Harriet Dunbar-Morris, executive assistant (learning and teaching), University of Bath, is reading Victoria Hislop鈥檚 The Thread (Headline Review, 2011). 鈥淭he third novel by Hislop I鈥檝e read is even better than the previous two (The Island and The Return). She writes about difficult subject matter, but really pulls one into the story by establishing a connection between reader and characters. I knew nothing about the history of Thessaloniki, but this family saga, spanning a century of upheaval in Greece, had me looking forward to bedtime just so I could read more of the Komninos family鈥檚 story and live vicariously through the many troubled times they faced. Well-written, engaging history in novel form at its best.鈥

Stephen Halliday, panel tutor in history, Institute of Continuing Education, University of Cambridge, is reading Michael Burleigh鈥檚 Small Wars, Far Away Places: The Genesis of the Modern World, 1945-65 (Pan Macmillan, 2013). 鈥淎n intriguing collection of accounts of often forgotten post-war and post-colonial conflicts, marred by strange asides, obscure references and the odd clumsy sentence, but well worth the reader鈥檚 effort.鈥

Nigel Rodenhurst, disabled students鈥 allowance administrator at the University of Wales Trinity St David, is reading Howard Jacobson鈥檚 The Finkler Question (Bloomsbury, 2011). 鈥淛acobson breathes new life into the familiar questions 鈥榃ho and what is a Jew?鈥, in a novel in which a gentile is possibly (and possibly not) the victim of an anti-Semitic attack. Slightly old hat, but Jacobson鈥檚 compulsive storytelling and wit make it hard to put down.鈥

Bruce Scharlau, senior teaching fellow in computing science, University of Aberdeen, is reading Olav Maassen, Chris Matts and Chris Geary鈥檚 Commitment: A Novel about Managing Project Risk (Hathaway te Brake Publications, 2013). 鈥Commitment stays with you. This graphic business novel about a failing project shows you the implications of the three rules of 鈥榬eal options鈥. Along the way you see that 鈥榦ptions have value; options expire; and never commit early unless you know why鈥. You will see options instead of commitments when you鈥檙e done.鈥

Sharon Wheeler, senior lecturer in journalism, University of Portsmouth, is reading Mikl贸s B谩nffy鈥檚 They Were Counted (Arcadia, 2009). 鈥淭his novel is a total immersion in the social and political world of 19th-century Hungary and the Balkans. Your mileage may vary, though, as to how much you care about the aristocratic cousins through whose eyes the story is told. There are two more books after this sprawling epic 鈥 if I鈥檓 not back by Christmas, send out a search party.鈥
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