The Cure for Death by Lightning: Gail Anderson-Dargatz

Published by Houghton Mifflin / Virago, 1996, 304 pages. “The scrapbook was my mother’s way of setting down the days so they wouldn’t be forgotten. This story is my way. No one can tell me these events didn’t happen or it was all a girl’s fantasy. The reminders are there, in that scrapbook, and I …

Continue reading The Cure for Death by Lightning: Gail Anderson-Dargatz

Macbeth: Jo Nesbo

Translated from Norwegian by Don BartlettPublished by Hogarth, 2018, 624 pages. Original version published in 2018. A town in Scotland where the sun never breaks through the clouds, pollution hangs heavy, unemployment is high and people are in thrall to a potent drug called the brew, manufactured and sold by the drug lord, Hecate. This …

Continue reading Macbeth: Jo Nesbo

Three Ways to Capsize a Boat: An Optimist Afloat—Chris Stewart

Published by Sort Of Books, 2009, 180 pages. It all began when Chris Stewart, 29 and out of work, bumps into a friend. “My great-aunt Jane has been on at me for weeks to find her a skipper [for her yacht], and I thought of you straightaway.” Which was a little odd because Stewart had …

Continue reading Three Ways to Capsize a Boat: An Optimist Afloat—Chris Stewart

Daemon Voices: Essays on Storytelling—Philip Pullman

Published by Alfred A. Knopf / David Fickling Books, 2019, 455 pages. “[T]he image of the reader is solitary. We are each alone when we enter the borderland and go on to explore what lies in it and beyond it, in the book we’re engaged with. True, we can come back and and talk about …

Continue reading Daemon Voices: Essays on Storytelling—Philip Pullman

Written in Black: K.H. Lim

Published by Monsoon Books Pte. Ltd., 2015, 240 pages. Jonathan is a 10-year-old boy in Brunei. He lives with his father and brother Aaron and sister Jen. His mother has gone away, ostensibly for health reasons, and his older brother Michael left to join a rock band. When the book starts, Jonathan’s uncle, Ah Peh, …

Continue reading Written in Black: K.H. Lim

Kafka on the Shore: Haruki Murakami

Translated from Japanese by Philip GabrielPublished by Vintage, 2005, 505 pages. Original version published in 2002. A man talks to cats, fish and leeches rain down from the sky, a man dressed like Johnny Walker (of whisky fame) is making a flute from cats’ souls, and a stone opens the door to another world. Welcome …

Continue reading Kafka on the Shore: Haruki Murakami

Exit West: Mohsin Hamid

Published by Hamish Hamilton / Penguin, 2017, 240 pages. A man and a woman meet in a city in what is probably Syria and fall in love. Civil war is initially just a distant presence in their lives. But then it all starts to fall apart, and strange doors start opening up, leading out of …

Continue reading Exit West: Mohsin Hamid

Best books of 2018

My request for the best books you read this year had an overwhelming response! Thank you to those of you who sent in their lists.   The lists below not only cover  a wide range of subjects, but also span centuries, from 2018 to those published hundreds of years ago. Fiction includes fantasy, crime and …

Continue reading Best books of 2018

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle: Stuart Turton

Published by Raven Books / Bloomsbury Publishing, 2018, 544 pages. Stuart Turton takes the traditional English setting for a whodunit—a country house thrumming with secrets, tensions and fears—and turns it into something completely unexpected. I have read a lot of crime fiction, and this is one of the most original books I’ve come across. Take …

Continue reading The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle: Stuart Turton

Einstein’s Dreams: Alan Lightman

Published by Bloomsbury Publishing / Vintage, 1992, 192 pages. What if time flowed in a different way from the one we know and we are used to? What if it circled in on itself, so we relived our lives endlessly without ever knowing it? What if it moved in fits and starts? What if you …

Continue reading Einstein’s Dreams: Alan Lightman