7 Jun 2026

What I'm reading ...

I have started Fifty Things that Made the Modern Economy by Tim Harford. I am very familiar with this author from his work on Radio 4. I am confident that this will be an interesting and informative read. Here’s the blurb:

Who thought up paper money? How did the contraceptive pill change the face of the legal profession? Why was the horse collar as important for human progress as the steam engine? How did the humble spreadsheet turn the world of finance upside-down?
The world economy defies comprehension. A continuously-changing system of immense complexity, it offers over ten billion distinct products and services, doubles in size every fifteen years, and links almost every one of the planet's seven billion people. It delivers astonishing luxury to hundreds of millions. It also leaves hundreds of millions behind, puts tremendous strains on the ecosystem, and has an alarming habit of stalling. Nobody is in charge of it. Indeed, no individual understands more than a fraction of what's going on.
How can we make sense of this bewildering system on which our lives depend?
From the tally-stick to Bitcoin, the canal lock to the jumbo jet, each invention in Tim Harford's fascinating new book has its own curious, surprising and memorable story, a vignette against a grand backdrop. Step by step, readers will start to understand where we are, how we got here, and where we might be going next.
Hidden connections will be laid bare: how the barcode undermined family corner shops; why the gramophone widened inequality; how barbed wire shaped America. We'll meet the characters who developed some of these inventions, profited from them, or were ruined by them. We'll trace the economic principles that help to explain their transformative effects. And we'll ask what lessons we can learn to make wise use of future inventions, in a world where the pace of innovation will only accelerate.

Enough - by Dawn French

I really enjoyed this book. It is quite well written, with a good pace and well-drawn characters. It manages to address a very serious subject, while still injecting humour. It is quite emotional, particularly the twist towards the end. I was entertained and made to think - just what I like in a book.
I have one downer: the quality of editing - or lack thereof. At one point there is a flashback, where Etta aged 5 uses the word “ninja”; this word was not in the English vocabulary in 1963. At another point someone is slapped in the face and there is a reference to a “welt”; this word refers to a serious, but not open, wound, like you might get from a whip. Was the editor lazy or incompetent or do publishers skip such editing for high-profile author or are they just saving money. Disappointing either way.