糖心Vlog

What are you reading?

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
September 25, 2014
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Book review: Unapologetic: Why, Despite Everything, Christianity Can Still Make Surprising Emotional Sense, by Francis Spufford

Sir David Bell, vice-chancellor, University of Reading, is reading Francis Spufford鈥檚 Unapologetic: Why, Despite Everything, Christianity Can Still Make Surprising Emotional Sense (Faber, 2013). 鈥淚f apologetics is the discipline of defending Christianity, then Spufford provides a distinctive 21st-century version. He seeks to wrong-foot the Richard Dawkinses of this world by arguing that God is encountered through feelings and emotions. Bracingly, too, he is open to the possibility that God might not exist at all. For atheist or Christian, or spaces between, this is an offbeat and thought-provoking book.鈥

Book review: The Baby in the Mirror: A Child鈥檚 World from Birth to Three, by Charles Fernyhough

Helen Butler, academic registrar, Hartpury College, is reading Charles Fernyhough鈥檚 The Baby in the Mirror: A Child鈥檚 World from Birth to Three (Granta, 2009). 鈥淭his engagingbiography of the author鈥檚 daughter, Athena, wears its learning lightly. Weaving vignettes of family life through discursions on child development, he shows the lay reader how a baby develops its capacities, memories and emotions, and considers the thorny question of how that baby might react to finding herself the subject of a study when 鈥楽he is nine, or nineteen鈥︹ 鈥

Book review: Economics: The User鈥檚 Guide, by Ha-Joon Chang

Martin Cohen, editor of The Philosopher, is reading Ha-Joon Chang鈥檚 Economics: The User鈥檚 Guide (Pelican, 2014). 鈥淐hang Tzu (meaning 鈥楳aster Chang鈥) is a great critic of our existing economic system, and why not. His earlier foray into the myths of capitalism fell flat, I thought, but this time his personal crusade and expert knowledge really seem to have come together, with a nice light touch and plenty of puns. Most enjoyable.鈥

Book review: How to Create the Perfect Wife: The True Story of One Gentleman, Two Orphans, and an Experiment to Create the Ideal Woman, by Wendy Moore

Sara Read, lecturer in English, Loughborough University, is reading Wendy Moore鈥檚 How to Create the Perfect Wife: The True Story of One Gentleman, Two Orphans, and an Experiment to Create the Ideal Woman (Phoenix, 2013). 鈥淢oore sets out the extraordinary true story of how 18th-century eccentric Thomas Day, after being rejected in love, decided to take two orphans from the care of the Foundling Hospital into his household to train according to his Rousseau-influenced idea of the ideal wife. The treatment the girls suffered at his hands was often brutal, and it is staggering that Day鈥檚 cohort looked on without directly intervening. Moore鈥檚 fluent writing makes this story a compelling read.鈥

Book review: Butcher鈥檚 Crossing, by John Williams

Mark Stevenson, senior lecturer in computer science, University of Sheffield, is reading John Williams鈥 Butcher鈥檚 Crossing (Vintage Classics, 2013). 鈥淟ike many other readers of these pages I read Williams鈥 Stoner, which inspired me to read his other works. Butcher鈥檚 Crossing is set in the Wild West and tells the tale of a mismatched trio鈥檚 expedition to make their fortune from buffalo hides. The straightforward story brings in themes of adventure, self-discovery, greed and resilience. As engaging a read as Stoner and highly recommended.鈥

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