Books
Thomas Halliday: Otherlands review - diving into the deep pastWednesday, 02 February 2022Life on Earth: David Attenborough has it covered, right? Well, globally, maybe, but not historically. He has presented world-spanning series on pretty much every kind of life except bacteria, but it’s life in the present. There’s the odd look back... Read more... |
Tessa Hadley: Free Love review - the Sixties, the suburbs and the hippie dreamTuesday, 25 January 2022Free Love opens in 1967 and remains within that heady era throughout; no flashbacks, no spanning of generations as in Hadley's wonderful novels The Past or Late in the Day. Phyllis, aged 40, is a suburban housewife, C of E, deeply apolitical and a... Read more... |
Best of 2021: BooksFriday, 31 December 2021“Duck! Here comes another year.” We can, I think, all empathise with the motions and emotions of Ogden Nash’s new year poem, “Good Riddance, But Now What?” Before, however, we bid a troublesome year farewell, we look back at the year in fiction and... Read more... |
The Holiness of Sex: Leonard Cohen's Biblical TheologyWednesday, 15 December 2021On hearing that I had recently written a book about Leonard Cohen, someone asked me why I thought Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature rather than Cohen. Not being a Nobel prize adjudicator I couldn’t answer the question but I did... Read more... |
Peter Robison: Flying Blind review – a story of decline and crawlTuesday, 30 November 2021Thomas Pynchon’s saturnine '70s novel Gravity’s Rainbow (1973) begins with “[a] screaming [that] comes across the sky. It has happened before, but there is nothing to compare it to now.” In contrast, on 10 March 2019, when a Boeing 737 MAX operated... Read more... |
Lucie Elven: The Weak Spot review - a cryptic modern fableTuesday, 23 November 2021For most of us, fluttering our eyelids to convince a loved one to cook dinner is harmless meddling. Complimenting our boss on their new coat before asking for a promotion is necessary cunning. For the characters in Lucie Elven’s debut novel The Weak... Read more... |
Sarah Moss: The Fell review - a dark night on the hillsMonday, 22 November 2021Sarah Moss’s new novel is a slim snapshot of a moment of fear and danger in the year of Covid. That year when judgement and recrimination ruled, and neighbourly feeling was in short supply. It is almost too close to the bone, but it is a neat... Read more... |
Claire Tomalin: The Young H.G. Wells review – days of the cometWednesday, 17 November 2021In late 1894 an unknown 28-year-old science tutor and wannabe writer finished a story in his dismal lodgings just north of Euston station. Divorced, after a brief, calamitous marriage to a cousin, he lived with a new lover even though the hostile... Read more... |
Devin Jacobsen: Breath Like the Wind at Dawn review – the disturbances of the Civil WarMonday, 15 November 2021How do you imagine the wind at dawn? Biting, brisk, peremptory – a kind of summons as another day begins? For Les Tamplin, wife-beater, sheriff, father to three sons, it is a detective, deathly wind, "the wind that cannot be stopped" which... Read more... |
Ruth Ozeki: The Book of Form and Emptiness review - where the objects speakFriday, 05 November 2021“Form is emptiness, emptiness is form.” Ruth Ozeki’s latest novel takes its name from a Buddhist heart sutra that meditates on reality and questions of human existence. It’s a big question for a big book. A Zen priest as well as a teacher, writer,... Read more... |
Mark Bould: The Anthropocene Unconscious review - climate anxiety is written everywhereTuesday, 02 November 2021Our everyday lives, if we’re fortunate, may be placid, even contented. A rewarding job, for some; good eats; warm home; happy family; entertainment on tap. Yet, even for the privileged, awareness of impending change – probably disaster – intrudes.... Read more... |
Stuart Jeffries: Everything, All the Time, Everywhere - How We Became Post-Modern review - entertaining origin-story for the world of todayTuesday, 02 November 2021In his 1985 essay “Not-Knowing”, the American writer Donald Barthelme describes a fictional situation in which an unknown “someone” is writing a story.“From the world of conventional signs,” Barthelme writes, laying out for the reader this story... Read more... |