Review – Beneath Our Feet

Posted August 21, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Beneath Our Feet

Beneath Our Feet

by Michael Lewis, Ian Richardson

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

Britain has a rich past, with incredible archaeology. Every day, new discoveries transform our understanding of its history. Most are made not by professional archaeologists, but by ordinary members of the public. Some are chance finds; others are recovered by the thousands of fieldwalkers, mudlarks, and metal detectorists who scour Britain's countryside and waterways looking for artifacts and coins.

Beneath Our Feet is a celebration of this growing public involvement in archaeology, and of the groundbreaking work of the Portable Antiquities Scheme managed by the British Museum in England and Amgueddfa Cymru in Wales. Its mission is collaboration with public finders, encouraging them to report their discoveries so they can be recorded on a national database and shared with archaeologists, historians, and everyone with an interest in the past buried beneath our feet.

From the 3,500-year-old Ringlemere Cup to the Anglo-Saxon Staffordshire Hoard, a heart pendant connected to Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, and a jar of American gold coins buried by a Jewish refugee fleeing the Nazis, these are the stories of more than fifty astonishing treasures, the people who found them, and how they are reshaping British history.

Beneath Our Feet is by Michael Lewis and Ian Richardson, but it covers the finds of many ordinary people — not archaeologists, but metal detectorists, fieldwalkers, mudlarks, and people who just chanced across their finds. In the UK there’s a system to get such things declared and recorded in order that museums can acquire them for display and study, which is great, and here the authors show off some of these items.

It’s a fully illustrated book with colourful, non-glossy pages, some of which are the items themselves and some just images that cast some light on them. I could’ve done with more sense of scale on some of the items, but for a few they do show the scale and the comparisons. Each object or set of objects gets discussed quite briefly, within a couple of pages, and a note about where it can be found now (e.g. a museum or a private collection), so it’s more of a taster than anything.

I really liked it — as a kid who grew up watching and loving Time Team, this kind of “everyday archaeology” (though some of the objects found are in fact officially Treasure and incredibly opulent) is incredibly fun to read about. And it’s a really well-presented book.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Most Delicious Poison

Posted August 20, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Most Delicious Poison

Most Delicious Poison: From Spices to Vices - The Story of Nature's Toxins

by Noah Whiteman

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 304
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

A deadly secret lurks within our kitchens, medicine cabinets and gardens...

Digitalis purpurea. The common foxglove. Vision blurs as blood pressure drops precipitously. The heartbeat slows until, finally, it stops.

Atropa belladonna. Deadly nightshade. Eyes darken as strange shapes flutter across your vision. The heart begins to race and soon the entire body is overcome with convulsions.

Papaver somniferum. The opium poppy. Pupils constrict to a pinprick as the senses dull. Gradually, breathing shudders to a halt.

Scratch the surface of a coffee bean, a chilli flake or an apple seed and find a bevy of strange chemicals - biological weapons in a war raging unseen. Here, beetles, birds, bats and butterflies must navigate a minefield of specialised chemicals and biotoxins, each designed to maim and kill.

And yet these chemicals, evolved to repel marauding insects and animals, have now become an integral part of our everyday lives. Some we use to greet our days (caffeine) and titillate our tongues (capsaicin), others to bend our minds (psilocybin) and take away our pains (opioids).

Inspired by his father's love of the natural world and his eventual spiral into the depths of addiction, evolutionary biologist Noah Whiteman explores how we came to use - and abuse - these chemicals. Delving into the mysterious origins of plant and fungal toxins, and their unique human history, Most Delicious Poison provides a kaleidoscopic tour of nature's most delectable and dangerous poisons.

Noah Whiteman’s Most Delicious Poison: From Spices to Vices – the Story of Nature’s Toxins is primarily focused on the issue of addiction, and includes discussion of his father’s alcoholism and death due to complications thereof. It muses on his own likely propensity toward addiction as well, and generally seems to be part an exorcism of Whiteman’s own demons around addictive plant products.

There is a great deal of discussion of chemistry and biology as well, discussing how exactly the toxins work, and how they interact with receptors — and even how that might have evolved (often coincidentally, but sometimes based on the fact that some things are widespread across the animal kingdom, having evolved early on). It was this that I was interested on, and it largely didn’t disappoint, though I felt the emphasis on addiction meant a bit of a narrowed focus beyond some other plant toxins that would’ve been interesting. Basically everything came down to addiction within a few pages, and I don’t think that emphasis was really clear in the book’s description.

I did also find Whiteman’s style a bit challenging, rather inclined to jump around/link together topics that aren’t closely linked in a very “and another thing!” manner.

Overall, not quite what I hoped for.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted August 20, 2025 by Nicky in General / 4 Comments

Cover of Preventable by Devi SridharWhat have you recently finished reading?

Devi Sridhar’s Preventable, a book about the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic completed/published in 2022, which makes it off-base on a number of things (e.g. basically commenting that Trump’s hate on for the WHO doesn’t matter at all and was just words). I found it a bit too “yup, let’s get back to normal” at the end, particularly given that she assumes that’s possible because of vaccination… which is no longer widely or freely available in the UK. But mostly it was a pretty good look at the initial situation.

Cover of Paladin's Strength by T. KingfisherWhat are you currently reading?

I just started History in Flames: The Destruction and Survival of Medieval Manuscripts, by Robert Bartlett, which I just got today as a birthday present! Not very far into it yet, but I might finish it today — it’s not very long.

Other than that, I have a few books on the backburner, but nothing else at the forefront of my mind. I do want to finish Lex Croucher’s Gwen and Art are Not in Love, Laura Spinney’s Proto, T. Kingfisher’s Paladin’s Strength, Caitlin Rozakis’ The Grimoire Grammar School Parent Teacher Association, Victoria Shepherd’s Stony Jack and the Lost Jewels of Cheapside and Molly Conisbee’s No Ordinary Deaths, because they’re all on my August Book Spin list on Litsy, but we’ll see, that’s a lot!

Cover of The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System vol 3 by MXTXWhat will you be reading next?

Probably I’ll start my reread of the third volume of The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System, as a birthday treat. Since I have the day off, I might finish up with that, in which case I might start one of my new books — Carwyn Graves’ Tir: The Story of the Welsh Landscape is calling to me, or maybe Rachel Harrison’s Cackle — or start on a book that’s been on my backlog for a while, Margaret Elphinstone’s The Sea Road.

 

Quick reminder: I added a captcha to my comment form because of relentless spam. It should be invisible to legit users, and people have been commenting OK as far as I can tell, but if you’re having any difficulty with commenting, shoot me an email at bibliophibianbreathesbooks@gmail.com so I can troubleshoot! ♥

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Review – The Undetectables

Posted August 19, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Undetectables

The Undetectables

by Courtney Smyth

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 442
Series: The Undetectables #1
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Be gay, solve crime, take naps—A witty and quirky fantasy murder mystery in a folkloric world of witches, faeires, vampires, trolls and ghosts, for fans of Magic for Liars by Sarah Gailey and T. J. Klune’s Under the Whispering Door.

A magical serial killer is stalking the Occult town of Wrackton. Hypnotic whistling causes victims to chew their own tongues off, leading to the killer being dubbed the Whistler (original, right?). But outside the lack of taste buds and the strange magical carvings on the victims’ torsos, the murderer leaves no evidence. No obvious clues. No reason – or so it seems.

Enter the Undetectables, a detective agency run by three witches and a ghost in a cat costume (don’t ask). They are hired to investigate the murders, but with their only case so far left unsolved, will they be up to the task? Mallory, the forensic science expert, is struggling with pain and fatigue from her recently diagnosed fibromyalgia. Cornelia, the team member most likely to go rogue and punch a police officer, is suddenly stirring all sorts of feelings in Mallory. Diana, the social butterfly of the group, is hitting up all of her ex-girlfriends for information. And not forgetting ghostly Theodore – deceased, dramatic, and also the agency’s first dead body and unsolved murder case.

With bodies stacking up and the case leading them to mysteries at the very heart of magical society, can the Undetectables find the Whistler before they become the killer’s next victims?

In the end, Courtney Smyth’s The Undetectables didn’t really prove to be my thing. I loved the tagline (“be gay, solve crimes, take naps”), and I loved the fact that Mallory has a serious and potentially limiting disability, which is never ignored in the course of the story even when she has to do heroics. I don’t know from experience whether her fibro was portrayed accurately, but I appreciated the inclusion — along with the various flavours of queerness, too.

However, it just felt a bit… lacklustre? Obviously, because I’m a mystery fan, the mystery element was pretty important to me, and it felt like the girls kept missing really obvious clues — and then I hated the villain monologue section, with all the super-manufactured clues. The narrative lampshaded that a bit, in that Mallory very much thinks the puzzles are stupid, but… ugh, so many pages taken up with that.

And then there was just a certain immaturity to the relationships. In a way it makes sense for the main character, who has felt left behind by the others, but it wasn’t just that. Cornelia’s relationship with Beckett is transparently bad. Not that older people don’t get into bad relationships, or that it’s about maturity or intelligence exactly, it’s just… not the kind of situation I enjoy reading about, and makes me feel like I’m back in school.

I did like the relationship between the three girls, and the deep friendship between Theodore and Mallory. There were definitely good elements. But I finished it and thought… I’m not sure that was a good use of my time.

I am sure, however, that it is the perfect read for many people! I mean, look at that tagline.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: Doorstoppers

Posted August 19, 2025 by Nicky in General / 27 Comments

This week’s theme from Top Ten Tuesday is all about the big chonky books. I don’t have stats on all my books, since I left Goodreads in a huff some years ago and then only settled into StoryGraph a year or two later… but let’s see what I can do.

I’ll skip the most obvious (The Lord of the Rings) and the technical (Control of Communicable Diseases Manual), I think! I also realised that the illustrated Earthsea I have is probably chonkier than any of these, but I didn’t think of it. So here we go.

Cover of The Hands of the Emperor by Victoria Goddard Cover of Kushiel's Dart by Jacqueline Carey Cover of The First Binding by R.R. Virdi Cover of Vanished Kingdoms, by Norman Davies Cover of The Ember Blade by Chris Wooding

  1. The Hands of the Emperor, by Victoria Goddard (899 pages). Some editions even run to ~1100 pages, but mine’s “only” 899, and apparently one of my chonkiest books. I’ve read this one, and really love it — I want to reread it soon. It’s wish fulfillment, about dismantling an empire and turning it into something fairer and kinder, but the relationship between the former Emperor and the main character, Cliopher, is really lovely. There’s also At the Feet of the Sun, the sequel (at 790 pages). It looks just as chonky on the shelf, though! I have to get round to it soon, but I’ve waited long enough thanks to a poor attention span that I really do want to reread the previous book first.
  2. Kushiel’s Dart, by Jacqueline Carey (901 pages). I’m surprised this is so long, actually, because I know I’ve completely inhaled it in the past, and these days I seem to find 400 page books quite intimidating. It’s the start of a fantasy trilogy that I really love, though sometimes the violence (consensual and otherwise) is a lot to read, even with the conceit of Phèdre’s abilities.
  3. The First Binding, by R.R. Virdi (929 pages). I don’t remember anything about this one! I haven’t read it yet, and I think I had it as an e-ARC. Oops.
  4. Vanished Kingdoms: The History of Half-Forgotten Europe, by Norman Davies (830 pages). This one’s still on my TBR, and I’m still looking forward to it, but… it’s just waiting for me to get round to it.
  5. The Ember Blade, by Chris Wooding (824 pages). This is another one where I don’t really remember anything about it, it’s just been on my TBR a while. It sounds like pretty traditional fantasy, like it makes a point of being so even, so… maybe it’ll be fun?
  6. Istanbul: A Tale of Three Cities, by Bettany Hughes (900 pages). I’ve liked some of Hughes’ work before, which I read because she got an honorary degree from Cardiff University at my first graduation ceremony. So I’m curious about this one, but it’s quite a commitment, so it’s been waiting on my TBR for the right mood.
  7. The Thousand Deaths of Ardor Benn, by Tyler Whitesides (784 pages). Again, this sounds like pretty traditional fantasy, could be fun, but I haven’t got round to it yet.
  8. Making History: The Storytellers who Shaped the Past, by Richard Cohen (708 pages). Understanding who is writing the history books is a very important thing, so this sounds very interesting. Though slightly daunting!
  9. European Travel for the Mysterious Gentlewoman, by Theodora Goss (708 pages). I haven’t read the first book yet, so this one’s waiting behind that one. I didn’t realise this was so chonky — I have the ebook edition!
  10. Plagues Upon the Earth: Diseases and the Course of Human History, by Kyle Harper (704 pages). As ever, can’t resist something about infectious diseases! I think it’s been on my TBR since last year? Ish? But I thought I’d probably enjoy it more when my MSc is all done and dusted.

Cover of Istanbul by Bettany Hughes Cover of The Thousand Deaths of Ardor Benn by Tyler Whitesides Cover of Making History by Richard Cohen Cover of European Travel for the Monstrous Gentlewoman, by Theodora Goss Cover of Plagues Upon The Earth by Kyle Harper

So there we go, those’re my chonkers — mostly still waiting to be read!

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Review – A Side Character’s Love Story, vol 16

Posted August 18, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – A Side Character’s Love Story, vol 16

A Side Character's Love Story

by Akane Tamura

Genres: Manga, Romance
Pages: 162
Series: A Side Character's Love Story #16
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Nobuko and Hiroki's long-distance relationship has hit a bit of a rocky patch. Hiroki is plagued by his own anxieties, but still rushes to Nobuko's side when he senses something is amiss. But when they finally meet, she has an unusual request to make of him... How will their relationship change as they try to focus on life beyond love?

Volume 16 of Akane Tamura’s is the last one I hadn’t reviewed fully, and now I’m almost at the end of the series so far in my reread! Boo. It’s another really cute volume, even though Hiroki is struggling with feeling jealous and Nobuko is still finding her way with new friends and coworkers. I love how Hiroki and Nobuko communicate and work things out, and how Nobuko resolves herself to do better — for Hiroki and also by apologising to Asuka.

The side characters are really quite prominent over the next few volumes, with Hiroki so far away, and I don’t always love that because I’m here for Hiroki and Nobuko. Still, Asuka’s love for Tai is cute, as is Aoike and Shiotani’s friendship.

Honestly it’s all a pretty realistic portrayal of young adulthood, made interesting by the fact that Hiroki and Nobuko are sweet and determined to make their relationship work, unwilling to let lack of communication hinder anything. You can really root for them.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – The Judas Window

Posted August 17, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Judas Window

The Judas Window

by John Dickson Carr, Carter Dickson

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 269
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Avory Hume is found stabbed to death with an arrow - in a study with bolted steel shutters and a heavy door locked from the inside. In the same room James Caplon Answell lies unconscious, his clothes disordered as though from a struggle, his fingerprints on the damning arrow.

Here is the unique Carter Dickson "impossible situation" - yet the great, explosive Sir Henry Merrivale gets down to serious sleuthing and at last startles the crowd in the Old Bailey with a reconstruction of the crime along logical, convincing lines.

H.M. in his most exciting case - an original, unconventional mystery, with a rich story background and a thrilling trial scene.

Every time the British Library Crime Classics series republish one of John Dickson Carr’s mysteries (under that name or as Carter Dickson), the intro hyperbolically refers to it as one of the greatest locked room mysteries ever, etc etc. The Judas Window was a genuinely fun one though, with one of the least goofy explanations of how the locked room wasn’t actually impenetrable, and it’s one of the books in John Dickson Carr’s oeuvre that I got on with best so far (not always having been much of a fan).

It certainly helps that much of it is courtroom drama, with the larger-than-life H.M. defending the prisoner in court, with a few sensations along the way. The character of Mary Hume is pretty amazing, and a rare one in crime fiction: having allowed a lover to take erotic photos of her and then been blackmailed about them, she comes out in court to take all the power out of it by forthrightly admitting the whole thing. I feel like this doesn’t get as much spotlight as it deserves in the story, because it’s a heck of a power play.

The puzzle works out nicely, with my only quibble being that I didn’t think the actual culprit made a lot of sense without some more clues or build-up. But that wasn’t so much the point of the story, I think, so it wasn’t a huge downside. Overall, I really liked this one.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Underwear: Fashion in Detail

Posted August 16, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Underwear: Fashion in Detail

Underwear: Fashion in Detail

by Eleri Lynn

Genres: Fashion, History, Non-fiction
Pages: 224
Series: Fashion in Detail
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Get intimately acquainted with the V&A's world-renowned collection of undergarments in this eye-opening visual history. From camisoles to corsets, basques to boudoir caps, Underwear: Fashion in Detail traces the peculiar evolution of underwear. Revealing photographs highlight close-up details in the garments, while intricate line drawings show their masterly construction. A wide range of designs is represented, from rare 16th-century examples to Dior's curvaceous New Look, to Calvin Klein's notorious briefs.

Underwear: Fashion in Detail is another of the books from the V&A delving into a particular topic through their collections, this one written by Eleri Lynn. I found it a little less easy to read than the others, with text arranged in columns rather than going smoothly across the page, and it doesn’t provide full images of many of the items discussed. Just seeing the detail without seeing how it fits into the whole is pretty unedifying, to be honest.

There’s a lot of information here, and someone with a better visual imagination might find it more useful for envisaging the whole thing, but I was a bit disappointed in the presentation.

Still, if it’s a topic you have interest in, it’s worth it!

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted August 16, 2025 by Nicky in General / 24 Comments

Weekend again, wooo! Not sure yet what (if any) plans I have, other than helping move some unpacked boxes to our storage unit and some old packaging and boxes that can’t be re-used to the tip (the house looks so much bigger now we’re getting more unpacked!). Probably mostly reading and gaming, which will be nice.

Books acquired this week

A few library books first, from an impromptu trip to the library!

Cover of Monsters: A Bestiary of the Bizarre, by Christopher Dell Cover of A Brief Atlas of the Lighthouses at the End of the World Cover of Queer as Folklore by Sacha Coward

I actually read the first two sat at a coffee shop after a long bike ride that ended with a stop at the library before going home. They were quick reads, but also I was there a while due to tiredness, ahaha.

I’ve been meaning to read Queer as Folklore for a while, so that was what I was at the library to pick up. The other two were incidental. I haven’t dug into it yet, but I’m curious for sure.

Other than that, I also got this month’s British Library Crime Classic, this time by an author I knew but not for crime fiction!

Cover of The Odd Flamingo by Nina Bawden

I’ve already finished this one; it was fun, but not special.

Posts from this week

As usual, let’s do a recap! Here go the reviews:

And other posts:

What I’m reading

It doesn’t feel like I’ve been reading a lot this week, but I did finish a few books, so let’s see the sneak peek of the ones I plan to review for the blog:

Cover of A Brief Atlas of the Lighthouses at the End of the World Cover of Monsters: A Bestiary of the Bizarre, by Christopher Dell Cover of Most Delicious Poison: From Spices to Vices - The Story of Nature's Toxins by Noah Whiteman Cover of The Last Murder at the End of the World by Stuart Turton Cover of This Is Not Propaganda by Peter Pomerantsev

Not sure what I’ll be reading this weekend, but as ever, I’ll be following my whim. It might feature reading more of T. Kingfisher’s Paladin’s Strength, rereading volume three of The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System… or something else entirely.

P.S. I added an invisible captcha to help cut down on spam, and people still seem to be commenting without a problem. Still, if you have any trouble commenting today, especially if it says anything about failing a captcha, can you shoot me a quick email at bibliophibianbreathesbooks@gmail.com? Thank you!

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

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Review – Spirits Abroad

Posted August 15, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Spirits Abroad

Spirits Abroad

by Zen Cho

Genres: Fantasy, Science Fiction, Short Stories
Pages: 352
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

"If you live near the jungle, you will realize that what is real and what is not real is not always clear. In the forest there is not a big gap between the two."

A Datin recalls her romance with an orang bunian. A teenage pontianak struggles to balance homework, bossy aunties, first love, and eating people. An earth spirit gets entangled in protracted negotiations with an annoying landlord, and Chang E spins off into outer space, the ultimate metaphor for the Chinese diaspora.

Straddling the worlds of the mundane and the magical, Spirits Abroad collects science fiction and fantasy stories with a distinctively Malaysian sensibility.

Zen Cho’s Spirits Abroad is a fun collection, with a lot of Malaysian background to the stories. She doesn’t waste time on explaining the Malay words she uses, but it’s usually perfectly clear from context, or easy to look up.

I don’t quite know why it didn’t work for me: there was nothing I could pinpoint as disliking in any of the stories, but something about the collection as a whole kind of dragged for me. I know I’ve liked some of the short stories in isolation, too, because I know I’d read a couple of them before — so I’m under the impression it just wasn’t the right time for me with this book.

All the same, I’m glad I finished it. I vaguely remembered ‘The Terracotta Bride’, but it surprised me all over again, and I really liked the imugi trying to become a dragon, as well. Maybe it wasn’t the right moment for me, but there was still a lot to enjoy, reading it piecemeal the way I did.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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