Author: Nicky

Review – Moneta

Posted September 16, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Moneta

Moneta: A History of Ancient Rome in Twelve Coins

by Gareth Harney

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 384
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

The extraordinary story of ancient Rome, history's greatest superpower, as told through humankind's most universal object: the coin.

Moneta traces ancient Rome's unstoppable rise, from a few huts on an Italian hilltop to an all-conquering empire spanning three continents, through the fascinating lives of twelve remarkable coins. In these handcrafted pieces of ancient art we witness Caesar's bloody assassination, follow the legions to the edge of the known world, take a seat in the packed Colosseum, and ultimately, watch as barbarian armies mass at the gates.

The Romans saw coins as far more than just money - these were metal canvases on which they immortalised their sacred gods, mighty emperors, towering monuments, and brutal battles of conquest. Revealed in those intricate designs struck in gold, silver, and bronze was the epic history of the Roman world.

Hold the glory and the infamy of ancient Rome in the palm of your hand.

I picked up Gareth Harney’s Moneta on a bit of a whim, and partly because it had Emma Southon’s endorsement on the cover, and I’ve really enjoyed her books. And indeed, Moneta is just as readable as Southon’s work, and I found it surprisingly engaging: coins in and of themselves aren’t that interesting to me, but using an object to interrogate a wider history is great.

One quibble, I suppose, inasfar as it matters, is that it’s not really just twelve coins. Each chapter mentions plenty of other coins. And I’d have loved more images of the coins, close to where they get discussed in the text — I’m no good at imagining what’s not in front of me, since I have no visual imagination at all.

Still, I found it a really engaging read. I’m not usually a fan of imaginative reconstructions, but Harney has a knack of storytelling that made them interesting (though of course one should take them with several pinches of salt). The coins and scenarios he chooses to highlight are fascinating, and worthwhile in understanding the Roman Empire.

I guess the ultimate accolade is that even though it’s non-fiction, I found it pretty unputdownable.

Rating: 4/5

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Review – Love Everlasting, vol 2

Posted September 15, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Love Everlasting, vol 2

Love Everlasting

by Tom King, Elsa Charretier, Matt Hollingsworth, Clayton Cowles

Genres: Fantasy, Graphic Novels, Horror, Romance
Pages: 137
Series: Love Everlasting #2
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

The mind-bending story of Joan Peterson's journey through love and horror continues in the second epic and heartbreaking arc of this critically acclaimed, Harvey-nominated series. After traveling from romance to romance, Joan finds herself trapped inside just one story, growing older with the love of her life instead of escaping again and again. And as she becomes a wife, a mother, a grandmother, she is on a bloody quest to discover if everyone in this new world is insane, or if she alone is broken.

Volume two of Tom King’s Love Everlasting is a bit different to the first: instead of multiple short  romances, now Joan finds herself trapped in a different kind of love story. This time she gets married, has children and grandchildren, while all the while being haunted by the fact that she knows nothing is real: everything is happening in the year 1962.

The art style is great and expressive, and mostly I just want to be thrown a bit more of a bone story-wise. Just as it felt like it lingered too long on the random romances, it felt like it lingered too long on Joan’s fake family. We get no nearer to knowing why her mother(?) is putting her through this.

I’m still intrigued and would still pick up the third TPB if one gets released (seemingly not so far). But I do feel like as a reader I need a little more to hang onto here.

Rating: 3/5

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted September 14, 2024 by Nicky in General / 20 Comments

Happy Saturday! It’s been a quiet week around here, and I haven’t been feeling much like reading — but I did finally sort out my library card, and I got some tempting books out, so there’s hope.

Books acquired this week

First up, my haul from the library:

Cover of The Hunter by Richard Stark Cover of The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler Cover of Sir Hereward and Mister Fritz, by Garth Nix Cover of Pharos by Alice Thompson

Cover of The Unmaking of June Farrow by Adrienne Young Cover of Burning Books for Pleasure and Profit by KJ Parker Cover of Sorcery & Cecilia by Patricia C. Wrede and Caroline Stevermer Cover of Godkiller by Hannah Kaner

As you see, I got quite enthusiastic! The first five are the ones I picked up from a bike trip down to the main library, while the latter three I grabbed on Libby.

I also got a review copy this week, of a book I’ve been very eagerly anticipating. Thanks, Tor!

Cover of The Tomb of Dragons by Katherine Addison

And finally, two that I bought. The latest volume of A Side Character’s Love Story is out, and my British Library Crime Classic book from my subscription arrived for this month.

Cover of A Side Character's Love Story vol 19 by Akane Tamura Cover of Metropolitan Mysteries, ed. Martin Edwards

As you see, there’s a lot to tempt me!

Posts from this week

As usual, let’s do a bit of a roundup. First the reviews:

And other posts:

What I’m reading

As I mentioned above, I haven’t been reading a lot this week. I’m onto a flashback arc again in Heaven Official’s Blessing, and I know it’s also pretty dark, so I’ve not been super drawn to that… and in general, I haven’t been in the mood very much. I think it’s picking up today, though: I finally got back to my long-neglected reread of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, and I’m quite tempted to pick up one or two of my library books.

Here are the books I’ve finished this week that I plan to review on the blog:

Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing vol 5 by MXTX Cover of Book Lovers by Emily Henry

I did read some poetry collections as well, but I don’t plan to review those on the blog.

So that’s been my week! How’s everyone else doing?

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 – Invisible Friends

Posted September 14, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Invisible Friends

Invisible Friends: How Microbes Shape Our Lives and the World Around Us

by Jake M. Robinson

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

As we continue to live through a pandemic, all eyes are on microbes: an imperceptible and pervasive threat that hangs heavy on the air and clings to surfaces. But the reality of micro-organisms is far more diverse and life-sustaining than such a notion would have us believe (hence the title of this book). Not only are they omnipresent, but we are highly attuned to their workings - both in the world at large and right here within our own bodies. Meanwhile, cutting-edge microbiome research is changing our understanding of reality, challenging fundamental concepts of free will and individuality. Threaded through everything are microbes: the very glue that holds ecosystems together.

This topical, engaging and original book counters the prevailing narrative of microbes as the bane of society, along the way providing much-needed clarity on the overwhelmingly beneficial role they play. We discover how the microbiome is highly relevant to environmental and social equity issues, while there's also discussion about how microbes may influence our decisions: even the way we think about how we think may need to be revisited. Invisible Friends introduces the reader to a vast, pullulating cohort of minute life - friends you never knew you had.

Jake M. Robinson’s Invisible Friends is a fairly basic discussion of microbes and what they do — how they don’t just make us sick, but also influence how we feel through their influence on our guts, immune systems and more. It really is very, very basic though, touching only lightly on important topics like antibiotic resistance, and extremely lightly on what we might do about that, barely giving half a page to the potential of bacteriophages. Which is a shame, because we need to move toward using methods like bacteriophages, and for that people need to know more about them and not be afraid of them. (Check out Tom Ireland’s The Good Virus, to that end.)

I know that I’m not exactly the target audience for this book, given my background knowledge and interests even before I started doing an MSc in this stuff, but it still felt excessively simplistic. Really, it seemed like a vehicle for Robinson to tell people to spend more time outside and stop being so germophobic.

It’s true that that’d be good for us, and he’s not wrong about the impact of city living on the human microbiome, nor about the potential benefits of trying to fix that. It’s just that sometimes it begins to feel like he’s self-aggrandising, discussing this project or that that he’s been involved with that aims to improve this or that in order to, you’ve guessed it, improve people’s exposure to microbes in the city environment. We also hear repeatedly about the fact that he’s writing the thing outside in a forest. He does at least touch on the fact that there is some serious inequality in ability to access natural landscapes, at least on an economic level, which is good. (He doesn’t discuss accessibility issues of other kinds other than location and money, though.)

Anyway, I know I’m a harsh judge of this kind of thing, but I’m perfectly capable of enjoying a good book aimed at laypeople for being clear and precise in communication, even when it’s the basics — like Philipp Dettmer’s Immune — so I don’t think it’s just that.

Rating: 2/5

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Review – The Murder on the Links

Posted September 12, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – The Murder on the Links

The Murder on the Links

by Agatha Christie

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 273
Series: Poirot #2
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

On a French golf course, a millionaire is found stabbed in the back…

An urgent cry for help brings Poirot to France. But he arrives too late to save his client, whose brutally stabbed body now lies face downwards in a shallow grave on a golf course.

But why is the dead man wearing his son’s overcoat? And who was the impassioned love-letter in the pocket for? Before Poirot can answer these questions, the case is turned upside down by the discovery of a second, identically murdered corpse…

The Murder on the Links is the second Poirot book, and mercifully gets rid of Hastings by marrying him off. He’s just unbearable — one can believe there’s someone so self-absorbed and unable to learn from mistakes, but one would rather not have to. Not that I love Poirot as a character, either, but Hastings’ deficiencies are much more aggravating.

The plot here is a bit over-convoluted, to my mind, and of course relies on characters appearing and disappearing like jack-in-the-boxes. “Cinderella” and Hastings’ relationship is based on less than nothing, and Poirot’s posturing toward Giraud does him no credit in my eyes.

There’s a satisfaction in seeing the plot work out, but it wasn’t enough for me. I wonder if I’ll get along better with Poirot without Hastings — I know I liked The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, back when I read that.

Rating: 2/5

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WWW Wednesday

Posted September 11, 2024 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Yep, time for the usual check-in!

Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing vol 5 by MXTXWhat have you recently finished reading?

I’ve mostly been reading poetry for a few days, because it was on Serial Reader and it’s been a while since I read any poetry. This involved the conclusion that I’m still not a fan of Robert Frost, but I did like Kahlil Gibran’s “The Prophet”.

Other than that, the last thing I finished was the fifth volume of Heaven Official’s Blessing (MXTX).

Cover of Book Lovers by Emily HenryWhat are you currently reading?

Predictably, I’m onto volume six of Heaven Official’s Blessing, which includes a scene I’ve been waiting for ever so long — finally Xie Lian has acknowledged Hua Cheng’s feelings for him, and seems to be reciprocating! (This is hardly a spoiler: it’s danmei, you know they’re headed there.)

On Serial Reader, I’m working my way through Agatha Christie’s Poirot Investigates, which is short stories. They feature an unfortunate amount of Hastings, and I am not a fan.

Other than that, I got back to reading Emily Henry’s Book Lovers, which I am at times reading while peeking through my fingers because of embarrassment squick.

Cover of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha ChristieWhat will you be reading next?

It’s a fair bet that I’ll be reading Heaven Official’s Blessing volume 7 in pretty short order, of course, but after that, I’m not sure. I do know that my next choice on Serial Reader is likely to be a reread of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd — I remember enjoying it very much and thinking it very clever, so I’m not going to skip it even though I know whodunnit. I did read it quite a while ago, so the clues and such will be new to me, even though I remember the conclusion.

And what are you reading?

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Top Ten Tuesday: Great Escapes

Posted September 10, 2024 by Nicky in General / 14 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is “books that provide a much-needed escape”, which is quite a broad one. Let’s see what I can do!

Cover of The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing by MXTX Cover of Piranesi by Susanna Clarke Cover of Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie Cover of Band Sinister by K.J. Charles

  1. The Goblin Emperor, by Katherine Addison. I know this one comes up a lot in my Top Ten Tuesday posts, but it’s such a touchstone for me. I’ve read it quite a few times, and I always enjoy it: Maia does his best to be a good person, despite the chaos and ill-will around him, and there’s something so hopeful about the story as a whole. Even better, there’s quite a lot of detail and world-building to wonder about and admire.
  2. Heaven Official’s Blessing, by MXTX. This is a much newer addition to the list: it’s what I’m seeking out for escape at the moment. It’s a complicated story with a big cast, and a world that’s unfamiliar in part because I lack the cultural background, and in part because it’s a fantasy. There’s a lot going on: there’s the romance between Xie Lian and Hua Cheng, of course, but there’s also the various mysteries that Xie Lian finds himself trying to understand, there’s the moments of slapstick (which isn’t normally my thing, but seems to work here), there’s horror elements, high fantasy… There are so many side characters I’ve come to love, and picking up whichever volume I’m up to at the end of the day is a lovely escape.
  3. Piranesi, by Susanna Clarke. I almost chose Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, which is a big dense brick of a fantasy, but on reflection it’s Piranesi that took me further away. I was enchanted by it on first read, and I don’t think I really put it down at all. I had the same experience on a second read, and I’m sure I’ll return to it again in future.
  4. Ancillary Justice, by Ann Leckie. This trilogy is so soothing to me, and I couldn’t quite tell you why. In part I think it’s Breq attitude to everything, the ability to go on despite everything crumbling. Plus, the world of the Imperial Radch has a lot to learn, a lot to be curious about.
  5. Band Sinister, by KJ Charles. This book is just pure fun. Most of her books work for me if I need a bit of an escape, but Band Sinister is my favourite of them. The first time I read it, I couldn’t sleep, but I spent the whole night trying not to giggle too loud as I read because my wife was sleeping!
  6. The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet, by Becky Chambers. Or really this whole series. It’s just so hopeful about people, in general, and I love exploring the universe with Chambers’ characters.
  7. A Natural History of Dragons, by Marie Brennan. How could I not include this series? I’ve reread it several times — I love Isabella, and her drive to learn and explore, and the dragons.
  8. The Miss Fisher Mysteries, by Kerry Greenwood. I couldn’t pick a favourite of this series, because it’s more about Phryne and her glamour, surprising practicality, and her mysteries. Really this is similar to point #9 just below…
  9. Classic mysteries. This isn’t a single book, but a whole subset of a genre — there’s not one specific book that I’d really point to here, because I find most classic mysteries (think Agatha Christie’s era) soothing. There’s a social order that will be restored by the end of the book, everything is going to turn out okay, the innocent will go free and the guilty find their just rewards. My favourite authors that fit this mold are probably E.C.R. Lorac and Dorothy L. Sayers, but it doesn’t even have to be their work in order to act as a perfect escape.
  10. Non-fiction. I find non-fiction soothing in a slightly different way, and an excellent way to escape from worrying over things going on in my life. It’s pretty “safe”, it doesn’t require an emotional investment (most of the time anyway), and I can learn new things. That’s always going to be enjoyable for me, even when I’m too het up to enjoy fiction.

Cover of The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers Cover of A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan Cover of Miss Phryne Fisher Investigates by Kerry Greenwood Cover of Death of an Author by E.C.R. Lorac

Oof, we made it!

How about you? What books do you think of as a perfect escape?

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Review – The Sarpedon Krater

Posted September 9, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Sarpedon Krater

The Sarpedon Krater: The Life and Afterlife of a Greek Vase

by Nigel Spivey

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 240
Series: The Landmark Library
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Once the pride of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Sarpedon krater is a wine-mixing bowl crafted by two Athenians, Euxitheos (who shaped it) and Euphronios (who decorated it), in the late 6thc BC. The moving image Euphronios created for the krater, depicting the stricken Trojan hero Sarpedon being lifted from the battlefield by ‘Sleep’ (Hypnos) and ‘Death’ (Thanatos), was to have an influence that endured well beyond Antiquity.

Nigel Spivey not only explores the vibrant Athenian civilization that produced the krater, but also reveals how its motifs were elaborated in later Greek art and in the Christian iconography of the Renaissance.

He tells the story of a small object, once consigned to the obscurity of an Etruscan tomb – yet a work of art whose influence extends far beyond its size and former confinement. The Sarpedon Krater is a fascinating case-study of the deep classical roots of the ideas and iconography of western art.

Nigel Spivey’s The Sarpedon Krater is part of a series about “landmarks” in world history and art. Obviously that’s a bit of a metaphor when we’re discussing this mixing bowl, since it’s not a landmark in the same way as Stonehenge is — but in metaphorical terms, it seems it (or at least the themes on it) really was a landmark. Spivey discusses not just the origin of the vase, the artist and their context, but also the afterlife, including the burial in an Etruscan tomb, the looting, and the sale to a museum, along with its brief involvement in the Marion True saga. It also discusses how the motifs may have been copied by — or at least influenced — later artists.

I didn’t know much about this specific object before I started, though I knew a certain amount about symposia, Greek vases, etc, so this filled in some interesting gaps. It’s beautifully illustrated, with close-ups of the krater and other artwork that’s related in some way.

In the end, I don’t know how to evaluate Spivey’s claims about how influential this art was, but it does all hang together pretty well and make sense as an argument — and regardless of that, I enjoyed the contextualisation of the krater and its afterlife.

Rating: 4/5

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Review – Heaven Official’s Blessing, vol 3

Posted September 8, 2024 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Heaven Official’s Blessing, vol 3

Heaven Official's Blessing

by Mò Xiāng Tóng XiÚ

Genres: Fantasy, Horror, Mystery, Romance
Pages: 476
Series: Heaven Official's Blessing / Tian Guan Ci Fu #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

SOMETHING TO FIGHT FOR, SOMEONE TO LIVE FOR

Gods should never meddle in the affairs of mortals, but Xie Lian is not one to follow the rules when lives are at risk. He spits in the face of heaven and its laws and descends in a fury to save his country from drought and civil war. Yet this golden child gets a harsh dose of reality when he discovers just how little one individual—even a god—can do to save a crumbling nation. As the people reject and betray him, one young soldier stands by Xie Lian—a boy with a face wrapped in bandages and a fierce loyalty in his heart. In this chaotic past, can an unshakable bond grow from the ashes of unimaginable destruction?

Volume three of Heaven Official’s Blessing is very up-and-down. The first part is the conclusion of the second arc, which is an extended flashback filling in details of events we pretty much knew about already. Much as I liked seeing Xie Lian in an earlier stage of his life, that quickly palled. While I know the significance of seeing Honghong-er and the unnamed little soldier, and it was important to see Xie Lian fallible and foolhardy, and you gotta appreciate the rudimentary epidemiology (at least, you do if you’re me)… it feels like it all just took too long.

That said, the third arc hits the ground running and had me quickly grabbing volume four to continue the story. It feels like so much happens in the “present” arc, including a lot of delightful moments like the lanterns for Xie Lian and his utter freakout about the underwater “kiss”; the second arc really suffers in comparison to that as well, because the third arc is just one thing after the other, adventure leading into adventure… and of course, it also features more Hua Cheng. The second arc is predictable because it’s covering details we already know, and Hua Cheng isn’t present — at least, not in the way we know him by now.

In some ways, I feel like there was a similar problem in The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System. The character whose mind we most wanted to understand was Luo Binghe, but the narrative sticks close to Shen Qingqiu, who doesn’t understand what’s going on. Xie Lian is a different flavour of oblivious, but he’s still oblivious, and I really want to know what Hua Cheng is thinking.

Not that that relationship is the be-all and end-all — there’s also a fascinating story going on with other characters, which I’m excited to dig into. As ever, the cut-off happens mid-arc, so have volume four at the ready.

Rating: 4/5

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted September 7, 2024 by Nicky in General / 10 Comments

It’s been a quiet week around here — at least in terms of books! But I did get a bicycle, after several years of not cycling, so that was exciting. I’m looking forward to getting out and about a bit more; normally I go for walks, but you can’t get very far that way, at least not in a limited time like a lunch break. I already did some exploring of the local villages, which was a fun ride!

Books acquired this week

N/a! Yep, absolutely nothing new this week. I did start a new serial on Serial Reader, so perhaps we can count that just to add some colour to this entry…

Cover of Poirot Investigates, by Agatha Christie

Posts from this week

Here’s the usual roundup of the posts I’ve been making. Reviews first!

And the other posts:

What I’m reading

Today I’ve been focusing on volume 5 of Heaven Official’s Blessing, where I keep thinking that “Yakety Sax” would be the perfect background music… At times it’s a bit sillier and more slapstick than I typically enjoy, but I do love the characters.

It’s been a slow week for reading, but here’s a sneak preview of the books I read which will be reviewed on the blog in due course:

Cover of Around the Ocean in 80 Fish & Other Sea Life by Helen Scales Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing vol 4 by MXTX Cover of Gitanjali by Rabindranath Tagore Cover of All That Remains, by Sue Black Cover of The Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie

And that’s it for now! Hope everyone’s been having a good week.

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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