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notes from JK

Booklog: Taste, Agent Sonya and How Westminster Works

For some reason I haven’t much felt like doing these reading notes this year, in fact it’s almost exactly a year to the day since my last one. Interesting.

I’ve read more John Le Carré (no surprises there) as I seek whatever I haven’t yet read of his. I thoroughly enjoyed Jason Matthews’ Red Sparrow trilogy, far better than the film of the first book, FAR better. Elizabeth Day’s Magpie was wonderful. Charles Arthur’s Social Warming was a stand-out piece of non-fiction I’ve read. Read it and follow his emails.

Taste – Stanley Tucci

I was utterly besotted with Tucci’s Searching for Italy TV series. He is so charming and endearingly passionate about food in the land of his ancestors. Taste is a memoir which weaves together drinks, food, showbiz eating and rather touching family stories as well as a hilarious snapshot of his family life in lockdown and a tough read on his cancer treatment. Brilliant stuff, and some lovely recipes in there too.

Agent Sonya – Ben Macintyre

Even if you’ve never read Macintyre’s wonderful books, you’ve probably watched an adaptation of them, he’s everywhere these days. And it’s easy to tell way – he researches great historical tales with dedication and writes them up with gusto. He’s really having a great time telling us about them, and it’s catchy. This story of Soviet agent Sonya, a German Jewish communist from a wealthy background is just riveting and astonishing on so many levels. How a woman came to be a top spy in a man’s world. How she raised three children whilst undertaking extraordinary missions and travels. And how she managed to evade detection for so long. Another great Macintyre read.

How Westminster Works… and Why It Doesn’t — Ian Dunt

I think pretty much every section of this book is broadly right in its analysis. It’s also a fun read. Everyone should read it. Indeed much of what it suggests as positive steps forward have been recommendations in recent reports by numerous reviews. Let’s hope some get taken forward.

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