Analysis
Orlam
Introduction This year for my birthday Fiona bought me the new PJ Harvey album "I Inside The Old Year Dying" and then found that there was a linked book "Orlam" so I got that as well. I love everything that Polly Jean does, even though I don't have everything she has done.
By Mike Singleton đź’ś Mikeydred about 9 hours ago in BookClub
Sins of the Fathers: Unveiling Sydney’s Criminal Past in John Byrnes’ Gripping Historical Crime Novel
Sins of the Fathers by John Byrnes offers a compelling exploration of early 20th-century Sydney, expertly capturing a city in the midst of profound transformation. Byrnes immerses readers in Sydney’s shadowy underworld, skilfully blending meticulously researched historical detail—such as the notorious razor gangs, smoky speakeasies, and entrenched police corruption—with a cast of vivid, memorable characters. The novel’s immersive atmosphere is particularly striking, with scenes in the bustling Darlinghurst district drawing readers into tense confrontations between rival factions, and moments that encapsulate the city’s transformation, such as midnight raids in back alleys now replaced by glittering skyscrapers.
By Sarah Xenos8 days ago in BookClub
Small Print
I don’t care much for alarmist claims, especially when they concern the right and wrong ways to enjoy culture, but it’s hard to deny a shift hasn’t occurred. The “Post-Literate” world seems to be one where text, as a source of information and entertainment, has been overtaken by audiovisual media; podcasts, videos, streams, VoD, and TikToks.
By Conor Matthews12 days ago in BookClub
Frederick McKinley Jones
Frederick McKinley Jones (1893 – 1961) The train that carried Frederick McKinley Jones back to Hallock, Minnesota, after World War I rattled like a pocketful of bolts. Through the window, winter wheat lay flat against the prairie, and the sky stretched in a pale sheet to the horizon. He had a duffel bag, a head full of machine music, and the kind of hands that remembered how things fit together long after memory had given up the words.
By TREYTON SCOTT14 days ago in BookClub
Book Review: Focus to Fortune by Terry Fisher
In Focus to Fortune: The New Science of Attention, Energy and Earning Power, author Terry Fisher argues that the defining currency of the modern economy is no longer time or even skill, but attention. The book positions focus not as a personal virtue but as a measurable economic resource that influences productivity, income and long-term wealth.
By Manish Bhatia16 days ago in BookClub
Unhinged Healing - Raw Poetry For The Abused
The book that was never meant to be. In a moment of discontentment and boredom, I began to gather my poetry that was scattered across writing platforms, old journals, and forgotten documents on my Google Drive to bring some sort of organization to my writing portfolio. I realized I had a lot more poems than I thought I did. It was a joke at first. I said to my family, "Man. I didn't realize I had this many poems written. I could make a book of them." When my husband suggested actually making a poetry book to add to my portfolio with them, I almost automatically responded with: "Because I am no Poe or Emily Dickinson. No one wants to read my trash poems."
By Hope Martin17 days ago in BookClub
Reading Orlam
Introduction For my birthday I got the Polly Jean Harvey book "Orlam". I was a little confused about it at first, but now it has revealed itself to me and I am enjoying exploring the worlds and magical mythical creatures and people that are described here.
By Mike Singleton đź’ś Mikeydred 19 days ago in BookClub









