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Books of Note

Conversations On Kindness by Bernadette Russell

I had no idea what I was letting myself in for. I’m not sure if I’d known what was coming, I would have started it so impulsively. We live in a world where the leader of a major political party (I had to check this was actually true, as I’ve been ill and was concerned I’d had a fever dream where I’d imagined she was a senior politician) describes diversity initiatives as a “poison” , and the presumptive leader of the “free world” (apologies for the liberal use of parentheses, but I’m struggling to overcome deep skepticism about the cultural and political structures which we tend to take for granted and feel powerless to alter for the benefit of us all – i.e. those whose labour is exploited by capital [ more on this later ]) can call the teaching staff at Harvard “woke” and blame the first tragic air disaster in more than 20 years on disabled staff at air traffic control . These are facts, I checked! It’s worth interjecting at this point with a quick definition of woke, as expresse...

UnAmerican Activities by James Miller

Hannah Green And Her Unfeasibly Mundane Existence by Michael Marshall Smith

Very Good, Jeeves! by P. G. Wodehouse

A Child Across The Sky by Jonathan Carroll

One Of Us by Michael Marshall Smith

Look To Windward by Iain M. Banks

Watching The English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour by Kate Fox

Only Forward by Michael Marshall Smith

The Bullet-Catcher's Daughter by Rod Duncan

Miracle Brew by Pete Brown

Ways To Disappear by Idra Novey

Christie Malry's Own Double-Entry by B. S. Johnson

Dead Writers In Rehab by Paul Bassett Davies

Stoner by John Williams

Open: An Autobiography by Andre Agassi

Wolf In White Van by John Darnielle