Winding Up the Week #423

An end of week recap

A bend in the road is not the end of the road…Unless you fail to make the turn.”
  Helen Keller

Many of you are enthusiastically settling down to work (or should I say play?) on your latest seasonal reading projects (summer for some, winter for others, in bibliobunches or alone), and there is a palpable sense of anticipation with a dash of trepidation in the air as you prepare to complete those 900-pagers or thrash the TBR backlog over the next three or four months. This, to me, is part of what makes our small but steadfast community such great fun and excellent company. We are always there to encourage or commiserate, discuss and recommend, sometimes picking each other up off the library floor after a deeply discombobulating DNF and, most importantly, we amuse and distract each other in a positive way no matter what is happening in the world. May it always be so.

As ever, this is a post in which I summarise books read, reviewed and currently on my TBR shelf. In addition to a variety of literary titbits, I look ahead to forthcoming publications, see what folk have on their nightstands and keep readers abreast of various book-related happenings.

CHATTERBOOKS >>

If you are planning a reading event, challenge, competition, or anything else likely to be of interest to the book blogging community and its followers, please let me know. I will happily share your news here with the fabulous array of bibliowonks who read this weekly wind up.

* Finding Tove’s Finland *

My latest contribution to the Tove Trove project is a brief flip through the English-language edition of This is FINLAND 2025-26 – a magazine filled with fascinating articles, including several about Tove Jansson and her Moomin characters. >> What is Finland? #ToveTrove >>

* Fuller Days Through Summer *

A group of people on the same page are coming together this summer to read and discuss the Library of America’s new Margaret Fuller: Collected Writings (edited by Brigitte Bailey, Noelle A. Baker and Megan Marshall) – a volume containing all the American “intellectual and feminist rock star’s” major works, including Summer on the Lakes, in 1843 and Women in the 19th Century, plus “articles, reviews, unpublished writings, journals, and letters.” Furthermore, says Chris Wolak of Stay Curious, an invitation has been extended to all those with an interest in joining a small, committed group in their endeavours from 20th June to 22nd September 2025. Fuller was a women’s rights advocate associated with the American transcendentalism movement, a writer, editor, critic and translator who “inspired suffragists” and “taught women how to think critically,” though surprisingly few people know of her these days. If you fancy reading some or all “929 pages of this book,” please go to You’re Invited to a #FullerSummer and peruse the details about taking part.

* A Roaring Good Read *

There’s a swell reading challenge to look forward to this autumn, marking a very special year from the last century. Three clues: it was the period in which Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs Dalloway was published, C. S. Lewis was elected a fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, and bright young things had their noses buried in The Great Gatsby. There were also some hotsy-totsy titles from the likes of Marcel Proust, Henry Handel Richardson (aka Ethel Florence Robertson), P. G. Wodehouse, Kate Roberts, Compton Mackenzie, Anita Loos, H. G. Wells, Gertrude Stein, Edgar Wallace, Sigrid Undset and W. Somerset Maugham. If the thought of this fills you with anticipation, you may like to hot hoof it over to Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings or Stuck in a Book to find out about the 1925 Club and a certain up-coming 10th anniversary (running in conjunction, of course, with century celebrations). For now, let’s just say, hosts Karen and Simon are preparing to party from the 20th to 26th October. Though, it must be said, they truly are the cat’s pyjamas!

* Almost Overlooked * 

Last September Linda Hill scored quite a coup when British author Vybarr Cregan-Reid wrote a guest piece for her blog about his 2024 memoir-cum-manifesto-cum-history, We Are What We Read: A Life Within and Without Books. Describing him as “an unlikely academic” who “left school [without] qualifications” and in dire need of a “second chance”, he is, says Linda, a person who knows better than most “the power of literature to change a life.” Indeed, Vybrar openly tells us he was a gay, Northern Irish Catholic child of the ‘80s, whose father was “in and out of prison”, leaving a “trail of violence and chaos” in his wake. After a difficult start in life, he was one day given a copy of The Innocent by Ian McEwan. He picked it up out of sheer boredom and thereafter never stopped reading. To learn what happened next, please visit Linda’s Book Bag and read A ‘First’ Reading Experience – A Guest Post by Vybarr Cregan-Reid, Author of We Are What We Read: A Life Within and Without Books. 

* Lit Crit Blogflash *  

I am going to share with you a couple of my favourite posts from around the blogosphere. There are a great many talented writers producing high-quality book features and reviews, which made it difficult to pick only these two – both published in the last week or so:

Parting Words (2017), by Cass Moriarty – Lisa Hill at ANZ LitLovers LitBlog found this “novel about how our values influence the people we become and the ways we behave” a real “pleasure to read”. Brisbane dweller, Cass Moriarty’s Parting Words is the tale of Daniel Whittaker, his unusual legacy and the unforeseen consequences his attempt to “control matters from beyond the grave” have upon his unfortunate progeny. “He sends the three off on quests to find people he has wronged [over his long life,] or who deserve an explanation for his behaviour” and they endeavour to fulfil his final wishes. However, “Moriarty’s imaginative plot” shows the father’s desire to “put things right [many] decades later” is “a fantasy,” says Liz, and “passing his responsibility off onto his children” was never likely to work out as expected.

Writers Behaving Badly: An Interview with Lee Upton by Curtis Smith – The American poet, author and literary critic Lee Upton tells Curtis Smith (Interviews Editor for JMWW) that her latest novel, Wrongful, is “about writers behaving badly and the baffling fate of a popular novelist” who goes missing during a festival. The book experiments with “varied character perspectives in the mystery genre” and intriguingly, has its origins in a “failed short story” that was rewritten after she heard about an actual “writer who enjoyed swimming to the point where she would jump into a ditch if there was any water in it.” Among numerous subjects covered in the discussion, she also touches on previous works, her years as a teacher and Agatha Christie – whom she admires for her “refined sense of mischief.”

* Irresistible Items *

Umpteen fascinating articles appeared on my bookdar last week. I generally make a point of tweeting/x-ing (not to mention tooting and bsky-ing) a few favourite finds (or adding them to my Facebook group page), but in case you missed anything, here are a selection of interesting snippets:

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Guardian Australia: ‘Literary scandal’, ‘joke-a-minute’, ‘captivating’: the best Australian books out in May – “Each month Guardian Australia editors and critics pick the upcoming titles they have already devoured – or can’t wait to get their hands on”.

Literary Review: The Once & Future Genius – In this “sensitive, compelling study,” Francesca Wade “puts writing at the centre of her subject’s world”, says Sophie Oliver of Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife, which she describes here as an “unconventional biography”.

The Lamp: Ghosts and Dolls – “Be interested in rather than anxious about what machines write.” Paul J. Griffiths on “the writings of artificial intelligence.”

Beyond the Bookshelf: Guardians of Memory – “From the book’s earliest pages, Pettegree an der Weduwen make it clear that libraries are as mortal as the societies that birth them.” Matthew Long examines The Library: A Fragile History.

The New York Times (via DNYUZ): ‘James’ Won the Pulitzer, but Not Without Complications – “In an unusual but not unprecedented move, the prize board chose a fourth option after it couldn’t agree on the three less-heralded finalists”, reports Alexandra Alter.

Pioneer Works: Sense and Senescence – “A professor ponders how Jane Austen prepares us for death.”

Counter Craft: The Age of Genre Bending, Blending, and Juxtaposing – “Thoughts on the most important literary trend of the last 25 years, and novels that juxtapose different genres side by side”, from Lincoln Michel.

Literary Theory and Criticism: Analysis of Aphra Behn’s Love Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister – “While Aphra Behn’s Love Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister is not a well-known work, it remains crucial to the development of the novel”, says Nasrullah Mambrol.

Read Japanese Literature: Japanese Proletarian Fiction – “Proletarian literature was an international movement, especially in the 1920s and 1930s.” Alison Fincher provides a list of proletarian writers from Japan and their work in English.

Literary Hub: Separate Rooms – After many years out of print, the English translation of an Italian gay classic returns to bookshops. The following is an excerpt from Pier Vittorio Tondelli’s Separate Rooms.

Life With Books: Books about the quiet joy of everyday life: Drinking coffee, flowers on tea trays, good breakfasts and other delights – Lucy Fuggle on “the gentle, comforting charm of books that celebrate the ordinary… our habits, rituals, simple pleasures, and ways of navigating the world.”

Caught by the River: Angels in the Cellar – “More than a description of wine making, Peter Hahn’s Angels in the Cellar, recently published by Little Toller, is a celebration of nature and a love of the land, the seasons and the soil, writes Paul Bursche.”

China Books Review: Yan Geling: Crossing the Red Line – “The acclaimed novelist and screenwriter built an audience in China for her powerful historical narratives. Then, somewhere, she crossed a line. What is it like to be banned from publishing in your homeland?” asks Karen Ma.

Nordiskpost: Greenland without a bookstore: the end of Atuagkat marks a cultural turning point – Malthe Pedersen is deeply concerned that “Greenland no longer has a single bookstore.” She considers the consequences to “readers, publishers and writers across the island.”

Miller’s Book Review: Open Thread: Emotional vs. Intellectual Novelists? – “George Eliot vs. Charles Dickens? Victor Hugo vs. Alessandro Manzoni? Henry James vs. Dostoevsky?” Joel J Miller would like to know if there is an “emotional-intellectual divide” between novelists and, if so, would it be possible to “map [their] temperaments and styles”? ChatGPT may have the answers.

New Scientist: The best new science fiction books of May 2025 – “May’s new science fiction novels include a hot tip from [the] culture editor, as well as war on an alien planet from Bora Chung,” says Alison Flood.

Platform: Siyahi Retreat – Ahead of her first-ever writers’ retreat in Jaipur, Mita Kapur, founder of “one of the very first literary agencies in India,” talks to Paridhi Badgotri about her relationship with books, promoting literature in India and reading Enid Blyton’s stories with her sisters when she was a child.

Our Culture: Author Spotlight: Matthew Gasda, ‘The Sleepers’ – Sam Franzini “spoke with Matthew Gasda about [his novel The Sleepers,] generational fiction, playwriting, and plundering from diaries”

Beshara Magazine: Wild Service: Why Nature Needs You, edited by Nick Hayes and Jon Moses – “Charlotte Maberly reviews [Wild Service: Why Nature Needs You,] a new book that argues that it is only by including human beings in nature that we can preserve it.” 

Los Angeles Times: 10 books to read in May – “Critic Bethanne Patrick recommends 10 promising titles, fiction and nonfiction, to consider for your May reading list.”

The Duck-Billed Reader: At the Edge of Death: Safety Coffins, Poe, and Dracula – Claire Laporte examines “what happens when the boundary line between life and death is blurry?”

Granta: This Very Complicated Cast of Mind – Renata Adler shares a previously “unpublished piece” on “the death of her friend, Hannah Arendt” – a “forthright reckoning with Arendt by a writer from a younger generation with a shared German émigré background” (available to read in PDF format). There follows here “a supplementary conversation, in which Adler relates some of her memory of Arendt.”

Independent: Ian McEwan’s next novel is science fiction ‘without the science’ – Ian McEwan’s forthcoming speculative fiction novel, What We Can Know, “will be a post-apocalyptic story”, says Hillel Italie.

The Moscow Times: Walk the ‘Green Mountains’ of the Caucasus with Author Caroline Eden – Caroline Eden’s latest book, Green Mountains (the last in her ‘colour trilogy’), traces her journey through the Caucasus, “walking  and collecting stories and recipes [as she reflects] on ten years of researching and writing these books, set most recently against the dark backdrop of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.”

Persuasion: Why It’s So Hard To Find Small Press Books – “Adopt a few small and independent presses as your own” is just one of the suggestions by Melanie Jennings and Elizabeth Kaye Cook for how you could help make small press books more widely available in bookstores.

OUPblog: Elleke Boehmer’s seminal Colonial and Postcolonial Literature at 30 – “May 2025 marks the 30th anniversary of Elleke Boehmer’s seminal text Colonial and Postcolonial Literature: Migrant Metaphors, [which] remains a landmark publication in [its] field”. Here, the author “reflects on her book and its longevity and shares some of her ‘must reads.’”

Reactor: Writing the Speculative Into Real History – American author of speculative fiction, Lara Elena Donnelly, whose recently published novella No Such Thing as Duty is a “World War I alt history” featuring Somerset Maugham, draws on non-fiction and fantasy to discuss the appeal of alternate histories.

NPR: There’s some Revolutionary reading coming your way this week – Colin Dwyer rounds up a few new books he thinks you should consider this week, including a debut short story collection by Molly Olguín with “vibes similar to Shirley Jackson or Angela Carter, if that’s your thing.”

The Conversation: Is Russian misogyny enabling sexual violence in Ukraine? Yes, argues a bestselling author – In Same River, Twice: Putin’s War on Women, Sofi Oksanen draws on her family’s history of Soviet colonisation and reports of the war in Ukraine to argue Russia uses violence against women as a weapon of war.

The Miramichi Reader: We, the Kindling by Otoniya J. Okot Bitek – “Okot Bitek’s writing is unapologetic as she reckons with the legacy of the Lord’s Resistance Army: a militant group that abducted tens of thousands of children to serve in its ranks between the late 1990s and early 2000s”, says Catherine Marcotte in her review of Kenyan-born Ugandan-raised diasporic writer, Otoniya J. Okot Bitek’s We, the Kindling.

Books of Titans: Read it as if it were True – After first dreading but then going on to read The Lord of the Rings series in its entirety “in under a month”, Erik Rostad shares his “reading tip for books you don’t want to read.”

Bocas Lit Fest: Haitian Myriam J.A. Chancy wins 2025 OCM Bocas PrizeVillage Weavers, an historical novel by Haitian Canadian American author Myriam J.A. Chancy, “has won the award for best Caribbean book of the past year.”

The MIT Press Reader: ‘The Silver Bridge’: Gray Barker’s Psychic Travelogue – “The first book-length exploration of the Mothman sightings, The Silver Bridge is also something much stranger and more expansive”, writes Gabriel Mckee.

The Wall Street Journal: ‘“I Humbly Beg Your Speedy Answer”’ Review: Instruction Fit to Print – “The first advice column was published in 17th-century London. Correspondents were especially interested in the topic of sex” says Judith Flanders in her review of Mary Beth Norton’s “I Humbly Beg Your Speedy Answer”: Letters on Love and Marriage from the World’s First Personal Advice Column.

Open: Search Party – “Set in contemporary Kerala, [Jissa Jose’s Mudritha is] a novel about women escaping to find themselves,” writes Geeta Doctor.

The Conversation: A new publisher will focus on books by men. Are male writers and readers under threat? – Julian Novitz says evidence suggests male writers and readers are in decline – in Australia and elsewhere. Is a male-only publishing house the solution?

LARB: More and Scarier Monsters, Always – Scholar of Indigenous literatures and theory, Vanessa Evans, “reviews the new critical anthology Global Indigenous Horror,” a collection of essays edited by Naomi Simone Borwein in which the reader is invited “to consider how horror can become something more fluid—less about containment than about transformation and exploration.”

Public Books: The Translator’s Dilemma: Thinking Versus Doing? – Lawrence Venuti, author of Contra Instrumentalism: A Translation Polemic and translator from Italian, French and Catalan, poses the question: Would we get a different view of translation if we turned to translators themselves?

Newcity Lit: Island Time: A Review of “The Living and the Rest” by José Eduardo Agualusa – Set on “a small island off the eastern coast of Africa [where] a group of writers assemble for the first Ilha de Moçambique Literary Festival”, José Eduardo Agualusa’s novel, The Living and the Rest, is “concerned with why people write [and] what it means to be an ‘African writer,’” says Theodore Anderson.

CNN Travel: Bookstores’ latest release? Beer, wine, dinner, coffee and a unique aesthetic – “Books — real books, the tangible, flip-the-pages kind — have an enduring appeal. As do bookstores — real bookstores, the brick-and-mortar, browse-and-discover kind. There is an atmosphere and culture to them, expert curation and literary serendipity. Bookstores are vital social capital too — third spaces where strangers mix.”

NewsSky: Light of the Word: Ukraine says goodbye to Valery Shevchuk – “Ukraine has lost one of its most prominent literary voices: Valery Shevchuk, a writer from the sixties, Shevchenko Prize laureate, literary historian, translator, and keeper of the Ukrainian Baroque,” reports Chilli Pepper.

Deadline: ‘Unaccustomed Earth’ Series A Go At Netflix From John Wells & Madhuri Shekar – “A drama based on Jhumpa Lahiri’s collection of short stories, Unaccustomed Earth, has been ordered to series at Netflix from showrunner, writer, and executive producer John Wells”, writes Rosy Cordero.

Bookanista: The dark side of the mirror – “‘One thing needs to be made clear. I did not kill my twin sister.’ So Begins Liann Zhang’s fiercely entertaining debut Julie Chan Is Dead.” Liann Zhang talks to the second-generation Chinese Canadian author about her debut thriller. 

Keep Calm and Carry On, a Substack from Karen Dukess: The Jane Austen Controversy – “When the facts ruin a great story but reveal an even better one”, says American mystery novelist and author of the forthcoming cosy crime title, Welcome to Murder Week.

ScreenRant: There Were Originally 5 Elephants In Discworld: What Happened To The Fifth & Why It’s Missing – What happened to Terry Pratchett’s fifth elephant? Nicole Zamlout investigates.

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FINALLY >>

If there is something you would particularly like to see on Winding Up the Week or if you have any suggestions, questions, or comments for Book Jotter in general, please drop me a line or comment below. I would be delighted to hear from you.

Thank you for taking the time to read this post. I wish you a week bountiful in books and rich in reading.

NB In this feature, ‘winding up’ refers to the act of concluding something and should not be confused with the British expression: ‘wind-up’ – an age-old pastime of ‘winding-up’ friends and family by teasing or playing pranks on them. If you would like to know more about this expression, there is an excellent description on Urban Dictionary.



Categories: Winding Up the Week

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17 replies

  1. So much to explore! Been out of the loop a bit this week, so I’m grateful to you, as usual.

  2. “This, to me, is what makes our small but steadfast community such great fun and excellent company. We are always there to encourage or commiserate, discuss and recommend, sometimes picking each other up off the library floor after a deeply discombobulating DNF and, most importantly, we amuse and distract each other in a positive way no matter what is happening in the world. May it always be so.”
    Such words of wisdom… I don’t know how I would get by without our bookish community… thank you for all you do to help keep us together.

  3. I’m very fond of flapper slang (I think my favourite is ‘scary biscuits’!) so thank you for your wonderful 1925 Club write up! Truly the bees-knees 🙂

  4. Gosh what links! I don’t quite know where to start! 🤣 And thank you for the kind mention of the 1925 Club – we think it’s a sterling year and you list some great options there!

  5. Ohhh, a new Francesca Wade, a JA story by Kipling to hunt down and the promise of a new Ian McEwan that could actually be one of the good ones.
    Thank you for another week of amusement and distraction!

  6. Marvellous as always. I’ve just recommended your posts to Carys Shannon because you have such a lovely community here. And can I recommend to you her debut novel, ‘Truth Like Water’ which is coming out later this year from Parthian? I know you’re not at the helm of Diwethon now but I think you are still interested in ‘Reading Wales’!

  7. I’ve added The Living and the Rest to my wishlist, thank you (no buying books for me in a scarily bumper month) and I’m working up to doing 20 Books of Summer and have been comforted by everyone’s good luck wishes as I attempt a ridiculous pile!

  8. Fabulous, as always! Happy near-summer to you and yours!

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