Keep a little fire burning; however small, however hidden. — Cormac McCarthy’s The Road

We’re really in the harshest part of Winter on this Scottish Estate, so the residents of Kinrowan Hall, save the staff of Gus, our Head Gardener, who have livestock and buildings to tend, are quite content to stay inside. There’s always something to stave off boredom, be it reading or needed Estate chores, at which everyone on this communitarian Estate lends a hand.
So it comes to pass that we’ve been cleaning out the under the eaves spaces and no, unlike at Evenmere Hall, we didn’t precisely find a dragon there – though we did find the plans for a rearly big stone one. There was a lot of stuff to be moved or discarded as The Steward has an intent to create more staff housing in part of it. The spaces are heated already to keep ice from building up on the slate roof, so extending plumbing and power will be no big deal.
What kind of stuff? A crate of botantical books that Gus claimed for his workshop; a model of Kinrowan Hall wonderfully detailed with real glass windows and tiny roof slates, that will be displayed in the Library for everyone to see; maps of the Estate dating back centuries, which went to our Steward; dark green glass pickling jars more than big enough for whole cabbages and which had something odd in them; hand written copies of The Sleeping Hedgehog from the mid-eighteenth century; a crate of whisky laid down centuries ago for later consumption and didn’t I as Pub Manager claim that fast; and some seelie impression balls of Elven performances of Elizabethan music which the Winter Court left here very long ago; and so forth.
Now let’s see what I found for you this time …

Gary here. I finished reading Sue Burke’s latest SF novel a few weeks ago, but it didn’t fit with the themes of the past couple of Green Man issues, so I’m presenting it now, along with a roundup of other books I reviewed in 2024. Burke’s ‘Dual Memory is a tale of late stage capitalism continuing to run amok as the planet continues to drown and boil, and refugees and raiders wash up on all shores, stressing humans and systems both built and natural. Burke has crafted a fast-paced, entertaining tale with likeable characters and a twisty, action filled plot.’
I didn’t review a lot of books in 2024, although I probably read just as many as ever. Mostly I came home from the library with a big stack of science fiction and worked my way through it. But as with many of us, I found that books now have to compete with lots of other things for our attention, from streaming entertainment to podcasts to just the online world itself. And of course I also re-read some old favorites. For the past 10 years since I first encountered them, Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead books have become my most re-read books. In 2024 the only one I re-read was Lila, which is in keen competition with Jack for my favorite of the lot.
But I began my reviewing year by wrapping up Neal Stephenson’s nearly 1,000-page Baroque Trilogy with the third, The System of the World. It was a satisfying end to the trilogy, which grew out of Stephenson’s very popular Cryptonomicon. It’s a series of historical novels (beginning with Quicksilver and continuing in The Confusion) with some minor SFF elements, notably one particular character who somehow travels through time and acts as a bit of cement holding together the entire series. In my review I noted that the trilogy “…follows three disparate characters through the tumultuous period at the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th century, when changes in politics, economics, and what we now call the sciences sent Europe careening toward the Enlightenment. It’s the final piece of the story of how the era’s “natural philosophers” slowly began to reject the accepted beliefs about how the universe was ordered, many of them based on classical Roman and Greek writings and others on the Bible. And of how the best thinkers of the day debated and fought – sometimes literally – over how to describe the new reality they were seeing through their telescopes and microscopes.”
I continued with the latest installment of what may be my favorite SF series of all time, Martha Wells’s The Murderbot Diaries. This one, System Collapse picks up right where the previous book Network Effect left off, with our friendly neighborhood rogue SecUnit, his human companions and his best frenemy the research transport ART trying to rescue a bunch of stranded colonists from their planet that’s trying to kill them. As I concluded, “Fast paced, darkly hilarious, and deeply humane as usual, Wells’s latest Murderbot story is just what the Med Unit prescribed to relieve your own boredom, trauma, or existential crises.” (I just discovered that I haven’t yet reviewed Network Effect, which I hope to remedy soon.
Even better news is that The Murderbot Diaries is coming to Apple TV+, and Martha Wells has been doing some interviews and social media postings around it including an interview in Locus, excerpted here. She’s posting frequently on Bluesky.
My only other review was a non genre book, Per Petterson’s Out Stealing Horses. ‘A bildungsroman set in rural Norway just three years after that country’s Nazi occupation ended with the War, the story is told in first person by Trond Sander,’ I explained in my review. ‘The narrative is split between late 1940s Trond and present-day (1999) Trond; he’s now in his 60s, retired, and setting up bachelor quarters in a remote cabin by a lake with only a dog for companionship. The surroundings and an encounter with a neighbor send his thoughts to things that happened in his youth that he apparently has not revisited in a half-century.’ This was a re-read for me, having first read and loved it shortly after its English publication in 2003. It’s an intimate psychological portrait of self-discovery, as young Trond loses the innocence of childhood and adult Trond deals with repressed memories and traumas.
Sue Burke’s Semiosis is currently on my pile of books awaiting my attention, so expect a review of that in the new year. Other than that, who knows? Perhaps even a cookbook or two …
Happy reading in the New Year!

Dark chocolate bread pudding… Cocoa in huge mugs with homemade marshmallows… Chocolate chip cookies… We here at the Kinrowan Estate love chocolate in all its guises, so it’s not surprising that we review chocolate bars here with this review being by Robert of three Ritter bars: ‘The bars in this case are all square and all weigh in at 100g (3.5 oz.), and all seem somehow weightier than an equivalent size of American chocolate — I suspect because of the shape and size: they’re all about 3 inches on a side and are actually very nice to hold in the hand (if you can restrain yourself from ripping off the wrapper and stuffing your face).’

Me again, Gary, back with some music reviews to start the New Year. But first, the Russian World Music Chart for 2024 is out, and one of my favorites, Vedan Kolod’s Birds, is perched atop the Top 20 for 2024.
In new music, I review a couple of related releases from Giant Step, The Fury’s Live In Brooklyn, and Jason Palmer’s The Cross Over: Live in Brooklyn. The common thread on both (besides great live modern jazz) is saxophonist Mark Turner, who I said ‘…stands out for me because of his generally restrained and lyrical approach. This is true whether on Brewer’s lovely ballad “Of Our Time,” Lund’s anthemic “Couch” or his own skittering “Ender’s Game.” ‘
I also review Scroggins & Rose’s Speranza: ‘Scroggins & Rose is an acoustic duo project of mandolinist Tristan Scroggins and fiddler Alisa Rose. Both are multiple award nominees including Grammys and IBMA, and Rose is a U.S. State Department Musical Ambassador. Their music slots right in with a lot of contemprary acoustic stringband music like Hawkwind, Tatiana Hargreaves, Alison DeGroot, Billy Strings, Oliver the Crow, Watchhouse, Bruce Molsky, Goat Rodeo, etc.’
There’s something about the Winter Solstice and the turn of the year that makes us want to sit by the fire and listen to some good Nordic music. Our reviewers have written about a lot of this music over the years; here are some of our favorites.
Cat reviewed a disc from Sweden’s Triakel. ‘Sånger från 63º N is probably one of the finest Nordic CDs I’ve had to pleasure to hear in quite some time. Triakel consists of Emma Härdelin (vocals), Kjell-Erik Eriksson, (fiddle), and Janne Strömstedt (harmonium) which makes them akin to what Våsen was like when I heard them play at Bowdoin College sans percussionist a few years ago.’
Donna offered up a retrospective of three discs involving one of the founders of the Swedish band Hedningarna: Anders Norudde’s Kan Själv!, Anders Norudde, Leo Svensson, and Goran ‘Freddy’
Fredericksson’s Med Hull Och Hår, and Lennart Gybrant and Anders Norudde’s Böndernas Underverk. ‘Anders Norudde, once known as Anders Stake, was a founding member of this band and is still a mainstay in their eclectic neo-traditional sound. We have had a copy of Kan Sjalv! (I can do it myself), his solo CD, since it was released. A few years later, we tracked down a copy of Med hull och hår (Line and Sinker).’
Jack looks at some of the early releases of the pan-Nordic trio Frifot, and Sweden’s dark folk rockers Garmarna. ‘Frifot bring together three superb musicians that create a truly unique sound: Per Gudmundson (fiddle and bagpipe), Ale Möller (mandola, hummared dulcimer, and flutes), and Lena Willemark (vocals and fiddle),’ he says. And of Garmarna: ‘This is serious, winterside music with Emma Härdelin’s deep, soaring vocals and violin forming the base sound of the group. Think dark when you try to picture what Garmarna sounds like.’
Relatedly, he also did an omni review of Lena Willemark’s När som gräset det vajar, Ale Möller Band’s Bodjal, and Maria Kalaniemi Trio’s Tokyo Concert. Of Willemark’s release, he says: ‘I’ve heard more Nordic neo-traditional CDs than I care to think of, and I can say that this is one of the very best I’ve heard!’
Jasmine turned in an in-depth review of three albums that blend Nordic jazz and folk elements: Morild’s Dromte Mig En Drom, BNB’s Ein Song Fra Dei Utsungne Stunder, and Poul Lendal’s Ønskebarn. Her favorite was the latter, of which she said, ‘All the tunes are quite short and mostly instrumental, which makes it easier to enjoy the entertaining, wildly diverse mecum of sound as individual gems. The liner notes at the end contain a blessedly useful and interesting English blurb for each track. The album is accomplished and diverse, and I have no caveats whatsoever: in fact, go ye and buy this frolic of an education.’
Judith had thoughts about Arctic Paradise, a promotional CD of Finnish music. ‘The CD has culled the best of “contemporary” Finnish folk music. Some artists, like Värttinä and Wimme, are fairly well known, but others will be familiar only to Nordophiles. Interestingly, only five of the tracks are traditional music, the rest for the most part are composed in a traditional style and many are transposed and fused freely.’
Kim liked the interpretation of the music of everyone’s favorite 12th century Abbess by Swedish folk rockers Garmarna, the aptly titled Hildegard von Bingen. ‘Hildegard’s music has been preserved with notations on melody, the lyrics, and some good (depending on the piece) guesses as to what she imagined for her compositions. I’ve heard other groups attempt to communicate her music, both in “medieval” form and adapted for modern instruments, but Garmarna’s effort is the only one that really works for me, so far. Garmarna bring something of the medieval into the now, seeming to tap into the nuances within the lyrics and melodies.’
She also heartily approved of a series of compilations from NorthSide called Nordic Roots, of which she reviewed the first three volumes. ‘Not only are the artists working here a great representation of some of the most creative artists in any traditional folk genre today, but the production values are extremely high, with sophisticated arrangements and judicious use of what the studio has to offer. As someone who listens to part or all of thousands of folk music CDs each year (no kidding!), these collections are more than a breath of fresh air, they are a comfort and a balm, and they create hope in even the most jaded listener.’
Lars took on the daunting task of reviewing all 28 CDs of the Folk Music In Sweden series, many of them taken from field recordings from the 1950s and ’60s. ‘In the middle of the 1990s the Swedish National Radio together with Caprice, a record company owned by Rikskonserter, a government agency aimed at supporting live music, started a project with the aims to present a broad selection of these recordings, arranged thematically, on CD. Up to date 28 CDs have been released, sometimes in boxes with two or three CDs in each.’
Our Summer Queen, ironically, reviewed Triakel’s Vintervisor, originally intended as a Christmas album. ‘… Triakel’s second release developed a broader theme while the trio was in the studio — winter. And not just any winter, a Swedish winter. This beautiful follow-up to 1998’s eponymous Triakel celebrates not just Yuletide, but Advent, St. Stephen’s Day, New Years and Epiphany with a glorious blend of tunes and words old and new, both joyous and somber.’

Our What Not comes courtesy of the American Songwriter where Geoffrey Himes has an essay titled ‘Saying Something Human: A Look Back At The Child Ballads’ which has a lovely lead-in: ‘What do Bob Dylan’s “Barbara Allen,” Doc Watson’s “Matty Groves,” Fairport Convention’s “Tam Lin,” the Fleet Foxes’ “The False Knight On The Road,” Tom Waits’ “Two Sisters,” Sam Cooke’s “The Riddle Song,” Dr. John’s “Cabbage Head,” the Carter Family’s “Sinking In The Lonesome Sea,” Jerry Garcia’s “Dreadful Wind And Rain,” Joan Baez’s “The Greenwood Side,” John Wesley Harding’s “Little Musgrave,” Anais Mitchell’s “Sir Patrick Spens,” Sam Amidon’s “How Come That Blood” and Steeleye Span’s “Lord Randall” have in common?’

‘Nghtfaeries’, our coda music this time, comes courtesy of Paul Brandon, author of one of my favorite novels, Swim The Moon. It’s by Sunas which is one of his bands which he founded in Brisbane, his home city. I do believe it’s a splendid note to end this edition on.
What’s New for the 16th of February: Books by and about Bob Dylan, and music by Dylan and others; plus some new world music and jazz
Gary here. After writing up my impressions of the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown for our last outing, I set off to see what else the Archives contained of a Dylan nature, and came up with some superb book, film, and music reviews from our staff and contributors.
He gave a thumbs up to a couple of books about Dylan, Robert Shelton’s No Direction Home: The Life And Music Of Bob Dylan, and Howard Sounes’s Down The Highway: The Life Of Bob Dylan. ‘Where does one begin talking about the life and work of Bob Dylan? Arguably the most influential songwriter of the second half of the last century, he is largely a mystery. A cipher. A surreal muse floating through the pop charts, influencing others but never fully accepted by the marketplace. Both of these volumes seek to find the man behind the masks. They both provide a glimpse behind the facade, but Dylan remains a mystery throughout.’
David also reviewed four other books about Dylan, his life and art, Carl Benson’s The Bob Dylan Companion: Four Decades Of Commentary; Clinton Heylin’s Bob Dylan: A Life In Stolen Moments, Day By Day 1941-1995; and Paul Williams’s Bob Dylan: Performing Artist, The Early Years 1960-1973, and The Middle Years 1974-1986. Unusually, he did so mostly in verse, and concluded, ‘ … I’d hafta say… / nobody knows the mystery tramp / but if ya wanta catch a glimpse of him / skippin’ like a stone / across the waters of time / here’s a few books that might, / no, definitely will, help ya on yer way.’
I enjoyed a book about one of my favorite Dylan albums, Andy Gill & Kevin Odegard’s A Simple Twist of Fate: Bob Dylan and the making of Blood on the Tracks. ‘A Simple Twist of Fate tells the story of the making of this watershed work. In language that is remarkably disciplined for a book about a major rock ‘n’ roll celebrity, Gill and Odegard lay out a tale that is surprisingly complex. And it’s a sad and sordid tale, indeed …’
I gave mixed reviews to a couple of other Dylan books, C.P. Lee’s Like the Night (Revisited): Bob Dylan and the road to the Manchester Free Trade Hall; and Derek Barker’s Isis: A Bob Dylan Anthology. He has some minor quibbles with the former book, whose author was a journalist but also attended the legendary “Judas” concert: ‘Lee seems to be of the common school of British music writing; which is to say, sometimes more concerned with an enthusiastic style than with the rules of the Queen’s English.’ Of the latter, he notes that it’s a collection of articles from an old fanzine, with the good and bad that implies: ‘All in all, Isis is an uneven read. Completists probably already have all the issues of the ‘zine, and hardly anybody but a completist will want to slog through the whole book.’
But I gave quite high marks to David Hajdu’s Positively 4th Street, which delves into the lives and times of Dylan, Joan Baez, and Joan’s sister and brother-in-law, Richard and Mimi Fariña. ‘True Dylanologists probably won’t find anything new here, but that’s not what Hajdu is trying to provide. He gives an insider’s look at four young people who were caught up in the explosion of youth culture in the 1960s, and who also helped shape it to some extent.’
As part of a review of some Dylan tribute CDs, David covered a performance DVD of Bryan Ferry’s Dylanesque Live: The London Sessions, (which was also released on CD). ‘It’s not the most visually interesting ovideo I’ve ever seen. Everyone basically stands there doing their thing, while Ferry sits on the stool, lyrics on a music stand in front of him. OK, he moves his shoulders in time with the beat. He plays a bit of harmonica, he smiles, he adds a touch on the Farfisa. The musicians, though, play well. The arrangements are creative, using the Dylan songs as a jumping- off point. There is no slavish copying here. Ferry finds the melody in Dylan’s songs which are sometimes obscured by Bob’s own voice. He doesn’t oversing anything. There’s no American Idol warbling, just the songs and the odd sizzling guitar solo arising from the mix.’
I reviewed The Traveling Wilburys’ Collection, which brought together the rock supergroup’s two CDs plus a DVD with videos, interviews, and a short documentary film. ‘One of the best parts of the package is that documentary, which captures the Wilburys, otherwise known as George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Roy Orbison and Jeff Lynne, in the process of recording Traveling Wilburys Volume 1. If like me you love peering behind the curtain of the recording process, this is a real treat.’
Charles de Lint gave a mixed review to a batch of reissues from 2009, New Morning, Dylan & the Dead, Before the Flood, and The Basement Tapes: ‘I’m a big fan of the remastered series of Bob Dylan’s catalogue that Columbia’s been piecing out to us over the years. I don’t think they sound as good as pristine copies of the original vinyl, but for digital versions, they’re very warm and rich, with lots of detail. But I’m not one hundred percent delighted with this new batch. I suppose it’s not really Columbia’s fault. They’ve pretty much released everything by this point and now they’re just filling holes. But still.’
Charles liked one new Dylan album, Together Through Life, better than the critics initially did. ‘The lyrics, mostly in collaboration with The Grateful Dead’s Robert Hunter, are sharp and to the point, telling stories of love and heartache and the mess of the world, using those smart turns of phrase which we always associate with Dylan. And there’s still room for humour, albeit dark, as in “My Wife’s Hometown” (which is Hell, in case you were wondering).’
David and I teamed up to review a small handful of Dylan albums from the batch that Columbia remastered in 2003, including Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited, Nashville Skyline, and Blood On the Tracks. Of one of them, David noted: ‘ “Nashville Skyline Rag” was the first instrumental to grace a Dylan album, and on this new version the guitars of Norman Blake and Charlie Daniels, Kenny Buttrey’s drums, Charlie McCoy’s bass, and Pete Drake’s pedal steel are so warm that it feels like you’re right in the middle of the session. This was the second album to feature Dylan’s post-motorcycle accident vocals. No longer the scruffy Woody Guthrie wannabe, the kid had developed a chesty croon to sell these new country songs with. The hybrid Super Audio sound adds depth to the recording.’
David reviewed a small handful of Dylan tribute and cover albums including Highway 61 Revisited’s The World’s Only Bob Dylan Tribute Band, Jackie Greene & Sal Valentino’s Positively 12th & K, and Howard Fishman’s Performs Bob Dylan & The Band’s ‘Basement Tapes’ Live At Joe’s Pub (plus a Bryan Ferry DVD, which we discuss in the Film section above). ‘It’s something every guitar picker out there has done,’ he says. ‘It didn’t matter if you were a great player, or a great singer, you would sit down with your Yamaha FG-180 on your lap and play through the Bob Dylan songbook. Three chord progressions, maybe a relative minor, and you were away. Over the years there have been dozens if not hundreds of albums (or at least songs) performed in interpretive versions by artists all over the world.’
David loved another Dylan tribute album, Caught in the Convent by The Dylan Project, a group of top-notch UK folk-rockers. What’s it all about: ’20 of Mr Zimmerman’s songs, both the well and some lesser known played with the expertise of musicians who have been in the business for almost 50 years and who really know their Dylan. Do not expect any copies of His Bobness’sown performances; the Dylan Project play the songs their own way, not straying to far from the original but adapting it to their own style.’
And I turned in a newly written review of Dylan’s 1992 album: ‘Good As I Been To You at the time was seen as a return to the acoustic folk music of his early career, but with hindsight it also pointed the way to many of his later, very popular albums that have continued to explore the riches of the folk tradition — both Black and Anglo-European — of the United States of America.’
Gary here again. Of course, music goes on here in the present, and I have a review or two of new releases to share with you.
I’m enjoying a new collection of Finnish folk music called Nouse Luonto: Lauluja Monimuotoisuudestat (which means “Songs About Diversity,” as in the diversity of the natural world). ‘As with any collection, some listeners will be drawn more to some songs than to others. It begins with something anybody who knows Finnish music will recognize, a lovely dance tune “Vid Stormyren” from Frigg. And … it ends with a group sing-along on a song titled “Vaskilintu,” the multiple voices accompanied by lots of violins, some accordions, woodwinds and more; it’s lovely and very moving.’
Another winner is Mathias Eick Quartet’s Lullaby, featuring the warm, often melancholy tones of this Norwegian trumpet player and composer. ‘This is such a strong and appealing album from beginning to end, I think it’s going to figure prominently in my listening for some time to come. Whether playing in ballad mode or more upbeat and rhythmic numbers, this quartet truly shines, with the expert touch of Manfred Eicher producing.’
Finally, I found a lot to like on Folk and Great Tunes from Belarus. ‘The collection is two discs, each with songs by the same 10 bands, plus a bonus by an eleventh band on Disc 1. There’s plenty of variety within that framework. One thing that surprised me was the presence of bagpipes in at least a couple of the bands. Turns out the use of pipes in Belarus apparently goes back at least to the 15th century.’
So let’s finish Bob with Dylan and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Al Kooper at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 performing ‘Like A Rolling Stone’. This was the second of the three songs in the ‘Bob Dylan goes electric’ controversy there, played right after ‘Maggie’s Farm’ and before ‘Phantom Engineer’. He then left the stage and came back to play two more songs on an acoustic guitar. Some folkies still are angry at him.