Tag: book blog

Attack On Titan: Volume 5 (Manga)

My first manga I have read for this year, I could be naive and say I am reading this to pad out my total books read but genuinely I am reading this to compare the manga to the anime. Last year I read the first 4 volumes and this is the first one I have finished for this year.

I enjoyed the anime very much and it is nice to read the manga, that said I do prefer the anime. There are some subtle differences between both versions.

This fifth volumes follows the scouts from Eren’s Titan reveal and introduction to the Scouts up to the Scouts expeditionary mission and the reveal of a new type of Titan…

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7394772797

Thousand Cranes by Yasunari Kawabata

This is a book I have read many, many times in the past, its a haunting novella focused around the Japanese tea ceremony and of a man who gets involved with his dead fathers mistress and the shadow of his fathers previous long term mistress hovers over him constantly. A very tragic novella and one where the past weighs heavily on the present.

Despite the bleakness of his works, I have yet to read a Yasunari Kawabata book that I did not like. His books are my gateway to Japanese literature in general. They are ones I come back to yearly especially this one and Snow Country. I do have five of his translated works yet to read, and I should get around to them soon. The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa, The Lake, The Old Capital, The Rainbow and Dandelions. I also want to read The Sound of the Mountain and The Master of Go again, having only read those once.

I notice this book is also newly re-published here (UK) as one of the 90 new Penguin Archive books. All short stories or novellas re-released with a beautiful minimalist new cover.

This makes it 10 books for the year so far, I was tempted to increase my years target to 50 but I think for now I will keep it at 25. I have plans for some longer books which I may get bogged down in.

Happy Easter.

The Eye of The Bedlam Bride by Matt Dinniman

Jesus wept this book felt a bit of a chore. I thoroughly love this series but this book just felt like a slog and chore to get through. Very card game orientated with the magic and plot and something I am not really into beyond Pokemon cards. Its not that I didn’t like the book, which I did very much. It just felt a drag.

Finishing this means I’m onto the last book (as of writing) and I think it is going to be amazing and full of action. I am happy to be done with this book, it could have been a fair chunk shorter. Despite loving this series I find some of the books have grabbed me more than others. Perhaps this one my least favourite so far and it has felt like forever since I started this book.

I think I will take a little break before I read Book 7.

4/5

The Peepshow: The Murders At 10 Rillington Place by Kate Summerscale

An incredibly engrossing read, this was a book I only recently discovered but it is a subject I have been interested in for a long time, since I saw the movie as a teenager. The book follows the trial of the British serial killer John Christie, a man who murdered several women and kept their bodies at his home and garden at 10 Rillington Place. A double whammy being that his upstairs neighbour Timothy Evans was three years earlier tried and hanged for the murder of his wife and daughter. Was Christie guilty of those murders too? That is what this book discusses via the word of writers and journalists of the time, most notably Harry Proctor who was one of the great figures of his day.

The book follows Harry through the Christie trial as feeling misled in 1949 he tries to get Christie to admit to the murders of Beryl and Geraldine Evans, and as a journalist feeling responsible for the potential wrongful conviction of Timothy Evans.

It is very harrowing read and no details left out in the examination of the facts and evidence. I truly believe that Christie did indeed kill the Evans mother and daughter. A botched abortion or excuse to satisfy his fetish of gassing, strangling and necrophiliac rape. The baby being collateral and to silence rumours. Timothy Evans being a naive uneducated man confessed in the moment led on by assurances from Christie.

Christie was rotten from the start and a serial molester and depraved man. A murderer already before the Evans murders. All the facts are clear to see that a massive miscarriage of justice one that was led to stand with evidence and facts withheld until 1992 when the files were made public.

It is a fascinating study in British history and I have no doubts Christie is one of the biggest villians in British history and deservedly so alongside Jack The Ripper. The death penalty existed for animals like him. A man who took advantage of the weak and vulnerable women he befriended.

The book is excellent and one I would highly recommend and afterwards take a deep dive into the case. It is an eye-opening thing and how he got away with it for so long. The facts were there to be found like a human thigh bone propping up a fence, the stench of decay with the bodies hidden under the floor and in alcoves, the fact he was an illegal abortionist.

The case also has spawned an excellent movie from the 1970s 10 Rillington Place starring Richard Attenborough, John Hurt and Judith Geeson. As well as a 2016 television series Rillington Place starring Tim Roth.

This book is a superb study of not just the case but a social history of Britain and London in the early 1950s.