Mercifully short “bad” novel that examines the Bay Area's changing culture in the meta-manner of a Stewart Lee monologue. Amusingly familiar for anyone who lived in San Francisco between the late-nineties and today, but probably best for those who have left. Not sure the author deserves to be so cynical about a city he only lived in for only four years.
Fascinating investigation of toilets and sanitation systems around the world. It might not sound like a savoury topic, but Rose George tells a lot of interesting and important stories. How often do you think about what happens after you flush the toilet? Ever considered how it's handled around the world? Lack of adequate and hygienic conditions lead to more deaths a year than AIDS, TB or malaria. It's an important issue, and one that's very tricky to fix.
Actual science is so much more interesting than science fiction. Unlike the space-age vision of sterile space capsules pensive floating, actual space travel is full of fear, bravery and lots of bodily functions. Roach discusses the very human concerns of people in space, and the history of how we got there. Fascinating, and some of her best writing. I laughed out loud on numerous occasions.
Any book with a chapter discussing pauses in popular songs (with The Four Tops' “Bernadette” being a particularly great one) is doing something right. Egan is a very skilled writer, who says more in a paragraph than other writers say in a chapter. Though her characters were really well drawn, I didn't particularly like any of them. So while I savored every page, it felt like something was missing.
I'd give this one 3.5 stars if I could. Second of Higson's post-apocalyptic/zombie trilogy, this was better than the first. The characters were better drawn, and we're getting to know more about how the other survivors are living in zombie-plagued London. I'm looking forward to the third book, if only so I can stop thinking about the living dead for awhile.
* Update - This isn't the second book, it's the third! (I think the clue is in the title as listed on GoodReads.) I'm so disappointed that I've read these out of order, but it doesn't seem to matter. Each book covers a different set of kids and timelines. If that's the case, then this book ends on a cliffhanger, and I'm looking forward to the next installment!
In this book Bryson explores the history and culture of Victorian England (and the U.S.) by talking about each room of his Norfolk home, built in that era. There are many tangents into architecture, the Industrial Revolution, agriculture, and historical figures, all stories told with Bryson's flair for honing in on the most fascinating human details. My only criticism is that, in an effort to tell the most compelling story, he perhaps omits details and in some cases contradicts himself. The fact that it took me 18 months to finish this book is because, if anything, it's too interesting, and I wanted to take my time savouring the details.