What We Are Reading Today ‘Common People: In Pursuit of My Ancestors’ by Alison Light

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Updated 28 March 2024
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What We Are Reading Today ‘Common People: In Pursuit of My Ancestors’ by Alison Light

Alison Light, author of many acclaimed books about feminism and history, takes us on a journey to trace her own ancestors in “Common People: In Pursuit of My Ancestors.”

Many of us might be curious about our ancestors — who were they, what stories did they have to tell, what were they like? Exploring one’s lineage could uncover less than glamorous backstories or prove to be a frustrating endeavor with inconsistencies and dead ends.

Light, however, finds a way to chart the course of the lives of everyday people. She goes through the stories of servants, sailors, farm workers, combing through archives to revive their stories and allow these people to live once more — if only in her pages.

In her 2009 book, “Mrs Woolf and the Servants: An Intimate History of Domestic Life in Bloomsbury,” she was transfixed by the life of Virginia Woolf, a popular yet deeply depressed author in her own right, who relied on live-in domestic help during her life to help with the most intimate and mundane of daily tasks. In this book, Light uses the same approach but turns the focus to her own life and history. She tries to understand her own ancestors and — by extension — all of ours, too. Her attempt at understanding the lives of those who once existed helps us to understand our own lives. Family history is a kind of public history and one that we share.

The book has maps, detailed family trees and Light’s personal photographs to augment her painstaking research and ability to zap life into those long gone.

“I began this book because I realized I had no idea where my family came from,” she says in the preface. Although she knew where she grew up and her personal history — as well as fragments of her parents’ lives, which they shared, and some stories about her grandparents — she did not know the bigger picture.

Her mother’s mother was an orphan and her father’s side was littered with blank spaces. She concluded that many of her relatives had no roots, as far as she could tell, and so the book became a quest to dive deeper into what it is possible to find out about people we never met but whose bloodline we share.

Since genealogy has become something of a trend in recent years, finding out your genetic background has become a simple process — spit into a tube and have it analyzed. But what are the stories that go behind and beyond the science?

Light’s book tries to find out, and you, the reader, can join her on that journey.


What We Are Reading Today: Himalaya: A Human History

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Updated 28 July 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Himalaya: A Human History

  • The book offers a panoramic, character-driven history on the grandest yet most human scale, encompassing geology and genetics, botany and art

Author: Ed Douglas

This is the first major history of the Himalaya: an epic story of peoples, cultures and adventures among the world’s highest mountains.

Spanning millennia, from its earliest inhabitants to the present conflicts over Tibet and Everest, Himalaya is a soaring account of resilience and conquest, discovery and plunder, oppression and enlightenment at the “roof of the world.”

The Himalaya has throughout the ages been home to an astonishing diversity of indigenous and local cultures, and a meeting point and conflict zone for the world’s superpowers, according to a review on goodreads.com.

The book offers a panoramic, character-driven history on the grandest yet most human scale, encompassing geology and genetics, botany and art.

 


Review: ‘Citizen Sleeper 2’ is narrative gaming at its best

Updated 28 July 2025
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Review: ‘Citizen Sleeper 2’ is narrative gaming at its best

DUBAI: The sequel to one of indie gaming’s most beloved narrative gems, Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector, proves that lightning can strike twice. Again featuring an imaginative space setting, the dice-driven roleplaying game thrives on subtle storytelling that feels both intimate and epic.

In Citizen Sleeper 2, you step once more into the worn metal frame of a Sleeper — a synthetic body powered by a digitized human consciousness, stripped of its original memories. While the first game saw you fleeing the corporate entity that created you, the sequel shifts gears. This time, you are a Sleeper who has broken free from the chemical leash of Stabilizer only to find yourself bound by another kind of chain — indentured to ruthless gang boss Laine, trading one form of control for another.

What sets Citizen Sleeper 2 apart is its ability to make every choice matter without bombarding the player with flashy moral prompts. Conversations feel organic, decisions ripple outwards with quiet but devastating impact and the characters are drawn with nuance and compassion.

The gameplay remains as relaxing as it is engrossing. The dice mechanic returns, offering a meditative rhythm of planning and risk, but there is added depth in how resources, relationships and time must be balanced.

As the hours pass, the stakes rise. What begins as a personal quest for survival grows into a meditation on community, identity and the cost of freedom. By the time the credits roll, Citizen Sleeper 2 feels less like a game you played and more like a story you lived.

It is narrative-driven gaming at its best.


What We Are Reading Today: Under the Naga Tail

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Updated 27 July 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Under the Naga Tail

  • This gripping and inspiring memoir is a testament to the human spirit’s capacity to endure and prevail in spite of great adversity

Author: Mae Bunseng Taing

This book is a courageous and poignant memoir of a young man’s daring escape from Cambodia’s genocidal regime.

Forced from his home by the Khmer Rouge, teenager Mae Taing struggles to endure years of backbreaking work, constant starvation, and ruthless cruelty from his captors — supposed freedom fighters who turned against their own people. Mae risks torture and death to escape into the dark tropical jungles, trekking across a relentless wilderness crawling with soldiers, according to a review on goodreads.com.

This gripping and inspiring memoir is a testament to the human spirit’s capacity to endure and prevail in spite of great adversity.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Atlas of World Embroidery’

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Updated 27 July 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Atlas of World Embroidery’

  • “The Atlas of World Embroidery” examines many distinctive embroidery styles and traditions found across the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australasia

Author: GILLIAN VOGELSANG-EASTWOOD 

Embroidery is one of the world’s most widely shared forms of creative expression—and one of its most varied and diverse.

It can be found in every region, yet its visual languages, themes, and techniques vary greatly: Some are marked by unique styles and others show influences from neighboring cultures.

“The Atlas of World Embroidery” examines many distinctive embroidery styles and traditions found across the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australasia.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Cold Kitchen’

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Updated 26 July 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Cold Kitchen’

  • The book is a slice of life, a scrapbook of scrumptious crumbs that make up a medley of a meal: Recipes, descriptions and reflections — arranged seasonally

Author: Caroline Eden

During my recent visit to Scotland, while walking the cobblestoned streets beneath moody skies and with a grumbling stomach, I dipped into a nearby bookshop to whet my appetite before heading to dinner — and discovered a book offering a sort of charcuterie board of travel morsels: Caroline Eden’s 2024 release, “Cold Kitchen: A Year of Culinary Journeys.”

The book invites readers into Eden’s Edinburgh basement kitchen to recall where she went and what she ate in Eastern Europe and Central Asia over the course of a year. 

The title refers to the part of the kitchen often used for preparing cold dishes, like salads, preserves and such. But in Eden’s hands, it becomes a metaphor for freezing memories.

The book is a slice of life, a scrapbook of scrumptious crumbs that make up a medley of a meal: Recipes, descriptions and reflections — arranged seasonally.

It is presented with three chapters per season, starting with winter, spring and summer, then ending in my personal favorite: autumn. Each segment pairs a place with a dish.

Eden, an award-winning travel writer, is best known for her color-themed travel trilogy — “Black Sea,” “Red Sands” and most recently, “Green Mountains.”

She understands how food anchors us; how we truly are what we eat. What we feed our bellies shapes our sense of place long after our suitcases — and we — roll away.

One moment that stayed with me was Eden’s detailed description of the Uzbek melon in the beginning of the book, honoring winter — its sticky sweetness, its lingering scent.

I have tasted it in Uzbekistan while journeying there myself, and the fruit is as she describes: dense, perfumed and indulgent. That single taste can lodge a landscape in the mind.

In “Cold Kitchen,” a dish becomes a way to mark time. A menu gives us a moment to sit with grief — to remember someone or somewhere. It allows us to take a second taste from our own history, a portal into a past version of ourselves.

Picking up this memoir in Edinburgh felt just like reaching for the perfect fruit from an orchard — something local, ripe and firm, yet delicate to sink into. Truly food for thought.

Though Eden’s kitchen is “cold” by name, it radiates warmth.