I also started to ponder: why the obsession throughout the book with belladonna?
Read MoreReviews
Review: How to write short
This is a very different book from Short-Form Creative Writing: A Writer's Guide And Anthology, both in content and style, but covers similar ground.
Read MoreQuick look: You talkin' to me? The Unruly History of New York English (The Dialects of North America)
One of my ambitions, once this pandemic is over, is to visit New York if I can. In the meantime, this look at the various cultures and dialects in New York is a reasonable substitute for actually being there.
Read MoreListening, by Terry Freedman
Books of 2020 -- now with audio
Yesterday I published a blog post entitled Books of 2020, a list of the books I’ve (mostly) read in 2020. Well, it’s a bit of a long read at around 4,000 words, so I’ve created an audio version of it as well.
Read MoreBooks of 2020

These are the books I’ve encountered in 2020. I’ve read most of them, and reviewed many of them.
Read MoreA shorter review of the Penguin Book of The Prose Poem

Arranged in reverse chronological order, this book will help you find great examples of innovative approaches to writing poems, dating back to the 1840s. But what exactly is a prose poem?
Read MoreOn This Day, by Terry Freedman
On this day #7: Review of Help! for Writers
On 22 December 2015 I published a review of Help! For Writers, by Roy Peter Clark. I liked the book back then. Do I still like it now?
Read MoreReview: The European City in Contemporary Literature

The focus was not so much on viewing the city through a tourist’s lens as on looking at how spaces in the city interacted with the experiences of the authors or, rather, the narrators in their stories.
Read MoreReview: Leaving the Atocha Station

This is a very clever book. Too clever, in fact, for any one person to fully appreciate I think.
Read Morepodcast-ai Screenshot, by Terry Freedman
Turn Chrome browser tabs into podcasts
A Chrome extension called Podcast.ai enables you to convert browser tabs to podcasts. Sometimes.
Read MoreReview: Great Novellas

My reading journey feels like the kind of trek where, exhausted, you make for the brow of the hill just ahead of you, only to discover that an even higher hill lies just beyond.
Read MoreReview: Ethan Frome

(Amended) The pages in my copy are marked (in pencil of course) all the way through, to highlight wonderfully-crafted sentences.
Read MoreReview: Chronicle of a death foretold

It was with some foreboding that I opened this book.
Read MoreReview: Book of Clouds

I’ve never been to Berlin, but I feel like I’ve come to know it through this book.
Read MoreReview: A Little History of Poetry

The poets featured each enjoy a potted biography that places them and their work in the context of the time. Extracts rather than whole poems are presented, and this is both an advantage and a disadvantage.
Read MoreReview: Who will run the frog hospital

If you like stories about teenaged angst, and especially female teenaged angst, you will like this book. Well I don’t and I didn’t.
Read MoreReview: The Comfort of Strangers

Rather than write the traditional sort of review, I thought I would do it in the form of one of those quizzes one sees in popular magazines. Answer each question honestly, and keep a note of your answers on a sheet of paper so you can add up the score at the end.
Read MoreReview of Things Seen, by Annie Ernaux

There is something to be said for short pieces that stand alone as impressions but yet together form a tapestry of a whole picture. Once certainly gets a sense of the aspects of Paris which, as in any tourist-attracting city, are not to be discovered in the guidebooks.
Read MoreReview: Giovanni's Room

Giovanni’s Room, which is the only work of James Baldwin’s that I’ve read so far apart from a few articles, also starts at the end. The result is a story that is intriguing and gripping within the first few minutes.
Read MoreReview: Closely Observed Trains
There is some very beautiful writing in this book, and plenty of humour.
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