Once-upon-a-time I used to read a lot of non-fiction, but these day my reading habits are dominated almost exclusively by fiction. In the course of a year, I'd be lucky to read two or three true stories, which is terrible given I'm a journalist and I should be interested in this genre. Perhaps that's why I tend to favour the made-up stuff; it's less like work and more like escapism.
Anyway, last weekend I decided it was time to start reading a new non-fiction tome I bought back in April, which had been sitting on my bedside table unread and gathering dust. It took awhile to get into, but Martin Sixsmith's The Litvinenko File, about the poisoning of London-based Russian Alexander Litvinenko last November, was a riveting read. I had a four-hour round train trip to take last Saturday and this book was perfect company. The journey went by so quickly, simply because I became lost in the world of Russian exiles and their murky pasts. I know it's a cliche, but I honestly couldn't put it down.
Sixsmith is a former Moscow correspondent for the BBC, so he certainly knows his stuff. Reading this book (review coming soon) made me realise how great non-fiction can be if it is written well and tells an intriguing story.
As soon as I finished it, I thought it might be time to make the most of my non-fiction reading bent and crack open a book my father brought over from Australia in May. I'd specifically requested he bring me a copy of Chris Masters' hefty Jones Town, a biography of Australian shock-jock Alan Jones, because it hasn't yet been published in the UK, but until now I haven't felt much like reading it. For a start, at more than 500 pages, it weighs a tonne, making it a little cumbersome to tote around in my handbag for reading on public transport. It's so heavy it's even difficult to read in bed (where I tend to do the bulk of my reading).
So far, I'm about 80 pages in. While it's not as "catchy" as the Litvinenko book, it's still a fascinating, if overly detailed, account of one man's life. It will be interesting to see if the level of detail -- almost to the point of recording the colour of Alan Jones underpants every time he changed them -- continues, or whether Chris Masters lightens up a bit. I guess you could not accuse him of not being thorough in his research!
I largely suspect this book is going to take me a month or so to read, in between other books, because it's relatively hard going and to read it exclusively would probably kill too many of my brain cells.
Anyone got any hot tips for other non-fiction books I should read once I've finished Jones Town? Do you favour fiction over non-fiction, or the other way around?
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