#BookReview Islands of Abandonment: Life in the Post-Human Landscape by Cal Flyn @WmCollinsBooks

Islands of AbandonmentAbout the Book

This is a book about abandoned places: ghost towns and exclusion zones, no man’s lands and fortress islands – and what happens when nature is allowed to reclaim its place.

In Chernobyl, following the nuclear disaster, only a handful of people returned to their dangerously irradiated homes. On an uninhabited Scottish island, feral cattle live entirely wild. In Detroit, once America’s fourth-largest city, entire streets of houses are falling in on themselves, looters slipping through otherwise silent neighbourhoods.

This book explores the extraordinary places where humans no longer live – or survive in tiny, precarious numbers – to give us a possible glimpse of what happens when mankind’s impact on nature is forced to stop. From Tanzanian mountains to the volcanic Caribbean, the forbidden areas of France to the mining regions of Scotland, Flyn brings together some of the most desolate, eerie, ravaged and polluted areas in the world – and shows how, against all odds, they offer our best opportunities for environmental recovery.

By turns haunted and hopeful, this luminously written world study is pinned together with profound insight and new ecological discoveries that together map an answer to the big questions: what happens after we’re gone, and how far can our damage to nature be undone?

Format: Paperback (384 pages)             Publisher: William Collins
Publication date: 23rd December 2021 Genre: Nonfiction

Find Islands of Abandonment: Life in the Post-Human Landscape on Goodreads

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My Review

Once again, this is a book I probably would not have chosen to read were it not for being a book club pick. I’ll freely admit I read very little non-fiction and although I’d like to think I’m environmentally aware it isn’t something I’ve studied in any detail.  However, as is often the case, I found much of interest in the book.

Flyn argues that the abandonment by humans of some places in the world – either because of conflict, economic or environmental change – means we are in the midst of ‘a huge, self-directed experiment in rewilding’. Abandonment is rewilding, she maintains, because as humans draw back nature inevitably reclaims the space vacated.  Some of the most powerful examples of that for me were the sections of the book in which the author visits the demilitarized zone between the Greek and Turkish occupied parts of Cyprus, and the so-called ‘Zone Rouge in Verdun, France, the site of the trenches in the First World War.

Although the author also explores the issue of urban blight, such as the abandoned neighbourhoods of parts of Detroit, the sections featuring the natural world were much my favourite parts of the book as these seemed to me to illustrate most strongly the ‘post-human’ element of the book’s subtitle. I learned an awful lot from the book. For example, that certain plants can act as ‘bio-indicators’ of minerals in the soil and that there exist ‘hyperaccumulating’ plants that can absorb metals. I was also enthralled by the section of the book which examines the ability of certain animals to develop the capacity to survive in conditions that would once have killed them, or as the author puts it, ‘the ability to adapt to a befouled and ruinous world, and even thrive in there’.

As a journalist of some repute, it’s not surprising that the author has a real ways with words especially when it comes to describing nature. So we have ‘gnomish razorbills’, ‘spaniel-eyed’ baby seals and ‘buxom puffins’ who make the Forth Islands of Scotland their home. Or later when, near the spoil heaps known as the Five Sisters in West Lothian in Scotland, the author observes the first bumblebees of the year blundering by and ‘revving their engines’.

I was struck also by the author’s sensitivity to the ‘ghosts’ of long abandoned places that she visits, the traces left by their former occupants. For example, when visiting an abandoned church in Detroit she writes, ‘You can feel it in the air: the emotional trace of past epiphanies, crises of faith. Funerals and christenings, confirmations, the comings of age.’

Although the author generally succeeds in conveying complex scientific information in an accessible way, I did find some parts of the book a more challenging read than others. The author’s scholarly approach is exemplified by the footnotes and the index and comprehensive notes section at the end of the book.

Cal Flyn observes at the beginning of the book that its subject matter might make it seem all about darkness but, she argues, it is in fact a story of ‘redemption’.  I think that statement is justified by many of the examples in the book although I was still left with the overwhelming feeling that human activity has pushed the planet close to the point of no return.

In three words: Detailed, passionate, thought-provoking

Try something similar: Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake

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Cal FlynAbout the Author

Cal Flyn is an award-winning writer from the Highlands of Scotland. She writes literary nonfiction and long form journalism.

Her first book, Thicker Than Water, about frontier violence in colonial Australia, was a Times book of the year. Her second book, Islands of Abandonment – about the ecology and psychology of abandoned places – is out now. It has been shortlisted for a number of prizes including the Wainwright Prize for writing on global conservation, the British Academy Book Prize and the Baillie Gifford Prize for nonfiction.

Cal’s journalistic writing has been published in Granta, The Sunday Times Magazine, Telegraph Magazine, The Economist and others. She is the deputy editor of literary recommendations site Five Books, and a regular contributor to The Guardian. Cal was previously writer-in-residence at Gladstone’s Library and at the Jan Michalski Foundation in Switzerland. She was made a MacDowell fellow in 2019, and shortlisted as Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year in 2022. (Photo/bio: Author website)

Connect with Cal
Website | Twitter | Instagram

#BlogTour #BookReview The Improbable Adventures of Miss Emily Soldene: Actress, Writer, and Rebel Victorian by Helen Batten @AllisonandBusby

Improbable Adventures Twitter blog tour graphic

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Improbable Adventures of Miss Emily Soldene: Actress, Writer, and Rebel Victorian by Helen Batten. My thanks to Helen at Helen Richardson PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Allison & Busby for my review copy. Do be sure to check out the reviews by the other book bloggers taking part in the tour.


The Improbable Adventures of Emily SoldeneAbout the Book

‘I rode on the stage in such style, that the men in front forgot I was a girl, and also forgot to laugh.’

From humble beginnings as the daughter of a Clerkenwell milliner, Emily Soldene rose to become a leading lady of the London stage and a formidable impresario with her own opera company. The darling of London’s theatreland, she later reinvented herself as a journalist and writer who scandalised the capital with her backstage revelations.

Weaving through the spurious glamour of Victorian music halls and theatres, taking encounters with the Pre-Raphaelites and legal disputes involving Charles Dickens in her stride, Emily became the toast of New York and ventured far off the beaten track to tour in Australia and New Zealand. In The Improbable Adventures of Miss Emily Soldene, a life filled with performance, travel and incident returns to centre stage.

Format: Hardcover (320 pages)               Publisher: Allison & Busby
Publication date: 23rd September 2021 Genre: Nonfiction, Biography

Find The Improbable Adventures of Miss Emily Soldene: Actress, Writer, and Rebel Victorian on Goodreads

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My Review

Helen Batten’s fascinating book explores Emily’s eventful journey from country girl, to music hall artiste, to doyenne of opera bouffe, to theatrical producer, novelist and journalist.  She also brings out of the shadows Emily’s family – her husband, children, nephews and nieces – who are curiously absent from not only Emily’s memoirs but also largely from her life and career. The exception is the relationship between Emily and her sister, Clara, the dynamics of which the author explores in some detail.

Helen Batten admits in her introduction that there are gaps in Emily’s memoirs – and sometimes downright untruths – which she has filled either with information from other sources or with speculation. The latter is always well-argued and insightful. By the way, in the introduction Helen explains her own very particular connection to Emily Soldene.

Alongside Emily’s story, the author includes fascinating nuggets of social history whether that’s contemporary attitudes to marriage and parenting roles, the Victorian male’s predeliction for saucy postcards, the prevalence of the casting couch in Victorian theatre, or the beginnings of the cult of celebrity journalism. Clearly the product of extensive research, this historical detail is delivered in an accessible way that never feels heavy-handed. Helen Batten also takes the opportunity to bring other female theatrical entrepreneurs out of the shadows, such as Charlotte Cushman, a singer and actress who became the first female theatre manager in the United States.

The author makes judicious use of excerpts from Emily’s memoirs and her newspaper columns. These really allow Emily to come alive, showcasing her keen observational skills and wicked sense of humour. One example is her less than complimentary observations about New York ladies of 1874: ‘They wore diamonds at the breakfast table, and cut through the vast space of the hotel dining-room with elevated, thin, nasal, metallic voices that made one’s skin creep.’ Being thin is something Emily herself could never be accused of.  Many years later attending the Motor Show at Olympia Emily imagines the conversation in the salon set aside for members of the Ladies’ Automobile Club: ‘Tea and transmissions, coffee and clutches, macaroons and magnetos, discussed with ardour and zest’.   As the author rightly observes of Emily’s journalism, ‘Her joie de vivre bubbles up in her prose like the literary equivalent of Offenbach’s champagne bounce’.

There is a great cast of secondary characters with walk-on parts for, among others, Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde (‘unconvential, not to say impertinent’ remarks Emily) and aristocratic figures such as Lord Dunraven, whom Emily describes admiringly as ‘Gay, bright, clever and full of life; and who after the opera would walk home with us, cut the cold beef, and open the oysters and stout with the unconvential facility of the man who has been everywhere…’  As it happens, oysters and stout feature prominently in Emily’s life.

During her life Emily was also witness to many historic events including the 1908 London Olympics, the Sidney Street siege, the opening of the Central Line of the London Underground, and even the invention of the mobile phone. Yes, really… okay, an early version of it.  About the latter Emily wonders with uncanny prescience whether it will prove ‘a beneficent boon or a holy terror’.

As well as being a fascinating, impeccably researched and hugely entertaining read, the book contains some wonderful photographs of Emily, members of her family and of locations mentioned in the book. I absolutely loved following Emily’s ‘improbable adventures’ as she criss-crosses the globe. The book is a picture of a woman who lived life at full tilt and on her own terms; an example of girl power in the Victorian age, if you like.

In her introduction to the book, Helen Batten observes that Emily’s memoirs don’t tell the whole story. She writes, ‘I think she left some of the best bits out. So I’ve put them back in’. Helen, you absolutely did.

In three words: Fascinating, spirited, entertaining

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Helen BattenAbout the Author

Helen Batten is the Sunday Times bestselling author of Sisters of the East End, and of The Scarlet Sisters which told the story of her grandmother’s life. She is also the co-author of Confessions of a Showman: My Life in the Circus, Gerry Cottle’s autobiography.

After reading history at Cambridge, Helen studied journalism at Cardiff University. She went on to become a producer and director at the BBC. She now works as a writer and psychotherapist. She lives in West London with her three daughters.

Connect with Helen
Twitter | Goodreads

Emily Soldene twitter quote