Off into Central London for the rally against antisemitism.


Watched Funeral in Berlin 🎥 last weekend.

After enjoying The Ipcress File a year ago (where does the time go?) it was good to see more of what Harry Palmer was up to back in the Cold War.

In this he’s sent on a slightly confusing mission to West Berlin — and, inevitably, into the East — to get out a high-ranking Russion officer who wants to defect.

Or at least, that’s what he’s told. Betrayals and double-crossings ensue. It’s not as good — and somehow, strangely, not as sixties — as the first one, but Michael Caine is great, and it’s fun enough.


There is a petition to parliament asking for UK civil service software to be made open source by default. This comes after (and at least partly in response to) a move by the NHS to make the opposite move: to make all their existing open-source repositories closed-source.

Please sign it here if you can. Publicly funded software should be available for the public to see and use. And open-source software is more secure and helps free us from US tech giants.


📚 You are reading Bright Lights, Big City by Jay McInerney. You are finding it hilarious. This book was published when you were 20: why have you not read it till now?


I used to wonder if the Greens had any policies other than the environment. Now I see they have no policies at all. Not even the environment. (Based on literature I’ve seen for the local elections, and the fact they’re still opposed to nuclear power.)

And some of them are showing distinctly worrying tendencies. OK, antisemitism, I mean antisemitism.

Not a policy, sure. But it feels like they’ve been taken over.


Voting day today, for most of us in the UK. All those local councils and mayors aren’t going to elect themselves (luckily).

Vote for the ones who are going to make sure the bins get collected, the schools are good, social housing gets built… OK, Labour, I mean vote Labour.


📚 Books 2026, 10: The Lost World, by Arthur Conan Doyle

I had read a lot of Sherlock Holmes, but none of Doyle’s other work; including none of the Professor Challenger stories. There aren’t nearly as many as there are Holmes stories, so it’s less of a challenge (ha) to do so. I was in a second-hand bookshop a few weeks back, in an unfamiliar town — let’s not be coy, it was Taunton — and I was there so long, going, ‘So many books, so little time,’ that I felt I had to buy something: it would be impolite not to.

And just as I was preparing to leave, I saw a collected Professor Challenger volume, and here we are. I’m treating the individual novels in it as separate novels, since they are, and will write about them here individually.

So to The Lost World . A tale of adventurers finding a fabled land where dinosaurs still live, even in the 20th century. In this case it’s on an inaccessible plateau in South America, not underground, for example.

In fact, this is the motherlode for all those kind of stories, predating Edgar Rice Burroughs and everyone else.

It’s presented as a work by a journalist, Edward Malone, a young man seeking both to please his editors, and (seemingly more importantly at first) to charm his beloved, one Gladys, who says she’s attracted to the adventurous type of man.

Challenger claims to have seen evidence of the prehistoric creatures' existence; his brother scientists don’t believe him; the Zoological Institute commissions an expedition to confirm or deny. Young Malone volunteers/is volunteered to go along and report back.

Stuff happens. Dinosaurs are found. Ape-men fought. An impossible fecundity of life exists on a twenty-by-thirty mile plateau, isolated from the rainforest and Amazon below it. (A question comes to mind: why wouldn’t the pterodactyls fly down from the plateau to the jungle? At least sometimes?)

It’s lots of fun, if very full of the idea that the white European (or really, British) man is the most highly evolved entity on the planet. It is, of course, of its time.


Crucial Track for 03 May 2026: (White Man) In Hammersmith Palais" by The Clash

"(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais" by The Clash

Listen on Apple Music

The prompt:

Share a song you love that has parentheses (in the title).

It's been a while since I wrote a Crucial Tracks entry, but when I saw John Philpin's post with this bracket-based prompt, how could I not write about one of my favourite Clash songs?

The strange thing about the title is, given the parenthetical structure, we should call it 'In Hammersmith Palais' for short — you can always drop the parenthetical, right? — but in fact everyone always calls it 'White Man' for short.

It famously tells the story of Joe Strummer going to a reggae show at the titular venue, and realising he was the only white person there. And about punks and other groups and how they did or might behave. The near-closing couplet seems worryingly relevant again at the moment:

If Adolf Hitler flew in today
They'd send a limousine anyway

Also I don't know how this will appear either on Crucial Tracks itself or on my blog, but what the hell is the image that's appearing alongside the track where I've selected it? Very strange. I've screengrabbed it and added it to the post, but I've no idea where it'll appear.

Anyway, one of my all time favourite songs, with or with the brackets/parentheses.

Entry image

View Martin McCallion's Crucial Tracks profile

Listen to my Apple Music playlist


Must be time to link to Nick Cave’s The Red Hand Files again. The latest episode had me laughing aloud many times, both from Nick’s answers and his questioners' questions.


I suspect this StoryGraph review of the book I just posted my own thoughts on captures what’s going on:

… a character who has agency but really doesn’t, which subverts the western idea of conflict that pivots around a main character always having to make the choice, do the thing, that runs the story. Here, no matter what Matt Kim does, the world affects him, does whatever it wants to him. Disappear him even. The ‘looseness’ of the story, as in, ‘I don’t get this book’, is imo holding up eastern cultural expectations of writing …


📚 Books 2026, 9: Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear, by Matthew Salesses

I first heard of Matthew Salesses when I was doing my MA. One of the tutors said his forthcoming book on the craft of creative writing was eagerly awaited by everyone in the business of teaching it. This was in early 2021. I got hold of an ebook copy of Craft in the Real World at some point, and haven’t got very far with it. The main thesis, as I recall, was about the typical method of critiquing creative works didn’t work well for all people.

Which is fair enough, if perhaps a bit slight to hang a whole book on (I’m sure there’s more). But when I was looking into it, I read the announcement of this novel (which came out earlier, in 2020), and thought it sounded amazing.

What’s actually amazing to me, having read it, is that it’s the second novel in a row I’ve read that makes almost no sense at all.

I expect it’s me. I suppose it must be, because again, the cover and inner pages here are festooned with glowing platitudes, while I was left cold by much of the action, and confused by what Salesses was trying to say.

A young Korean-American writer1feels he’s disappearing. A near-duplicate of his girlfriend turns up. She used to have a boyfriend who looked just like the narrator, and who disappeared.

She has never heard of Boston, where the novel is set. Until it switches to the alternative universe where the doppelgänger woman came from, and a city whose name is given as XXXXXX. Why not make up an actual, believable, name, I wondered.

All of which is fine, and could explore some interesting ideas about identity, and indeed tries to. But the narrator is such an annoying character who keeps doing stupid things for no very good reason, that it’s hard to get with him. That in itself could be seen as good characterisation, of course.

But whatever is going on between the two alternatives doesn’t make much sense to me, and things don’t get resolved in any meaningful way, and I just didn’t enjoy it much. Cultural differences, maybe? That is, I believe, part of what Salesses’s Craft book was about: different cultures have different ways of telling stories. Maybe my understanding and expectations are just too western to appreciate this.

Which is my loss, I guess.


  1. Just because they say ‘Write what you know’ doesn’t mean you have to write about writers, by the way. ↩︎


📚 Books 2026, 8: The Spirit of Science Fiction, by Roberto Bolaño, Translated by Natasha Wimmer

On the cover of this there is a quote from The New York Times describing it as ‘A gem-choked puzzle of a book.’ Which is a very fair point. I ended this book and said, ‘I didn’t understand that.’ Which has nothing to do with its being in Spanish, as I was reading a very good translation.

I didn’t really get what it was trying to say, what the point of its existing was. Which sounds horribly dismissive, and I don’t mean it that way. I enjoyed it while I was reading, which didn’t take long, as it’s only 196 pages. But the ending…

Well, let’s start at the beginning. It’s a novel by a Chilean author who is very well thought of, at least posthumously. It’s about two twenty-something would-be poets from Chile, recently arrived in Mexico City. It has three strands. One is a fairly straightforward telling of their life, from the point of view of one of them, Remo. Trying to find writing workshops, learning about the literary magazines of their adopted city, partying.

In another strand, someone is interviewing someone else. The interviewee appears to be Jan, the less active of the two poets. In that first strand, it’s clear he hardly leaves their room. But in this one he has just won a major award. The interviewer may be Remo, but it’s never stated, and there are suggestions it’s someone else.

And in the third strand, Jan writes letters to real-life science fiction authors. Alice Sheldon, Ursula LeGuin, Philip Jose Farmer, and others. They are partly fan letters, partly weird philosophical discussions.

And that’s more or less it. They both get girlfriends, Remo gets a motorcycle. The book ends with a section entitled ‘Mexican Manifesto’, which describes Remo and Laura’s experiences in the bathhouses of the city. And then it just… stops.

Honestly, I feel as if there’s a whole chunk missing at the end. Especially since there are no pages after the last one, either with information or even blank, which is quite unusual.

Another review comment, from the Paris Review, says this book ‘functions as a kind of key to the jewelled box of Bolaño’s fictions’. So maybe I need to read more of his books, and I’ll understand them collectively?

A couple of reviews linked from the Wikipedia entry suggest strongly that this — an early draft, not published in Bolaño’s lifetime — was indeed the wrong place to start.


📚 Books 2026, 7: Raven Black, by Ann Cleeves

I heard Ann Cleeves on the Radio — probably Radio 3’s Private Passions — a couple of years ago. I must have seen her books in shops before that, but hadn’t really paid attention. And I vaguely was aware there was a BBC detective show called Shetland.

Turns out that show is based on this novel and its sequels.

Anyway, she sounded interesting on the radio and I seem to read almost as much crime fiction as SF these days, so when I was exploring a bookshop on our recent trip to Devon, and saw this, I thought I’d give it a try. I devoured it in a couple of days. Really good page-turner, engaging characters, unexpected ending, Just what you want.


If You Hail Mary, Will She Stop to Pick You Up?

In my piece on Project Hail Mary, I mentioned having some thoughts on the title. I was talking about the use of ‘Hail Mary’ to mean a last-ditch attempt. All else has failed, we have no other hope left, this is our ‘Hail Mary’. I believe the use of it in that form comes from American sports. Most likely American football. I’ve seen the term ‘a Hail Mary play’.

It baffles me how the expression came to be used that way. I was brought up as a Roman Catholic. The ‘Hail Mary’ is a prayer to ‘Our Lady’, Mary the mother of Jesus. It is very much a Catholic prayer. Presbyterians, such as members of the Church of Scotland, wouldn’t be heard dead reciting such a prayer. Nor, I imagine, would Baptists, Evangelicals, or other non-Catholic Christians. I’m not sure about the Church of England, they can go either way.

So it surprises me the term would originate in the United States, a country drenched in Christianity, but not so much in Catholicism. True, there have been a couple of Catholic Presidents, including the last vaguely sane one, so it is a mainstream sect there. But it doesn’t seem exactly a major player.

Maybe people have some sort of sense that Catholics have better access? That Catholic prayers have more power? Or is it something like, ‘Even God won’t answer my prayers, maybe his mom will’?

I don’t know, but the thing is, it’s the wrong prayer to choose. The ‘Hail Mary’ isn’t a last-chance prayer, something you save for desperation. It’s not just an everyday prayer for Catholics, it’s one that’s used with mantra-like repetition. It’s mostly said as part of the rosary, where groups of one ‘Our Father’ and ten ‘Hail Marys’ are tracked on a set of beads. The rosary is recited in churches at least weekly at regular services (not the mass), and no doubt daily by real believers.

If you’re looking for a Catholic prayer that’s appropriate for all hope being gone, try the Last Rites (or in Latin, extreme unction), the prayers said for a dying person. Though the intent there is not to prevent the death, but to help to ease the soul on its way.

You’re not really supposed to pray for help on the football field. Saving the world, maybe. But what if those astrophages were ‘God’s will’? Maybe He chose to destroy the world not by the expected fire, but by ice?

What do I know, though, I’ve been an atheist a lot longer than I was a Catholic.


📚 Books 2026, 6: The Twenty Days of Turin, by Giorgio De Maria, Translated by Ramon Glazov

I don’t recall where I first heard about this . It was probably Warren Ellis, but I seem to recall there being a second source. Anyway, I lived in Turin, or between Turin and my then-home in Walthamstow, for the best part of a year, 1989–90. My employers had a big contract with an Italian bank, and most of the work was done on site. Which seems amazingly old-fashioned for software development today, when we mostly don’t even visit our employers' premises very often.

All of which has nothing to do with the novel. It was written in the 70s and is set then. The unnamed first-person narrator is researching the titular event, which happened ten years earlier. It’s not entirely clear to what extent he experienced the ‘Twenty Days’ himself, but many people still living in the city did, and they don’t talk about it. It started with mass insomnia. Sleepless people took to the streets, some in their nightclothes. Then the violence started. Mysterious, brutal murders of the insomniacs.

But before all that, there was the Library. It seemed to be a project by well-meaning young people, possibly religious, who set up a kind of pre-computer social network. People were encouraged to share diaries or other writing — original manuscripts only, no published work. For a small fee, anyone could visit the archive thus formed, and read any of the pieces. For slightly higher fee, they could find the name and address of a chosen contributor.

The idea being ostensibly to help lonely people find like-minded folks. With a strange inevitability, that isn’t necessarily how it was used.

The implication is the Library somehow led to the sleeplessness, if not the violence. Perhaps not the violence, as our narrator’s explorations appear to find a more supernatural, if not downright bizarre, explanation for that.

And it all seems to be starting up again. The Library didn’t go away, it just went underground. And the narrator and at least one of his interviewees may be in danger.

It’s an odd one this. Reviews of the recent English-language publication speak of its prescience, comparing the combination of the Library and the insomnia with people up all night doomscrolling on their phones. Which is interesting, but takes no account of the violent attacks, and the supernatural element.

I think this will bear repeated readings.


I’ve posted here every day so far this year. That’s unusual for me — unprecedented, in fact. I might take a break now , though. Except… hello.


Full of Grace

I just realised as I wrote that title, why the lead character has that surname. Huh.


Off to see Project Hail Mary in Leicester Square. Time to find out what these astrophages are made of.


Watched Top Secret! 🎥 a couple of nights ago. A 1984 film by the makers of Airplane, I have to wonder why on Earth I haven’t seen it till now. It’s pretty funny. A rock star visits a weird East Germany, which is just as oppressed as the real one, but the authorities are still the Nazis. Wehrmacht and SS uniforms abound.

Our hero gets caught up in a plot to rescue an imprisoned scientist — the resistance are all french, of course — and falls for the scientist’s daughter.

It’s about as silly as it sounds. An early part for Val Kilmer, and he does a pretty decent job as the singer, which can’t have hurt when he was cast as Jim Morrison in The Doors.


How can it be that I only realised today, with the clocks going forward for summer, that we don’t have a six-month summer/standard time split. We have seven months of British Summer Time.

All the more evidence that BST should be the standard, if not the permanent state.