Tag Archives: Rory Stewart

Books I Read in January 2026

The Haunted Wood Sam LeithThe Haunted Wood by Sam Leith is a survey of childhood reading from Aesop to J. K. Rowling. With a focus on British children’s literature, Leith examines how ideals of what childhood should look like have shifted over the years and how that has been reflected in books aimed at younger readers. Leith’s excellent pen portraits of various children’s authors show that the majority seem to have had some sort of major trauma in their life. Some like Roald Dahl are already well-known, but I didn’t know that E. Nesbit had had such a terrible time of it. The chapter about Harry Potter neatly shows how many homages to children’s books are contained in the series and Leith’s analysis of the delights of picture books are a particular joy. There are inevitable gaps even in a very long book, particularly because the topic of childhood reading is almost always discussed from a personal angle, but the broad span of The Haunted Wood makes it very pacy and enjoyably nostalgic to read. Continue reading

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Books I Read in August 2024

My Good Bright Wolf Sarah MossMy Good Bright Wolf by Sarah Moss is a memoir about the author’s eating disorder which developed during her childhood with a serious relapse during the pandemic. I have enjoyed reading several novels by Moss over the years which often deal with food and illness, and her latest memoir is a complex account about these themes and also addresses control, memory and unreliable narrators. She writes about her emotionally neglectful childhood in Manchester and the books she sought solace in, with some analysis of their depictions of food and femininity. ‘My Good Bright Wolf’ is mostly written in the second person, an unusual style for a memoir and a very powerful one too. The prose is intercut with Moss often berating herself, which sometimes felt relentless and intrusive to read but is very effective at showing the mental toll of anorexia. Many thanks to Pan Macmillan for sending me a review copy via NetGalley. Continue reading

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