Book of the Week, new releases, non-fiction

Book of the Week: Entitled

I mean, I’d be shocked if any of you are surprised by today’s pick if you saw yesterday’s reading list, because I am somewhat predictable BUT this really lived up to the hype and is worth reading.

Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York is a joint biography of Prince Andrew, Duke of York and his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson. It’s written by Andrew Lownie, whose previous book was The Traitor King (which I also read on a holiday!) but has also written about The Mountbattens and Guy Burges. Lownie says in the introduction that he asked the Duke and Duchess to participate in the book – who then tried to prevent the book from happening. He says he approached more than three thousand people as part of the process of writing this book, of whom only around a tenth responded. All of which is to say that he wants you to know that he’s really tried to get the whole picture about the couple. It’s a joint biography but it’s also a look at the way that the couple remain incredibly intertwined nearly 20 years after their divorce. Andrew of course was forced to retire from public life after his disastrous Newsnight interview in 2019, where he tried (and failed) to answer questions about his relationship with the paedophile former financier Jeffry Epstein.

Now you may have seen the headlines generated first by the serialisation ahead of publication, and then the think pieces afterwards about what it means for the future of the couple. Or of course the headlines this week when Sarah Ferguson was dropped by a series of charities after an email from her to Epstein emerged from after the time when she said she had cut all contact with him. And you may think that given all that, what is the point of reading the book, surely all the best bits are already out there.

Well. Yes, the biggest revelations are already out there, but I think reading the book really brings home the scale and volume of it all. And although a lot of the focus of scandal in recent years has been on him (and indeed the serialisation headlines), her behaviour is worth reading about too – according to this she’s a charming people person and great sales person, locked in a cycle of spending, debt and then grift and deals to try and bring it round to a point where she then repeats the pattern.

In The Traitor King, Lownie made a persuasive case that the Duke and Duchess of Windsor were active and willing participants in the Nazi intrigues that surrounded them as part of a concerted effort to benefit themselves and improve their positions and I think it changed significantly the way that the couple are viewed. This isn’t changing the way that the Duke of York is perceived – it’s putting all the pieces together and adding in the background information to really cement the idea that he’s up to his neck in scandals around sex and money. And between the two of them – in Lownie’s telling – they present a big challenge for the British monarchy to deal with at a time when there are less and less “working” Royals and also perhaps less public fondness for the institution as a whole.

I bought my copy of Entitled at the airport but you should be able to get this basically everywhere – as long as they haven’t run out of copies. And at Birmingham last week, they only had copies in one of the bookshops (and as I said on Saturday I didn’t manage to get it in any of my pictures!) and not many of them. But I’ve seen it in any bookshop of any size that I’ve been into since early August, and it’s obviously in Kindle and Kobo and audiobook too – although those e-versions have already had a edit, which is a good reminder to us all that ebook files are changeable, and your hard copies are not – once you’ve bought the original version I mean!

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: September 22 – September 27

So as you saw on Saturday I’ve been on holiday, and so the list is appropriately holiday-y. My goal for the holiday was to read the same number of books from NetGalley as other books and across the week and a bit I basically did that (once you exclude the audiobooks) so I’m pretty pleased with that. Go me. For once a target I achieved!

Read:

Entitled by Andrew Lownie

Island Calling by Francesca Segal*

Mrs Pargeter’s Past by Simon Brett*

The American Duchess by Anna Pasternak

Murder on the Mountain by Ellie Alexander

Love Queenie by Mayukh Sen*

The Crichel Boys by Simon Fenwick

The Last Camel Died at Noon by Elizabeth Peters

Villains in Venice by Katherine Woodfine

Peggy by Rebecca Godfrey with Leslie Jamison*

Started:

Twilight Falls by Juneau Black

Abdication by Brian Inglis

You Had to Be There by Jodie Harsh*

Still reading:

Ritual of Fire by D V Bishop

Pet Shop Boys, Literally by Chris Heath

Three e-books bought.

Bonus picture: a delightful view across to Tenerife on Saturday afternoon.

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

audio, not a book

Not a Book: Unicorn Girl

Happy Sunday everyone, I hope everyone is making the most of the weekend, and that it hasn’t turned too-too cold and wet where you are. I’m back with another podcast today, which is the next series from the presenter of Scamanda, the podcast that inspired the documentary series that featured in a previous Not a Book.

Unicorn Girl is about the rise and fall of Candace Rivera, a divorced single mum in Utah, who built an online community based around her successes as a nurse and a CEO of multi-million dollar companies. But as you can probably guess, all wasn’t quite what she wanted you to think it was. Over the course of nine episodes, Charlie Webster tries to work out what was actually going on and who Candace really was. The first episode of this dropped into the Scamanda feed in mid-August, I listened to it and then went straight over to the Unicorn Girl feed to listen to episode two. And then I got Apple Plus so that I could listen to the rest of the series straight away rather than having to wait for a new episode each week.

Now that was partly because I have poor impulse control, but also because early on Charlie says that there’ll be times when you’re listening when nothing seems to add up, but by the end of the series it will all make sense. And that’s a brave thing to say (in my opinion!) when you’re trying to get people to keep listening, but it also intrigued me. And she’s not wrong. Candace’s con (so to speak) is a lot more complicated than Amanda’s was. In Scamanda, Charlie jumps backwards and forwards in time a bit but Amanda is really just doing the same con more than once. But Candace has got a lot of things going on and is juggling a lot of balls and that all makes it a lot more difficult to follow.

It must be really hard to follow up a series as successful as Scamanda, because so much is depending on finding the right story – the world of podcasts is littered with attempts to follow up something great that haven’t quite come off. It needs to be similar enough that your previous audience will still be interested, but not so similar that it feels like a total retread. And Candace’s story has got a lot going for it on that front, not least interviews with loads of the women who were working for or friends with Candance as well as Candace’s own voice from her social media posts. But there’s just so much going on. However, without wanting to give too much of a spoiler, this has more resolution to it than Scamanda did when I first listened to it (although no more than the documentary series had by the time that it came out).

I hope that doesn’t sound too negative – because make no mistake, I binged this podcast – listening to all nine episodes in less than three days as well as obviously signing up to a subscription service to be able to do that. I do think Scamanda is better, but if you’re interested in the same sort of Utah/Mormon-adjacent/religion-adjacent sort of things that I am (and I’ve written about enough of them at this point) then it’s worth a look. I’ve even held onto this post for a few weeks so that almost all the series is available without having to subscribe to anything! You’re welcome.

Have a great Sunday everyone.

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Autumn 2024 Airport Edition

Happy Saturday everyone! I’ve been on holiday – and so I’ve been at the airport bookshop again. And please note, these were not taken this week – so they’re pre-Richard Osman release, which I’m expecting to be dominating from this week on.

But let’s start with the “biggest books” of the week which continue to be Coleen Hoover, Frieda McFadden and Sarah J Maas with a spattering of other books in silimar ends of their genres like Elsie Silver and Rebecca Yarros.

Lots of familiar names here too – last year’s Osman now in small paperback, Liane Moriarty, Lisa Jewell, Jojo Moyes, Harlan Coben but I’m really pleased to see how often Bob Mortimer is popping up in these displays now. I don’t think he’s my thing but I will give one a go at some point because I’ve heard good things about them being smart and funny. And we need more smart and funny.

I was a bit disappointed with the non-fiction paperbacks – I was hoping for more stuff I hadn’t seen or at least more stuff that wasn’t self help or podcast tie-in books. I’ve picked up some interesting stuff from this very bookshop before (Going Infinite for example) that was a bit different.

And now on to the airport exclusives aka the stuff that’s only in hardback everywhere else. And we have some more of the same names from the biggest books display but also the latest Emily Henry, the very new R F Kuang, and the new Adam Kay (as in This is Going to Hurt) murder mystery. But surprisingly not Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid

And it should be noted that I clearly missed a display somewhere because one of my airport purchases was Entitled, the new Andrew Lownie about the Duke and Duchess of York and I cannot find it in any of my pictures, but the other was Fast Money – seen on the bottoms row here about the finances of Formula One.

And finally because I can hear you wondering about Dan Brown and yes, they did have the new Robert Langdon but and this is a big bit – only in hardback, not as the large format paperback which I found really interesting – and not many of them which given the big ad they had for it may well mean they had sold a fair few copies!

Have a great weekend!

cozy crime, crime, detective, mystery, series

Mystery Series: Canon Clement

The TV adaptation of Reverend Richard Coles’ first novel in the Daniel Clement series arrives on TV soon so I thought now was a good time to write a series post about them, although I’ve already written a few bits about them in other posts.

Lets start with a reminder of the set up: It’s the late 1980s and Daniel Clement is Canon of the parish of Champton, a seemingly quiet and sleepy village (albeit a fairly large village judging by the number of shops it has!) where secrets are hiding below the surface. Murder Before Evensong sees battle lines being drawn in the village over a proposal for a lavatory in the church. You wouldn’t think that could lead to murder, but when it comes to parish rivalries, anything is possible! Trust me, I’ve seen things. One of the things that I like about the books is the fact that I can recognise a lot of the processes and ceremonies of the church as very similar to the ones that were happening in the parish church that I went to as a child.

There are four books and a Christmas novella in the series now and so far Coles has managed to find different places and set ups to put Daniel in so that Champton doesn’t quite feel like the St Mary Mead or Cabot Cove of the Midlands. So in book two he’s in a neighbouring parish that is being merged with Champton. In book three he’s taken a sabbatical from his day job to go back to the monastery where he trained and in book four there’s a movie crew filming at Champton House.

As you can see from the trailer above, the adaptation has Matthew Lewis aka Neville Longbottom as Daniel and Amanda Redman as his mother Audrey. It’s going out on Channel Five, which means it could go either way for me: I really liked the first couple of series of their All Creatures Great and Small adaptation, but I haven’t had a lot of luck with their other mystery series. But I remain hopeful and I may yet report back…

Have a great weekend everyone!

Book previews

Out This Week: You Had To Be There

We are in the thick of the autumn releases now, and I’ve already written about some of the big hitters coming ahead of this Christmas, so today I wanted to mention a slightly more under the radar one: You Had To Be There by Jodie Harsh. The subtitle is An Odyessy through Noughties London, One Night At a Time. If you weren’t around in the early years of the 21st century, Jodie Harsh is a DJ, nightclub promoter and drag queen who was popping up all over the place in the pre-social media era of glossy celeb magazines because of her nightclub nights. Before Ru Paul’s Drag Race appeared, she was probably one of a handful of drag queens that people in the UK might have been able to name.

A lot has changed in London’s nightlife scene since the early noughties. While pubs and clubs across the country have struggled, the London nightclub and gay scene has been particularly badly hit – whether it’s all the venues that disappeared as a result of the construction of Crossrail (now known as the Elizabeth Line) around Tottenham Court Road Station or the masses of redevelopments that have happened in Soho which have seen small venues disappear because of construction work, rising rents or licencing issues because of the bougie new apartment buildings. I was never much of a club goer, but I was (and still am) a theatre goer who was on the perifery of some of these changes as well as an avid readers of the sort of magazines that featured stories about London nightlife, so I’m really looking forward to reading this.

Book previews, book round-ups, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: New Autumn Fiction

After last week’s look at the non-fiction, this week I’m using Recommendsday to talk abou the big fiction releases of the autumn as we hurtle towards Christmas.

I’ve already written about the new Dan Brown which came out on the 9th, but tomorrow sees the other biggie September with the arrival of the new Richard Osman. After taking a break from the Thursday Murder Club last year with We Solve Murders, he’s back with the fifth in the series The Impossible Fortune, which sees the residents of Coopers Chase back on the case. You’re going to want to have read the previous book because there was a Big Plot Development at the end of The Last Devil to Die.

Also out this week is the new novel from Patricia Lockwood, Will There Ever Be Another You. This is inspired by Lockwood’s own experiences suffering the effects of Long Covid on her memory and promises to be a slightly trippy and inventive read. I read Lockwood’s memoir Priestdaddy years ago and still need to read her first novel before I get around to this one, even if I was ready to start reading books set during Covid. Which I’m not sure I am yet!

The new R F Kuang, Katabasis is already out and completely everywhere. This is Kuang’s first book since Yellowface and is a return to speculative fiction. If you are a reader of Literary Fiction, there are lots of the Big Authors who have books out this autumn – from Salman Rushdie with The Eleventh Hour on November 4, to Ian McEwan’s “literary thriller and love story” What We Can Know (which came out last week) and William Boyd’s historical spy novel The Predicament which is his second book featuring Gabriel Dax (the first being Gabriel’s Moon).

There are also new books from some of the mega thriller writers: John Grisham has The Widow (October 21) which is being described as his first whodunnit as well as being a legal thriller. Jeffery Archer also has a new thriller out this week with End Game. In (other) books that are Not For Verity there is also the Nicholas Sparks and M Night Shyamalan book Remain

But what am I waiting for, I hear you ask. Well my autumn pre-orders include Olivia Dade’s Second Chance Romance. This is the second book in the Harlot’s Bay series, and I’ve had it pre-ordered since March, because that is how I roll. If you read At First Spite, this is Karl the Baker’s story, and the heroine is an audiobook narrator who moved away from town after high school. I can’t wait. It’s out at the end of November. I’ve also got the paperback of Katherine Center’s Love Haters ordered – the ebook came out at the start of the summer, but for some reason Past Verity went for the paperback and a longer wait!

The fifth H M The Queen Presents book, The Queen Who Came in from the Cold is out the same day – it’s the early 1960s, and The Queen is getting ready to go to Italy on the Royal Yacht when someone claims to have seen a murder from the Royal Train. There is another Sophie Hannah Poirot novel coming this autumn too – The Last Death of the Year – which sees Poirot arriving on a Greek island for New Year. These can go either way for me – I’ve liked two, disliked two and just picked up the one I haven’t read on offer to see how that one suits me.

And finally, it would be remiss of me not to mention that Stephen Rowley, author of The Celebrants and The Guncle, has a new one coming in mid October. Just a warning though that The Dogs of Venice is a novella – it’s already available on Audible and only lasts 80 minutes, so it’s quite pricey as a £20 hardback (no matter how much I love him).

books

Book of the Week: Breakneck

Happy Tuesday everyone and today I have a non-fiction pick for you – and it’s a book that’s only come out in the last month or so, so I’m even timely for once!

Dan Wang is a Chinese-Canadian, who now works in academia in the US as a research fellow but who was previous a China analyst looking at the country’s technological capabilities while living and working in Hong Kong, Beijing and Shanghai. Breakneck is his attempt to put all of this work into one place and to look at the differences between China and the US. He sees the US and China as fundamentally similar in some ways – but that China is an engineering state and the US is a lawyerly one. He says this isn’t a grand theory to explain everything but a framework to put the recent past in and to help understand what might happen next.

I found this really fascinating and illuminating and really liked Wang’s framework as a lens to view China and its relationship with the US through. I’ve spent a lot of time reading about China and trying to understand the current geopolitical situation as part of my day job so on a macro level this is interesting to me. But on a micro level, my little sister and her now husband moved to China in the summer of 2019 and I was really looking forward to visiting them and seeing China – and then the pandemic happened and they were stuck where they were and we were stuck where we were. They came back in 2021 and a lot of the stories that they have told me from their time in Beijing fit in with what is being set out here.

This is a really thought provoking book that is also a glimpse at China beyond the big cities that people outside of China have heard of. I don’t know enough about China to be able to analyse this on a scholarly level (duh!) but as a casual reader and consumer of world news it made a lot of sense to me!

My copy of Breakneck came via NetGalley, but it’s out now and hopefully should be relatively easy to get hold of if you’re in a bookshop with a decent non-fiction section. And it’s also on Kindle and Kobo.

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: September 15 – September 21

Well. That list is looking a bit more healthy. I was going to say it was looking better, but then I realised that not all the books on the list were better and revised my words. Because although there is some excellent stuff on there, there were also a few that were really not. But that happens every now and again, it just seems to have happened more than usual in the last couple of weeks. But on the bright side, another off the long runners list, so I can’t really complain can I?

Read:

The Vanderbeekers on the Road by Karina Yan Glaser

Breakneck by Dan Wang*

Abdication by Juliet Nicolson

The Mystery of the Polite Man by C M Rawlins

Feet of Clay by Terry Pratchett

The Paris Spy by Sarah Sigal*

Death of a Cheerleader by Marina Evans*

Pitcher Perfect by Tessa Bailey*

Started:

Entitled by Andrew Lownie

Still reading:

Ritual of Fire by D V Bishop

Pet Shop Boys, Literally by Chris Heath

Two books and two ebooks.

Bonus picture: new knitting in the village!

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

not a book, streaming

Not a Book: Shiny Happy People season 2

It’s been a couple of years since the first series of Shiny Happy People, which was about the Duggar family and the IBLP, and now there is a second series this time not focusing on the Duggars but on Teen Mania, an evangelical group for teenagers which gained popularity across the US in the early 90s.

This is a three part series that shows how a group that initially presents as a evangelical pep rally for teens that also offers mission trips evolved into a militaristic group of young people being groomed to lay down their lives for Jesus. Yes, you read that right, these teenagers ended up doing military-inspired survival missions and expecting do die in the name of their faith.

And I’m not going to lie, I wasn’t expecting this to get quite so dark when it started with giant stadium rallies for teens with Christian rock music and a pastor riding in on a motorcycle. I’ve watched a lot of documentaries about various Christian movements (and written about them here*) and I thought I knew what I was expecting – but this is something else. This one is less sexual abuse and predation, more straight up abuse and fraud with added fascism and indoctrination. If you remember Generation Joshua from series one, this is like the military wing of that. It’s quite shocking.

But as we seem to be seeing increasing Christian nationalism happening in the USA, this is a really interesting look at how something that starts off seemingly healthy – I can’t imagine many parents objecting to their teens going to a Christian event with their youth group (as opposed say to going to a rock concert on their own), and a mission trip abroad where they’re raising their own money to go might seem like a good opportunity too – can end up in people being dumped a state over from the college they’re at, with no money and no food and told to get back to campus with their giant wooden cross.

This is a three part series – and I watched it back to back one Saturday afternoon while I was doing the ironing. It’s a really well put together watch, with great voices talking about their experiences and solid talking heads.

Shiny Happy People is on Amazon Prime.

*Other religious or religion adjacent documentaries as well as Shiny Happy People series one, the duo of Hillsong documentaries, the two Twin Flames docs, Keep Sweet, Murder Among the Mormons, Unfinished: Short Creek, LulaRich and more tangentially Scamanda who partly used her church for her scam.