What We're Reading

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Neil

Good Dogs Don't Make It To The South Pole, by Hans-Olav Thyvold (A&U February 2020)

In the same vein as The Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, but with dogs, Good Dogs is a charming, wise and inspiring novel about ageing, polar exploration, and the love for dogs. Funny and moving, especially for dog lovers this is a perfect light read.

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Neil

The Boyfriend, by Laura Southgate (VUP 2019)

The Boyfriend is Laura Southgate's first book, but it doesn't show. It's a psychologically astute story of a naive 17 year old girl, who falls in love with a damaged and controlling 42 year old man. It's a courageous and honest novel, unsettling, funny and haunting.

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Neil

Sweet Sorrow, by David Nicholls (Hachette 2019)

David Nicholls is one of those rare things - a popular but also literary authors. Sweet Sorrow is a beautifully observed, nostalgic novel about a teenage boy's first summer love experience. It's evocative, romantic but not cloying, moving and funny. Nicholls really gets it right in this novel, the power of youthful emotion is brilliantly achieved, and the narrative well timed.

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Neil

Walking Away, by Simon Armitage (Faber 2015)

The follow up to the award-winning Yorkshire poet's 'Walking Home' about his walk on the Pennine Way, this amusing travel narrative relates his walk on the South West Coastal Path starting in Somerset and ending on the Isles of Scilly off Land's End. The walk passes through Devon and Cornwall: Poldark and Rick Stein territory. It's a notoriously challenging walk along the wild and isolated coast, and Armitage again adopts the nature of a troubadour, giving readings in exchange for food and accommodation.

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Neil

Walking the Woods and the Water, by Nick Hunt (Brealey 2014)

The subtitle of this book is 'In Patrick Leigh Fermor's footsteps from the Hook of Holland to the Golden Horn'. It's widely known that one of the Twentieth Century's best writers and most compelling figures made his reputation by writing a trilogy about his walk in the 1930s from Holland, across Germany, Austria, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. Patrick Leigh Fermor's books are essential reading, and Nick Hunt recreates the same journey, using Fermor's books as a guide, and comparing how the intervening 80 years have changed Europe.

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Neil

The Way to the Sea, by Caroline Crampton (Granta 2019)

Books and TV series about the Thames River seem to be many and varied recently. This must be one of the very best - it's well researched, well written and the author has a personal connection with the river. Her South African parents sailed to London when the author was young, and she spent her teenage years living on their yacht on the river. She traces the river from its origin in Gloucestershire, through the City and finally to the North Sea. Many of the stories she tells are not widely known.