Emma Inch
banner
emmainch.bsky.social
Emma Inch
@emmainch.bsky.social
360 followers 270 following 190 posts
multi award-winning writer | academic | UK Beer Writer of the Year 2018 | co-author: World’s Greatest Beers | producer: Same Again? mental health podcast | erstwhile rockabilly DJ | she/her | 🏳️‍🌈 | trans ally 🏳️‍⚧️ www.fermentationonline.com
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
I'm still new to Bluesky, so here's a bit of info for those who don't know me. I'm a beer writer & audio maker & have my fingers in a number of pies (which, as everyone knows, go perfectly with beer). I post mainly about beer, pubs, books, mental health & equality. More at fermentationonline.com
* On time for the first - and possibly only - time…
And I loved this account of a young Damien, aged just 6, finding a wild hop growing at the roadside & discovering for the first time the beauty & aroma that this magical plant holds.

‘It was sugary-sour. It smelled like something precious. I wanted to lock it up somehow & take it back with me…’
Damien Le Bas - The Stopping Places (2018)

As someone with distant Gypsy roots of my own & a love of travelling the country in my campervan, I thoroughly enjoyed this honest & insightful account of one man’s journey through some of the Traveller stopping places of old. So many stories seldom told.
David Mitchell - Slade House (2016)

It’s always good when you find a book by one of your favourite writers in a charity shop. I scooped up this pleasantly creepy little novel & read it in a couple of sittings. Bargain.
Chloe Dalton - Raising Hare (2024)

The only time I’ve ever seen a hare, it appeared in the road like a bad portent during a somewhat terrifying nighttime drive through France, but this fascinating & personal book has shown me the beauty of this
misunderstood animal.

@chloedalton.bsky.social
For the first - and possibly only - time this year, here’s my regular round up of the best books I’ve read this month - September 2025

On some days it was warm enough to read outside, on others I had my central heating on high, but these books have seen me through the change in seasons.

#booksky
With a Trump flag hanging just a few hundred yards from where I live, and now the shelves of my local Tesco Express completely devoid of houmous, it’s hard not to feel personally targeted as a lesbian at the moment…
Thank you to @willhawkes.bsky.social & his @londonbeercity.bsky.social newsletter for drawing this wonderful film to my attention. It’s a fantastic snapshot - featuring some very familiar faces - of the excitement of the London brewing scene back in 2010.

youtu.be/DggCEQoLnAs?...
London Brewers Alliance 2010
YouTube video by LambicFilms
youtu.be
Reposted by Emma Inch
Easington, 1984, photo by Izabela Jedrzejczyk. From her series Striking Women, about women there who were supporting miners during the strike.
The beer briefcase is back????
Reposted by Emma Inch
What we did in school today. Here’s an amazing graphic summary, drawn by Rebecca Osborne as we talked, of today’s Pubs in the Community meeting @nottinghamtrentuni.bsky.social organised by @culturalclare.bsky.social
Elliot Page - Pageboy (2023)

Meandering memoir by the actor, Elliot Page that gives an insight into his own transition & the wider, sometimes toxic, world of Hollywood.
Matt Rowland Hill - Original Sins (2022)

Given the subject matter, I did not expect this book to be as funny as it was but it had me laughing aloud at some points. A deeply personal, honest account of addiction & forgiveness with one of the best opening chapters I’ve ever read.
Kieran Yates - All The Houses I’ve Ever Lived In (2023)

A powerful memoir of home & an intelligent & timely account of how the housing system in the UK fails so many of us.
Yael van der Wouden - The Safekeep (2024)

Shortlisted for the Booker Prize & winner of the 2025 Women's Prize for Fiction, this is also in the running for my own personal book of the year. An absolute masterpiece of a novel & a lesson in history everyone should learn. Read it.
Fashionably late, as always, here’s my regular round up of the best books I’ve read in the past month - August 2025

One novel & three - very different - memoirs have kept me company.

#booksky
Reposted by Emma Inch
I am a trans woman in the UK. My most influential enemies are the guy who co-created a sitcom about Catholic priests back in the 90s, a woman who wrote some children’s books about wizards, and the prime minister.

Sometimes I feel a little crazy about this.
Just so you know, I fixed my printer this morning so I’m gonna have a go at world peace later.
#NotAllHeroesWearCapes
*nowhere near York though!
I’m currently away in my motorhome in Pembrokeshire & have been using @beerbreaks.bsky.social as a guide for St David’s & Tenby!
We definitely need a UK motorhome / beer guide (commissions welcome!) My favourite beery place to stay is currently Edwardstone White Horse (home of Little Earth Project).
Reposted by Emma Inch
If I have to explain to you why it's a bad idea to use a machine that makes shit up 15-80% of the time AND destroys the environment AND contributes to rising fascism and genocide AND puts brilliant skillful creatives out of work by stealing their work, then we're already speaking different languages
Kit de Waal - Without Warning & Only Sometimes (2022)
Fascinating memoir of a childhood lived at the meeting point of different worlds. Painful at times but filled to the brim with courage. Wonderful.
@kitdewaal.com
Greg Marshall - Leg: The Story of a Limb & the Boy Who Grew From It (2023)
Wonderfully entertaining & incredibly intimate memoir of disability & queerness. Loved it.