Well-written and evocative. The period detail was convincing but not intrusive. I liked the characters although I found the main protagonist a bit annoyingly passive. Still that seemed true to the time and the number of choices she had.
This is a coffee table book but very enjoyable to read cover to cover. The pictures are stunning and the commentary mostly amusing. Occasionally the prose goes a bit Conde Naste Traveller but only occasionally, mostly it's wryly amusing.
This is a brilliantly shabby and seedy book. The London of the early 1980s when it was written is beautifully evoked. And sometimes it's nice to read about an older woman with no redeeming features whatsoever. However, the characters weren't compelling company and the book was fairly easy to put down.
I really enjoyed this. I wasn't sure the approach - Deakin's own writings interleaved with others' memories - would work but it created a fascinating picture. He was clearly hugely charismatic, with a winning personality and a wonderful communicator, but selfish, mercurial, entitled and immature, features common in men of his generation. An absolutely fascinating read and a great way to explore human complexity.
I really struggled with this book. The style is at the same time high handed and imperialistic, as Western travel writing always used to be, and meandering and hard to penetrate. In many places it's reminiscent of the obscure, referential style of the Psychogeographer Ian Sinclair. After a while I realised the real problem is that it is marketed as a history of the Baltics and is in fact a history of the Baltic German aristocracy, for whom the author seems to have a worshipful passion. Consequently, there's no mention of Lithuania, which may disappoint some people, and very little about the lives of ordinary people. However I did learn many things from it and he can certainly evoke a place.
I am not a birder of any kind but I love Simon Barnes' writing, especially when he is writing about the Norfolk Broads, where he lives. This is a lockdown experiment, as he observes the marsh from the same seat every day. Insightful, funny and moving and I know a bit more about birds than I did.
Pretty much what you would expect if you have read the first book and mostly as compelling. I only felt I was reading anecdote filler right at the end. A good book for when you aren't feeling well.
What a wonderful book. I love Laura Cummings' writing and her intelligent exploration of memory and knowledge. This book had a ln extra appeal because I have a long-term love of 17th century Dutch art. Twenty-something me would have been very excited to read this, but would have struggled with the actual reading. With a more flexible fifty-something reading muscle, I found myself going back over paragraphs because the writing was so insightful and beautiful, and I didn't want to miss anything.
Solnit is neither a psychogeographer nor a historian. While there is some history here, much of it fascinating, this is a ponderous book of essays on topics more or less related to walking. There were many insights but I did find she took a long time to say everything. It may be that some of the things that seem obvious, for example about women walking and suburbanisation, only seem so because of this book's influence over the last 20 years. Not an unalloyed pleasure but glad I have finally read it.