• The Duke, Matteo Melchiorre. Review.

    The Duke by Matteo Melchiorre Translation by Antonella Lettieri. (Foundry Editions, 2026) The Duke is in fact not a Duke – that is a semi-affectionate/semi-ironic name by which the locals in Rubino’s bar refer to him-  but he is a titled aristocrat, a young man who grew up in a (now sold) palazzo in Berua. 

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  • Project Hail Mary. Film Review

    Film: Project Hail Mary (2026)  Cert. 12A Genre: Sci Fi Drama with some comedic elements and some dark bits Directors: Phil Lord  / Christopher Miller Starring: Ryan Gosling/  Sandra Hüller/ James Ortiz I have just staggered home from a record breaking 2.5 hours in the cinema watching this film – and before anyone asks, no

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  • Evoking a Deep Sense of Place:  Clear by Carys Davies. A Review.

    Carys Davies has set her book in 1843 at the cross section between the disestablishment of the Free Church of Scotland and the Highland clearances – as well as a potato famine.   The clearances took place between 1750 and 1860.  Deciding that small tenanted dwellings and farms were too unprofitable, landowners sought ways to expand

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  • Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton #CCSpin43

    I read this book for Classics Club Spin # 43. I read my own copy published by Vintage, 2002. *** Cry, the Beloved Country stands as an impassioned plea for an end to the horrors of apartheid.  The reader is immediately drawn into the beauty of the surroundings in which the chief protagonist, Reverend Stephen

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  • One Moonlit Night by Caradog Prichard #ReadingWales26

     (Canons, 2015) Trans. Philip Mitchell. Foreword (2009) by Niall Griffiths.  Afterword (2009): Jan Morris Last year Paula at BookJotter handed on the baton from the Reading Wales challenge having hosted for many years. This year I am joining in with Karen from Booker Talk and Kathryn Eastman from Nut Press for #ReadingWales26 a celebration of

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  • Guest Post: Review of Gwyn Thomas ‘A Welsh Eye’. Illustration by John Dd. Evans. #ReadingWales26

    Header image: ‘The Road to the Chapel’ by John Dd. Evans Publisher: Hutchinson & Co, 1964. Last year Paula at BookJotter handed on the baton from the Reading Wales challenge having hosted for many years. This year I shall be joining in with Karen from Booker Talk and Kathryn Eastman from Nut Press for #ReadingWales26

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  • I’m just in time to announce that I’m taking part in the #readingwales event which runs 1st – 31st March 2026. Last year Paula at BookJotter handed on the baton from the Reading Wales challenge having hosted for many years. This year I shall be joining in with Karen from Booker Talk and Kathryn Eastman

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  • If on a winter’s night a traveller…

    Italo Calvino (Vintage) 1998 Trans. William Weaver. “I have had the idea of writing a novel composed only of the beginnings of novels”. The protagonist could be a reader who is continually interrupted…” This novel begins in a railway station (but it actually begins in a bookshop). The protagonist ‘I’ does not appear until the

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  • The Changeling Child by H.S. Norup,  Pushkin Press #readindies

    The Changeling Child, by H.S. Norup (Pushkin Press) 2025 I was getting in a bit of a pickle over a book for the Indie Press challenge hosted by Karen at kaggsysbookishramblings since the book which I originally ordered for the challenge – The Palace on the Higher Hill by Karim Kattan had not arrived from

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  • All Nature’s Complicated Beauty: H is For Hawk. Film Review

    “We are all fragile creatures whose lives are marked by grief, loss and times of great personal darkness, but together we share more than we lose, and our courses through life are buoyed and shaped by love.” Helen Macdonald                                                                                                             Director: Philippa Lowthorpe Starring Claire Foy and Brendan Gleeson. I recently expressed concern in a

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