robotnic.co

  • Home
  • Hello!
  • Reading Week
  • 52 Books

Independent Booksellers Week | Bookish Blether #12

06.24.2015 by Nicola //

This week on Bookish Blether we’re sharing our favourite indie bookshops as part of Independent Booksellers Week with Books Are My Bag. IBW celebrates independent bookshops across the UK. Check out #IBW2015 and #giveabook on Twitter for more info.

Follow Bookish Blether on Twitter and Tumblr for more book chat.

If you have any questions or comments tweet us or send an email to bookishblether@gmail.com!

Subscribe to Bookish Blether: iTunes | SoundCloud | RSS

Categories // Bookish Blether

Reading Week #59 – Flying High

06.19.2015 by Nicola //

Small is Beautiful pop-up

The past 2 days at Small is Beautiful have been a whirlwind of like-minded people, talks, thoughts, provocations and inspiration. It went by more quickly than any other 2 days in my life.

I’m coming to you this morning from Heathrow airport, where I’m awaiting a connecting flight to Dallas, then on to central California. We’re already delayed by 40 minutes.

All this to say it’ll be a brief one today, but I hope you find something worth sharing.

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

I finally caught up with my damn May Reads. It was a very good reading month indeed.

ICYMI here’s Bookish Blether Episode 11 – Summer Reads which comes with a buttload of holiday reading recommendations.

On my business blog, I was all like, Let’s Collaborate!.

 
 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Writing, Briefly. Brilliant.

Also on writing, James Greig uploaded the slides from his brilliant Small is Beautiful talk.

Jeff Bridges has been taking tons of great panoramic photos on film sets these past 30 years.

Local film journalist Hannah McGill wrote about women in film – and film festivals – in the UK. These kinds of articles are so common now but whatevs here you go.

 
 

–– DIGITAL ––

This dude thinks that signing off emails with “Best” is actually the worst. I do, and fuck it, I won’t change for no-one.

Why Start-Ups Love Moleskines. Busted. Maybe I am the worst.

Jessica Furseth on Bridging the Digital Divide. Who will pay for it?

 
 

–– ON PAPER ––

I’m still crawling on through The Folded Clock by Heidi Julavits – only about 10% to go.

On the plane, who knows? I have an entire Kindle library at my disposal. It might be time for How to be both by Ali Smith, or a novel called Valley Fever by Katherine Taylor, appropriately set where I’m headed.

What are you reading this weekend?
 
 

–– &c. ––

A lovely essay from Oliver Sacks on Mishearings.

A Manhattan Fortuneteller Cost Him Fortune After Fortune, in the New York Times. This one’s a few weeks old but oooooft.

 

Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me with a link.

​Have a lovely weekend, friends!

 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

May Reads | 52 Books 2015

06.17.2015 by Nicola //

I’m late!

May was a great reading month for me, not least because I took a week’s holiday and devoured 5 books while I was away.

Have a wee read at my thoughts, and let me know if you’ve read, enjoyed, or contemplated picking up any of these.

The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan

22. The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan
★★★★★ – A stunning debut from Scottish author Kirsty Logan. Gorgeous prose, a fully realised world and an excellent cast of characters. You can hear me interview Kirsty on Bookish Blether Episode 8.
 
 
All I Know Now by Carrie Hope Fletcher

23. All I Know Now by Carrie Hope Fletcher
I read this because I thought it might be a good candidate for The Essayist Project but… it wasn’t. It’s directed at teens, particularly Carrie’s fans or ‘Hopefuls’, and didn’t have much bearing outside of that. It definitely could’ve used a heavier edit and some sections should’ve been totally restructured. But it’s giving that audience something they want, so, hey.
 
 
one-summer-america-1927

24. One Summer: America, 1927 by Bill Bryson
★★★★★ – I listened to this as an audiobook and literally developed some wrinkles in the process. It’s that good old Bill Bryson thing with rich detail and inadvertently hilarious moments… but it wasn’t his strongest work. He ties himself in knots over the connections between some subjects, and it’s kinda horrible about women. So a history book, basically.
 
 
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty

25. Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty
★★★★★ – If you’re curious about the subject of death, you’ll love this. Part general non-fiction, part-memoir, it’s mortician Caitlin Doughty reflecting on her career journey, what made her interested in death, and some great analysis on our culture’s tendency to shun dealing with death and corpses. A great read.
 
 
All My Friends are Superheroes by Andrew Kaufman

26. All My Friends are Superheroes by Andrew Kaufman
★★★★★ – This came highly recommended and it was a very sweet – if a little insubstantial – read. It’s essentially a short fairytale along with some humorous bios of some people with unconventional superpowers. I’d have liked a bit more world-building, but at face value it’s a fun wee read.
 
 
This One Is Mine by Maria Semple

27. This One is Mine by Maria Semple
★★★★★ – Semple’s debut novel, this was published a few years before her break-out Where’d You Go Bernadette (which I loved). It centres around a bored wealthy housewife, her asshole husband and his oddball sister who would definitely be played by Amy Sedaris on screen. Semple brings her TV comedy chops to some brilliantly realised scenes, but the characters’ unlikability uncharacteristically kept me from really investing in the story. So-so.
 
 
Bream Gives Me Hiccups by Jesse Eisenberg

28. Bream Gives Me Hiccups by Jesse Eisenberg
★★★★★ – As a surprise to either everyone or no-one, this is an absolutely brilliant collection. His sharply observed restaurant reviews-cum-diaries by an eighth grader are as strong as his pithy dialogue scenes. His pathos is absolutely heart-in-mouth, and no sooner do you allow yourself to laugh than he sticks the knife in. Just fantastic. Look out for this one when it’s released in September.
 
 
The Lover by Marguerite Duras

29. The Lover by Marguerite Duras
★★★★★ – Magnifique.
 
 
Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yuri Herrera

30. Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yuri Herrera
★★★★★ – This stunning short novel is difficult to get a firm grip on. I’m still not sure exactly what I read, or whether I fully understood it, but I loved it anyway. It’s lyrical, it’s gripping, and it takes you on a fantastic journey. What more could you possibly want?

 

Categories // Books Tags // 52 books 2015, Books, kirsty logan, marguerite duras, reading, the gracekeepers, yuri herrera

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 65
  • 66
  • 67
  • 68
  • 69
  • …
  • 198
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Studio Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in