Hello all,
I hope you're having a lovely bank holiday, and the sun is shining wherever you are.
This month has a whole host of reading delights, which made it pretty hard to pick my book of the month. We've got internet revelations, murder mysteries, and apples. Let's dive in!
One. North Woods by Daniel Mason
I love a novel that explores different genres, so this mix of literary fiction, horror, song, and more was always going to be catnip to me. I also really like apples, and this story centres around a plot of land where the apple is king. It starts with an injured soldier from the American civil war, who moves with his daughters to the place where he has tasted the most delicious apple he could find. It then skips through time, following his daughters, and then the others who live on the plot, but there is always the spectre of the first people who lived there hanging behind. I found it mystical, earthy, and creepy.
How I read it: on holiday on the Isle of Man
Two. Conspiracyland by Marianna Spring
Spring is the BBC's disinformation correspondent, and spends most of her working life trying to track how different people experience social media. In this book she does a deep dive on conspiracy theories, and the people who believe them, often to the extent of being cut off from their family and friends. She wrote it during the pandemic so Covid-related theories feature quite heavily, but she also speaks to people who think that the Manchester Arena bombing was faked, as well as speaking to some of the victims. The reading experience was a bit choppy - I could tell it was her first book and she usually writes more short form pieces. But nevertheless the investigation is fascinating and alarming in equal measure. It's also just sad to read about all these people living in fantasy worlds entirely on the internet. One of the most sobering strands is how difficult it is to get people out of that world once they've landed in it.
How I read it: a mix of holiday and commuting
Three. The last murder at the end of the world by Stuart Turton
This was such a fun read. Stuart Turton loves to write twisty-turny crime plots set in absurd places. This one is on an island surrounded by a deadly fog, held back by fancy tech, which fails the day the matriarch of the island is found dead. High stakes! I found the plot really engaging, with loads going on and a slow reveal of the key details that lead you to the final dénouement. It's very fast paced, and I enjoyed the central character of Emory who is our sleuth.
How I read it: very quickly on a train up north
Four. Intermezzo by Sally Rooney
It's almost pointless to say what you thought about a Sally Rooney novel because her books are marketed in such an over the top way that you feel everyone must have already read it. Nevertheless, I'm sure some of you are behind the times like me. In this one, she narrates the lives of two brothers, who often misunderstand each other, and whose father has just died. They have their own private cares and joys, centring primarily around romantic relationships, which is what it feels Rooney is mostly interested in. I connected with the characters, and enjoyed the way she made their internal voices so different - I would find myself siding with one brother, only to flip flop to the other when their view was presented. I also like the occasional diversions into intellectual debate, even if I can't quite follow them sometimes.
How I read it: it kept me company before bed for a few nights
Five. Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams
What a wild ride! This memoir is by a former (very much former) employee of Facebook, who joined the tech company in the fairly early days, when global domination was coming, but not quite there. She worked directly with Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, and if even half of what she narrates about their attitudes and working practices is true, then it does leave me fearing for the future. It also has one of the wildest couple of opening chapters I've ever read, which span negotiating with the junta in Myanmar and almost dying from a shark attack. She has been banned from promoting it by Facebook, so of course it's now a bestseller. It was a good companion read to Conspiracyland too!
How I read it: with my mouth agape
Book of the month: actually a really tough one, this was a great and varied reading month, but the one I am recommending most at the moment is Careless People.
That's all for this month, see you in a few weeks. And as ever, do let me know what you're reading!