Internet highlights – w/c 6th July 2025
12 07 2025Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : The Best of the Internet
Unashamed – by Harry Baker
7 07 2025Less than a month after reading his third book, I’ve now read his second (also, his first is on order and fourth is on pre-order!). I was privileged to see Harry perform live last week, and so got this book then! The poems take on another dimension when performed, but it’s still great to be able to have copies of them to be able to pick up and read any time.
This time the maths and German themes felt even more prominent, as well as chat about marathons and his mum. There’s a poem that runs through the book with a stanza between each other poem, taking you through the maths of a marathon!
Again, it’s crazy hard to narrow it down to a few favourites, but I loved “Falafellรถffel” (translation: falafel spoon), “Knees” (how great his are), “Toilet Seat” (the joy of a new one), “An A-Z of Time and Space” (what it says on the tin) and “Christmas Through the Ages” (a look back on the first 24 Christmasses of his life)! Even his chat between the poems, introducing them was really fun and warm too, and gave you a good feel for what he’s probably like.
This book also introduced me to the concept of a Dougie Day (and the excellent young man who inspired it), but I was devastated to find I’d missed mine!
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Tags: book review, book reviews, harry baker, poetry
Categories : Books I've Read
Internet highlights – f/c 22nd June 2025
5 07 2025Comments : Leave a Comment »
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We Solve Murders – by Richard Osman
5 07 2025I really enjoy the Thursday Murder Club series by Richard Osman, so when he wrote a book that wasn’t in that series, I was interested to see if it was as good – and I do think it was!
So the basic premise is that Amy is a close protection officer, currently looking after a world famous author Rosie on her private island, and Amy’s father-in-law Steve is a retired cop, living in the New Forest. But then various people who are trying to get other people killed get involved, there are influencers, money smugglers, all sorts of things.
And I think this is the only reason I didn’t give it 5 stars (I would have given it 4.5 if that was an option on goodreads) – there are a lot of fringe/secondary characters, and I don’t know if it was that they weren’t given enough intro to bed them into my brain, or if there were just one or two too many of them, but I did have to keep trying to remember who some of them were during the first half, and one of them even later on I was still struggling to place. But I don’t want to be too negative, that really was the only negative for me.
I think Richard Osman’s greatest strength is his characters, and their little eccentricities which really endear them to you. I particularly loved Steve and Rosie this time around, I related to Steve a lot in his desire to potter about somewhere he knows – and Rosie was just so extreme and extravagant in so many ways! The contrast between them was a lot of fun.
What was also enjoyable for me were the bits set in the New Forest, I grew up just outside the national park, and so it was fun to hear references to different places I knew!
As I often do, here are some of my favourite one liners
- “Jeff looks over at Tony, ‘No offence.’
‘I never take offence,’ says Tony. ‘Saved me a lot of time over the years.'” - “Trouble [the cat] never stopped to ask [what flavour his dinner was]; he just loved food that he hadn’t had to catch or scavenge for himself.”
- “What unfortunate timing. If she’d known she was going to die this morning, she would have ordered the pancakes.”
- “‘And how did she score on your psychopath test?’
‘Ninety-six, same as me. That’s why she’s Head of HR'”
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Tags: book review, book reviews, cosy crime, fiction, richard osman, whodunnit
Categories : Books I've Read
Allegiant – by Veronica Roth
21 06 2025This finishes the initial trilogy – there’s a separate fourth book that ties in, which I’ll get to at some point.
I was less keen on this when it started, as while the first two books are told from the perspective of the female protagonist, this one alternates between her and the male protagonist as the narrator, which was quite off putting initially, took a lot of concentration and flicking back to check who was talking to begin with.
In this book we go outside the city that’s been the setting for the first two, and there are shocking revelations about the origin of the city that’s been their home. There’s an awful lot going on with plot, which occasionally got a little confusing, but generally just kept attention, with the second half of the book being really gripping.
The only thing that annoyed me a bit about it was the relationship between the 2 main characters in that so many times it seemed if one of them was upset, it would just be resolved with a passionate kiss – there was a lot about the impact of the kissing, it was a bit grating after a while.
But it’s a trilogy I’ve enjoyed, and I’ll read Four at some point, which, I think, is a series of stories from our male lead’s perspective.
I watched the first 2 films as I reread, but having finished this, it seems the films have now disappeared from iPlayer, which is a shame. Plus this book was meant to be split into two films, but they never made the second, so it’d be left open anyway!
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Tags: book review, book reviews, distopia, divergent, fiction, veronica roth, ya, ya fiction
Categories : Books I've Read
Internet highlights – w/c 15th June 2025
21 06 2025Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : The Best of the Internet
Internet highlights – w/c 8th June 2025
14 06 2025Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : The Best of the Internet
Wonderful – by Harry Baker
9 06 2025I’ve loved Harry Baker’s stuff on socials for a long time, and really wanted to get one of his books. My brother kindly got me this for my birthday, and I read it in 2 days.
Harry’s interests are based around maths, dinosaurs and German, but he’s also a Christian – while not a perfect overlap, it’s pretty close all things considered!
Now, this IS a poetry book, and as a general rule, I am NOT into poetry. I hated studying it at school, and often find it’s just a bit too fancy. But when I do like it, is when it’s fun, and a lot of these are! A handful are more meaningful, but still in his style and so not too much for me to handle, and I really appreciated them too.
I would say my favourites from this book were: “20 Achievable New Year’s Resolutions”, “An Ode to Postcodes”, “Things I Learnt from Interrailling”, and “Trying”, but I loved nearly all of them, and really had to try hard to not list over half the book in picking favourites!
Big fun, big feelings, loved it. Can’t wait to get his other books.
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Tags: book review, book reviews, harry baker, poetry
Categories : Books I've Read
Internet highlights – f/c 25th May 2025
7 06 2025Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : The Best of the Internet




