Friday, 30 December 2016

A Year of Reading - In Pictures

Intrigued by just what my current insatiable reading habit amounts to, and keen to share my literary discoveries and pleasures, I decided for a year to photograph, at the end of each month, the books I finished that month. These have been shared, along with some limited (but admittedly growing) comments, with a small number of Facebook friends each month. Here now is the compilation of those posts for 2016, for wider consideration and hopefully enjoyment…

January

Emma – Jane Austen
The Outrun – Amy Liptrot

A bracing contrast as pompous fictional Emma Woodhouse and the very real alcoholic Amy Liptrot get their respective acts together.


February

The Good Soldier – Ford Madox Ford
Runner – Lizzy Hawker
Black Country – Liz Berry


The exquisitely articulated slow sad adulterous self-destruction of Ford's masterpiece, nicely offset by the wonderfully motivating and life-affirming story of mountain ultrarunner Lizzy Hawker. With some brilliantly evocative and visceral brummie poetry from Liz Berry stirred into the mix. Marvellous!

March

The Buried Giant – Kazuo Ishiguro
The Bell Jar – Sylvia Plath
Shackleton's Whisky – Neville Peat
A Sleepwalk on the Severn – Alice Oswald
Virginia Woolf – Alexandra Harris


A bumper month, though a couple of titles required a stiff drink to see me through! I fear Alexandra Harris has worked her normal magic on me, and that I'm now fired up to read much more Virginia Woolf...

April

Rain – Melissa Harrison
Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
The Bonniest Companie – Kathleen Jamie


Three more gems; I'm particularly pleased to finally "get" Virginia Woolf after several abortive tries - Mrs Dalloway is an astonishing piece of writing really. And Kathleen Jamie's poetry was a fine and fitting accompaniment to our April Scottish foray - this collection was written in 2014 and beautifully captures the essence and mood of that country in independence referendum year.

May

In Pursuit of Spring – Edward Thomas
The Singing Sands – Josephine Tey
To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf


A wonderful journey by bicycle from London to the sea in Somerset with Edward Thomas a hundred years ago, through some places and country lanes I know intimately, had me reaching for the maps and memories. Followed by an elegantly sparse, understated yet addictively evocative, 1950s murder mystery in the Scottish highlands and islands courtesy of Josephine Tey. And finally another fantastic dose of Virginia Woolf; To the Lighthouse is so subtle, complex and insightful it almost beggars belief, packing so much in so cleverly that it seems entirely reasonable that she should have suffered a breakdown after the completion of several of her major books.

June

Nothing is True and Everything is Possible – Peter Pomerantsev
The Racer – David Millar
A William Condry Reader – Jim Perrin (editor)


The reason why Orwell's 1984 doggedly remains a top ten bestseller in Russia is writ large in Pomerantsev's chilling account of how Putin's dystopian nation is currently run, and in particular how the "truth" is carefully manufactured for the masses. A cautionary tale if ever there was one.
Once again David Millar proves he can rise substantially above the usual two-dimensional sports autobiography, and has produced a timeless and passionate warts-and-all account of his final racing season which still leaves him and his readers well in love with cycling and its wonderful culture.
And finally an antidote to all the worlds current frenetic madness, in a fine compilation of the beautiful writings of the under-appreciated  late Welsh naturalist William Condry. There are times when you need a book like this, found hiding in a shop in Aberystwyth.ll account of his final racing season which still leaves him and his readers well in love with cycling and its wonderful culture.
And finally an antidote to all the worlds current frenetic madness, in a fine compilation of the beautiful writings of the under appreciated late Welsh naturalist William Condry. There are times when you need a book like this, found hiding in a shop in Aberystwyth.


July

Cockfosters – Helen Simpson
At Hawthorn Time – Melissa Harrison
Five Rivers Met on a Wooded Plain – Barney Norris
All the Birds, Singing – Evie Wyld


Consistently compelling and powerful writing from four modern authors this month, it’s been quite a ride! None, and especially Evie Wyld, are for the faint-hearted but all are ultimately and variously rewarding

August

Summer – Melissa Harrison (editor)
Black Apples of Gower – Iain Sinclair
The Man in the High Castle – Philip Dick


While I usually avoid "pretty" anthologies which are so often full of the same lazily selected tired old material, Melissa Harrison's Summer really is the business. Full of new writing by young authors and naturalists, around a lightweight framework of smartly chosen minor masterpieces by more established names, it manages to gradually envelope you in a marvellous summerness - to perhaps cling on to into autumn (though there is also now an Autumn volume, just out).
And Iain Sinclair manages to beautifully and gently expand your mind in his unique mysterious way as he eruditely ambles through his childhood haunts on the Gower, embracing creative connections at every turn (Dylan Thomas, Vernon Watkins, Ceri Richards…).
In stark contrast is Philip Dick’s sixties sci-fi masterpiece, or should that simply be alternative history since it describes a post-war America run by the Japanese and Germans. Either way it disorientatingly focuses on a few ordinary lives and small scale events, with an emerging considerable and odd emphasis on Chinese philosophy that develops an unsettlingly power and a climax strangely reminiscent of 2001. A very sixties example of the drug-fuelled creative process, which certainly stays with you afterwards and keeps you pondering.e just out!).
And Iain Sinclair manages to beautifully and gently expand your mind in his unique mysterious way as he eruditely ambles through his childhood haunts on the Gower, embracing creative connections at every turn (Dylan Thomas, Vernon Watkins, Ceri Richards...).
In stark contrast is Philip Dick's sixties sci-fi masterpiece, or should that simply be alternative history since it describes a post-war America run by the Japanese and Germans who had won. Either way it disorientatingly focuses on a few ordinary lives and small scale events, with an emerging considerable and odd emphasis on Chinese philosophy that develops an unsettling power and a climax strangely reminiscent of 2001. A very sixties example of the drug-fuelled creative process, which certainly stays with you afterwards and keeps you pondering...



September

Addlands – Tom Bullough
Skies – Alison Brackenbury
His Bloody Project – Graeme MacRae Burnet


Three powerful volumes this month; a beautiful moving epic tale of three generations of farmers in the Welsh borders around Llanbedr Hill from Tom Bullough, pure fiendish poetic magic from Alison Brackenbury in Skies, and a brutal triple murder in the 19th century Scottish Highlands that provides the vehicle for exploring so many things, including the nature of truth itself (but definitely not one for the squeamish).

October

What Goes Around – Emily Chappell
Estuary – Rachel Lichtenstein
The Mirror of the Sea – Joseph Conrad


From the heart of the city to the open sea in three volumes.

I started this month with Emily Chappell’s breathless and addictive account of life as a cycle courier in central London, which had me tearing around hazard-strewn streets trying to meet delivery deadlines with her. Her intimate evocation of the marginal culture of couriers and raw enthusiasm for everything cycling (see also thatemilychappell.com ) had me well and truly hooked.

I then wended my way out of the city on the Thames, courtesy of Rachel Lichtenstein’s atmospheric homage to the Estuary of her books title and her home. A passionate and compelling capture of another marginal place, of land and water, made particularly real through the lives of many of its fascinating current occupants, often in conversation; a genuine treat. It also contains a number of superb quotes from Joseph Conrad that neatly reminded me of the book I had to read next.I then wended my way out of the city on the Thames, courtesy of Rachel Lichtenstein’s atmospheric homage to the Estuary of her books title and her home. A passionate and compelling capture of another marginal place, of land and water, made particularly real through the lives of many of its fascinating current occupants, often in conversation; a genuine treat. It also contains a number of quotes from Joseph Conrad that neatly reminded me of the book I had to read next.

It is a special pleasure when a book you start in the hope it will be merely good, rapidly blows your mind. Magnificent is the only word for Conrad’s The Mirror of the Sea. It is rare in simply setting out to provide the reader the sense of being at sea in a sailing ship at the end of the nineteenth century, without any single underlying adventure tale or narrative. It’s the only non-fiction by Conrad and is underpinned by the experience and knowledge of twenty years at sea working his way up to captain, and the intellect and sheer writing prowess of one the greatest authors of all time. Every sentence counts for something, and the wonder, fear, psychology, atmosphere and complexity of every aspect of sailing is covered along with an astonishing level of observation and insight of human nature and the human condition. A captivating read and true classic. There is also a beautiful chapter on the Thames estuary, making for the smoothest of cross-overs from Lichtenstein’s work.
 
 then wended my way out of the city on the Thames, courtesy of Rachel Lichtenstein’s atmospheric homage to the Estuary of her books title and her home. A passionate and compelling capture of another marginal place, of land and water, made particularly real through the lives of many of its fascinating current occupants, often in conversation; a genuine treat. It also contains a number of superb quotes from Joseph Conrad that neatly reminded me of the book I had to read next.It is a special pleasure when a book you start in the hope it will be merely good, rapidly blows your mind. Magnificent is the only word for Conrad’s The Mirror of the Sea. It is rare in simply setting out to provide the reader the sense of being at sea in a sailing ship at the end of the nineteenth century, without any single underlying adventure tale or narrative. It’s the only non-fiction by Conrad and is underpinned by the experience and knowledge of twenty years at sea working his way up to captain, and the intellect and sheer writing prowess of one of the greatest authors of all time. Every sentence counts for something, and the wonder, fear, psychology, atmosphere and complexity of every aspect of sailing is covered along with an astonishing level of observation and insight of human nature and the human condition. A captivating read and true classic. There is also a beautiful chapter on the Thames estuary, making for the smoothest of transitions from Lichtenstein’s work.

November

The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
Days Without End – Sebastian Barry
Let Them Eat Chaos – Kate Tempest


In the month that the year's imbecilic self-destruction reaches its new low point I felt the need for some robust challenging reading.

Margaret Atwood's dystopian classic on the appropriation of women’s bodies seemed scarily real, let's hope Trump who famously "doesn't read" doesn't get hold of a copy - he'd probably treat it as a user guide. One of those books perhaps largely regarded as by women, for women, but which would have greatest impact if more (intelligent) men read it.

Sebastian Barry’s new novel tracing 20 years of the Indian Wars and the US Civil War rattles along at a breathtaking pace with a gay love affair, cross-dressing aplenty, savagery of the direst kind imaginable, and a twisting cliff-hanger plot. Somehow through all of this, wrapped within exquisite descriptions of landscape and season, runs a golden thread of simple love, truth and integrity that is hugely life-affirming.

And so to Kate Tempest's necessary, vital, angry blast. A 72 page accessible poem on the state of society, the nation and the planet that I got through in a single sitting. It tells us what we all need to know at this dire post-truth, post-humane moment, where we seem to have collectively totally lost the plot. Read it. Deal with it.t impact if more (intelligent) men read it.
 Barry's new novel tracing 20 years of the Indian wars and the US civil war, rattles along at a breathtaking pace with a gay love affair, cross-dressing aplenty, savagery of the direst kind imaginable, and a twisting cliff-hanger plot. Somehow through all this, wrapped within exquisite descriptions of landscape and season, runs a golden thread of simple love, truth and integrity that is hugely life-affirming.

December

The Essex Serpent – Sarah Perry
Slaughterhouse Five – Kurt Vonnegut
Some Corner of a Foreign Field – James Bentley (editor)
Black Dog, The Dreams of Paul Nash – Dave McKean


Popularity and merit should never be confused, but justly coincide in Sarah Perry’s superbly brooding Dickensian (with a touch of Bram Stoker and Sarah Waters) tale on the murky Essex marshes around the Blackwater. It’s about belief versus fact; fear and need and desire, and ultimately about the overlooked power of that most modest sounding of things, friendship. A great tale to curl up with of a winters evening; frequently discomforting, and building its strength seductively slowly.

Kurt Vonnegut survived the 1945 bombing and subsequent firestorm of Dresden as a POW by virtue of being imprisoned in an underground slaughterhouse in the city. It took him another 24 years to adequately distil what he wanted to say about it into his classic Slaughterhouse Five. The slim volume contains aliens, and a novel take on time (and what a lifetime is) whereby he slides up and down his own timeline, frequently from one paragraph to the next. Other reviewers have noted its potential influence on the recent superb film Arrival, if not directly then possibly indirectly on the writer Ted Chiang whose short story the film is directly based upon. For all its strangeness and often apparent randomness, Vonnegut ultimately weaves a hard-hitting work that is one of the best anti-war books of all time.

And finally, as we reach the mid-point of the centenary of the supposed “war to end all wars”, two superb devastating volumes to aid the contemplation of man's (continuing) inanity:

Some Corner of a Foreign Field is, frankly, perfect. There are many much more weighty collections of Great War poetry, and the beauty and diminutive size of this volume may fool you into thinking it is relatively trivial, but the combination of expertly chosen poems (all necessarily short to fit on a single page) and opposing striking colour artwork from the time, achieve something even greater than the sum of its considerable parts - exceptionally moving.

Graphic novels have not been my natural territory, conjuring as they do, images of adolescent boys clutching dodgy magazines with improbably busty heroines on their covers. Yet the form is getting interesting, and so-called literary graphic novels for adults have in particular started to emerge. Taking the blending of artwork and words to create powerful messages (the previously mentioned book does this after all) to a new level is intriguing and exciting. The perfect example of what can be achieved is Dave McKean’s recent stunning Black Dog – The Dreams of Paul Nash. Nash was a war artist in both World Wars, creating iconic images from each, and his life experiences before, during and immediately after the Great War are used here as a framework for a dramatic exploration of what war does to men, and what personal traits and skeletons come to the fore during and after extreme situations (black dog is of course an allusion to depression). McKean pulls no punches in page after page of dark powerful artwork and comparatively light use of text (including a subtle passing quote from Vonnegut), constantly varying in innovative style, and delivers a formidable coherent whole that simply knocks you for six.


Here's to Good Reading...
 

See also:  Favourite Listening of 2016

Monday, 11 January 2016

Favourite Listening of 2015

It’s that time of year again, and 2015 has provided a particularly diverse and exciting range of new (to me) musical listening. My favourite half dozen albums of the past year are detailed below for your consideration, and hopefully enjoyment.

As an aside, my listening was briefly interrupted this year by the final expiry of my trusty hi-fi, after 23 years sterling service, as the amplifier died and the attached CD player made an increasingly alarming range of noises. So what to do? I’m as impressed as anyone by the clever new ways of listening to music; my credit card sized iPod containing 250 CDs-worth of music still amazes me, providing tolerable sound quality and a handy ability to be plugged into the car stereo, and networked and blue-toothed options abound. But still nothing comes close to a decent hi-fi with a couple of reasonably-sized high quality speakers, fed by good quality source material, for fully appreciating a piece of music in all its detail, mood and subtlety. It frequently even trumps live music when focussing purely on the music, as the latter is at the mercy of remarkably common dodgy sound systems, engineers and acoustics that can leave you deafened and/or puzzling over the lyrics or the crudeness of the sound.

Reports in recent years of the impending death of the CD in favour of the download, streaming, or some such internet-enabled nebulosity, left me wondering if it would still be sensible or even possible to invest in a replacement CD-based system. It became necessary to take a deep breath and plunge briefly into the rather disturbing world of hi-fi magazines (£200 for a 1m cable anyone?) to educate myself. The message I got from this little exercise was strangely reassuring; buried in many of the reviews of weird and wonderful digital audio devices at absurd prices was the frequent referral to CD-quality sound as the standard that many new devices still aspire to, but frequently don’t reach. And since I’ve also detected a renewed commitment to the issuing of new music of the sort that interests me on physical CD (not to mention my existing collection), I decided I was going to stick with it for as much of the next 23 years as possible. So a couple of shiny new boxes have been installed at moderate expense, the sound quality is even better than before, and I can get promptly back to thinking about the music rather than equipment (very much the opposite, I fear, to regular readers of those magazines - I believe it’s largely a male thing)...

 
The Gloaming
The Gloaming are the new band of the profoundly impressive Irish sean-nos singer Iarla O Lionaird that I was fortunate enough to see perform in great style in 2014 (see 19May2014 post). On this, the bands eponymous first album from 2014, the deeply moving Gaelic songs performed by Iarla on the first and final tracks would alone justify its purchase price, yet there is so much more to it than that. Indeed more than half the tracks of the highly coherent whole, more like a symphony of movements rather than a collection of disparate tracks, are instrumentals. And these, including both fiddle and guitar played respectively by the formidable Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill, but also fine sensitive piano from Thomas Bartlett, are measured, consequential, and often semi-classical in range and flow, though always with a traditional Irish core that is occasionally allowed freer rein. Overall this is a serious, magnificent, timeless piece of work that will always reward the thoughtful listener.

Olivia Chaney: The Longest River
So at last the long awaited debut album arrives, and has to immediately run the gauntlet of the sky high expectations that have been given too much time to accumulate. On initial listen it’s a pretty good piece of work: crystalline, emotive, intricate, elegant and polished, with material centred on youthful growing pains that the recording label, witness promotional tours in Australia and the US but not the UK, have clearly decided is best suited to an offshore/transatlantic market. Good yet measured and caveated early press reviews however, prioritising timely publication perhaps, suggest that those high expectations have not been exactly met. After a couple of listens I tended to agree, there seemed no immediate wow-factor of the sort perhaps we were all expecting, knowing just how uniquely talented and engaging Chaney is - based on live performances and the 5-track EP of a couple of years ago. And yet. This album has refused to let go and has drawn me back again and again, and has grown in stature with every listen in a way I recall of the best of the likes of Joni Mitchell. I’ve finally had to admit that this is actually a very fine and often poignant work, with sufficient depth and quality to provide substantial and sustained rewards, and am left pondering whether some of the writers so keen to be first with a review would actually write something different given a later opportunity.

Attwenger: Spot
23 tracks in 40 minutes from Austria’s finest alpine duo delivers a quick-fire Germanic accordion/ drums/ synthesizer based object lesson in rampant creativity and sheer beguiling entertainment that leaves many other established artists looking comparatively shabby in those departments. See my previous (15Nov2015) post on this splendid, criminally unsung outfit for far more.

Stick In the Wheel: From Here
This is not a nice album. It’s brash, in-yer-face, Essex. Raw down-to-earth contemporary stories are mixed with almost brutal no-nonsense reworking of traditional folk standards for an effect that some of a nervous disposition might find offensive (“the antidote to twee” has been one description, “punk-folk” I might almost suggest). Somehow evocative of many current injustices and with an air of not-so-quiet desperation; but boy is it bracing! They still call it folk, but it seems to have blown guys in Arran jumpers with fingers in their ears to kingdom come. fRoots magazine Critics Poll Album of 2015. Awesome. Nuff said.

Moriarty: Epitaph
I picked this up while stranded at Orly airport, nudged by a vaguely remembered favourable review and, yes, its exquisite hardback book format. Moriarty are a well-established French-based band fronted by distinctive singer Rosemary Standley, who sing in English but have been strangely absent from British soil for some years. Whatever their origins, the bands core sound is, if anything, gusting towards American traditional (blues, ballads, hillybilly…), though always versatile and, as I’m discovering, always compelling. Epitaph indicates an album whose central theme is death, and how it is variously coped with, yet this is not the complete downer it might sound – Moriarty have a talent for originality, atmosphere and for getting the feet tapping, and spirits (pun intended) can’t be kept down for long. They also put a high value on craftsmanship, evident both in the sheer quality of their performances and their beautifully presented albums – Epitaph comes in a cloth-bound book full of intriguing and elegant drawings and hand-written lyrics.

The White Stripes: De Stijl
OK so this is catch-up time for the old codger who is just 15 years late on this one. Based on the well proven rule that 90% of current mainstream pop/rock music is mutton dressed in myriad different ways as lamb, I don’t really track it very much. This obviously runs the risk of missing the odd gem, which is a pretty good description of Jack and Meg White, alias The White Stripes. This is the first album of theirs I picked up, and I was immediately blown away by the power of rock music being performed with greater charisma, originality and sheer competence than I’ve heard it for a very long time. Superficially some of it may sound like much that has gone before, but this is somehow considerably superior to most, with some great classy musicianship, and very very addictive. It’s a while since I bought three albums by the same outfit in as many weeks, and it was also rather novel to be twice congratulated on my choice by young music shop staff; respect!

The White Stripes also have an irresistible ability to tease you into nudging the volume up, and up, and even to wonder if perhaps some slightly bigger speakers might be in order…  Hmmm, where exactly did I put those magazines?

Happy listening, however you do it.


See also: Favourite Listening of 2014