I may have made a little mistake with the audio-books this week. With Leon I am listening to The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Shehan Karunatilaka , a book about a gay war photographer killed in the Sri Lankan civil war. By myself I am listening to A Passage North by Anuk Arudpragasam, about a Sri Lankan man trying to help clean up, post war after seeing war photographs. They are very different books, but in audio they are getting a bit confused in my head. In eye reading I have very nearly finished the NetGalley review book The Confidence Woman by Sophie Quick. It's beautiful and heartbreaking and set in Melbourne. I highly recommend. Next up is another NetGalley review book A Lady's Guide to London by Faye Delacour , because I randomly thought 'I feel like reading a romance' and it was both a romance and the next thing in my NetGalley queue. Serendipity. In crafting I've finished the top I was knitting (come back Friday for modelled phot...
W elcome to part 22 in a series of non-fiction book reviews, originally based on the idea that the books I request tell you everything you need to know about me. I have, after so many chapters of this series, realised that all these posts say about me is that have eclectic taste and endless curiosity. I can't believe I'm up to part 22, this was just a place to put these reviews, but now I can see how broad my non-fiction reading is, and how many interesting, good (and sometimes not-so-good) books and topics I've had a chance to explore. Today I am talking about bohemia (the cultural state, not the Eastern European region), sloths and relaxing. I don't do a start rating here (although I have to on NetGalley) because sometimes I prefer to use words to express how I felt about a book than provide a stark, unscientific and often inconsistent number. All books in this post are kindly provided in e-arc form from the publishers through NetGalley. The Twiligh...