Published by Time Warner Books / Sphere, 2003, 488 pages. Cambridge, 1354. “The winter that gripped England was the worst anyone could remember. It came early, brought by bitter north winds that were laden with snow and sleet. The River Cam and the King’s Ditch—usually meandering, fetid cesspools that oozed around the little Fen-edge town …
A Focus on Outsiders: An Interview with Nilanjana Roy
Nilanjana Roy is an Indian author, journalist and editor. Her novels include Black River (2022), which was listed as one of the best crime novels of 2023 by The Guardian; The Hundred Names of Darkness (2013); The Wildings (2012), which won the 2013 Shakti Bhatt First Book Award and was shortlisted for the 2013 Commonwealth …
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From Calabria, Italy, to North Cape, Norway: A Walk through Europe’s Wild Places
The Earth Beneath My Feet and On Sacred Ground: Andrew TerrillPublished by Enchanted Rock Press, 2021, 357 pages / 2022, 397 pages. “Finding places that called as though I belonged was one of the reasons I’d started The Walk. ... In truth, I was walking to be somewhere, not get somewhere. My goal was to …
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A Shining: Jon Fosse
Translated from Norwegian by Damion SearlsPublished by Fitzcarraldo Editions, 2023, 46 pages. Original version published in 2023. A man drives without a destination, out of boredom. He continues driving until the road takes him into a forest, and his car gets stuck on the forest road. He gets out of the car and instead of …
The Hatter’s Ghosts: Georges Simenon
Translated from French by Howard CurtisPublished by Penguin, 2022, 196 pages. First translated into English in 1960. Original version published in 1949. “It was the third of December and still raining. ... In fact, for the last twenty days, it had been raining almost without interruption.” It started raining in the small French town of …
They Called Us Enemy: written by George Takei with Justin Eisinger and Steven Scott, and drawn by Harmony Becker
Published by Top Shelf, 2019, 208 pages. After the attack on Pearl Harbour by the Japanese on 7 December 1941, the US government declared that all people of Japanese origin were “enemy aliens”, including those who were US citizens. They were rounded up and incarcerated. The assumption was that their race made them “nonassimilable” and …
Growing Up in the Somali Desert: An Interview with Shugri Said Salh
Shugri Said Salh is a Somali writer, now living in San Diego, USA. Her memoir, The Last Nomad: Coming of Age in the Somali Desert (2021) won the 2022 Gold Nautilus Award, Multicultural and Indigenous Category; and was a finalist for the 2022 Dayton Literary Peace Prize; the 2021 CALIBA/Golden Poppy Award; as well as …
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The Last Murder at the End of the World: Stuart Turton
Published by Raven Books / Bloomsbury Publishing, 2024, 332 pages. It is the end of the world as we know it. A black fog has swept through the world, destroying every living thing in its wake: “the fog kills anything it touches...Unfortunately, it covers the entire earth, except for our island and half a mile …
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Descent into Dystopia
Prophet Song by Paul Lynch, published by Grove Press, 2023, 320 pages.The Bee Sting by Paul Murray, published by Hamish Hamilton, 2023, 645 pages. Review by Usha Raman The scariest dystopian novels are those that seem to be set on the inside edge of our times. Anyone who reads the daily news (or worse, watches …
Black River: Nilanjana Roy
Published by Pushkin Vertigo, 2022, 350 pages. The best crime fiction is more than just a whodunnit—it shines a light on the darker side of society. This is true of Nilanjana Roy’s Black River: it is dark, heart-breaking and ultimately redemptive. Munia is a little girl who lives with her father Chand, a farmer, in …