And
Other Stories have recently announced pre-orders for Fifty Forgotten Books
by R B Russell, due out in September. The author recounts autobiographical
episodes alongside discussing books that have been important to him, many of
them not very well-known.
All
enthusiasts of fantastic, supernatural and unusual literature will enjoy
encountering the titles the author chooses, but the book also introduces us to
a cast of decadents, bohemians, cult musicians, the odd (very odd) spy, shady
publishers and backstreet booksellers, as well as the writers of the weird and
wayward.
David
Tibet calls it ‘A groovy and delicious and intimate jigsaw of memories and
passions and books . . . Falling in love
with books voraciously, whilst growing up ferociously, has never been so
beautifully described.’
We
asked R B Russell to join us for The Wormwood Interview. Here he has chosen
some different titles to those in the book.
Ray notes: ‘I have tried not to repeat myself in this interview for
Wormwoodiana, and this time I discuss only well-known books!’
The first book I
remember
This would be the first in the Ladybird Key Words Reading Scheme—the “Peter
and Jane” books. They were not page-turners, but that was not the point. I
didn’t discover that phenomenon until Enid Blyton’s “Five Find-Outers” and her
“Mystery” series. Blyton has been rightly maligned, even in her own day, for
not being particularly challenging, for creating lazy stereotypes, and not
engaging with the issues of the modern world. Nevertheless, she made me, and hundreds
of thousands of other children, desperate to read all the books in her various
series, and that was important. I know it will have helped that I was like most
of her characters—a white, middle class child, living in the countryside, with
parents who didn’t mind if I left the house early in the morning and didn’t
reappear until bedtime. The adventures of her characters merged with my
adventures and are almost inseparable from my memories of childhood.
The first book I
bought for myself
Through
the Scholastic Book Services, The
Tomorrow People in The Visitor by
Roger Price and Julian R. Gregory (Piccolo, 1973). I loved the television
series about young people from a range of backgrounds (very un-Blyton), brought
together by their telepathic, telekinetic and other abilities. Looking back, it
has that strange “period” feel of the 1970s, probably enhanced by the fading of
the colour on the cover of my original paperback. It was essentially science
fiction, and the evocative title music of the ITV television series was created
by the immortal Delia Derbyshire (who was moonlighting from the BBC). It makes
sense that children should recognise themselves in the characters they read
about, but also that they should read about those with different experiences
from their own. The educationalists who despise Blyton probably wouldn’t be too
impressed, either, by children reading novelisations of popular television programmes.
However, once again it got me reading and collecting (I eventually obtained all
five books in the series). It was important for me to discover that, unlike
ephemeral television programmes in those days, I could go back to a book again
and again.
The book I thought
was my discovery
This
is difficult to answer because I’ve always assumed that any book I’ve come
across will have been appreciated by other readers at some time or other.
Before the internet, the problem was finding anybody else who appreciated the
same authors as me. I’ve always enjoyed discussing books with other people, not
least because everyone brings a different perspective, even a different
understanding to a book. I well-remember discussing, at school break times,
Camus and Kafka with Danny Goring and Tim Rich, and Machen and Lovecraft with
Adrian Bott.
The book that
changed me
I
don’t think any one book has ever changed me, but all the books I have read
have had some effect on me—even books that I haven’t enjoyed and have given up
reading! If forced to name one book, it would have to be Machen’s The Hill of Dreams, which I have
discussed often before.

The book a friend
told me about
The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood
(McClelland and Stewart, 1993) was recommended to me by Rosalie Parker fifteen
years ago, when I was starting to write fiction seriously. It was, perhaps, the
first time I had read a book and paid attention to the craft of novel-writing.
In some ways it feels like going back to what I very first appreciated—a book
being a page-turner. Many critics seem to denigrate this ability in writers, as
though it automatically makes books shallow or second-rate. It strikes me as a
bigger problem that there are writers who have great intellectual or
philosophical ideas but who fail to engage the reader because they forget to
write a decent story. I was impressed by the quiet way that Atwood drew me into
the novel, kept me interested, and raised so many ideas without making an issue
of them. It appears effortless, but once you start to pick it apart you can see
what skill it takes.
The wildest
weirdest book I ever read
Entangled Life by Merlin
Sheldrake (Random House, 2020) is perhaps the weirdest, wildest read I’ve
experienced in a long time, not least because it is a book of non-fiction.
Fungus is strange stuff, but its relationship with so much of life on earth is
inextricable and often defies understanding. And lichen! The more that is
discovered about lichen, the more alien it seems. Perhaps the most memorable
section of the book deals with a fungus that infects leaf-cutter ants, but I
won’t spoil it for those who are yet to read the book. Highly recommended!
The book I
treasure most
An
impossible question! If the house was on fire and I could only choose one book
to save, I would probably not get out of the house in time.