The Quiet Earthquakes of Anne Tyler ~ Three Days in June & The Amateur Marriage

Anne Tyler doesn’t write novels that shout. She writes the ones that echo. Long after you’ve finished, her stories hum softly in your chest ~ stories of family, time, small decisions, and the quiet wreckage they can leave behind.

Her latest, Three Days in June, arrives like a letter from a friend you thought had forgotten you. It’s a tender, intimate portrait of memory, ageing, and the complexity of lifelong relationships. In it, we spend just three days in the company of a woman confronting the strange shape of her life ~ past, present, and possible.

It echoes a deeper current that’s run through Tyler’s work for decades. If you found yourself moved by Three Days in June, there’s a quiet masterpiece you might’ve missed: The Amateur Marriage.

Photo of 2004 version of The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler
The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler


Published in 2004, The Amateur Marriage is everything the title suggests ~ and everything Anne Tyler does best. It charts a mismatched couple through decades of mismatched time, showing how ordinary incompatibility can ripple through generations. What makes it remarkable is not drama, but patience. Tyler invites you to watch as these characters stumble and endure, never quite finding the language for what they need.

What ties the two together?

In both books, Tyler examines the small tectonic shifts of domestic life. Nothing explodes ~ and yet, everything changes. The marriages she writes about aren’t failures or triumphs. They’re lived-in. Flawed. Real. And somehow, hopeful.

These aren’t just stories of romantic entanglement. They’re emotional cartographies ~ maps of how people learn (or fail to learn) to live beside each other.

If you’re looking for fiction that understands the beauty and ache of everyday life, start with Three Days in June ~ then maybe walk backwards through her work. There’s treasure there.

Affiliate links help support small bookshops and independent creators. If you purchase through the above, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you ~ and it helps me keep sharing books I love. Many thanks for your support.

Surrendering to the End: J.G. Ballard and the Beautiful Disaster of Eco-Fiction and Cli-Fi

J.G. Ballard's The Crystal World
The Crystal World by J.G. Ballard

Before the climate crisis was headline news, J.G. Ballard was already writing the Earth’s slow descent into alien landscapes. His novels don’t offer action heroes or tech-fixes ~ they present acceptance, transformation, and often psychological unravelling in the face of planetary change.
Here are three key Ballard novels that sit perfectly in today’s eco-dystopian wave:
________________________________________

The Drowned World (1962)

Set in a future where global warming has melted the polar ice caps, London is submerged and teeming with tropical flora and fauna. The novel isn’t about survival ~ it’s about evolution. Ballard’s characters feel drawn to the heat and strangeness, pulled backward through time, toward the primordial.
“Soon it would be too hot. Looking out from the stairwell, Kerans watched the huge sun sink below the horizon…”
It’s hypnotic, slow, and eerie ~ a classic of eco-lit before we had the term.
________________________________________

The Drought (aka The Burning World, 1965)

Rain no longer falls. Rivers are dry. Civilisation cracks open under the pressure of thirst. But again ~ this isn’t Mad Max. Ballard explores how internal landscapes collapse alongside the outer ones. It’s haunting, sun-scorched, and bleak in the most compelling way.
________________________________________

The Crystal World (1966)

Possibly his most dreamlike eco-disaster. A strange crystalline disease spreads through the jungle, turning everything ~ trees, birds, time itself ~ into glittering stillness. It’s beautiful. It’s terrifying. And Ballard’s protagonist doesn’t try to stop it ~ he walks toward it.
________________________________________

Why Ballard Now?

Because we’re arguably already living in that surreal slow-motion collapse ~ the heat, the flood, the drought. Ballard’s novels feel less like predictions and more like mood-boards for the now.
________________________________________

If you want to explore the roots of climate fiction, or just fancy a read that’ll make you question your grip on reality ~ I’ve linked the best editions below via affiliate. Every click supports my struggling bookshop and your local climate doom dealer (me).

Buy The Drowned World on Amazon
Get The Crystal World here (i do have this but haven’t added it to the database yet!)
Check out The Drought / The Burning World
All other J.G. Ballard books

Please check out my other recommendations such as mushroomy books and George Orwell books

Plus if you want anything on Amazon if you click through this link it might well earn me some commission at no extra cost to you which might save my little shop from complete closure…

Inside the Mind of Orwell: A Look at the Original Nineteen Eighty-Four Manuscript

Ever wanted to peer over George Orwell’s shoulder as he crafted one of the most chilling visions of the future? This facsimile edition of his original Nineteen Eighty-Four manuscript lets you do just that.

In the margins, you can see his mind working: crossed-out lines, rewritten phrases, even entire paragraphs restructured. The physicality of it is intense ~ this wasn’t typed and backspaced, it was scratched out in pen, built line by line in longhand while Orwell battled illness and isolation on the Isle of Jura.

Holding this book feels like holding a piece of literary archaeology especially because it’s one of the few surviving Orwell manuscripts – he destroyed or lost many of them. The original is held by the John Hay Library at Brown University in the US, this a facsimile of that, it’s an artefact of literary and cultural power. It’s basically the blueprint for modern dystopia.


There doesn’t seem to be a copy of this beautifully reproduced facsimile on Amazon right now, but here’s a link to a few lovely version’s of the novel, you can really help me out by buying through this link as i could get a small commission.
Amazon affiliate link for a clothbound classic
Amazon affiliate Jura Edition
Amazon affiliate link to paperback version
Amazon affiliate link to hardback edition
Amazon affiliate link to George Orwell boxset
I could be persuaded to part with mine.


This is more than a collector’s piece ~ it’s a keyhole into the soul of a writer whose warnings feel more urgent than ever.

Please check out my other blogs, here’s one on mushroom books, and if you’re feeling especially sorry for this micro business in this difficult economic climate please consider using my Amazon Affiliate link if you are purchasing from them instead of me… and this applies to everything not just books.

If you want to look at my current catalogue it’s on Abe but bear in mind this is a tiny fraction of my stock as it’s not humanly possible to list it all.

Feel free to contact me if you are looking for special items that maybe more ephemeral.

Books That Mushroomed My Mind: A Fungal Reading List

There’s something about mushrooms ~ quiet, mysterious, essential ~ that makes them irresistible. Whether you’re a forager, a dreamer, or just fungus-curious, here’s a selection of mushroom-inspired books that have taken root in my mind over time.

These are affiliate links, which means if you buy through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you (thank you for helping a small business in this difficult economic climate!).

1. Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake

A poetic, mind-expanding journey into the fungal kingdom. Sheldrake explores how fungi shape our world and challenge our ideas of individuality. There is now an illustrated version. Also: the author grew mushrooms on his own book. Iconic.
Affiliate link to Entangled Life on Amazon… but you can buy this one from me on Abe books too if it’s still available.

2. Mycelium Running by Paul Stamets

A fungi classic. Stamets dives deep into how mushrooms can help save the world ~ from restoring ecosystems to creating sustainable technologies.
Affiliate link to Mycelium Running

3. The Mushroom at the End of the World by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing

An anthropological look at the matsutake mushroom and its unexpected role in post-capitalist survival. Beautifully written and strangely comforting.
Affiliate link to The Mushroom at the End of the World

4. Collins Complete Guide to British Mushrooms and Toadstools

Ideal for UK foragers. A clear, practical guide with photos and habitat info. Pop it in your rucksack and head to the woods.
Affiliate link to Collins Guide

5. Mushrooms by Roger Phillips

The mushroom guide that serious foragers swear by. It’s chunky, detailed, and beautifully photographed.
Affiliate link to Roger Phillips’ Mushrooms

6. Kew – The Magic of Mushrooms: Fungi in folklore, superstition and traditional medicine (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew)

A dreamy and practical journey through the folklore and medicinal use of mushrooms. Great for folklorists, and mushroom healers alike.
Affiliate link to The Magic of Mushrooms

7. Fictional Fungi: A Bonus Pick

Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia is a gothic horror with mycelial surprises. If you like your fungi spooky, this one’s for you.
Affiliate link to Mexican Gothic

I’ll be adding to this list as I come across more fungal treasures. Feel free to share your favourites with me on Twitter or Instagram!
Let’s keep the mushroom conversation growing.

…and for any other Mushroom books like Fungarium pictured above or any other books in general ~ if you want to help our bookshop please consider using our affiliate link to search anything in Amazon ~ I will love you forever….

more blogs