Kapow! by Adam Thirlwell
I read Adam Thirlwell’s debut novel, Politics, a couple of months ago and quite enjoyed it, though didn’t feel itContinue Reading
I read Adam Thirlwell’s debut novel, Politics, a couple of months ago and quite enjoyed it, though didn’t feel itContinue Reading
W. G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn is one of the strangest books I have read it a while. It isContinue Reading
I read Sharon Olds’ lauded Stag’s Leap last Summer and though I loved the idea and the poetry of her verseContinue Reading
I took a week to read this harrowing, depressing, heart-wrenchingly awful* biography of one of the most troubled, confused andContinue Reading
So I’ve read another memoir by a British academic, but this one isn’t the “Books Conquers All” disappointment of LornaContinue Reading
Joe Sacco’s Journalism collects several short pieces (ranging from two to fifty pages in length) drawn and written in the decadeContinue Reading
Not a book about reefer addicts written by a composer, John Williams’ Stoner is a long-winded novel detailing the whole lifeContinue Reading
I really really liked this. That’s what I’m going to open with, because everything of any wit or interest IContinue Reading
(Wrote this on a train on Sunday, forgot to upload it:) As is perhaps clear, my recent reading has becomeContinue Reading
Today I read Colm Tóibín’s 2013 novella, The Testament of Mary. It’s very short, 104 pages in this edition, with pretty bigContinue Reading
David Shields’ Reality Hunger is a non-fiction book about the fictional and the unreal being dead to contemporary creativity. ItContinue Reading
I was worried that Hilary Mantel’s 2012 Booker-winner Bring Up The Bodies would take me weeks to read. But there wasContinue Reading
This is the third memoir about “growing up” in the second half of the 20th-century I’ve read in a rowContinue Reading
This is a set text for my MA twice over, so this has been touted as a book that isContinue Reading
Sectioned: A Life Interrupted is a recent memoir by John O’Donoghue, a man who spent his teens and twentiesContinue Reading
I just reread Graham Greene’s The End of the Affair as it’s being discussed in a class I have this week.Continue Reading
Art Spiegelman’s Maus is famous. And serious. And acclaimed. And important. And canonical. And worthy. There is very little I canContinue Reading
I picked this novel up from a massive pile of free books offered by my university a few weeks beforeContinue Reading
The eighth book I’ve finished n 2014, and finally an absolute FUCKING BELTER. Ostrich by Matt Greene is a beautiful,Continue Reading
I read and enjoyed Ali Smith’s There But For The whilst travelling last Summer, and was recently recommended this as aContinue Reading
This is a bloody strange book. I was initially led to this postmodern 1960s American mystery-thrillery-comedy due to my enjoymentContinue Reading
Malcolm Lowry’s books are all about depression and alcoholism. And most of them he was too drunk and sad toContinue Reading
Errr… Wow. I’m almost feeling vicariously post-coital after reading the cock-a-block sexed-up Tampa by Alissa Nutting. It’s got a vagina onContinue Reading
I haven’t changed my opinion halfway through a novel so drastically in ages. Which was a good thing, because theContinue Reading
I am having an absolute TRIUMPH of an evening. I have a negroni IN MY HAND, have just finished readingContinue Reading
Midnight’s Children took me three weeks to read. Which is an extortionately long time for me: I read Ulysses inContinue Reading
A hip-hop review of the year now ending.
I’m exhausted. I’m tired. And the fucking Christmas party season still isn’t over yet. Accompanying my frantic essay work, rampantContinue Reading
I may have mentioned this in a blog post before, but my mother has the morbid (though appreciated) habit of,Continue Reading
After the horrors I went through when I gave up my serious ibuprofen addiction last week (surprisingly messy), I thoughtContinue Reading
I’m in a pretty filthy mood as I begin this review, but I have the excellent Naked City by John ZornContinue Reading
Without a shadow of a doubt, Big Sur is the best book by Jack Kerouac I have ever read. It wasContinue Reading
This is edited from a brief presentation I gave in a class. So it’s more literary than usual and doesn’tContinue Reading
In December 1991 Isabel Allende’s daughter Paula fell into a coma. With little knowledge of how long it would lastContinue Reading
It is a key belief of my that it is important to, occasionally, read bad books. Otherwise, how is oneContinue Reading
I have had one of the most boring days of my life. I dedicated OVER SEVEN HOURS to getting holdContinue Reading
I have an odd relationship with the works of Geoff Dyer. There are books of his that I rate asContinue Reading
This little book, collected from a series of lectures Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk gave in 2009, is an interesting textContinue Reading
I had been intending to read George Orwell’s Homage To Catalonia ever since I encountered Down And Out In Paris And London,Continue Reading
Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood is a fucking emotional rollercoaster of a book. It tells the story, in great detail,Continue Reading
I found this excellent 90s-scene short story collection in a charity shop, picking it up mainly because amongst its sixteenContinue Reading
Reading two comic books within two months makes me look like far less of the sleek, hip-hop player most peopleContinue Reading
I had intended to spend the day writing the “dopest”* literary rap of all time, but I have instead beenContinue Reading
I bought this little promotional book for £2 on impulse a few weeks ago. I read it today. The SeaContinue Reading
I found myself a copy of Flaubert’s 1877 short story collection Three Tales in order to read ‘Herodias’, his piece aboutContinue Reading
I was recommended to read If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things in order to marvel at McGregor’s impressive ability to leapContinue Reading
This is the first book I have ever read by JG Ballard. I haven’t read any of his famous ones,Continue Reading
Wow. I just finished reading this long collection of themed poems, and found it pretty impressive. Birthday Letters, Ted Hughes’Continue Reading
Will Self’s 2012 novel Umbrella, shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize that went to Bring Up The Bodies, is a sexy, war-y, JoyceanContinue Reading
I’m reading less because I’m busy, yeah, I have a life and whatever. Today I read 77 Dream Songs by JohnContinue Reading
















































