Tim Birkhead, professor of behaviour and ecology, University of Sheffield, is reading Thomas Wright鈥檚 Circulation: William Harvey鈥檚 Revolutionary Idea (Chatto & Windus, 2012). 鈥淗arvey鈥檚 discovery in the 1620s that blood circulates around our bodies was a physiological and medical breakthrough. The medical profession found it hard to accept because it undermined the logic of their main treatment, bloodletting. Wright has produced a highly readable, streamlined version of Geoffrey Keynes鈥 1966 Life of William Harvey with better context and excellent insight.鈥
Christoph Bode, chair of modern English literature at Ludwig-Maximilians- Universitat Munchen, is reading Hunter S. Thompson鈥檚 The Rum Diary (Simon & Schuster, 2011). 鈥淭he first novel by the godfather of gonzo journalism. Puerto Rico in the late 1950s: lots of boozing and schmoozing and, alas, too little canoodling, against the backdrop of an inexorable US takeover of the Caribbean paradise. And pitiful male twentysomethings who, torn between idealism and an impending sense of doom, can鈥檛 help feeling that the best is already over. Lad lit? Perhaps. But a darn good read.鈥
Chris Routledge, director of continuing education in English, University of Liverpool, is reading Peter Messent鈥檚 The Crime Fiction Handbook (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013). 鈥淎 clear and well-organised introduction to crime fiction, beginning with a useful overview of the genre and ways of thinking about it, supported with perceptive, up-to-date and detailed readings of 14 key crime fictions, from Edgar Allan Poe to Ian Rankin. A concise and enjoyable explanation of why crime fiction is so popular and yet so fascinating intellectually.鈥
Julie Scanlon, senior lecturer in English literature, Northumbria University, is reading Leanne Shapton鈥檚 Important Artifacts and Personal Property from the Collection of Lenore Doolan and Harold Morris, including Books, Street Fashion and Jewelry (Bloomsbury, 2009). 鈥淎n engaging and original book that expresses the story of a relationship鈥檚 highs and lows through the device of an auction catalogue. Readers browse photographs and descriptions of lots that accumulate over the course of a relationship. Shapton interweaves romantic attachment with attachment to (other) objects and shows the role that 鈥榯hings鈥 play in memories and constructions of identity.鈥
Jamie Sims, senior lecturer in community sports coaching, University of Chichester, is reading Haruki Murakami鈥檚 Kafka on the Shore (Vintage, 2005). 鈥淢urakami鈥檚 customary requirement for suspension of disbelief comprises conversations with cats, raining fish, secret forest soldiers and incestuous dreams. None of this detracts from a gently compelling journey following the protagonists Kafka and Nakata along parallel storylines, all the while subtly building the tension of an abstract overarching narrative. The mysteries are never tainted by explanation, merely beautifully described, delivering a hypnotic read.鈥
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