Sunday, 13 April 2025

"The Letters of Mercurius" by Mercurius Oxoniensis - book review

A book a satirical letters about the student revolts at Oxford University in 1968-70 written in a comical Elizabethan English and published pseudonymously, at the time, in the Spectator. These were recommended to my by my father-in-law, Tom Wheare, who also lent me his copy, which has an appropriately fusty smell and yellowing pages. The language is delicious, even if the events behind them are now slightly occluded and muddied by in-jokes. I love the sweeping way each letter is signed off as one sentence runs into the farewell. It also features "lady Wheare" (Tom's infamous mother), who somehow got involved in the student occupation of the Clarendon Building. An musing diversion.

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

"The Child in the City" by Colin Ward - book review

The penultimate book in my list of books to read after Finals, and another one recommended to me by Roman Krznaric. I read the second edition, which printed the text without the pictures (which I nevertheless looked up online). Colin Ward is a gentle anarchist in the sense that he wants society to function despite - not because of - what government does or doesn't do. He has a remarkable empathy for children. I'm wondering if Roman recommended this to me because we were talking about how I don't really like (or want to have) children. Although it didn't set my brain on fire, I suspect this book will quietly influence my thinking. It's a good companion to the ITV documentary series 7 Up.

Friday, 4 April 2025

"Starship Titanic" by Terry Jones and Douglas Adams - audiobook review

Based on the computer game that Douglas Adams developed. He couldn't be bothered to write the novel version, so Terry Jones did it for him…in the nude! It's quite a horny book (probably because Terry Jones was naked at the keyboard). Amusing and definitely woven through with Adams's sense of humour and preoccupations with technology. Expertly narrated by Bill Nighy, who is a great hang. Typical of Adams's work in that it's not a compelling plot; more a series of amusing scenes and characters. Probably one of those books that had more of a commercial than a literary imperative and slightly adjacent to but not divorced from the Adams cannon.