Showing posts with label John Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Williams. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 August 2025

The quiet power of slow books

Stack of novels and a teacup on a windowsill, sunlight catching their edges — a quiet moment for thoughtful, slow-paced reading.
Some novels refuse to be hurried. They ask for patience, not because they’re difficult, but because they move differently. You don’t tear through them. You live in them.

I was thinking about this as I slowly make my way through Lonesome Dove, by Larry McMurtry. It’s that kind of book. There are, of course, plenty of others.

Saturday, 16 August 2025

Why the Literary western endures — and what’s driving Lonesome Dove’s TikTok resurgence

Why are readers falling for the Western again? From Lonesome Dove to Blood Meridian, we explore the genre’s enduring power and literary evolution.
There’s something quietly electric about Lonesome Dove’s return in the BookTok universe: the dust-swept epics and tender, layered characters suddenly feel urgent again. 

In a time when TikTok scrolls through bite‑sized narratives, this sprawling western reminds us that sometimes we long for horizons—not just on screen, but in story. 

Wednesday, 12 March 2025

The art of the campus novel – what makes them work, and which are the best?

The rules of Attraction by Brett Easton Ellis, The secret HIstory by Donna Tartt, Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld, The art of Fielding by  Chad Harbach are all examples of campus novels included in this list of 12 of the best campus novels.

Writing about Donna Tartt last week and The Secret History got me thinking about the campus novel.  

I’ve always been fascinated by this sub-literary genre, from what makes it work to why it continues to captivate readers and how it manages to be both intensely specific and universally resonant. 

The best campus novels transport us to a world of intellectual ambition, youthful recklessness, and, often, profound disillusionment. They capture a moment in life where identity, relationships, and ambition collide.

But what exactly makes a great campus novel, and which books best define the ever-growing genre?