Jonathan Gibbs
@jonathangibbs.bsky.social
2.8K followers 1.1K following 4.5K posts
Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing at City St George's, Uni of London. I curate the short story project apersonalanthology.com. Novels are Randall or The Painted Grape, and The Large Door. Poetry is Spring Journal. https://linktr.ee/jonathangibbs
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jonathangibbs.bsky.social
2025 Reading 1: Fifty Sounds by Polly Barton. A fascinating use of format for a memoir/linguistic commentary: Barton picks fifty onomatopoeic or more broadly 'mimetic' Japanese phrases and explores their meaning to her, using the form to narrate her experience of working in Japan as a teacher.
White paperback book with dark blue text giving title, author and publisher (Fitzcarraldo Editions), set on a wooden table.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Not read the Raven - have heard similar things!
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Books on the tube

Atomic Habits by James Clear
A Court of Silver Flames & Throne of Glass by Sarah J Maas
Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green
Grunwick by Jack Dromey
The Trading Athlete by Shane Murphy
Let the Snog Fest Begin by Louise Rennison
Villains Academy by Ryan Hammond
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Books on the tube (this morning)

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace
The Dispossessed by Ursula K Le Guin
The Miseducation of a 90s Baby by Khaholi Bailey
In Search of Fatima: A Palestinian Story by Ghada Kharti
Unidentified blue Fitzcarraldo edition
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Books on the tube (last night)

Babel by RF Kuang
Intimacy With God by Randy Clark
My Favourite Mistake by Marian Keyes
The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Ha. At his best he’s superb. “I am living at the Villa Borghese. There is not a crumb of dirt anywhere, nor a chair misplaced. We are all alone here and we are dead.” At his worst (The World of Sex or whatever it’s called) … shudder!
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Two books I happen to be reading at the moment.
Books Do Furnish a Room by Anthony Powell and So Many Books by Gabriel Zaid.
Reposted by Jonathan Gibbs
tomwoodhead.bsky.social
Anyone got a SAD lamp they'd recommend? Ideally one that's dimmable and can change colour temperature for the evening (but nothing that needs an app to control it)
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
If you choose to wear smart glasses then my first assumption right off the bat will be that your glasses are smarter than you are.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
I’ll reread Day one day, but the book of yours I reeaaally want to take in for the second time is Everything You Need – BUT I want a holiday on a remote island to do it properly.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
And a late addition from last week, which I didn’t post because it was just two books, but which seems appropriate to post today:

A Court of Thorn and Roses by Sarah J Maas
Riders by Jilly Cooper
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Books on the tube

Intermezzo by Sally Rooney
Our Evenings by Alan Hollinghurst
Boys in Zinc by Svetlana Alexievich
Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano
The Bee Sting by Paul Murray
Detransition Baby by Torrey Peters
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
I’ve only read the Harry Palmer books. Do you prefer them or the more military ones? (Bomber, GB-SS etc)
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Latest reading mini🧵, on a collection of essays with its centre of gravity in the unloved landscapes of Essex but moving off in all kinds of directions, and gathering up all kinds of interesting knowledge.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
2026 Reading 59: Brightening from the East by Ken Worpole. A perfectly judged present from @guineagibbs.bsky.social that I finally finished this weekend. The main attraction is the long essay ‘The New English Landscape’, originally published by Field Station with photos by Jason Orton.
Paperback book of Brightening from the East: Essays on landscape and memory by 
Ken Worpole with a photograph of three shire-type horses walking on an empty country road with crash barriers in the background.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
23yo son just brandished The Sea, The Sea at me and said: this is good, right? Or is it there another one I should read instead? Wasn’t sure but in the end gave him that and The Bell and said read a bit of both, see which you prefer. I think TS,TS was the first I read. Might as well dive right in.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
‘On the Marshes’ is another good book from Little Toller, but about life across the Thames on the north Kent coast.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
Oh I think you’ll enjoy it! (It’s also Little Toller, which is a mark of quality all of its own.)
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
To my cyclist son, the obituary of Pat Hanlon, iconic British bicycle frame- and wheel maker; to my friend H, the vignette of his father Cornelius Cardew playing with the Scratch Orchestra. etc; to my dad, the pieces on Essex, especially the land around Bradwell.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
It’s the best kind of ragbag collection, offering up the harvest and byproduct of many years’ research, observation and enchantment. The knowledge is dispersed like spores, not put on display or instrumentalised. But you come away enriched, and wanting to share the pleasure of enrichment.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
…about his parents and grandparents that features not just war-time evacuation from the East End to an Essex orchard and outside privvies but also fortune telling, music hall piano and rabbit stew. Wonderfully evocative. Great writing also on urban planning, gardens, and cemeteries and necropolises.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
That essay (40pp) is followed by shorter pieces, many of which also gravitate towards Essex, including pieces on the county’s history of utopian communities, often cross-pollinating Christianity and Socialism, the ‘Great Tide’ of 1953 (307 dead) and, in ‘The Bungalow’, an excellent piece of memoir…
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
The essay is about “post-war English landscape aesthetics”, and takes its cue mostly from the countryside and coastline of Essex, which I like Worpole knew as a child and teenager, and so can thoroughly appreciate its careful reclamation here from the inundation of cliché, ignoral and deprecation.
jonathangibbs.bsky.social
2026 Reading 59: Brightening from the East by Ken Worpole. A perfectly judged present from @guineagibbs.bsky.social that I finally finished this weekend. The main attraction is the long essay ‘The New English Landscape’, originally published by Field Station with photos by Jason Orton.
Paperback book of Brightening from the East: Essays on landscape and memory by 
Ken Worpole with a photograph of three shire-type horses walking on an empty country road with crash barriers in the background.