
The Price of Inequality
Book
Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz explains why we are experiencing such destructively high levels of...

What Makes a Terrorist: Economics and the Roots of Terrorism
Book
Why we need to think more like economists to successfully combat terrorism If we are to correctly...
How to Do Good: Essays on Building a Better World
Book
How to do good - a collection of extraordinary personal stories from thought leaders, celebrities,...

Monday's Child
Book
A little girl is found abandoned on a beach one chilly Monday in October, alone apart from the body...

Dubliners
Book
James Joyce's Dubliners is an enthralling collection of modernist short stories which create a vivid...

Fado and the Urban Poor in Portuguese Cinema of the 1930s and 1940s
Book
Colvin studies the evolution of Fado music as the soundtrack to the Portuguese talkie. He analyzes...

Ocana
Carlos Arribas, Adrian Bell and Antonio Cuadrado-Fernandez
Book
One of THE 10 MUST-READ CYCLING BOOKS OF 2014 according to the influential Peloton magazine. This is...

Out of the Desert: My Journey from Nomadic Bedouin to the Heart of Global Oil
Book
The extraordinary memoir of global oil's former central banker Ali Al-Naimi is the former Saudi oil...

ClareR (5841 KP) rated The Shape of Darkness in Books
Feb 21, 2021
Agnes is a silhouette artist in Victorian Bath, and she struggles to support her sickly mother and her nephew - although his father does contribute some money to help feed and clothe him (and help Agnes and her mother too).
Shortly after one of Agnes’ clients leaves her studio, he is murdered. She then discovers that another client has also been murdered - there is an unnerving pattern forming here, because this is just the start. In order to get some insight, Agnes decides that she should consult a medium. This is where Pearl and her sister Myrtle, a mesmerist-in-training, come in. Pearl is ethereal, a child with albinism, and seems to genuinely possess the gift of communicating with the dead.
This is an unnerving, chilling and at times, quite a scary book. It’s full of the detail of Victorian life too: poverty, class distinctions, the hustle and bustle of a busy Victorian Bath. I loved the dark, gothic feel, too. It contained loads of details of life, of how technology was changing and affecting the lives of Victorians. And it was just a really excellent mystery that kept me guessing to the very end. If you’re going to read it (and I strongly suggest that you do!), just don’t read it with only the little light on if you’re spooked easily!
Many thanks to Raven Books for providing me with an e-book through NetGalley to read and review.

ClareR (5841 KP) rated The Golden Rule in Books
Jun 3, 2021
This is a novel that not only looks at abusive partners and the effects their behaviours have on those around them, but also brings in such topics as Brexit, and why certain regions in the UK (i.e. Cornwall) voted for it, when it was clear that they’d get nothing out of it. It looks at poverty in London and the South West, and how the rich seem to asset strip the poor areas of the country even more, even under the pretence that they’re adding value. It’s about how a person can reinvent themselves despite the hurdles put in front of them.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and finished the last page feeling as though I’d just read a really good, satisfying book. I’d most definitely recommend it!