Saturday, January 30, 2021

How I Won the Yellow Jumper: Dispatches from the Tour de France (Ned Boulting)

Ned Boulting
How I Won the Yellow Jumper: Dispatches from the Tour de France

 



Ned is one of the voices of le Tour and this is an amusing book giving insights into following the tour as one of the media circus. It goes from Ned's first tour in about 2003 through to 2010 so Armstrong's wins had not been stripped from him as yet. The bonus written after original publication is 2011's tour where Cavendish had come into his own. It's no hold barred whether jokingly calling out his media colleagues or letting us know his views on cyclists, their team support staff and tour officials. A great read if you're a cycling fan. Probably not so interesting if you're not except for a passage about Johnny Hoogerland's argument with a barbed wire fence where the injuries sustained are graphically described comparing to coming under a kitchen knife. Although appalling the description is hilarious. Maybe that's just my sense of humour.

Saturday, January 23, 2021

The Beekeeper of Aleppo (Christy Lefteri)

Christy Lefteri
The Beekeeper of Aleppo

 

A book that I'm reading for my work Book Club. It's a very moving story but not one that I particularly enjoyed reading. I guess the subject matter of Syrian refugees being people smuggled across to the UK is not one that is meant to be very enjoyable. There are parts of the story that you think "why would(n't) you do that" and the main characters I didn't really warm to. Maybe that's the point that going through what these refugees have deadens your emotions or at least you are forced to cap them. At times it felt a bit formulaic as a novel and maybe the construct of each chapter being half present and half past whilst a good ploy does make it a little artificial. Also from the start you know that they have reached the UK. 

Work book club review: "A challenging read that shows the human side of refugee journeys rather than statistics or disturbing images. Well written the book gives context as to the reason why our couple decided to make the journey and shows that having made it this isn’t the end of their refugee story. Ultimately shows that there is hope although hanging by a thread dependent on UK immigration authorities with their interrogative interviews.”

Monday, January 18, 2021

I Wanna Be Yours (John Cooper Clarke)

John Cooper Clarke
I Wanna Be Yours


A very entertaining autobiography which really brings to life the times that JCC grew up in - a lot of which I can relate to (3 channels on telly?)  It's obviously got a lot about punk rock and the RnR lifestyle and also brings out how literary JCC is. Well, he is a poet after all. Some you feel is a little pushing it but who wouldn't bend a few facts when writing their life story. He's well known as a(n ex-) heroine addict, making the Honey Monster collaboration all the more funny, or not, and at first his exploits are entertaining. But after a while the interesting bits are interweaved with how he had to get more (and more) gear and it does get a little repetitive. Junkies have to get smack. Enough already (as he would have written). I suspect he's upset a few by implicating them in his dealings and I never know with autobiographies if all those mentioned are forewarned let alone agree to the stories. After he kicks his habit and settles down into family life it gets a bit twee but then we're swept through about 20 years with a few more amusing anecdotes and name dropping. To be fair the book is very readable and he does come across as a good sort (when not junked out) who is very appreciative of those who have supported and helped him in career and life. I Wanna Be Yours is only mentioned in passing as on the school syllabus and covered by The Arctic Monkeys so we don't find the roots of it. Although read at my wedding (as for many others I suspect) I always wondered if it was a poem about heroine rather than his true love much as there is ambiguity (amongst some) about Lou Reed's Perfect Day.

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Roof Dog: A Short History Of The Windmill (Will Hodgkinson)

Will Hodgkinson
Roof Dog: A Short History Of The Windmill


As it says a quick run through of the Windmill pub atop Brixton Hill which is possibly the best venue in the universe all things considered. The writer interviews or landlord and the guy who books bands and gives an excellent account of why this place is special and why places like it are an essential part of our social fabric. And why they need saving given that they can't open due to Covid. I like the comparison to the Hammersmith Clarendon Hotel which I used to go to with Olly and saw a storming set by Big Black for their farewell UK tour, with Wire on for the encore.

Saturday, January 09, 2021

Riot. Strike. Riot (Joshua Clover)

Joshua Clover
Riot. Strike. Riot (The New Era of Uprisings)



I thought this would be a romp through various riots and strikes but turns out to be a pretty intellectual piece about the differences between the two and how due to social and economic, and therefore political, conditions have led to the development of strikes from riots and back full circle to riots being the main form of resistance to the capitalist economic order. Written by an American professor who has made some fairly controversial (in the eyes of the media) statements regarding the police this is an academic work. Throughout the language is academic (as in words related to academic analysis that I have to look up) and there are many references to both original agitators and subsequent academic authors that you feel you are assumed to know well. It hit home to me half way through when a paragraph starts "The split in the First International surely needs no rehearsal here..." which both assumes you know what the First International was, what the split in it was and subsequent development of the radical "left" due to that split. Which is all assumed when used to analyse strikes. 

I don't necessarily agree with all the analysis and indeed the point is made that riot and to some extent strikes are often spontaneous and whilst their origins can be analysed to some extent that's just the point - you cannot predict. A bit like chaos theory in that given a certain landscape you can predict something will happen but not exactly what where and when. Interesting point is that you get strikes when the economy is booming, workers wanting more of the profits, whereas riots form when people are not in work to even think about getting more of profits. Some good analysis of class and how since the 1970s the early industrialised countries have had more unemployment, more underemployment, more people getting by in the grey economy and more in work in prisons as part of the industrial incarceration programme.

Very timely as I read this when Trump supporters invaded the Capitol building. Although this was called a riot it wasn't that. It wasn't looting and arson by an excluded group venting their anger with the police or military fighting them off. This was a mob infiltrating the seat of government to get the election result reversed in an attempted coup. The fact that Capitol security allowed it to happen, it was so obvious that the mob were going to march on the Capitol and security did nothing to stop them, shows that those forces were complicit in the action. Sitting presidents don't incite riots - they do however attempt coups. In this case Trump was hedging his bets and wouldn't go all in himself. Hence the far right backlash against him. The real riots are in the streets of big cities where the disenfranchised have nothing to lose.

Tuesday, January 05, 2021

How Much Land Does A Man Need? & What Men Live By (Leo Tolstoy)

Leo Tolstoy
How Much Land Does A Man Need?
What Men Live By





A couple of very short stories, the title and "What Men Live By". The title was "considered by James Joyce to be the world's greatest story" according to the back cover and although very a very readable moral little tale I'm not sure that something that takes under an hour to read can be quite that good. Good all the same. A better story to my mind is What Men Live By. Spoiler alert... Rather than a tale of greed and being snared by "the" fallen angel it's a tale of love and kindness and redemption of "a" fallen angel who learns 3 facts about man. As the angel says, "I have learned that men live not by selfishness, but by love." which is obviously what Tolstoy believed as he was both religious (although seems to be against organised religion) and held anarchist views (albeit nonviolent resistance).

Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad)

Joseph Conrad
Heart of Darkness



A famous short story that is as the title suggests pretty dark in substance and so much more than a trip up a jungle river. Very worthwhile reading. Apparently bits influenced Apocalypse Now and you can see why. Language and views are very much of it's time...

Friday, January 01, 2021

Essex Girls (Sarah Perry)

Sarah Perry
Essex Girls




A short run through of what it means to be an Essex Girl with examples drawn mostly not from Essex. An interesting and quick read more about feminism than an in depth analysis of the phenomenon of the Essex Girl, if such a think exists outside of the tabloid press.