Mid-Year Book Freakout Tag 2020

I was tagged by @lettersfromthelighthouse. Thank you, I’m sorry it’s taken me so long to do!

Best book you’ve read so far in 2020:  

It’s a three-way tie between Burn by Patrick Ness, Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell, and Folk by Zoe Gilbert. Very different books but all absolutely engrossing.

Best sequel you’ve read so far in 2020:

Not applicable. I’ve read two books this year that are the first in a series - namely The Cruel Prince by Holly Black and The Tea Dragon Society by Katie O’Neill - but no sequels. The Cruel Prince just didn’t grab me enough, although I might still get to the next book eventually. I really need the other Tea Dragon books though because, wow, tea dragons are just the cutest things and if I can’t have a real one I at least need to read more about them.

New release you haven’t read yet, but want to:

It’s been out for a couple of months now, I think, but Highfire by Eoin Colfer looks like it’ll be a fun read! I’m a big fan of Artemis Fowl and his children’s books, so I’m interested to see how he approaches an adult audience. (Also, just in case you were wondering, not everything I read is about dragons, I promise.)

Most anticipated release for the second half of the year:

I’m very intrigued by Susanna’s Clarke’s new novel, Piranesi. The labyrinthine house with infinite rooms and endless corridors sounds like a wonderful setting. It also seems as if it might be more manageable for me than Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, which I do want to read but is rather intimidating length-wise.

Generally speaking, I don’t really keep track of new releases though. Is that weird?

Favorite new author (debut or new to you):

I’ll say Zoe Gilbert here. Folk is a wonderful debut and I adore how atmospheric her writing is.

Biggest disappointment:

Probably Jeanette Winterson’s Frankisstein. It seemed like the kind of book I would love - I like Frankenstein, I like retellings, I like other things by Winterson - but in the end the weirdly fetishistic treatment of the trans main character overshadowed all the good points.

Biggest surprise:

Boring answer, but I can’t really think of any major surprises. I guess Snowflake, AZ by Marcus Sedgwick was a much more contemplative/ideas-based novel than I was expecting. I was anticipating something with more… plot, I suppose.

Book that made you happy:

I already mentioned this book above, but I often go back to children’s fiction when I need cheering up and wonderful The Tea Dragon Society by Katie O’Neill just left me with a great big smile on my face. It’s just such a warm, comforting story.

Newest fictional crush/newest favorite character:

Vivienne from The Cruel Prince by Holly Black was very enjoyable to read about. She’s the main character’s half-sister and doesn’t have a massive role, but I liked her more than the actual protagonist.

Burn by Patrick Ness has some great characters as well. I loved Sarah Dewhurst, Jason Inagawa, and Kazimir in particular.

Also, Albína Horáková, the landlady in Sarah Perry’s Melmoth, was not at all pleasant but a great character.

Book that made you cry:

The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker. They were angry tears. Briseis deserved so much better.

Favorite book to film adaptation you saw this year:

I don’t think I’ve seen actually any this year, apart from the Stargirl film based on the YA novel by Jerry Spinelli. Wouldn’t call it a favourite really. I loved the book when I was a teenager so I watched it on Disney+ while I was using up my free trial, but it was just okay really. There are a lot of movies dealing with the same themes in a more interesting way and, for me, it didn’t quite have the charm of the book.

Very much looking forward to seeing the new Little Women film and The Personal History of David Copperfield though, the latter especially just looks really charming and I do love Dev Patel (speaking of which, does Gawain and the Green Knight count?).

Most beautiful book you’ve bought or received this year so far:

Hamnet and Folk again. Just look at that gorgeous illuminated H! And the strong colours and the detail in the birds and leaves on Folk’s cover are just gorgeous!

Book you need to read by the end of the year:

I’ve been promising a friend that I’ll read Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo for ages now so definitely that.

Otherwise, I really need to read more non-fiction, especially around current events. I’m just hoping my ability to focus/concentrate will come back soon because it’s been absent for a while and I hate it.

Tagging: Um, anyone who wants to talk about books! If you see this and want to answer the questions then just say I tagged you. :)

Tagged by @erinbeatty – thank you! (Answering this on my main just to keep everything in the right…

Tagged by @erinbeatty - thank you! (Answering this on my main just to keep everything in the right place.)

Name: Laura.

Nickname: Not a lot you can do with Laura really.

Zodiac: Taurus.

Favourite music/bands: Mostly folk or folk rock these days. Traditional or contemporary, it’s all good. Some particular favourites at the moment are Karine Polwart, Jim Moray, Greg Russell & Ciaran Algar, Julie Fowlis, Emily Portman, False Lights, Sam Kelly, and Ruth Notman.

Favourite sports team: Don’t really have one. I vaguely follow the England cricket team but that’s about it.

Other blogs: Just this and the writing blog. I’m thinking of setting up an Animal Crossing blog or a Welsh history blog though (hey, I contain multitudes!).

Do you get asks: Haha, no, not very often.

How many blogs do you follow: 407 apparently, which is a lot more than I expected!

Tumblr crushes: I always enjoy reading posts from @teashoesandhair, @morgauseoforkney, @lloerwyn, @lettersfromthelighthouse and @bookhobbit.

Lucky number: 3.

What are you wearing right now: A short-sleeved jersey dress - purple, navy and white with a kind of stripey pattern, navy leggings and my favourite socks (they’re purple with bees on!). With minor modifications for the seasons that’s basically my ‘uniform.’

Dream vacation: Iceland or Norway. I’d love to see the Northern Lights or go on a fjord cruise. I’d also quite like to experience Christmas markets in Germany (guess my favourite season).

Dream car: I really couldn’t care less about about cars, haha. As long as it gets me from A to B reliably I’m good. I guess maybe a Volkswagen Beetle or one of those vintage/hippie Volkswagen camper vans? They both look pretty cool!

Favourite food: I’m a crappy cook but I love food and could talk about this all day! To name only a few - lots of different kinds of curry, pad thai, sushi, burgers, cherry bakwell tarts, apple pie. Jalebis too, which I can’t eat any more. :( Oh, and ‘Swansea Fisherman’s Breakfast,’ which I had at this one B&B in Cardigan. It’s cockles, bacon, and laverbread cooked in cream and served on toast with some chopped chives. Delicious!

Drink of choice: Tea! Always tea. I even have a tea tag on this blog. Specifically Earl Grey, spicy Chai or Lapsang Souchong. When I want something cold I tend to go for ginger beer, coke or lemonade.

Instruments: I played violin throughout school and had some acoustic guitar lessons but I’m terrible at both because I never practised enough. I was also part of a djembe drumming group for a while and that was great fun.

Languages: English is my first language. I started learning Welsh as a kid and I’m sort of edging my way towards intermediate level there now. I also picked up a tiny bit of Latin at university. Other than that though it’s just what scraps of French I can remember from school. I’d love to get a grip on the basics of Icelandic or Old English but I always find it really difficult to try and teach myself things.

Celebrity crush: Dev Patel.

Random fact: I collect stuff with bees on.

Favourite ecosystem: It’s a toss up between tundra, taiga, and temperate rainforests.

Favourite cat: Maine Coons and Norwegian Forest cats. Or Scottish wildcats for a non-domestic kind.

Tagging: @troiings, @ellatholmes, @ambarwen and @allspiritandfireanddew, but only if you want to. Feel free to ignore!

Ancient History Tag

So, I’m always happy to get an opportunity to yell about books and this was really fun. Thank you for the tag @lettersfromthelighthouse! I appreciate it because I’m trying to interact more with people on here but I’m really bad at it.

1. The Stone Age: One of the first books you ever remember reading.

The Alfie series by Shirley Hughes. I don’t know if they were actually the first books I ever read but they were certainly one of the first. I do remember having a special blanket just like Alfie in Alfie Gives a Hand. And also a stone that I called Bonting after the one Alfie finds in one of the other books.

2. Ancient Greece: Your favourite myth inspired book.

I enjoy myth and fairy tale inspired books a lot so it’s really hard for me to pick just one! For straightforward retellings I like Stephen Fry’s Mythos and Neil Gaiman’s Norse Mythology a lot, and Edith Hamilton’s Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes is always a classic. Angela’s Carter’s Book of Fairy Tales is great too.

For things that are more ‘inspired by’ though: Madeline Miller’s Circe, Ragnarok and The Djinn in the Nightingale’s Eye by A.S. Byatt, The Bloody Chamber (Angela Carter again), The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey, Edith Pattou’s North Child, and Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett. There are probably more I’m forgetting.

I’m mostly drawn to Arthurian-inspired material though, if I’m honest. Susan Cooper’s The Dark is Rising sequence, T.H. White’s The Once and Future King, and The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro are all favourites. Plus the weird and wonderful retellings of the Mabinogion published by Seren Books. I think if I had to choose just one though it would be Merlin Dreams by Peter Dickinson. It’s not very well known, or at least I don’t see it discussed much, but it’s absolutely gorgeous.

3. Roman Empire: A book that features an impressive Empire or a Kingdom.

I suppose this kind of depends on your definition of impressive? I find a lot of the kingdoms in Tolkien’s Middle-earth legendarium very striking, particularly Gondor and Rohan and the elven kingdoms of the first age. And there’s also Númenor of course. Like @lettersfromthelighthouse​ pointed out though, the decline of empires seems to be more prominent than their glory in Tolkien and I tend to find that side of things more interesting to read about.

Otherwise, Fantastica from The Neverending Story maybe? For non-fiction I would dearly love to read more about the Mongol Empire and the medieval empires of West Africa (Ghana, Mali, Songhai).

4. The Middle Ages: A book that is an absolute bummer (positive or negative).

This is probably just me being a bit thick but I’m not exactly sure what this one is asking for? I suppose the most depressing book I can think of is The Road by Cormac McCarthy. While I did finish it it was a hard read. There’s not a scrap of hope anywhere in that story.

5. Renaissance: A book that you have learned a lot from OR a book that made you think a lot.

I’m definitely cheating by mentioning an author rather than a single book but I find basically all of Ursula K. Le Guin’s writing very thought-provoking. Her science-fiction (The Left Hand of Darkness, The Word for World is Forest, The Lathe of Heaven, The Dispossessed) really got me thinking about big issues like identity, environmentalism, gender, and political systems for the first time, and her essays have informed a lot of my opinions on writing itself.

Oh, and I’ve got to mention Terry Pratchett’s entire Discworld series here too. So, so wise.

6. The Enlightenment: A book about knowledge, science, discovery, or exploration.

Does Arthur Ransome’s Swallows and Amazons count for that last one? There are aspects of it that I’m kind of uncomfortable with now but it captures the wonder and freedom of childhood exploration very well.

If not, then Frankenstein for science and knowledge? (Lol, I really couldn’t have come up with two more different books if I’d tried!)

7. The Industrial Revolution: A book featuring an invention or a concept that you would love to have in your own life.

Dæmons from Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials. I’ve always liked the concept of witches’ familiars and I feel like dæmons are sort of a very intense form of that. Having one would make it very hard to be lonely, I think, which really appeals to me.

8. World War I. and II.: Your favourite historical fiction book featuring either of the world wars.

Again, there’s more than one book I want to mention here. I was actually kind of surprised at how many titles came to mind because tbh I’m all about medieval and earlier when it comes to historical time periods.

Strange Meeting by Susan Hill is short but easily one of the most subtly devastating books about WWI I’ve come across. It’s sad (naturally) and very sort of claustrophic and it haunted me for a long time after I’d finished reading it. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque is also considered a classic for very good reason. At least in my opinion.

I haven’t really read as much set during WWII but Goodnight Mister Tom by Michelle Magorian was a childhood favourite that I still find very touching. In fact, a lot of her other books are set either during or after the war and I’ve enjoyed them all. Carrie’s War by Nina Bawden. Markus Zusak‘s The Book Thief is one I find myself coming back to a lot as well. Oh, and The Silver Sword by Ian Serraillier is wonderful!

9. Present day: A book you think everybody should read in present day.

Hmm, I don’t think there’s one single book that I’d recommend to everybody or one that I think everyone should read. We all have different preferences and opinions, and want different things from our reading. I do think it can be good to try books outside of your usual favourite genres every now and again though. That’s not to say anyone should force themselves to finish something they’re not enjoying but sometimes being open-minded can lead to nice surprises. I never expected that I would like hard science-fiction, for example, but I really enjoyed Isaac Asimov’s robot stories.


I don’t really know anyone well enough to tag them tbh!