

by Toby Wilkinson

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 240
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

The life, dramatic reign, and enduring legacy of the pharaoh Ramesses the Great, with lessons for the present, from internationally acclaimed Egyptologist Toby Wilkinson

Ramesses II ruled the Nile Valley and the wider Egyptian empire from 1279 to 1213 B.C., one of the longest reigns in pharaonic history. He was a cultural innovator, a relentless self-promoter, and an astute diplomat—the peace treaty signed after the Battle of Kadesh was the first in recorded history. He outbuilt every other Egyptian pharaoh, leaving behind the temples of Abu Simbel; the great hypostyle hall of Karnak; the tomb for his wife Nefertari; and his own memorial, the Ramesseum.

His reputation eclipsed that of all other pharaohs as well: he was decried in the Bible as a despot, famed in literature as Ozymandias, and lauded by early antiquarians as the Younger Memnon. His rule coincided with the peak of ancient Egypt’s power and prosperity, the New Kingdom (1539–1069 B.C.).

In this authoritative biography, Toby Wilkinson considers Ramesses’ preoccupations and preferences, uncovering the methods and motivations of a megalomaniac ruler, with lessons for our own time.

I really enjoyed Toby Wilkinson’s Ramesses the Great: I remember reading one of Wilkinson’s books before and finding that it dragged, but this really didn’t. It helps that Ramesses the Great is a larger-than-life figure, and can be made incredibly vivid through an account of his reign.

Despite reading a fair number of general histories of Egypt, I’ve never read a lot about his dynasty before, so there was a fair bit here that was actually new to me. Ramesses the Great looms large in the landscape of Egypt, both literally and figuratively thanks to his massive building works and the way he’s echoed in the stories told about Egypt and the stories Egypt has told about itself, and Wilkinson’s book makes it really clear why that is.

Ramesses II is compelling: he turned what was at best a stalemate into a stunning victory by simply selling the narrative confidently enough, made peace with the Hittites, had a truly astonishing number of children, built/restored/took credit for a ridiculous number of building projects/statues/temples, and reigned for 66 years. I loved reading about the stories he told about himself, his choices to change the art style of Egypt, the choices made about his tomb… and Wilkinson did a great job of explaining the evidence and putting together a readable narrative here as well, while making it clear what we can and can’t know. You get a sense of Ramesses II’s personality, even as Wilkinson reminds us we can’t judge that so easily based on a king’s public proclamations.

One detail I loved: the part about Khaemweset, one of Ramesses’ sons, who was essentially an Egyptologist, going round restoring monuments from older dynasties to the glory of his father (and sometimes himself).

So yeah, overall, really liked this one!

Rating: 5/5 (“loved it”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: Books I Picked Up On a Whim

Posted May 5, 2026 by Nicky in General / 12 Comments

I wasn’t feeling inspired by this week’s topic, since the only answers that leaped to mind for deceased authors I wish were still writing were Tolkien and Le Guin, and non-deceased authors… well, you never know, they might be writing something as we speak! I live in hope. I poked around a bit online trying to jog my memory, but nothing felt really authentic, in the end.

So I went and looked at old topics, and picked #294: “Ten books I picked up on a whim.” I do a lot of whim-driven buying when I go to a physical bookshop: honestly, that’s the main reason I go to bookshops: not to buy the books I know I want, but to explore what else is out there.

Here are some that I picked up on a whim and loved! I’ll count library books as well as books I bought, and I’ll link the reviews when they’re already up on my blog. In some cases they

Cover of Ramesses the Great by Toby Wilkinson Cover of Tied to You vol. 1 by WHAT and Chelliace Cover of Mr Collins in Love by Lee Welch Cover of The Correspondent by Virginia Evans Cover of A Boy Named Rose by Gaëlle Geniller

  1. Ramesses the Great, by Toby Wilkinson.
    I wasn’t actually sure if I’d like it, since I remembered finding something else by Wilkinson a bit tedious… but I’m glad I gave it the chance, because I found it totally riveting. Despite a lifelong interest in ancient Eygpt, I hadn’t dug very deep into most specific pharoahs, not even Ramesses the Great, and I ended up telling several people aaaaall sorts of things based on this book.
  2. Tied to You, by WHAT/Chelliace.
    This was a random borrow from the library via ComicsPlus, because it kept popping up when I was idly browsing for ideas for what to read, and I was curious about the concept (which is basically that every person has a “ring partner”, and if they touch them after they’re both of age, then a bond forms between them so they have to be physically together in order to sleep, and sleep wonderfully when they are together). It should not be mistaken for portraying a healthy romance because oh boy it does not, but I really enjoyed the twists and turns in getting Wooseo to eventually accept the fact that Jigeon is his ring partner for good.
  3. Mr Collins in Love, by Lee Welch.
    I am not a huge Austen fan, and I’d seen someone whose taste I trust praise it highly, so I approached this with a pretty open mind, despite the fact that it’s Mr Collins. I found it was very well done, with sympathy for a could-have-been Collins.
  4. The Correspondent, by Virginia Evans.
    I almost wasn’t expecting to like this one, because it was a random pick solely because I thought it’d be a good one to review for Postcrossing. I ended up really enjoying it, because it does a good job at giving us characterisation through letters, and drawing out some small mysteries to keep things intriguing while the main character slowly works things through. It’s not a book in which stuff happens, more of a character study.
  5. A Boy Named Rose, by Gaëlle Geniller.
    This was another random find via ComicsPlus, and I loved the gentle exploration of Rose’s love of dancing and his slow branching out into the world outside where he grew up. The blurb of the book makes it sound more dramatic than it really is.
  6. A History of England in 25 Poems, by Catherine Clarke.
    I keep banging on about this one since it’s a recent read, heh. But it really was an interesting history, selecting unexpected poems and digging into contexts I hadn’t thought of.
  7. Moon Cop, by Tom Gauld.
    I love Gauld’s comic strips, but wasn’t sure what I’d make of something longer. I hadn’t expected the melancholy tone of this one, but it worked really well, actually.
  8. Eat Me: A Natural and Unnatural History of Cannibalism, by Bill Schutt.
    I know, it doesn’t sound a very appetising subject, but nonetheless I found it really interesting, especially being introduced to alternative ideas about prion diseases and how they might spread.
  9. Church Going: A Stonemason’s Guide to the Churches of the British Isles, by Andrew Ziminski.
    Very much a whim for me here, because I’m not interested in churches or architecture per se — but I am always interested in someone enthusing about something, and that’s definitely what I got here. I did have a few critiques of the book, and honestly I don’t remember much of the actual detail, but it was soothingly fascinated in a subject that I didn’t have to agonise about at all, so I could let it wash over me, and that was at the time exactly what I wanted.
  10. Feeding the Monster: Why Horror Has a Hold On Us, by Anna Bogutskaya.
    This was a random choice from the library — especially random because I’m not that interested in horror! Especially not horror movies, which this was predominantly about. But it was pretty fascinating, all the same. I didn’t like the author’s other book nearly so much, sadly, but I’m still glad I read this one!

Cover of A History of England in 25 Poems by Catherine Clarke Cover of Mooncop by Tom Gauld Cover of Eat Me by Bill Schutt Cover of Church Going: A Stonemason's Guide to the Churches of the British Isles, by Andrew Ziminski Cover of Feeding the Monster by Anna Bogutskaya

Hope everyone’s having a good week so far!

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Fantasy With Friends: Further Reading

Posted May 4, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

A new week, and a new Fantasy with Friends discussion post! The prompts are hosted at Pages Unbound, and this week’s is about fantasies that have inspired you to do further reading:

Has reading a fantasy book ever inspired you to do further research into something else? (ex. Read a classic the book is inspired by/read a history text/read nonfiction writings by the author/research a specific topic)

Almost certainly, but I’m having trouble dragging anything to mind! Tolkien’s an obvious one for me: I actually studied Tolkien for a taught module during my MA, and we read a lot of stories which were… “sources” is the wrong word, but “inspirations” and “patterns” that Tolkien borrowed little bits from and did tribute to in creating his world. I wrote the assignment on “Northern courage” in his work, so I was reading stuff like ‘The Battle of Maldon’, the Prose and Poetic Eddas, and also a lot of the posthumous volumes that got pumped out with his notes, letters, etc. But I don’t think that quite counts here, since it was for a class!

I guess one example that fits is Vivian Shaw’s Strange Practice, in which Greta Helsing (yes, a descendent of that van Helsing) is a GP, and tends to the medical needs of London’s supernatural community. The story features several famous public domain characters, like Lord Ruthven and Varney the Vampyre. I’d read a few of the source texts before and was on nodding acquaintance with some others, but I’ve sought out a few more since plunging into this series.

Other than that, I can’t think of any right now, but maybe I’ll have to edit some in if I remember. Definitely curious to hear what fantasy novels might have inspired others to go further afield and do some extra reading!

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Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 3

Posted May 3, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 3

Solo Leveling

by Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Light Novels
Pages: 320
Series: Solo Leveling (light novel) #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

JINWOO SUNG, OFFICIALLY S RANK

Leveling up in C-rank dungeons has become next to impossible for Jinwoo. But an E-rank hunter attempting anything higher? Well, that would raise some serious red flags…so the time has come for a reevaluation. And when the results are back, it’s official-Jinwoo is the tenth S-rank hunter from South Korea! An entirely new world, brimming with powerful magic beasts and elite hunters, is now open to him. But before he can immerse himself in it, there’s something absolutely vital he has to do…

Volume three of Chugong’s Solo Leveling covers Jinwoo’s re-evaluation, his time with the mining squad (and meeting with Haein Cha), and some more of his time in the Demons’ Tower. His time with Esil is still pretty funny (dude, she probably has a crush on you!) and I continue to love watching him just get more and more overpowered.

I feel like some things are maybe better handled here, in that I feel like we’ve been hearing about Jeju Island for longer in the light novel than we did in the manhwa, so it just makes sense that it’s the next thing on the horizon.

There’s nothing groundbreaking and new here: if you’re getting tired of Jinwoo’s overpowered adventures, then you probably want to stop here. If you’re enjoying that, and it’s just how Jinwoo will win and not can Jinwoo win, then this continues to be super fun.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Fate’s Bane

Posted May 3, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Fate’s Bane

Fate's Bane

by C.L. Clark

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 166
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

The clans of the fens enjoy a tenuous peace, and it is all thanks to Agnir, ward and hostage. For as long as she can remember she has lived among the enemy, learning their ways, growing strong alongside their children. When a burgeoning love for the chieftain’s daughter lures them both to a hidden spring, a magic awakens in them that could bind the clans under one banner at last—or destroy any hope of peace. By working their intentions into leather, they can weave misfortune for their enemies… just like the Fate’s Bane that haunts the legends of the clans.

Ambitions grow in their fathers’ hearts, grudges threaten a return to violence, and greedy enemies wait outside the borders, seeking a foothold to claim the fens for themselves. And though their Makings may save their families, the legend that gave them this power always exacts its price.

I’m still digesting what I think about C.L. Clark’s Fate’s Bane as I write. I knew going in that it was a sort of vaguely ancient British setting, with a tragic sapphic love story, and a peek ahead had told me about the multiple endings… but even having finished it, I find myself not entirely sure how that sits with me.

The romance itself didn’t entirely work for me, because it wasn’t a relationship between equals, even though one party pretended it was: Agnir is barely more than a slave, even if they want to pretend she’s a “ward” of Hadhnri’s father. She wears a collar, constantly, and though she’s protected a little bit more than the others of her clan who were taken at the same time she was, they are slaves and she is definitely not free. She’s, at best, a hostage.

Hadhnri makes choices the way she does because she is free, loved, and secure. If there are punishments, they will fall heavily on Agnir and lightly on Hadhnri — but she blames Agnir for not being brave, true and loyal, despite the fact that Hadhnri’s clan have treated her like a prisoner her whole life, and constrained how they taught her and what she’s been permitted to do.

As a result, and given that Hadhnri’s brother kills Agnir’s brother and then Hadhnri gets cross at Agnir about the situation, it was hard to entirely root for the romance.

There are fun aspects of the book stylistically, and the oral storytelling mode it’s calling on (especially at the end) fits the ambiguous ending. I liked some of the details, and the close descriptions of the physical draw between the two leads. But… still. The romance didn’t entirely sit right with me: it’s not that it’s not realistic, because I think it was, it’s just that I felt I was being asked for a lot more faith that Hadhnri had earned, and I wasn’t sure the narrative knew that Hadhnri was being unreasonable. That makes some sense since it comes from Agnir’s eyes, but still, it just… it didn’t have to be quite so unequal and still ask faith from me.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted May 2, 2026 by Nicky in General / 26 Comments

Oof, that was a busy week! I’ve been making up for it so far this weekend by lazing around: I don’t usually wait so late in the day to compose my weekend post. So without further ado…

Books acquired this week

I didn’t do much shopping while I was in London, since it was a flying visit, but while I was waiting for my train home in the evening, I did pop into Hatchard’s in St Pancras International. I actually had some credit for free books on my Waterstones card, and of course you can use that at Hatchard’s too.

In other words, it was inevitable! I got a few new non-fiction books:

Cover of Dressing the Queen by Kate Strasdin Cover of A History of the World in 50 Pieces by Tom Service Cover of The Black Death by Thomas Asbridge

I’ve been looking at the first two for a bit, the first because of my interest in fashion history, and the second because I love that kind of popular history. As far as The Black Death goes… well, given I was in London to receive my MSc in Infectious Diseases, it seemed only right, since the book was right there and so appropriate.

I did pick up a couple of fiction books I’ve been curious about, as well:

Cover of The Murder at World's End by Ross Montgomery Cover of Thistlemarsh by Moorea Corrigan

I’ve been curious about The Murder at World’s End since I saw it in the shop and then only a couple of days later saw Mogsy’s (very enthusiastic) review; I dove into that one almost right away, and I’m enjoying it so far. Thistlemarsh is one I’ve mostly seen on people’s wishlists, and haven’t seen many reviews (if any?) for yet.

Posts from this week

I didn’t post quite as much this week as usual, since there was no Let’s Talk Bookish prompt, and I was too busy on a couple of days. Still, there’s plenty to round up even so! Reviews first:

As ever, some of these reviews have been waiting in the wings for a while, since I have a huge backlog of reviews written and not yet posted, and I try to mix things up rather than dump sixteen reviews of a manga series in one go, ahaha.

And of course, there were other posts this week:

Really, I think I kept busy enough around here, ahaha.

What I’m reading

It’s been a mixed week, reading-wise; I read quite a bit last weekend, and then only 20 minutes or so per day for the last couple of days. As ever, I have a sneak peek at the books I’ve finished this week which I plan to review:

Cover of Queer Georgians, by Anthony Delaney Cover of How Flowers Made Our World by David George Haskell Cover of The Meteorite Hunters by Joshua Howgego Cover of William Tyndale and the English Language, by David Crystal

Lots of non-fiction, as you see! I’m hoping to settle down to some fiction this weekend and finish S.L. Huang’s The Water Outlaws, and I’ve already found myself quite drawn to The Murder at World’s End, so I’ll probably focus on those two. I do want to read more of Kate Strasdin’s Dressing the Queen… and I’ve vowed to finish Gareth Russell’s Queen James as well.

Quite the stack I have before me — oh nooo, what shall I do, etc.

Hope everyone’s got a fun and/or relaxing weekend planned!

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.

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April Reading Wrap-Up

Posted May 2, 2026 by Nicky in General / 10 Comments

A swallow with a white underside, red throat, dark head and brown plumage, with wings wide sweeping over calm waters

Here we go! May already, and the weather here’s been beautiful — you could almost mistake it for summer. But before I really get started on May, let’s wrap up April…

April in general:

The beginning of the month was fairly quiet, but towards the end I got into a bit of a rush, with some busy moments with work stuff and of course the second part of my graduation. My graduation from the University of London was the fanciest ceremony I’ve had, and I had to bow to the deputy vice chancellor as I crossed the stage, which was a new one for me!

Either way, I am now definitely officially an MSc, woooo. Given my track record (now BA Hons, MA, BSc Hons, MSc) you might be asking when I’m going to study next and what it might be, and the answer is that I really don’t know. I’m sure there’ll be something, but I don’t know yet what it will be.

Alongside lots of work stuff, I have still been gaming a-plenty. I’ve barely lifted the lid on the new patch content in Final Fantasy XIV, but my group did complete the third fight of this raid tier this month, which is nice! We’re not the fastest group, but we’ve been faster this tier than last time, and have been making good progress.

As for my casual gaming, April was the month I got into hidden object games, and oh boy, I did not expect to get so hooked. Special shoutouts to the Find All series, Devcats’ games like DevcatsA Castle Full of Cats and An Arcade Full of Cats (the latter has a bunch of levels free!), Lost and Found Co. (which is the game that started me on this track), and the adorable Hidden Capybaras with Orange games, with the Spooky Edition being free. I did also get sucked into the world of PowerWash Simulator

In other words, I’ve been busy with plenty of things other than books. Still, there has been a fair bit of reading too!

Reading stats:

StoryGraph reading stats for April 2026: 23 books, 5,078 pages, average rating of 2.91. My top rated reads included Joshua Howgego's The Meteorite Hunters, Anthony Delaney's Queer Georgians, and Oliver K. Langmead's The Killing of a Chestnut Tree. The number of pages I read per day varied through the month, with a big dip on the 24th and a bit of a peak on the 25th-28th. More reading stats for April 2026: I read 52% fiction, 48% non-fiction, and 83% of my books were under 300 pages long, with 17% between 300 and 500 pages. I read 74% in print and 26% in digital editions, and my top genres were poetry (5), mystery (5), fantasy (4), history (4) and art (3).

Total books read: 23
Total pages read: 5,078
Rereads: 1
ARCs: 2
Series finished/up to date: 0
Books owned pre-2026: 2
Books owned from 2026:
11
Borrowed books: 10

Fiction: 10
Non-fiction:
7
Poetry:
6
Comics, manga, manhwa, etc: 2

Somewhat fewer books again than March, unfortunately. I’d love to see the numbers go back up again, as getting plenty of reading time tends to be linked with better moods for me. Still, I’m not going to kick myself for not “achieving”: I read for fun, darn it.

Progress on reading goals:

Overall total books read: 116/400 (17 books behind)
Overall total pages read: 27,914/100,000 (5,237 pages behind)
Books read from backlog: 25/100
Books owned since 2026 and not yet started: 20/20

As expected with my “low” (relative to my usual) book/page counts this month, I’m slipping on the annual goals. This often happens, and I usually read more intensively in the latter months of the year, for some reason.

Blogging stats:

Views: 21.8k
Visitors: 20.7k
Likes: 289
Comments: 351
Reviews: 26
Other posts: 22

It looks like a huge step up from last month, but I’d bet a significant amount of it is bots, so I’m not sure how reasonable it is to quote these numbers!

Most viewed posts:

Not sure what’s going on with that StS post, but probably bots, let’s be real.

My own favourite posts:

Stuff I loved from elsewhere:

And that, finally, is a wrap — let’s put April to bed.

And given the time (midnight), let’s put me to bed too. Happy weekend!

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Review – Delicious in Dungeon, vol 1

Posted May 1, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Delicious in Dungeon, vol 1

Delicious in Dungeon

by Ryoko Kui

Genres: Fantasy, Manga
Pages: 191
Series: Delicious in Dungeon #1
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

When young adventurer Laios and his company are attacked and soundly thrashed by a dragon deep in a dungeon, the party loses all its money and provisions... and a member! They're eager to go back and save her, but there is just one problem: If they set out with no food or coin to speak of, they're sure to starve on the way! But Laios comes up with a brilliant idea: "Let's eat the monsters!" Slimes, basilisks, and even dragons... none are safe from the appetites of these dungeon-crawling gourmands!

I didn’t really know much about Ryoko Kui’s Delicious in Dungeon going in, only that it featured a team of broke adventurers who need to learn to cook monsters in order to help them progress in a dungeon. I didn’t know about the whole “because a dragon has eaten the main character’s sister” part, which… to be fair… is not a major part of the story because they don’t seem to feel much urgency about it at all.

The pacing feels weird, as each chapter is essentially just a little episode in “what to cook next”. There are some fun touches, like the nutrition balance cards after the various meals, and the ingenuity of how to cook some stuff, and I really enjoyed the almost scientific interest Laios has in various creatures, figuring out how they work.

Overall, though, I felt a lack of character development (the most was Marcille, but it was mostly “whiny elf girl whines and then eats the food anyway”) and… direction? So I’m not sure I’ll read more. The lack of pace would probably have come across better if Laios’ sister wasn’t, you know, being digested. I know that they expect to just resurrect her but… yeah. Still.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – Do You Really Only Want a Meal? vol 2

Posted April 30, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Do You Really Only Want a Meal? vol 2

Do You Really Want Only A Meal?

by Yasu Tadano

Genres: Manga, Romance
Pages: 164
Series: Do You Really Want Only A Meal? #2
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Now happily dating, 27-year-old Masamune Hanzawa takes his boyfriend, 19-year-old Natsuki, on a birthday trip, but he unfortunately spends the whole time worrying he hasn’t done enough. When they run into Natsuki’s mom at the train station, she thanks Masamune for taking care of her husband and son. Inspired, they decide to come out to Natsuki’s parents about their relationship. But in a world where same-sex relationships face societal resistance, how will Natsuki’s family react? As love meets uncertainty, Masamune and Natsuki must navigate uncharted waters together.

Volume two of Yasu Tadano’s Do You Really Only Want a Meal? is really pure fluff. There are two potential sources of conflict: firstly, Masamune trying overly hard to find ways to please Natsuki (actually against his wishes), and secondly, the two of them telling Natsuki’s parents they’re dating. Between the age gap and the fact that they’re gay, that does give them some pause.

Aaaand in practice all conflict quickly fizzles out! It’s just cute and fluffy, with Natsuki’s parents surprised but supportive, and Masamune being a pretty perfect boyfriend.

There is also a fun bit where Masamune practises cooking and makes food for Natsuki for once, and also where they clearly go a bit further than making out (unclear if they have sex, but probably; it fades to black).

But really, no conflict here, just fluff. My only negative comment would be sometimes the transitions between scenes were poorly or not-at-all signposted. Why have they suddenly changed location?! Ohhh, okay, time skip.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted April 29, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Cover of The Meteorite Hunters by Joshua HowgegoWhat have you recently finished reading?

The last thing I finished was Joseph Howgego’s The Meteorite Hunters, which was pretty good. I liked it more than Helen Gordon’s The Meteorites, even though at times they were covering the same thing, I think because Howgego stuck to a more popular-science framework while Gordon was a bit more focused on cultural stuff at times.

Before that, I finished Anthony Delaney’s Queer Georgians, which had fewer new-to-me stories that I’d anticipated, actually (though I’m not saying there was nothing new to me, and though I knew of the ladies of Llangollen, I didn’t know about their lives in any detail before they arrived in Llangollen). I thought it was pretty good, though it’s not a pet period/topic of mine, so hard to really judge.

Cover of Dressing the Queen: Two Hundred Years of Makers and Monarchy by Kate StrasdinWhat are you currently reading?

I started Kate Strasdin’s Dressing the Queen on the train back from London yesterday, having picked it up in St Pancras, and got a chunk of the way in. It’s not about any given queen per se, but about the clothes and textile items provided for royalty over the last 200 years or so, and who made them, a bit about how they were made, etc. It’s highlighting fairly ordinary people at times, and I’m finding it fascinating.

Other than that, I’m slowly inching my way through Gareth Russell’s Queen James, which is less focused on the romantic partners of James than I had guessed from the subtitle, blurb, etc. I believe there are some more solidly understood lovers coming up from the chronological point I’ve got to, though.

And finally, I’m deep into S.L. Huang’s The Water Outlaws, and curious where it’s going exactly.

Cover of William Tyndale and the English Language, by David CrystalWhat will you read next?

I’m honestly going to try to focus on books I’ve started already. More of Cecilia Edwards’ An Ancient Witch’s Guide to Modern Dating, for one, and I think I’m not that far from finishing (or DNFing) David Crystal’s William Tyndale and the English Language, which is just… talking to a reader who isn’t me, and I think has made most of the points that are interesting to me already — the rest seems to be detail. But we’ll see, I’ll give it time next, is the main thing.

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