Tag: book reviews

Review – The Butcher of the Forest

Posted October 25, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Butcher of the Forest

The Butcher of the Forest

by Premee Mohamed

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 160
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

At the northern edge of a land ruled by a monstrous, foreign tyrant lies the wild forest known as the Elmever. The villagers know better than to let their children go near—once someone goes in, they never come back out.

No one knows the strange and terrifying traps of the Elmever better than Veris Thorn, the only person to ever rescue a child from the forest many years ago. When the Tyrant’s two young children go missing, Veris is commanded to enter the forest once more and bring them home safe.

Received to review via Netgalley

The main character of this novella, Veris, once went into the forest to save a child. It’s no ordinary forest, and her journey is the only time anyone has been known to be successful in entering and leaving the forest, let alone bringing a lost child back. When the local Tyrant’s children go missing, he has her brought to him: she must go and retrieve his children, or he will kill her family.

Well, what choice does she have? It’s an interesting set-up, since she’s a middle-aged protagonist, and she’s full of aches and pains as she makes her way into the forest — and she’s no great witch, holds no great power to find her way, just a bit of knowledge and some luck. And the luck’s tenuous.

It’s a genuinely creepy story in that tense sort of way, with a lot of blank spots at the edge of the canvas of things we don’t really get to see/understand. The focus is on Veris’ journey, and her efforts to find the children, despite the sense that there’s so much more going on.

I found it enjoyable, though I’m still sort of letting it settle.

Rating: 4/5

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Review – Fifth Sun

Posted October 24, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Fifth Sun

Fifth Sun: A New History of the Aztecs

by Camilla Townsend

Pages: 336
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

In November 1519, Hernán Cortés walked along a causeway leading to the capital of the Aztec kingdom and came face to face with Moctezuma. That story -- and the story of what happened afterwards -- has been told many times, but always following the narrative offered by the Spaniards. After all, we have been taught, it was the Europeans who held the pens. But the Native Americans were intrigued by the Roman alphabet and, unbeknownst to the newcomers, they used it to write detailed histories in their own language of Nahuatl. Until recently, these sources remained obscure, only partially translated, and rarely consulted by scholars.

For the first time, in Fifth Sun, the history of the Aztecs is offered in all its complexity based solely on the texts written by the indigenous people themselves. Camilla Townsend presents an accessible and humanized depiction of these native Mexicans, rather than seeing them as the exotic, bloody figures of European stereotypes. The conquest, in this work, is neither an apocalyptic moment, nor an origin story launching Mexicans into existence. The Mexica people had a history of their own long before the Europeans arrived and did not simply capitulate to Spanish culture and colonization. Instead, they realigned their political allegiances, accommodated new obligations, adopted new technologies, and endured.

Fifth Sun is a version of “Aztec” history which attempts to look beyond the traditionally-preferred Spanish sources to the sources written by indigenous people, as close as possible to the time events actually occurred. And it turns out that these sources actually have quite a bit to say, and some light to shed on common myths and beliefs. (Like the persistent belief that Moctezuma believed Cortes to be a god.)

Despite the author’s best efforts, I found the switching back and forth between the translated names and the untranslated names pretty confusing — in part due to unfamiliarity, giving my brain not that much to hang onto. I did appreciate the pronunciation guides though! Overall, partly because of that, I found it a bit slower and harder to follow than I’d hoped.

Nonetheless, it’s worth it; I feel like it’s closer than most popular history works to actually invoking what indigenous people thought and felt at the time. Townsend does a bit of “she must have sympathised with him” and so on where I rather wondered why on earth we should take that for granted given the circumstances, but I always find that irritating and it’s pretty rife in popular history in general.

Rating: 3/5

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Review – He Who Whispers

Posted October 23, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – He Who Whispers

He Who Whispers

by John Dickson Carr

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 270
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

'It almost seemed that the murder, if it was a murder, must have been committed by someone who could rise up unsupported in the air…'

When Miles Hammond is invited to a meeting of the Murder Club in London, he is met instead with just two other guests and is treated to a strange tale of an impossible crime in France from years before; the murder of a man on a tower with only one staircase, under watch at the time at which the murder took place. With theories of levitating vampires abounding, the story comes home to Miles when he realises that the librarian he has just hired for his home is none other than Fay Seton, a woman whose name still echoes from the heart of this bizarre and unsolved murder of the past.

I don’t normally get along with John Dickson Carr’s work. In fact, I don’t even buy the British Library Crime Classic editions — it’s one of only three gaps in my collection (a few of the short story collections, which I’m slowly picking up, and the Sergeant Cluff books are the others), because I just haven’t got along with the others.

It’s hard to say why this was an exception. I think in part it’s that it’s a fair-play mystery. Though there is a Great Detective (Gideon Fell), the POV character isn’t treated too much as his side-kick, and there’s some interesting attempts at psychological realism (even if it’s unfortunately in part about a “nymphomaniac” girl). I was able to form theories about it, and feel like I had the clues that fell into place at the right moments, and I didn’t universally hate the characters. There’s nothing so straightforward as some of Carr’s other female characters and snap romances.

It’s enough to give me hope for some of the Carr books I haven’t picked up yet: maybe some of those will equally have some joys for me. I was glad I gave this a shot thanks to my British Library Crime Classics subscription!

Rating: 4/5

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Review – The First Fossil Hunters

Posted October 22, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The First Fossil Hunters

The First Fossil Hunters: Dinosaurs, Mammoths and Myth in Greek and Roman Times

by Adrienne Mayor

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

Griffins, Cyclopes, Monsters, and Giants--these fabulous creatures of classical mythology continue to live in the modern imagination through the vivid accounts that have come down to us from the ancient Greeks and Romans. But what if these beings were more than merely fictions? What if monstrous creatures once roamed the earth in the very places where their legends first arose? This is the arresting and original thesis that Adrienne Mayor explores in The First Fossil Hunters. Through careful research and meticulous documentation, she convincingly shows that many of the giants and monsters of myth did have a basis in fact -- in the enormous bones of long-extinct species that were once abundant in the lands of the Greeks and Romans.

I really enjoyed this exploration and analysis of what the ancient Greeks and Romans thought of ancient fossils that they found and clearly noticed, collected and wondered about; the idea that they were “too big to be noticed” never sat right with me, even though it did seem weird that mostly the major philosophers didn’t comment on the subject (despite that well-known commentary on seashells demonstrating the presence of a long-lost sea in a given location).

I think that sometimes Mayor does go beyond her evidence — we just can’t be that certain, though she lays out some good evidence that tales of the existence of gryphons could’ve been sparked, in Greece, by second-hand travellers’ tales. I found that aspect of her discussion a bit thin, because there’s stuff in Greek mythology that is equally well or better explained by someone making stuff up.

That said, her discussion of “heroes’ bones” makes a lot of sense, and I do think it’s likely that stuff in Greek mythology references aspects of the world the Greeks didn’t understand, or didn’t properly understand anyway.

Rating: 4/5

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Review – Fevered Planet

Posted October 21, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Fevered Planet

Fevered Planet

by John Vidal

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 352
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Covid-19, mpox, bird flu, SARS, HIV, AIDS, Ebola; we are living in the Age of Pandemics - one that we have created. As the climate crisis reaches a fever pitch and ecological destruction continues unabated, we are just beginning to reckon with the effects of environmental collapse on our global health.

Fevered Planet exposes how the way we farm, what we eat, the places we travel to and the scientific experiments we conduct create the perfect conditions for deadly new diseases to emerge and spread faster and further than ever. Drawing on the latest scientific research and decades of reporting from more than 100 countries, former Guardian environment editor John Vidal takes us into deep, disappearing forests in Gabon and the Congo, valleys scorched by wildfire near Lake Tahoe and our densest, polluted cities to show how closely human, animal and plant diseases are now intertwined with planetary destruction.

From fossil fuel use raising the global temperature to increased logging polluting our landscapes, Fevered Planet exposes the perils of reckless environmental destruction - not just to our planet but to ourselves. As Vidal expertly argues, unless we transform our relationship with the rest of the natural world, the pandemics we are facing today will just be the tip of the iceberg.

If you’ve read books like David Quammen’s Spillover (the book which once nudged me toward my current studies!) then the premise of Fevered Planet comes as no surprise: habitat destruction through human agency is driving animals into closer contact with humans, leading to more and more spillover events of zoonotic diseases.

The details are a little more nuanced: there’s more emphasis here than I remember from Spillover on climate change as a causative issue here, which only makes sense because of the expansion of viable territory for mosquitos, the way temperatures favour the reproductive cycle of some pathogens, the way that habitat destruction/change leads to movement of animals… And Vidal points the finger less at wet markets, claiming that there was never any real evidence that COVID-19 originated from one — in fact, if anything, Vidal gives quite a bit of credence to the idea of SARS-CoV-2 being a manufactured disease that slipped loose from a lab.

Now and then, Vidal does slip and write something abjectly silly, like claiming that Ebola and Marburg “cells” are going to be mixed into smallpox viruses. That’s not possible because Ebola and Marburg “cells” simply don’t exist: it’s an impossibility, because they are viruses, obligately intracellular rather than possessing any cell body of their own. Perhaps he meant genes, or specific virulence factors of some other type, but what he wrote is an absurdity. It shows that either he doesn’t understand the science or he isn’t paying attention to detail — and either makes me question his ability to present other concepts accurately (and whether anyone properly proofread the whole book).

For the most part, it’s well-written, and what he writes accords with what I know and with what the sources I checked seem to suggest. Nonetheless, handle with care, and check any source you’re planning to quote or otherwise make use of to ensure that his presentation of the facts is correct.

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Review – The Mummy Case Mystery

Posted October 20, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Mummy Case Mystery

The Mummy Case Mystery

by Dermot Morrah

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 230
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

The Commemoration Night ball at Beaufort College, Oxford, is disturbed first by a strange prank with a professor's mummy, then by a tragic fire that kills the professor-or did it? If he died in the fire, what happened to the mummy? Professors Sargent and Considine take it upon themselves to investigate when the coroner rules accidental death, leaving them with unanswered questions.

I read about this book in Martin Edwards’ book on classic crime, and thought it sounded pretty awesome, so I tracked down a copy. In the UK they’re stupidly expensive, but AbeBooks solved that problem.

The book is very much an Oxford mystery: the first few chapters are just completely redolent of nostalgia and love for Oxford. It’s very similar in feel to Gaudy Night, and I’d be surprised if Dermot Morrah wasn’t an alumnus. (There’s a touch of romance here, but only the very lightest touch: no placet ne, magistra? here, and no chance of it either. It’s not anti-women but it’s not particularly positive about them either, though at least one character’s views on women in education are rather shown up.)

The mystery is entertaining enough, and I cottoned on to significant parts of it — not all, but most. Don’t be fooled by the title, in any case: the Egyptian stuff is mere trappings, though the mummy case is important in its way. Oxford is the real star.

I found it enjoyable, but a little slow and convoluted.

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Review – Bad News: Why We Fall for Fake News

Posted September 19, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Cover of Bad News by Rob BrothertonBad News: Why We Fall for Fake News, Rob Brotherton

Bad News is surprisingly full of good news, in fact. Although the subtitle makes it sound like this is all about “fake news”, that’s not quite the truth. The book focuses on the news in general, reasoning that to understand the problem of fake news, you must first understand what the news is and what we hope to get out of it. Fair enough, and Brotherton explains clearly various bits of research around the news and covers the history of how we’ve responded to the news.

The news is generally good, in fact: most people aren’t in filter bubbles, says the research; most people aren’t taken in by fake news, or so it seems in studies; partisan effects are there but less than you’d guess; people are able to take on board new information.

Which leaves me wondering why the online experience is so different, where it’s abundantly clear that people do believe absolutely bonkers things from fringe websites. Are those people not reached by the studies, and thus the studies inherently contain some bias? Is the online community just one of those examples where you only hear the squeaky wheels, and gosh, they squeak loudly? No conclusions here, just wondering.

Brotherton’s book is a surprisingly quick read, and surprisingly optimistic. I actually enjoyed it quite a bit.

Rating: 4/5

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Review – Slime: A Natural History

Posted September 16, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Cover of Slime: A Natural History, by Susanne WedlichSlime: A Natural History, Susanne Wedlich, trans. Ayca Türkoglu 

Slime: A Natural History is a very readable book. Often with translated works, I can tell that they’re translated, but this translator is very good at making the book feel chatty and colloquial. It slips by really quickly, with the author’s enthusiasm for the topic shining through.

However, it doesn’t quite feel organised. Although the chapters are arranged into sections by theme, it feels very “and another thing, and another thing, and another thing” — a pile of facts that doesn’t really cohere into a structure. I also thought that the human “fear” of slime was a bit over-egged. Sure, there are times when slime is very gross and touching it would be aversive, and there are horror films which use that grossness as part of the fever-pitch of emotion, but I don’t find slime inherently frightening.

Still, an enjoyable read, and I learned some interesting things!

Rating: 3/5

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Review – Death in Captivity

Posted September 15, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Cover of Death in Captivity by Michael GilbertDeath in Captivity, Michael Gilbert

Oof, I find talking about this one… complicated. Michael Gilbert was a prisoner of war during World War II, so in this story set in a prison camp in Italy, he knows exactly what he’s writing about. And that shows. It’s not like some war stories written nowadays where the gritty detail is intended to evoke a sense of hopelessness and despair: instead, it’s his matter-of-factness about the details and the shape of daily life that makes me feel a little crushed, reading it. Things often don’t seem so bad, kind of normal, and then atrocities casually happen.

As a result, it was a reading experience that I more appreciated than enjoyed, if that makes sense. It’s an inspired setting for a murder mystery, and Gilbert’s writing is… perhaps not the most descriptive, picture-painting stuff, but it makes things very clear, and for all that it’s matter of fact, the sense of life in the PoW camp really did come through.

As for the mystery… well. I don’t want to say too much, but I was disappointed by the solution — not because it didn’t make sense or anything, but just because it was more of that awful war-time mood. Not unexpected, not a bad twist to the story, nothing like that. Just… very WWII.

Rating: 3/5

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Review – The Possibility of Life

Posted September 12, 2023 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Cover of The Possibility of Life by Jaime GreenThe Possibility of Life, Jaime Green

The Possibility of Life looks to both science and science fiction for an idea of humanity’s hopes, dreams and fears of what alien life might look like, how realistic that might be, and what it’s based on. If you’re an SF/F fan, you’ll probably recognise a lot of the references, and not just the old white men or the hit TV series of SF either: Ursula Le Guin and N.K. Jemisin are here too.

I found it very readable, and thought Green presents the scientific facts (such as they are) very well. The enthusiasm for the subject is palpable, and optimistic, but doesn’t over-egg it (we’re probably not five minutes from meeting a Vulcan or Cardassian).

Nothing too surprising for me, but I enjoyed the approach to the subject.

Rating: 4/5

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