Woman’s life: Power induced seductive story

Unravelling modern woman’s life in seductive story of power. Emily Perkins  tap into contemporary conversations about power, privilege and gender equality  in her fifth novel Lioness, the story of a middle-aged woman in crisis. Perkin’s narrator Therese Thorne, an attractive woman in her fifties, who has spent the last three decades married to Trevor, a property developer who meets good and great people. Trevor is 70 year-old  and already had four teenage children from his first marriage when they met.  Theresa who had imperfect teeth and no real direction to her life, was helped by Trevor to get her luxury … Continue reading Woman’s life: Power induced seductive story

Great engine for state

Bank of England, the eighteenth-century private institution that operated for benefit its shareholders became “ became a great engine for state” according to Adam Smith. Now life is getting uncomfortable in Threadneedle Street with rate rises, gloomy pronouncements about higher mortgage bills and news that bank of England is itself launching a review into how it constructs and deploys economic forecasts have all contributed to the new wave of intense criticism from pundits, politicians and citizens of the UK’s central bank and its actions. The Bank had come under fire for the first time in its 300-year history for its … Continue reading Great engine for state

Shakespeare’s romantic tragedies

The New York Times bestseller is Chloe Gong’s These Violent Delights adaptation of Romeo and Juliet in 1926 Shanghai that hums to the tune of debauchery, similar top her first novel  (Immortal Longings by Hodderscape, £18.99) which is also based on another Shakespeare’s romantic tragedies, Anthony and Cleopatra. These Violent Delights is in twin cities San-Er in the Kingdom of Talin, where a gladiatorial death match is held annually, with great riches awarded to the last contestant standing. Princess Calla Tuoleimi enters the game in the hope that, if she wins, she will get close enough to her reclusive uncle … Continue reading Shakespeare’s romantic tragedies

Thrive in a crisis

Scott Patterson, a veteran Wall Street Journal reporter, explains vividly the world of billion-dollar traders and high-stakes crisis predictors who strive to turn extreme events into financial windfalls. After the Pandemics, climate change, superpower rivalries, cyberattacks, political radicalization virtually everywhere we look there is mayhem bearing down on us, putting trillions of assets at risk. In Chaos Kings, Scott Patterson depicts how one faction led by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, bestselling author of The Black Swan, believes humans can never see the big disaster coming. Extreme events – so-called Black Swans while inevitable, will always catch us by surprise. In 2007, … Continue reading Thrive in a crisis

Eccentric pioneers of mind-altering drugs

After 14 years to isolate the analgesic substance in poppy resin, the German pharmacist Friedrich Wilhelm Adam Sertürner decided to test a promising crystalline substance on himself and three teenagers from down the road, in 1817, to explore the hidden regions of the mind. He run previous identical tests on dogs killing one of them. After a few doses, all participants fell into a stupor and they could  very well have died but for a semi-conscious Sertürner hadn’t groped his way to some extra strength vinegar and poured it down everyone’s throats triggering severe vomiting. He  named the new substance as morphine after the … Continue reading Eccentric pioneers of mind-altering drugs

Stinging, sharp witted teen confusion

The Bee Sting is thought-provoking, sharp witted, tour de force about family, fortune and the struggle to be a good person when the world is falling apart. The Bee Sting by Irish writer Paul Murray, is the tale of a man who destroys himself in order to please others, but ends up destroying them too. The Barnes family is in trouble . Dickie’s once-lucrative car business is going under –  but rather than face the music, he’s spending his days in the woods, building an apocalypse-proof bunker with a renegade handyman. His wife Imelda is selling off her jewelry on … Continue reading Stinging, sharp witted teen confusion

Shakespearean tragedy: Economic decline

Professional economist, Russel Jones’s The Tyranny of Nostalgia provides detailed ironic observation, with a catalogue of misapprehensions, missteps, wasted opportunities, crises and humiliations, with all too-familiar problems arising time and again and yet never being satisfactorily addressed. All nations and their economic policymakers are to a certain extent prisoners of their history, and this applies more to the UK than to other countries. Nostalgia for the great days of the past has become tyrannical and is in some sense embodied in the form of the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s famous “budget box”, made for William Gladstone in the 1850s and … Continue reading Shakespearean tragedy: Economic decline

Feeding despots

Ukrainian government having watched Israel’s Iron Dome missile streak over Tel Aviv hunting down Hamas rockets, they contacted its Israeli counterpart last October in the hope of buying the air defence system to fend off the Iranian drone swarming their skies. According Loewenstein, the tiny country’s weapons exports,  which hit over $11 billion in 2021, are a means to an end. But Israel was not going to upset Moscow, especially when they are so deeply entrenched next door in Syria, so the answer was no, despite the key US foreign policy objective of arming Ukraine. Israel’s military industrial complex uses … Continue reading Feeding despots

Migration without borders

James Lockhart in Wild Air, write about a series of birds as though he has his granny’s role of listening to birds’ songs and calls and relaying what he heard to his aged and then quite deaf father- the famous naturalist Seton Gordon.  From the nightjars’ strange churring song on a heath in the south of England, to a lapwing displaying over the machair in the Outer Hebrides, he writes about eight different birds who he has spent most time with, returned to most often and relays what he hears. Watching birds is not merely entertaining m but also these … Continue reading Migration without borders

Quirky British chip company became a world powerhouse

Are you ready for the next wave of mobile innovation with unparalleled performance per watt, as Arm provides the performance, power and cost requirements of every device?  On February 2023, Arm,  the company founded in 1990, located in a former turkey farm barn in Swaftham, Bulbeck,  a village outside Cambridge, developed a semiconductor design which was incorporated into 250bn computer chips. Another 1000 were being added to the number every second, powering everything in our digital economy from smartphones to cars to data centres. This tiny device lies at the heart of the world’s relentless technological advance and slivers of … Continue reading Quirky British chip company became a world powerhouse