Daily Mail

CHRISTMAS Give some REAL Christmas cheer !

From the surprise hit of the season to the wisdom of a Buddhist monk and a medic’s black humour, slip one of these into a loved one’s stocking to . . .

- MARK MASON

Should it all get a bit much for you this Christmas, console yourself with the thought that at least you’re not working as a doctor in an NhS maternity ward. Such was the fate for several years of Adam Kay, author of the runaway bestseller This Is Going To hurt, who returns with his ‘difficult second album’,

Twas The Nightshift Before Christmas (Picador £9.99).

Kay’s first festive period on duty is so busy that Christmas dinner — not taken until 5pm — consists of ‘stolen toast from the ward kitchen, served with low-ranking Quality Streets’.

one baby is delivered as a nearby radio plays Christmas classics, including the famous song by Johnny Mathis, prompting the woman giving birth to yell: ‘No, Johnny. That is not what happens when a child is born.’ Another woman is informed that she’ll have to undergo a caesarean section.

She groans. ‘My other one was born on Christmas day, too. Everyone’s going to think I do this deliberate­ly to save on presents.’

The Life Scientific: Inventors (W&N, £18.99) is one of a series of books inspired by the brilliant Radio 4 series in which Jim Al-Khalili interviews scientists about their careers. here, we learn about the thermostat­ic control which prevents overheatin­g in the electric motor driving your car’s windscreen wipers. It’s called an otter G: the man who invented it (John C. Taylor) was working for otter Controls, and whenever he showed it to people they said: ‘Gee whizz! That’s small.’

Back in the 1960s, the computer coding pioneer Stephanie Shirley was working from home with a young baby, but didn’t want clients to know that. So when they rang up she played a tape-recording of several typewriter­s being used in the background. her company was eventually worth half a billion pounds.

NOT long before he died, the writer laurie lee gave a series of interviews for a TV documentar­y about Slad, the Gloucester­shire village he made famous in his book Cider With Rosie.

Transcript­s of these have now been collected as Down In The Valley: A Writer’s Landscape (Penguin Classics £12.99), in which lee reminisces about events such as harvest festival in the village pub, ‘the vicar going slowly green on cider’, and the time one of his friends gave a poetry reading at Cheltenham ladies’ College. Asked for advice by one of the girls, the friend replied: ‘ Never get married, it’s death to poetry.’ As lee recalls: ‘It made the teachers twitch a bit.’

The Boy, The Mole, The Fox And The Horse, by Charlie Mackesy (Penguin £16.99) chronicles the thoughts of the title characters as they wander and wonder. ‘Is your glass half empty or half full?’ asks the mole. ‘I think I’m grateful to have a glass,’ says the boy.

The mole’s favourite saying is: ‘If at first you don’t succeed, have some cake.’ You simply can’t argue with that.

Haemin Sunim is a Zen Buddhist teacher whose previous book, The Things You Can See only When You Slow down, sold over three million copies. he’s back with more life lessons in Love For Imperfect Things (Penguin £9.99). These take the form of poems, such as: ‘It’s oK not to be ranked first, second or even third. Compare yourself not with others, but with the old you.’

The jacket of Quicksand Tales: The Misadventu­res Of Keggie Carew ( Canongate £16.99) refers to the author’s talent for ‘turning embarrassm­ent into gold’ in prose that will make you ‘ laugh, wince and curl your toes’. Actually,

Carew’s recollecti­ons are slightly darker than you’d expect from that descriptio­n, less cringe-a-thon, more reflection on life’s vicissitud­es. But I did chuckle when she breaks into someone’s house to retrieve her stolen possession­s. First rule in such cases: make sure you get the right house.

Nicholas Foulkes’s Time Tamed (Simon & Schuster £25) is a wonderful account of how mankind has measured the fourth dimension these past few thousand years. We see omega

Speedmaste­rs with extra-long straps so NASA’s moonwalker­s can wear them outside their spacesuits, and learn that until 1872 the Japanese gave the hours names rather than numbers. Midday was ‘ horse o’clock’, midnight was ‘rat o’clock’.

Even if you judge books solely on the number of words for your money, Gyles Brandreth’s Dancing By The Light Of The Moon (Penguin £14.99) would be a winner. Brandreth provides over 400 pages of top- notch poems by everyone from Shakespear­e to Simon Armitage.

But his mission is to get you learning the poems by heart. Apparently this improves your academic performanc­e, your happiness, your resistance to dementia — even your love life.

If you want a poem that teaches you something — especially at Christmas — try A Word To husbands by ogden Nash: ‘To keep your marriage brimming / With love in the loving cup / Whenever you’re wrong, admit it; / Whenever you’re right, shut up.’

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