December 2025 Review

December was a slower month for reading, which works as I had a lot of other things on.  I ended up finishing eight books and then made a start on some chunky books to finish in January. I finished the daily read books too, I don’t mind reading these, and I am not intending to read any books like these for 2026. I have got into the habit of reading a week’s worth of entries on a Sunday, and that works fine for me.

Ended up getting a small pile of review books too ( thanks, Helen) that I will slot into the reading plan over the next couple of months. Anyway, here they all are:

Books Read

We Are All Adrift – David Banning & Iain Sharpe – 4 – Stars

The Accidental Garden: Gardens, Wilderness And The Space In Between – Richard Mabey – 4 – Stars

Handbook of Mammals of Madagascar Hardcover – Nick Garbutt  – 4 – Stars

A Tree A Day – Amy-Jane Beer – 4 – Stars

An Insect a Day: Bees, Bugs, And Pollinators For Every Day Of The Year – Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton – 4 – Stars

Poetry on the Buses – Valerie Belsey & Candy Neubert (Ed) – 3 – Stars

Cage of Souls – Adrian Tchaikovsky  – 4.5 – Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

Nature Needs You: The Fight To Save Our Swifts – Hannah Bourne- Taylor – 5 – Stars

 

 

Top Genres

Travel – 19

Fiction – 13

Natural History – 13

Science Fiction – 12

Poetry – 12

 

Top Publishers

Faber & Faber – 7

Bloomsbury – 6

Penguin – 6

Simon & Schuster – 6

Picador – 4

 

Review Copies Received

Tea and Grit: A Bicycle Journey along the Silk Road – Helen Watson

Bird of Ill Omen: The Gothic Tales of Catherine Crowe – Catherine Crowe & Ruth Heholt (Ed)

Possessed: A Lost Novel of the Occult – Rosalie Synton & Edward Synton

Trees Ancient and Modern: Woodland Cultures and Conservation – Charles Watkins

The Sound Atlas: A Guide to Strange Sounds across Landscapes and Imagination – Michaela Vieser And Isaac Yuen

The Medieval Scriptorium: Making Books in the Middle Ages – Sara J. Charles

Readers for Life: How Reading and Listening in Childhood Shapes Us – Sander L. Gilman and Heta Pyrhönen (Ed)

 

Library Books Checked Out

Three Rivers: The Extraordinary Waterways That Made Europe – Robert Winder

Make Time: How To Focus On What Matters Every Day – Jake Knapp, & John Zeratsky

The Starling: A Biography – Stephen Moss

Muslim Europe: A Journey in Search of a Fourteen Hundred Year History – Tharik Hussain

 

Books Bought (Or Sent by Friends)

As I have said elsewhere, I am trying to buy fewer books. So I will give totals of l the number of books that enter my house and those that leave permanently. These are the figures for this month:

Books in: 25 I kept these below:

Heart of the Country – James Ravilious & Robin Ravilious

False Calm – Maria Sonia Cristoff

Wild Air: In Search Of Birdsong – James Macdonald Lockhart

Where Are the Fellows Who Cut the Hay?: How Traditions From the Past Can Shape Our Future – Robert Ashton

Ley Lines of Wessex – Roger Crisp

Tea and Grit: A Bicycle Journey along the Silk Road – Helen Watson

Bird of Ill Omen: The Gothic Tales of Catherine Crowe – Catherine Crowe & Ruth Heholt (Ed)

Possessed: A Lost Novel of the Occult – Rosalie Synton & Edward Synton

Voices Of The Old Sea – Norman Lewis

Shaking Hands With Death – Terry Pratchett

Books out: 24 (The books leaving the house were sold, returned to the library or passed on to friends or charity. I am aiming for this number to be higher than the one above!!!).

So are there any from that list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

 

January 2026 TBR

Was I correct in thinking that 2025 passed after about 8 months? Or is it that I am getting much older and therefore time speeds up? Answers to the usual address!

I had intended to start off with a shorter monthly TBR, but I haven’t updated my template yet (It is still on the to-do list…) so this month’s is equally long as ever. And here they all are:

 

Finishing off from 2025

The Cruel Stars – John Birmingham

The Old Drift – Namwali Serpell

Free: Coming of Age at the End of History – Lea Ypi

The Owl Service – Alan Garner

A Butterfly Journey: Maria Sibylla Merian Artist and Scientist – Boris Friedewald & Stephan von Pohl (Tr)

Scoff: A History of Food and Class in Britain – Pen Vogler

 

Stanfords Shortlist

False Calm – Maria Sonia Cristoff

 

Review

Warrior: The Biography of a Man with No Name – Edoardo Albert with Paul Gething

The Sound Atlas: A Guide to Strange Sounds across Landscapes and Imagination – Michaela Vieser And Isaac Yuen

Tea and Grit: A Bicycle Journey along the Silk Road – Helen Watson

Small Earthquakes: A Journey Through Lost British History In South America – Shafik Meghji

21 Lessons for the 21st Century – Yuval Noah Harari

Your Journey Your Way: The Recovery Guide to Mental Health – Horatio Clare

Slow Trains Around Britain: Notes from a 4,088-Mile Adventure on 143 Rides – Tom Chesshyre

Return of the Ancients: Unruly Tales of the Mythological Weird – Katy Soar (Ed)

Little Ruins – Manni Coe

Hafren: The Wisdom of the River Severn – Sarah Siân Chave

 

Books I’m Clearing

Russians Among Us – Gordon Corera

Philip K. Dick: In His Own Words – Philip K. Dick & Gregg Rickman

Chris Hoy: The Autobiography – Chris Hoy

On the Road Bike: The Search for a Nation’s Cycling Soul – Ned Boulting

 

WFMAC

The Year of Living Danishly: My Twelve Months Unearthing the Secrets of the World’s Happiest Country – Helen Russell

Along the River that Flows Uphill: From the Orinoco to the Amazon – Richard Starks

 

Library Books

The Uninhabitable Earth: A Story of the Future – David Wallace-Wells

Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces – Laurie Winkless

The Life-Changing Magic of Numbers – Bobby Seagull

Here Comes the Fun: A Year of Making Merry – Ben Aiken

 

Poetry

Meridian – Nancy Gaffield

 

Bookclub

The Ghosts of Merry Hall – Heather Davey

 

#20BooksOfSummer (Still going…)

Sunfall – Jim Al-Khalili

Revenger – Alastair Reynolds

Shadow Captain – Alastair Reynolds

So are there any from that list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

 

 

Nevernight by Jay Kristoff

3 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

At the age of ten, Mia Corvere witnesses her first execution. It is a moment that will change her life and her destiny forever. The desire to have retribution against those who slighted her family burns fiercely within her.

To do so she must embrace that fury and become a weapon without equal. She decides that she must join the Red Church of Itreya and become one of their very best assassins. However, surviving a building full of murderers is going to take some doing…

Her and her fellow acolytes’ training is intense, bloody, brutal and relentless. She makes friends with some of them, others she is ambivalent about, and there are others that will become enemies for life…

The training covers every method that they can think of for killing people, but the Red Church has another range of methods of death that their imaginations have not even considered yet.
Not every acolyte will make it to the end of the course and be in the final selection. The rate of attrition is high for failure, and they have to be aware that things that they have recently learnt will be used against them. She doesn’t know if any of her friends will be there at the end, let alone if she has enough mental strength to pass the course.

It is a fast-paced and thrilling ride. There were parts of this book that I liked, the imagination it takes to come up with this assassin’s church and the world-building I particularly liked. The plot is half decent, too. I could predict some of the outcomes, main character, first book in a series, etc, etc, but not the journey that he drapes around the characters, to the ending. There were parts I wasn’t that keen on, it is incredibly violent, so might not be for everyone. He is also keen on info dumps, and I thought that these got in the way of the plot sometimes. Most annoying were the footnotes; I’ve grown up reading Pratchett, who was a master at them, but Kristoff’s were huge and, in my opinion, mostly unnecessary. So overall, not bad, but I’ll probably not bother to read the rest in the series.

Anticipated Books For Spring 2026

As usual, I have scoured the catalogues for all the books that pique my attention I only managed to find 15 catalogues so far, so this may be updated as I come across others. So without further ado, here are my picks from all the books being published in the first half of next year:

 

Aurum Press

The Tattooed Hills by Jon Woolcott

 

Bloomsbury

Access Adventure: The Ultimate Book of Trails and Adventures By Wheelchair And On Foot – Debbie North

Beauty Of The Beasts: Rethinking Nature’s Least Loved Animals – Jo Wimpenny

To The Limit: The Meaning Of Endurance From Mexico To The Himalayas – Michael Crawley

The Devil’s Garden: A Wicked Medley Of Flowers, Fruits and Fungi – Peter Marren

How To Fly – Simon Barnes

The Wind Beneath the Stone: My Quest to Unearth A Piece of Ireland’s Folklore – David Keohan

Sun Country: Writing My Way Home – Howard Cunnell

 

Canongate

Hark: How Women Listen – Alice Vincent –

The Future Is Peace – Aziz Abu Sarah & Maoz Inon

Nation of Strangers: Rebuilding Home in the 21st Century – Ece Temelkuran

Homework: A Memoir – Geoff Dyer

In Search of Now: The Science of the Present Moment – Jo Marchant

Foreign Fruit: A Personal History of the Orange – Katie Goh

Alive: A Revolutionary Understanding of the Earth’s Intelligences – Melanie Challenger

One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This – Omar El Akkad

Between Two Waters: Heritage, landscape and the modern cook – Pam Brunton

Food Fight: From Plunder and Profit to People and Planet – Stuart Gillespie

At Sea – Y.M. Abdel-Magied

 

Daunt Books

Called by the Hills: A Home in the Himalaya – Anuradha Roy

Over the Water: Essays on Islands– Various

 

Doubleday

Up – Lucy Rogers

The Edges of the World – Charles Foster

 

Duckworth

The Return to the Little Kingdom: Steve Jobs, the creation of Apple, and how one company changed the world – Michael Moritz

On Thin Ice: A Journey in Siberia, and Prison in Putin’s Russia – Charlie Walker

Bread and War: A Ukrainian Story of Food, Bravery and Hope – Felicity Spector

In Green: A Journey to the End of the Land – Louis D. Hall

 

Eland

News from Tartary: A Journey from Peking to Kashmir –Peter Fleming
Saints of Sind –Peter Mayne

 

Elliott & Thompson

Farewell to Russia: A Journey through the Former USSR – Joe Luc Barnes –

All the Feels: How Technology Is Changing Our Emotional Lives for the Better – Pamela Pavliscak

Full Circle: A History of Cricket – Peter Oborne & Richard Heller

The Waterlands: Follow a raindrop from source to sea – Stephen Rutt

The Apothecary by the Sea: A Year in an Orkney Garden – Victoria Bennett

 

Faber & Faber

Wilderlands – Eloise Kane

The Dark Frontier – Jeffrey Marlow

Tales of the Suburbs – John Grindrod

Jan Morris: A Life – Sara Wheeler

 

Granta

Despite It All: A Handbook For Climate Hopefuls – Fred Pearce

The Beginning Comes After The End – Rebecca Solnit

 

Harper Collins

Wild Peaks: A Journey on Foot Through England’s First National Park – Tom Chesshyre

 

Harvill Secker

Herlands: Lessons From Societies Where Women Make the Rules – Megha Mohan

 

Headline

Elemental – Arthur Snell

My Body is a Meadow – Bethany Handley

Power Play: Video Games, Politics and the Battle for Global Influence – George E. Osborn

A History of Booksellers and the Bookshop – Jean-Yves Mollier

Grassroots – Julia Rosen

The Writer and the Traitor: Graham Greene, Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal – Robert Verkaik

The Garden Through Time – Thomas Rutter

 

Jonathan Cape

Think Like a Forest: Letters to my Children from a Changing Planet – Ben Rawlence

Goyle, Chert, Mire – Jean Sprackland

Borrowed Land: A Highland Story – Kapka Kassabova

Dog Star – Michael Symmons Roberts

 

Little Toller

The Icknield Way – Edward Thomas

The Charm of Birds – Edward Grey

Looking for Mr Schwitters – Jennifer Potter

 

Oneworld

How Queer Bookshops Changed the World – A. J. West

How Not to Save the World: Activism Without Annoying Everyone Around You – Anthea Lawson

This Land Is Your Land: On A Road Trip to Make Sense of America – Beverly Gage

Transported – Elizabeth Margulis

En Route: A Journey Round France in the Company of Great Writers – Peter Fiennes

The Art of Patience: Seeking the Snow Leopard in Tibet – Sylvain Tesson & Frank Wynne (Tr.)

 

Particular Books

Attensity!: A Manifesto of the Attention Liberation Movement – The Friends of Attention

The Fire in the Mountain: Sicily, Etna and Her People – Helena Attlee

 

Picador

Frostlines: An Epic Exploration of the Transforming Arctic – Neil Shea

 

Profile Books

We Know You Can Pay a Million Inside the Dark Economy of Hacking and Ransomware – Anja Shortland

Land of Hot Sauce and Gravy: Notes from a Hungry Island – Ben Benton

Crossing the Wine-Dark Sea: Journeys through Ancient Literature – Emily Wilson

On the Mark: A History of Punctuation from Ancient Egypt to the Emoticon – Florence Hazrat

Hinterlands: Journeys through Europe’s Unfinished Frontiers – Hannah Lucinda Smith

Reaching for the Extreme: How the Quest for the Biggest, Fewest and Weirdest Makes Maths – Ian Stewart

Grasslands: The Intricate Life of Britain’s Hidden Habitats – John Wright

Polar War: Submarines, Spies, and the Struggle for Power in a Melting Arctic – Kenneth R. Rosen

Ancient: Reviving the Woods That Made Britain – Luke Barley

“Rogues, Widows and Orphans: When Words Go Wrong and Other Bookish Misadventures” – Rebecca Lee

 

Reaktion Books

The Point of the Needle: Why Sewing Matters – Barbara Burman –

The Wagner Group: Inside Russia’s Mercenary Army – Jack Margolin

You Want What We’ve Got: Big Tech v. Big Journalism – Jason Whittaker

Treasures on Earth: Buried Wealth in Landscape and Legend – Jeremy Harte

The Medieval Guide to Healthy Living – Katherine Harvey

Way Makers: An Anthology of Women’s Writing about Walking – Kerri Andrews (Ed)

Whispers from Celtic Seas: The True Meanings of Ancient Stories from Northwest Europe – Patrick Nunn

Stories of the Stones: Imagining Prehistory in Britain, Ireland and Brittany – Paul Robichaud

 

September Books

The Wild Within: What Plants Taught Me about Life, Recovery and Renewal – Brigit Anna McNeill

Possessions: A Memoir of Transformation in an Era of Precarity – Davina Quinlivan

Underwing: A Story of Motherhood, Loss and Wild Intuition – Jennifer Lane

Chopsy: Resistance Tales of a Working-Class Woman – Maya Jordan

Ripening: Why Women Need Fairy Tales Now – Sharon Blackie

 

The Bodley Head

Imitation Games: How the Gambling Industry Hijacked Sport – Darragh McGee

Tiny Gardens Everywhere: A History of Urban Resilience – Kate Brown

The Resilience Response: The New Science of Trauma and How We Heal Across Generations – Rachel Yehuda

 

Doomed Romances by Joanne Ella Parsons (Editor)

3 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Who says that blokes don’t read romance? That is quite a few of you then… Romance is the genre that I deliberately avoid, or more appropriately, run screaming from the boudoir… However, this is one of the fine offerings from the British Library’s Tales of the Weird Series, and the title Doomed Romances bring a whole different connotation to the word…

 

The Invisible Girl by Mary Shelley

This is the first Mary Shelley story that I have ever read! It is a strange tale of love and loss with whispers of folklore ad fairy tale woven in. But the strongest theme is the gothic melodrama that permeates the prose completely.

 

Carmilla by J. Sheridan le Fanu

A very gothic melodrama with vampires. I felt it was very overwritten; why use one word when you could use twenty instead? There is a strong lesbian theme between the daughter and the lady who is staying as a guest in the house.

 

Mr. Captain and the Nymph by Wilkie Collins

Somewhere in the Pacific, a ship encounters an island. The natives that live there seem friendly and welcoming, so the sailors go ashore, and it allows them to restock supplies. Alongside the main island is another, and they are curious as to what or who is on there. The natives strongly recommend that they do not set foot on the island as it is the home of a sorcerer, and it is a taboo for anyone else but him and the nymph to be there. The captain of the ship is told about her, and when he sees her through the telescope, he becomes besotted. So much so that he is brave and foolish enough to venture onto the island…

 

Little Woman in Black by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

Miss Sarah Pawlett was engaged to be married to Lord Bellenden. The relationship was a little unusual as she wasn’t from the aristocracy, as would be expected at the time. But this didn’t deter, Lord Bellenden.

The only problem, though, was that Sarah was head over heels in love with another actor called Ned Langley. Plus, there was a sense that she was being watched continually, and there was a small lady dressed entirely in black who sat in the same seat for every performance each night.

Who this lady was, though, would soon be revealed…

 

White Magic by Ella D’Arcy

I wasn’t overly enamoured with this story. It is a conversation between the narrator and their friend, but having read it twice, I wasn’t completely sure what was going on or what were the subtleties of the plot.

 

The Tiger Charm by Alice Perrin

This is a story set in the time of the British Raj in India. A blustering colonel sets out on a tiger hunt, dragging his wife with him. They are separated after an incident and she ends up switching to another elephant and then they are separated. When she returns, he accuses her of all sorts of transgressions that might have taken place with her new companion in his drunken rant. He still wants to shoot a tiger, though, so he sets out with her companion, with a darker motive in mind…

 

One Remained Behind by Marjorie Bowen

A student called Rudolph is desperate to acquire a grimoire, a book full of magic and ancient rituals and ends up arguing with an antique bookseller whose shop it is in. With a trick and some emotional blackmail, he manages to make the book his.

He wastes no time in using the book to gain fame and fortune. However, he had not ever thought through the consequences of his actions, and it all starts to unravel.
I really liked this story a lot. There is something quite satisfying about Karma…

 

The Lady of the House of Love by Angela Carter

I thought that this was the story that best suited the title of the book, Doomed Romances. The young lady is in a decrepit mansion with a crone as a servant. There is an innocent young soldier who stops for the night. There is a building tension as I, the reader, can second-guess his possible fate.

That said, I didn’t find it that scary. But it does have a brooding intensity that made it my top story in the collection.

 

The Glass Bottle Trick by Nalo Hopkinson

This is a really dark story about a man who has been widowed twice before and is now married to his third wife. They had married fairly quickly after meeting and courting, and were soon to learn that his moods were dark and his temper short.

Passing on her news was going to be a challenge that she wasn’t sure she could do…
I thought this was an incredibly intense and fast-paced story.

 

Could You Wear My Eyes? by Kalumu Ya Salaam

I thought that this was a well-crafted story about a man who thought that having his late wife’s eyes implanted to replace his.
What he didn’t realise was what the effect of seeing everything from her perspective would be like…

 

I’ll Be Your Mirror by Tracy Fahey
A story of love, anatomy and discovery by a woman who becomes obsessed by an anatomical Venus, a life-sized wax model. Very much more macabre than romantic, and has a very dark plotline.

 

Dancehall Devil by V. Castro
I thought that this was probably the closest story in the book to horror. A woman has just entered a club and she is approached by a man who has absolutely no idea what her has just let himself in for…

November 2025 Review

November is a short month, but I did manage to get a fair few read in the end:

Books Read

Phantoms of Kernow – Joan Passey (Ed) – 3.5 Stars

The Future Of Travel – Daniel Maurer – 4 Stars

Help!: How To Become Slightly Happier And Get A Bit More Done – Oliver Burkeman – 3 Stars

New York Vertical – Horst Hamann – 4 Stars

Green and Pleasant Land: Best-Loved Poems of the British Countryside – Ana Sampson (Ed) – 3 Stars

Jade City – Fonda Lee – 2.5 Stars

PhotoCity New York – Guillaume Gaudet & Zora O’Neill – 3 Stars

Weather – Storm Dunlop – 3 Stars

 

Book(s) Of The Month

Upon A White Horse: Journeys In Ancient Britain And Ireland – Peter Ross – 4.5 Stars

Lone Wolf: Walking The Faultlines Of Europe  – Adam Weymouth – 5 Stars

Craftland: A Journey Through Britain’s Lost Arts & Vanishing Trades – James Fox – 5 Stars

 

Top Genres

Travel – 19

Fiction – 13

Poetry – 11

Natural History – 11

Science Fiction – 10

 

Top Publishers

Faber & Faber – 7

Simon & Schuster – 6

Penguin – 6

Bloomsbury – 5

Picador – 4

 

Review Copies Received

We Are All Adrift – David Banning & Iain Sharpe

 

Library Books Checked Out

Help!: How To Become Slightly Happier And Get A Bit More Done – Oliver Burkeman

Fiesta: A Journey Through Festivity – Daniel Stables

Rope: How A Bundle Of Twisted Fibres Became The Backbone Of Civilisation – Tim Queeney

The Future Of Agriculture – Sarah Bearchell

Craftland: A Journey Through Britain’s Lost Arts & Vanishing Trades – James Fox

Common People: A Folk History Of Land Rights, Enclosure And Resistance – Leah Gordon & Stephen Ellcock

 

Books Bought (Or Sent by Friends)

As I have said elsewhere, I am trying to buy fewer books. So I will give totals of the number of books that enter my house and those that leave permanently. These are the figures for this month:

Books in: 15 I kept these below:

High Caucasus: A Mountain Quest in Russia’s Haunted Hinterland – Tom Parfitt

Night Life: Walking Britain’s Wild Landscapes after Dark – John Lewis-Stempel

The Book of Bogs: Stories from a Yorkshire Moor and other Peatlands – Anna Chilvers & Clare Shaw

Monsterland: A Journey Around the World’s Dark Imagination – Nicholas Jubber

Books out: 17 (The books leaving the house were sold, returned to the library or passed on to friends or charity. I am aiming for this number to be higher than the one above!!!).

So are there any from that list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

December 2025 TBR

My final TBR of 2025 was supposed to be a short one as I only have 7 books to go on the Good Reads Challenge. But I think that I am going to go over… So here is the not quite so short list for books to read this month:

 

Daily Reading

A Tree A Day – Amy-Jane Beer

An Insect a Day: Bees, Bugs, And Pollinators For Every Day Of The Year – Dominic Couzens & Gail Ashton

 

Still Reading

Handbook of Mammals of Madagascar Hardcover – Nick Garbutt

Cage of Souls – Adrian Tchaikovsky

 

#20BooksOfSummer (Ha!)

The Cruel Stars – John Birmingham

Sunfall – Jim Al-Khalili

Revenger – Alastair Reynolds

Shadow Captain – Alastair Reynolds

The Old Drift – Namwali Serpell

 

WFMAC

The Year of Living Danishly: My Twelve Months Unearthing the Secrets of the World’s Happiest Country – Helen Russell

Along the River that Flows Uphill: From the Orinoco to the Amazon – Richard Starks

 

Review Books

Small Earthquakes: A Journey Through Lost British History In South America – Shafik Meghji

21 Lessons for the 21st Century – Yuval Noah Harari

Your Journey Your Way: The Recovery Guide to Mental Health – Horatio Clare

Slow Trains Around Britain: Notes from a 4,088-Mile Adventure on 143 Rides – Tom Chesshyre

Return of the Ancients: Unruly Tales of the Mythological Weird – Katy Soar  (Ed)

Little Ruins – Manni Coe

We Are All Adrift – David Banning & Iain Sharpe

 

Books I’m Clearing

A Butterfly Journey: Maria Sibylla Merian Artist and Scientist – Boris Friedewald & Stephan von Pohl (Tr)

Scoff: A History of Food and Class in Britain – Pen Vogler

Russians Among Us – Gordon Corera

Free: Coming of Age at the End of History – Lea Ypi

The Owl Service – Alan Garner

 

Library

Nature Needs You: The Fight To Save Our Swifts – Hannah Bourne- Taylor

The Uninhabitable Earth: A Story of the Future – David Wallace-Wells

Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces – Laurie Winkless

The Future Of Agriculture – Sarah Bearchell

The Accidental Garden: Gardens, Wilderness And The Space In Between – Richard Mabey

 

Poetry

Poetry on the Buses – Valerie Belsey & Candy Neubert (Ed)

 

So are there any from that list that you have read, or now seeing them, now want to read? Let me know in the comments below.

Red Moon by Kim Stanley Robinson

3 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Fred Fredricks has an important delivery to make to someone on the moon. It is his first time there, and everything about the trip is strange. On the space flight over, he meets Ta Shu, a celebrity travel reporter and feng shui expert who agrees to meet with him again later in their visit to the moon. It is all going well until Fredricks meets the recipient of the package he is delivering, and it rapidly goes horribly wrong.

Fredricks is taken into custody following the incident. As he is an American and working for a Swiss company, there is a diplomatic standoff. Somehow, he manages to escape and joins a lady called Chan Qi, who is being sent back to Earth. They travel back with Ta Shu to China, where they evade the authorities on arrival and head to a safe house for a while. After being couped up, it gets to them, and they make a miscalculation on just how close the people looking for them are. They have to go on the run again, but they know the authorities are closing in on them.

One of the myriad factions in the Chinese security services that is sympathetic to Chan Qi has made the decision that they would be safer back on the moon and not be a distraction to the other factions on Earth. Once again, they are dispatched back on a space flight to stay in a super-rich gentleman’s called Fang Fei’s place. He is a businessman, and he has a separate base on the moon.

Even though she is 238,000 miles away, there are still people after her. They decide to hitch a ride with a couple of helium miners to an even more remote part of the moon. She decides that this is the time to send a coded message to her supporters in China, to add to the disruption as a power struggle for the president of China begins.

I have tried to keep the plot details as sparse as possible, to minimise spoilers, but there are a few. I would say that I liked rather than loved this; I had expected it to be entirely set on the moon, and was a little disappointed that it wasn’t. I would have liked it if Fred’s character had played a larger role in the story too; he was there as a bit of a stooge to the main character, Chan Qi. I felt it could have been a bit shorter, too. There were times when it dragged a bit, until the last quarter, when it flew by. Not bad overall, but not the best of his that I have read.

The Future of Travel by Daniel Maurer

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Be a traveller, not a tourist, is a phrase that is often attributed to the late Anthony Bourdain. But is there a difference between a traveller and a tourist, though? Some people think that there is, and surprise, surprise, others don’t… Though I do like Paul Theroux’s definition: Tourists don’t know where they have been, travellers don’t know where they are going.

Daniel Maurer considered himself a traveller, following in the footsteps of Bourdain, but it slowly dawned on him that maybe he was just a tourist.

Travel for almost everyone stopped during the pandemic. It took a while, but the world slowly opened up again, and Maurer became, not by choice, a digital nomad.

He ends up in Mexico and tries to find an authentic town to live in that isn’t overrun with tourists (sic). In this modern world, just the mention of a place can see massive crowds of people flocking to visit. This can have an enormous detrimental effect on the are and the people when this happens.

He is only moderately scathing on travel influencers and the lack of transparency that they have with regard to their sponsors. He is even less enamoured by AI assistants, seeing them as boring, predictable and often error-prone.

Being a travel nomad puts him in the gig economy. Yes, living is much cheaper in Mexico than in the States, but getting paid work meant that he had to lower his prices.

Moving on to Argentina, he finds that having dollars in his pocket means that he can live like a king. However, he soon learns to keep quiet about this as Argentinians are suffering from the effects of high inflation. As the economy there slowly implodes, he decides that he would be better off in Spain, the home country of his mother.

It is another country that is suffering from a massive hike in tourists and all of the accompanying problems that they bring with them. This is a phenomenon that is happening all around the world at the moment as locals struggle to cope with increasing self-entitled tourists. Instagrammable sites are super popular and these are now getting restrictions on the number of visitors that can attend.

The arrival of lots of digital nomads means that the local economies have changed completely. Rents and other expenses rise dramatically, locking out locals from the homes that they need. We have seen this effect in Cornwall and other places in the UK. Countries that were once offering golden visas are quietly dropping them. Plus, there is a concerted effort in Europe to restrict the number of short-term rental properties available.

During the time that he spends in Barcelona, he comes to see for himself how the tourists or guiri, and they are known there, are becoming less and less welcome. The city is beginning to restrict how many shops selling tourist tat are allowed. In July 2024, there was a huge protest against tourism; visitors were squirted with water pistols and attractions were cordoned off with fake police tape.

‘The idea of ‘I’m not like the others’ is very egocentric,’ Pardo said. ‘I think it isn’t possible nowadays to come to Barcelona and not be a tourist. If you come, you must accept it: you are just another piece of the mass. And it’s not each person, it’s the mass that is killing the city.

Cruise ships are also becoming a target for locals’ ire. The island of Ibitha can get three huge ships a day, and these can bring 10,00 disembarking from the ships. 10,000! This huge influx of people, coupled with the fact that the ships pollute a lot, are not particularly green and sustainable. Some countries are now starting to limit the number of ships docking and are insisting that low-sulphur fuels are used to combat pollution.

Other places are pushing back on anti-social behaviour too, restricting drink sales for example. In a twist of irony that you couldn’t make up, the anti-tourism protests have become a tourist attraction in their own right.

Like in other countries, migration is becoming a political hot potato, and this is causing some countries to lurch towards right-wing parties. Strangely, though, the predominantly right-wing capitalist system demands that low-paid workers exist to maximise company profits and executive pay. Utterly mad system when you think about it.

Maurer visits Expo 2025 to see what the future of travel offers from a corporate point of view and would it would look like. Having read his description of the event, I think it sounds horrendous… Whilst tech and apps could offer assistance in finding lovely places to visit, it struck me most as being a way to fleece consumers from increasingly larger sums of money.

One good this was that countries are now offering regenerative tourism. You help in some way or other, and you are granted benefits in kind. Key to it is that you are helping the area that you are staying in, rather than money disappearing into the corporate coffers.

Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell – Edward Abbey

How do we answer that Maurer poses at the end of the book:

Can we learn to move as thoughtfully as we can, as carefully as we can?

I thought that this was a really interesting book. Through numerous examples, he asks some very thought-provoking questions about the nature of travel and tourism and it made me think about just how it is affecting people and places that are becoming inundated with thousands of people on a regular basis.

I do feel, though, that he didn’t fully answer the question that he posed in the book; so, what do we do about travel? Not that this is a fault, he wants you to think about the consequences of what you do and where you go and the choices that you make. We have to make sensible and sustainable decisions going forward.

If you like to travel, then this book would be a great place to start before you book that next flight or holiday.

Slow Trains To Istanbul by Tom Chesshyre

4 out of 5 stars

The publisher provided a copy of this, free of charge, in return for an honest review.

Like all good plans, the idea for this trip formed over a few beers one evening. With his friends, Danny, they had been putting the world to rights before Danny finally got around to asking him the question that had been distracting him for a while. Had he heard of Interrail? Quite a daft question to ask a travel writer.

Of course, he had.

The reason for the question was that Danny had seen that they were having a half-price sale to celebrate 50 years of the service. Danny had the idea that they should spend an entire month travelling around Europe. He was so enthused by the idea he had even broached the subject with his wife and been given a provisional pass.

They bought tickets there and then on the bench in Soho Square, before heading to Stanford’s to get a couple of maps. It didn’t take them long to concoct a plan, and they both knew the destination: Istanbul.

Sadly, a half-price Interrail ticket wouldn’t let them go on the horrendously priced Orient Express. Instead of spending vast amounts of time sorting their itinerary out, they decided to let serendipity reign and follow their instincts and the tracks. This, they hoped, would add a level of jeopardy to the trip and help them see a completely different range of places and people.

They arrived at St Pancras for the Eurostar in good time. There was a slight concern that their first destination, Paris, had been on fire because of riots. They were both slightly apprehensive as they disembarked the train in the station.

However, all seemed well as they alighted in Paris and they headed to their hotel, which just so happened to be in the same area that George Orwell stayed in many years before. They had a night out on and returned late to the hotel. Strasbourg was tomorrow’s destination and they had a train to catch early afternoon.

This was the beginning of the long winding route that would take them across Europe on their way to Istanbul. They pass through Germany, Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria; almost exclusively on trains, but with one trip on a bus because of strikes. It makes for entertaining reading, too, which, if you have read any of Chesshyre’s work before, you’d be familiar with. They get on really well and their account of their travels out there did make me laugh a lot at times.

After they reached Istanbul, Danny had elected to fly back home to relieve his wife from looking after the three children. Chesshyre was going to have to make his own way home, a challenge he relished. Rather than go back the way he had come, he chose a route that would take him through Greece, across the Adriatic to Italy and along one of the world’s most beautiful railway lines in Switzerland and then onward to the Netherlands.

I have read a number of Chesshyre’s books in the past, so I was really looking forward to this, and I am glad to say, it didn’t disappoint at all. It is both an entertaining and informative read. He has a keen eye for detail and particularly likes the variety of stations and the architectural differences they have. I haven’t expanded on the events of the route, because I think that this is something you should read and discover for yourselves when you read it. This is something that I can wholeheartedly recommend that you do.

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