The Book of Delights, Ross Gay

Gay writes with beauty and such humanity. The thesis of this book, even ignoring its excellent execution, is such a valuable and important idea: we all of us should practice the art of being receptive to joy and delight. 

I Love Russia, Elena Kostyuchenko

A stunning, haunting portrait of a country that seems lost and set on self-destruction. The harshness, oppression, and corruption experienced by its people is heartbreaking. Kostyuchenko’s writing is incredible, necessary and deeply affecting. 

The Factory, Oyamada Hiroko

A surreal nightmare of a book which is fitting giving modern work is its subject. The calm, measured prose does a wonderful job of creating a bizarre, confusing feel, aided by (at first disturbing then I eventually figured out what was happening) abrupt and unmarked transitions between different character PoVs.  

More. Numbers. Every. Day, Helge Thorbjørnsen and Micael Dahlén

A fantastic book; one that tackles a topic that has been on my mind for the past few years—I even wrote an essay on the topic. Numbers have invaded our life and our thinking to such a degree that they distort debate, discussion and decisions. Being conscious of the power of numbers is the first step to a healthier relationship with digits small and large. Special acknowledgements to the fun little personal anecdote from the authors – set apart from the text itself – as well as the end of chapter summaries. 

The World of Yayoi Kusama, 1000 piece puzzle

So much fun! This is the first puzzle I’ve done that included an almost one to one sized poster which made assembling the puzzle really delightful. And as a bonus, the back of the poster explained the story of Kusama-san’s life. The centre provided quite the challenge, involving a bit of bifurcation, whereas the outer edges were more straightforward. Thanks, Claire, for the loan!

In Praise of Shadows, Tanizaki Jun’ichirō

An important essay – both so far as form goes (the afterward in my edition comments on the rather Japanese structure, itself a demonstration of the themes Tanizaki-san writes about) and content. I’ll never quite look at the interplay of light and darkness and shadow in the same ways every again. 

Open Throat, Henry Hoke

The ability to set a novel from the viewpoint of a non-human has always fascinated me; it can be quite hard to do well, but I think Hoke manages to pull off a convincing sense of otherness. We can both relate to and be curious about our mountain cat narrator.n And I think the book largely avoids falling into an overly anthropomorphic view point. A brilliant and contained story. 

Monstrilio, Gerardo Sámano Córdova

A dark (and darkly fun) novel about loss and the ways in which we cope. I was impressed with the clarity and strength of Sámano Córdova’s prose and character work and am very keen to read more of their work. 

The Great Divide, Alan Kohler

A wonderful essay by Kohler of the hows and why of the hellscape that is the housing market in Australia in 2024. Absent political bravery—of the sort totally absent from the world today—I cannot see any meaningful improvements, although I agree with many of the essay’s suggestions and conclusions. 

Baby Reindeer, limited series

Stunning and harrowing. An important story that is rarely told: that while it happens far less, men are still victims of sexual abuse, domestic violence and other similar crimes (although, the perpetrator of violence towards men is likely to be other men). I was also blown away to see a romance with trans woman handled so well, and with nuance and love and care, while also acknowledging that modern life does not make it easy for trans people to be happy and to thrive. This is tremendous television which rises far beyond the usual garbage one finds on netflix.

Creamerie, season one

A brilliant post-apocalyptic show that is darkly comic as well as frighteningly plausible. Whereas something like The Handmaid’s Tale television show only walks, this smart production from New Zealand runs effortlessly. I was so delighted to discover another season was ready and waiting for me.

Dayswork, Chris Bachelder and Jennifer Habel

I’ve never read anything quite like this remarkable book, a sui generis exploration of Herman Meville’s life through a fictional narrative of an academic. The writing is so warm and nuanced and emotive and incredibly moving. And it has inspired me to read Moby Dick, which would be hard to avoid given how warmly this novel deals with Moby Dick. Lovely stuff. 

A City on Mars, Zach and Kelly Weinersmith

A fascinating book that genuinely moved my thoughts on a topic: beforehand I would have described myself as quite bullish on space travel and settlement, but through this book’s broad exploration, I am now somewhat more cautious about the whole idea. In particular, I note with appreciation the Weinersmith’s conclusion that we oughtn’t consider space as a solution to the general socioeconomic and political instability that characterises the earth today. Rather, when (or if) we resolve this, then we should ought to pour ourselves into the stars. I did find the humour in this book a little too referential for my tastes in the way that a lot of (self professed) geeky or nerdy things are. There was probably an equal amount of eye rolls to chuckles. Still, even aside from the tone being not to my taste from time to time, I admire this book, its research and the passion that went into it.

Man’s Search for Meaning, Viktor Frankl

A powerful book that focussed on something very universal; life’s purpose. I took a lot from his conclusion that we can only define our own purpose, no one else can define another’s purpose. His views on suffering as a key and essential part of our lives also lit something inside me. Deep and moving. I will say that it is quite unfortunate that he refers to homosexual relationships as “sexual perversion,” but we can understand that as a relic of the era in which the book was written. It is similarly disappointing that he uses ‘men’ to mean people.   

Fallout, season one

This was such a loving thing, done with great fondness and respect for the source material. I have a few quibbles—I wasn’t convinced by Aaron Clifton Moten’s acting, and I found the whole thing, like the game I suppose, to be very violent and gory—but on the whole, I had a lot of fun and I am excited to see where they take the show in season two.

Why, Philip Goff

A tremendous piece of original thinking and philosophy. Some ideas were necessarily dense, but Goff’s writing and thought is clear, witty and thought-provoking. I have not landed if I find Goff’s ultimate thesis convincing, but I will be thinking about them for a long time, I suspect. 

Kung Food, Jon Kung

Kung’s views on food are fun and his recipes are smartly written. I’m yet to cook anything from the book yet, but I have about 30 or so recipes I’m very excited to make. 

The Creative Act, Rick Rubin

An excellent exploration of creativity and making art. I wish someone had taught me some of this as a kid, so I probably wouldn’t have internalized so many anti-creative sentiments. This is a book that would interest almost anyone, not just those consciously thinking about creating art. The book positions and treats creativity as an essential and necessary skill. Fascinating! 

Sunday lunch, Embla

One of my favourite wine bars, Embla, has a fantastic Sunday lunch. For a reasonable price, you get a mountain of food served by lovely people in a friendly space. Plus, the wine list is smart: a lot by the glass so you can try a bunch if you are so inclined. The menu changes each week—I ate wonderful chicken, amazing warm bread with mushroom salad, john dory rillettes, quince posset and other bits—and it’s just a lovely thing to do.

Invisible Women, Caroline Criado Pérez

Few books have made me see the world in such a different way as this brilliant work by Criado Pérez which exposes a historical and continuing inequity – if our decisions are (increasingly) made using data, and if data around women is not only under-collected but more often than not it is simply not collected: an omission that begins to look deliberate in its scale. This has disastrous consequences for human health, happiness, productivity, and welfare. And it’s simply not good enough and we must do better: collect data and challenge the male as default bias. 

Pachelbel’s Canon in D as performed by Hiromi Uehara

There’s music and then there’s music. This performance of a reasonably staid piece from the classical canon is done with such incredible verve, excitement and joy as to completely transform the piece. It is one of the most fun things I’ve watched on YouTube all year. And bonus points to the youtuber who transcribed the playing into sheet music.

Frieren, season one

Seemingly the anime everyone is watching—and loving—this season. And I can see why: this utterly charming, gentle, and beautifully illustrated show is the best of the very best of what anime offers. Finishing the 28 episodes of the first season left me longing for more, but also comforted by the show’s existence and themes. A must watch.

Poor Things, Yorgos Lanthimos

Wow! What a movie. I don’t want to spoil any part of this beautiful, funny, crass, serious, irreverent movie. So I will just leave you to discover all of the delights it contains. I will, also, note that Emma Stone is so incredibly perfect in this movie that it almost hurts.

Futureproof, Kevin Roose

Decent analysis about the upcoming domination (or not) of AI in our lives. While I thought the actual rules weren’t so useful, I thought the nuance Roose adds in to a debate that is often presented as AI being all good or all bad was what made this interesting to read. 

Dune Part Two, Denis Villeneuve

An ambitious movie that I enjoyed every minute of. I’m not sure if I’m as madly in love with it as I was the first part, but I’ve had a lot longer to think about that (and have had the benefit of seeing it twice.) It’s such a big movie, from its run time (almost three hours!) to its big epic Zimmer score, to the made-for-IMAX cinematography and just the seriousness with which it takes itself.

What You Are Looking For is in the Library, Michiko Aoyama

Firstly, the fat-shaming descriptions of the librarian were painful to read and felt rather at odds with the rest of the book, which is an entirely lovely thing that I couldn’t wait to read every night. If you can overlook the fatphobia, you’ll be delighted by this warm, comforting book.