-
Continue reading →: Book Review: The GCSE Roadmap by Francesco Limacher
My rating: 4 of 5 stars By rights, as ‘The GCSE Roadmap’ is a rival to my own book, ‘Try Not To Laugh’, I ought to be damning of this small guide to preparing for exams. But I have too much respect for the highly talented Limacher family and, having…
-
Continue reading →: Book Review: The Toolbox for Multilingual Families by Ute Limacher-Riebold & Anna Elisa Miranda
My rating: 5 of 5 stars I’ve been following Ute Limacher-Riebold for many years now, ever since my family and I found ourselves ‘in a strange land’ – in Bangladesh, many moons ago – trying to get a handle on a language so alien it didn’t remotely resemble any language…
-
Continue reading →: Book Announcement: Try Not To Laugh (How to Revise, Memorise and Survive Exams)
My third book, ‘Try Not To Laugh’ is now out both as paperback and in kindle version. Eight years in the making, the method(s) I detail within are the result of nearly 30 years of using in education (classroom and private) with a long and proven track record of significantly…
-
Continue reading →: Book Review: Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor
My rating: 3 of 5 stars Sometimes, I’m left bewildered by the gullibility of the general public. I don’t mean this cruelly, but, you know, I get a little upset when I see certain books become ‘bestsellers’ because these books are, frankly, pandering to the whims of readers and peddling…
-
Continue reading →: Book Review: 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke
My rating: 5 of 5 stars I am not the greatest of Arthur C. Clarke’s fans. Even in my youth, when I devoured classic sci-fi while other kids my age were discovering their dad’s not-so-secret stash of porn magazines, I was reading things like ‘Rendezvous with Rama’, ‘Imperial Earth’ and…
-
Continue reading →: Book Review: Paper Heart by Boomie Bol
My rating: 5 of 5 stars This collection of poetry is one I have been awaiting for a very long time. I will disclaim here that I have a vested interest in the book – but that interest is a key part of the importance of this review. I have…
-
Continue reading →: Book Review: How Britain Really Works: Understanding the Ideas and Institutions of a Nation by Stig Abell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars Stig Abell is quite a fascinating chap and that comes across very much in this book. Almost a contemporary of mine (we both grew up in the Midlands around the same time, and he went to the same school in Loughborough as a friend…
-
Continue reading →: Book review: My Adopted Life: The Adopted Mother’s Story by A.H.M. Beattie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars As with my review of the first book in this series (‘My adopted life: A birth mothers story’), my copy of this book was given to me to review and I do so freely and without compulsion. Likewise, this was a book I specifically…
-
Continue reading →: Book Review: Girl, Woman, Other by Bernardine Evaristo
My rating: 4 of 5 stars So, I need to make apparent the bleeding obvious disclosure, right from the beginning, that I am white, male, of the professional class, very firmly heterosexual and (regrettably) pushing too close to 50. All of which, more or less, disqualify me as a (stereo)typical…


