It was, surely, only a matter of time before someone would take Raymond Queneau’s idea of exercises in style and apply it to mathematics.
Read MoreBookshelf
Review: Adventures in Maps
This beautifully illustrated volume has relevance to several different curriculum areas, containing as it does accounts of intrepid historical journeys that range from 16th century seafaring voyages to Arctic crossings and even the surveys undertaken to facilitate the moon landings.
Read MoreReview: Write, Cut, Rewrite
Perhaps the second hardest thing for a writer to do (after commencing work in the first place) is to delete parts of what they’ve written.
Read MoreCould a book on time travel be useful for English teachers?

A book on temporal adventures may seem like an odd inclusion here, but it can actually be used in many ways.
Read MoreReview: A Date with Language: Fascinating Facts, Events and Stories for Every Day of the Year

David Crystal has triumphed again. This is a fascinating book containing hundreds of concise entries on quirky occasions, literary facts and significant events.
Read MoreReview of Triggered Literature -- useful for English teachers

At a time when even Noddy books have been declared ‘problematic’ due to their use of archaic terms such as ‘swot’ (since changed to ‘bookworm’), some of us might may feel the temptation to unleash our inner ‘Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells’ in response.
Read MoreReview of Handwritten: Remarkable people on the page - Great for readers and writers

In Handwritten we get to see handwritten manuscripts by monarchs, poets, novelists, scientists and many others.
Read MoreSpotting the BS

“You’ve been speaking to that blasted Freedman, haven’t you?!”
Read MoreA book I'm reading

I’m familiar with a few of the stories in this volume, which features some well-known names such as Raymond Carver, George Saunders, Grace Paley, Ursula Le Guin and Susan Sontag.
Read MoreFrom Unsplash
Review: The Notebook *CORRECTED*
I love the subtitle: A history of thinking on paper (my emphasis). I do think there’s much to be said for writing on paper, and there is no paucity of research showing the benefits of analogue over the digital approach.
Read MoreJust William

My Jane Austen collection
Quick looks: Jane Austen; Write, Cut, Rewrite; Handwritten; The Book At War; From Edtech to Pedtech
Since I read Northanger Abbey when I was in my twenties, I have to say that in the interim it has much improved. Clearly, Jane must have taken a creative writing course or two because it is now much funnier, more cutting and more modern, what with her stepping outside the story to comment on her characters and the novel form itself.
Read MoreReview: Oulipo and Modern Thought (Update)

If your interest in the Oulipo goes beyond simply trying out their techniques, and you wish to learn about the context in which it was conceived and the developments in went through, you will find this book very useful.
Read MoreQuick looks: Triggered Literature PLUS an extract from my new version of Macbeth
A very timely publication. The first section is replete with anecdotes about trigger warnings and similar. Some of these are, in my opinion, ill-informed (such as the charges levelled against Jane Austen) while others are ridiculous (like the rewriting of parts of the Noddy books).
Read MoreLibraries and readers in an age of conflict (book review)

The Book at War is a fascinating study of how books and other reading matter have variously influenced politics, propaganda and history over time.
Read MoreReview: The Artist's Journey
Elborough’s central premise is that artists’ travels have always influenced their art – albeit more obviously in some cases than others.
Read MoreReview of Fantasy: Realms of Imagination

The shelves in libraries or bookshops labelled Science Fiction and Fantasy interest me only for the former, not the latter. Games like Dungeons and Dragons have never appealed to me, and much as I like maps and strange lands, the works of Tolkien leave me cold.
Read MoreReview: The Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper
Who would have thought that a material as commonplace as paper could have such a rich history and profound effect on our lives?
Read MoreReview: Once upon a prime

As someone who had little in the way of mathematical prowess at school, I initially opened Prime with some trepidation.
Read MoreReview of The Girl at the Tram Stop

On the surface, this would seem to be nothing more or less than an example of performance art presented as literature. However, there is much more to it than that because Johnson has introduced elements of randomisation…
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