Category Archives: lost in math

What I Read In July

Steve Brusatte: The Rise and Reign of the Mammals The ink hardly dry on his bestselling The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs (which I reviewed here) palaeontologist Steve Brusatte returns with what can only be the natural successor. It’s … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in A Canticle for Liebowitz, a lonely height, alastair bonnett, alastair reynolds, anthony stuart, arthur c clarke, balle, beasts before us, bede, Blog Norfolk!, bone silence, brian clegg, china mieville, chitmahals, Christian iconography, conclave, dinosaurs, Earth Abide, edward gibbon, elsa pancirolli, elusive, fahrenheit 451, father brown, fatherland, folio society, frank close, giraffe, higgs boson, ian stewart, james white, john gribbin, Large Hadron Collider, Literary Review, lost in math, mammals, Mary Beard, murder before evensong, norfolk beaches, off the map, Overstrand, Peter Higgs, pirates of the caribbean, ray bradbury, rendezvous with rama, revelation space, revenger, richard coles, Richard Osman, rise and fall of the dinosaurs, rise and reign of mammals, robert harris, sabine hossenfelder, sector general, shadow captain, simon singh, SPQR, star surgeon, stephen capel mysteries, steve brusatte, the canon in residence, the city and the city, the decline and fall of the roman empire, the ecclesiastical history of the english people, The Man Who Died Twice, the second sleep, topophilia, travel, trimingham, vanished giants, Writing & Reading, Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska | Comments Off on What I Read In July

My Reads of 2021

Yes, the time is coming up to the top of rapidly fast approaching when I list my favourite reads of the past year.  I’m amazed I’ve managed 54 books this year given that I have been very busy elsewhere. Going … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in ali smith, antisemitism, asimov, batman, bring up the bodies, children of dune, clarke, coraline, david baddiel, delia owens, dracula, dune, dune messiah, Erebus, frank herbert, frankenstein, golden age of SF, heinlein, hilary mantel, jekyll and hyde, jews don't count, kate atkinson, life after life, lost in math, matt haig, michael palin, my books of 2021, needful things, neil gaiman, peter rabbit, philip ball, sabine hossenfelder, star wars, stephen king, struwwelpeter, terror, the accidental, the big bang theory, the midnight library, the mirror and the light, the modern myths, thomas cromwell, where the crawdads sing, wolf hall | Comments Off on My Reads of 2021