I'm currently reading Ben Aaronovitch's new Rivers of London novel, False Value, but I'm finding it rather slow going as my brain isn't really managing to focus on fiction at the moment, so I took a brief break to see whether, having bought a new (and much larger) phone recently, I'd be able to read the latest of the graphic novels, which I hadn't bought when it was released as my iPad had died and I didn't rate my chances of reading it on either a nine-year-old kindle or an iPhone 5S.
It turned out to be perfectly readable on my new phone; the kindle editions have a feature which enables you to scroll through frame by frame, rather than trying to see a whole page on the screen, which makes it easier. Action at a Distance is a flashback to a case of Nightingale's from the late 1950s; it was fun, if fairly slight, and interesting to see some of Nightingale's past.
It turned out to be perfectly readable on my new phone; the kindle editions have a feature which enables you to scroll through frame by frame, rather than trying to see a whole page on the screen, which makes it easier. Action at a Distance is a flashback to a case of Nightingale's from the late 1950s; it was fun, if fairly slight, and interesting to see some of Nightingale's past.