A Few Good Books
On our blog, we talk about our favourite books and authors, old and new, books that stayed with us long after we were done reading, the ones we might gently press into the hands of other readers.
Book Recommendation: Heat Wave by Penelope Lively
Penelope Lively's novel Heat Wave offers a psychologically astute portrayal of a family grappling with the destructive cycle of infidelity, set against the backdrop of a long, hot English summer...
Book Recommendation: Alone by Daniel Schreiber
This is a memoir, a meditation on life for a single person in a couple-dominated world, the generally accepted but questionable notion that having a spouse and kids is the only path to happiness, the role of friendship, the necessity of solitude, and the importance of building a true acquaintance with oneself...
Book Recommendation: Did Ye Hear Mammy Died?
In this poignant and hilarious memoir, the author recalls his childhood in Northern Ireland after the death of his mother when he was just five years old. Raised by his beloved but often overwhelmed father alongside his ten siblings (divided into three classes - the Big Ones, the Middle Ones, and the Wee Ones ), O'Reilly, one of the Wee Ones, paints a vivid picture of growing up in a large, grief-stricken, eccentric, and fiercely loving family during the tail end of the Troubles...
Book Recommendation: Ben & Me by Eric Weiner
This is a book about Ben Franklin. It’s a biography, but the writer focuses not just on what Franklin said and did in his life, but on what he thought about life, and how it should be lived, so it is philosophy as well. What makes it even better is that Eric Weiner doesn’t just write about Franklin, he engages with his ideas and tries to apply them to his own life...
Book Recommendation: Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart
Reading this book was an experience. So much about it was unexpected and wonderful. This is my first time reading Mary Stewart and I think I've found a new favourite writer...
Book Recommendation: Good Days by Michael Rosen
This book is many things, it is philosophy, memoir, general life advice and musings on a life well lived. It’s unusual in its structure in that it is not a straight-line narrative in which ideas build on each other. Rosen does not have a theory of happiness or a five-step plan to a happier life. While the word is in the title, he doesn't really talk about happiness in the narrative. He's thinking less in terms of how to be happy and more in terms of what we can do to have a good day.
Book Recommendation: Old Herbaceous by Reginald Arkell
Old Herbaceous tells the story of a man and his life in the garden, surrounded by plants and flowers that he gives all his time and his love to. At the beginning of the book we meet Burt Pinnegar, a somewhat crotchety old man, the retired head-gardener at the manor house, who's looking back on his life and reliving his memories...
Book Recommendation: Goodbye Mr Chips by James Hilton
This is a story about a school-teacher, Mr Chipping, who his students fondly call Mr Chips. He's the beloved Latin teacher at a quiet boys' school in England called Brookfield. When the book opens, we meet him as an old man, living in rooms across the road from his beloved school, still organising his days by the school bell, inviting the new boys, and some of the older ones over to tea, and keeping up with the goings on at the school...
Book Recommendation: Brian by Jeremey Cooper
The novel tells the story of Brian, a solitary middle-aged man living a carefully ordered life in London. He works at the Camden Council, eats lunch at the same cafe every day, and returns to his quiet flat every evening. His general approach to life can be summed up as, "Keep watch. Stick to routine. Protect against surprises." However, despite his preference for solitude, he does yearn for a bit more, as he enters his forties.
Book Recommendation: A Month in the Country by J L Carr
Published in 1980, this slim novel (at just over a 100 pages) is perfect for a quiet afternoon. But believe me, you will want it to last longer, and to read slower, to soak it all in...
Book Recommendation: The Garden Against Time by Olivia Laing
In The Garden Against Time, Olivia Laing writes about the unique and wonderful place that gardens occupy in our lives. She writes about the soul satisfying experience of being in green spaces made all the more meaningful when we take a hand at creating them. She examines the notion of a garden as a personal paradise, and shares how the time she spent working in her garden has transformed her, and enhanced her own experience of life...
Book Recommendation: Enlightenment by Sarah Perry
Some books are hard to summarise. A novel about astronomy, religion, friendship and unrequited love, Enlightenment by Sarah Perry is all of these things. What will stay with me though is the atmosphere of the bleak Essex landscape, Perry’s beautiful and unhurried telling of a complex tale, and the character of the protagonist, Thomas Hart...
