Go, Went, Gone: Jenny Erpenbeck

Translated from German by Susan BernofskyPublished by Portobello Books, 2017, 304 pages. Original version published in 2015. “War destroys everything…your family, your friends, the place where you lived, your work, your life. When you become foreign…you don’t have a choice. You don’t know where to go. You don’t know anything. I can’t see myself anymore, …

Continue reading Go, Went, Gone: Jenny Erpenbeck

Magpie Murders: Anthony Horowitz

Published by Orion, 2016, 464 pages. This is a whodunit within a whodunit. One Friday evening, Susan Ryeland, the Head of Fiction at Cloverleaf Books, picks up Magpie Murders, the latest manuscript by Alan Conway—one of their most successful writers—and takes it home. She pours herself a glass of wine and starts to read. As …

Continue reading Magpie Murders: Anthony Horowitz

The Gap of Time: Jeanette Winterson

Published by Hogarth Press, 2015, 320 pages. “God doesn’t need to punish us. We can do that for ourselves. That’s why we need forgiveness.” A man driven crazy by jealousy, a wife accused of adultery and a lost child: this is Jeanette Winterson’s take on Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale.[1] But unlike Othello, The Winter’s Tale …

Continue reading The Gap of Time: Jeanette Winterson

Flicker: Theodore Roszak

Published by Summit Books / ‎ Chicago Review Press, 1991, 608 pages. “[E]ntertainment rules more lives than art and rules them more despotically. People don’t put up their guard when they’re being entertained. The images and the messages slip through and take hold deeper.” Flicker is a thriller, a history of film (with a conspiracy …

Continue reading Flicker: Theodore Roszak

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead: Olga Tokarczuk

Translated from Polish by Antonia Lloyd-JonesPublished by Fitzcarraldo Press / Thorndike Press, 2019, 274 pages. Original version published in 2009. “[S]ometimes I feel we’re living in a world we fabricate for ourselves. We decide what’s good and what isn’t, we draw maps of meanings for ourselves… And then we spend our whole lives struggling with …

Continue reading Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead: Olga Tokarczuk

The Sultanpur Chronicles—Shadowed City: Achala Upendran

Published by Hachette India, 2018, 360 pages. Welcome to a world of magic, flying carpets and rakshasas[1]! Before I go any further, full disclosure: Achala Upendran is a friend. This is her first novel. Sultanpur is a vast empire, ranging from mountainous Firozia to the cities of Dastakar. It is home to humans, djinns and …

Continue reading The Sultanpur Chronicles—Shadowed City: Achala Upendran

The Selector of Souls: Shauna Singh Baldwin

Published by Penguin Random House / Vintage / Knopf Canada, 2012, 560 pages. As the book begins, Damini commits a crime because she believes there is no choice. No one sees her commit it except the goddess Anamika Devi (the Unnamed One), but it haunts her. With this incident, Shauna Singh Baldwin sets up the …

Continue reading The Selector of Souls: Shauna Singh Baldwin

Do Not Say We Have Nothing: Madeleine Thien

Published by Knopf Canada / Granta Books, 2016, 480 pages. “It was a time of chaos, of bombs and floods, when love songs streamed from the radios and wept down the streets. Music sustained weddings, births, rituals, work, marching, boredom, confrontation and death; music and stories, even in times like these, were a refuge, a …

Continue reading Do Not Say We Have Nothing: Madeleine Thien

Frankenstein in Baghdad: Ahmed Sadaawi

Translated from Arabic by Jonathan WrightPublished by OneWorld Publications / Penguin, 2018, 272 pages. Original version published in 2013. Ahmed Sadaawi takes the story of Frankenstein and transposes it to Baghdad in the early 2000s, in the aftermath of the US invasion of Iraq. Bombs go off regularly on the streets and people die every …

Continue reading Frankenstein in Baghdad: Ahmed Sadaawi

Sarah’s Key: Tatiana de Rosnay

Published by John Murray / St. Martin's Press, 2007, 294 pages. “He closed his eyes, like so many other Parisians, during that terrible year of 1942. He had closed his eyes the day of the roundup, when he had seen all those people being driven away, packed on buses, taken God knows where. … My …

Continue reading Sarah’s Key: Tatiana de Rosnay