Monthly Archives: August 2008

Books I have recently read

I got out of the habit of keeping track of the books I was reading here.  Let me see how many of them I can remember.

The Periodic Table, which I can’t believe I hadn’t got around to before.  Lovely; everyone should read it.

The Mezzanine, which marked a pause in my relationship with Nicholson Baker, as the ratio of style to content seemed to tip too far in favour of the former.  That’s not really a criticism I can justify in any detail, but this is my blog and I don’t have to.  I have since read some of his New York Times articles and my Baker-love is back.

The Uncommon Reader: there’s nothing wrong with this, but I’m as big a fan of Alan Bennett’s prose as you’re likely to meet, and I didn’t love it.

The Rain Before It Falls – see above, but replace “Alan Bennett” with “Jonathan Coe”.

Bollocks to Alton Towers, which despite its title is a sweet and thoughtful guide to some lesser-known tourist spots around Britain.

FranticScott Pack, whose judgement I trust, recommended this, but I’m afraid I found it a fairly run-of-the-mill thriller.  If you’re looking for a story about missing children (and who isn’t?) then I suggest Sophie Hannah’s Little Face as a more interesting example of the genre.

Wrong About Japan, which is nothing like anything I’d usually read, but which I enjoyed very much and finished in a couple of hours (it is very short).  It’s the closest I’ve come to an account of Tokyo that makes it sound as exciting, as bewildering and as alien as I found it.

I have also read four library books, all of which I have forgotten the names of.


He means business

This morning, I noticed a man standing on the roof of one of the six- or seven-storey buildings which our thirteenth-floor office overlooks. He was peering over the edge and moving in an aimless sort of a way. After a bit, he disappeared off around a corner and out of sight, and I realised that at no point had it occurred to me that he was there for anything other than savoury, non-suicidal reasons. I thought about it a bit longer and decided that this was because he had a pencil behind his ear.  Killing oneself doesn’t somehow seem compatible with having a pencil behind the ear.


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