Rebecca: Daphne du Maurier

Published by Virago / Hachette, 1938, 432 pages. “Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.” That one sentence is so evocative of this book, partly thanks to the 1940 Hitchcock film with Joan Fontaine and Laurence Olivier. There is something haunting about Rebecca—both the book and the title character. Rebecca is narrated by …

Continue reading Rebecca: Daphne du Maurier

Wife of the Gods: Kwei Quartey

Published by Random House, 2009, 319 pages. Set in Ghana, this is the first in a series featuring Detective Inspector Darko Dawson.  Gladys Mensah is found dead in the forest near Ketanu. Her body, seemingly untouched, is discovered by Efia, a trokosi or a “wife of the gods”. In reality, Efia is one of the …

Continue reading Wife of the Gods: Kwei Quartey

Fly Already: Etgar Keret

Translated from Hebrew by Sondra Silverston, Nathan Englander, Jessica Cohen, Miriam Shlesinger and Yardenne GreenspanPublished by Riverhead Books, 2019, 209 pages. Original version published in 2018. A child encourages a man to jump off the top of a building, believing that the man is a superhero and will fly. A man keeps the compacted wreck …

Continue reading Fly Already: Etgar Keret

Inspired by Mexico: An Interview with Kat de Moor

Photo: Lucía Brándulas Kat de Moor is a writer, who has just published her first two books, Anatomía de una entrega (translated into English by Robin Myers as Chronicle of a Longing) and Querido Miércoles (translated by Robin Myers as Dear Wednesday). Kat was born in Belgium where she studied translation and interpretation. Fluent in …

Continue reading Inspired by Mexico: An Interview with Kat de Moor

Feminine Ingenuity—How Women Inventors Changed America: Anne L. Macdonald

Published by Ballantine Books, 1992, 415 pages. “Although women have invented since the beginning of time, it seems as if full recognition of their role has been painfully slow.” When you think of inventors, who do you think of? Usually it is men like Thomas Edison, the Wright brothers and Giovanni Marconi. Seeing that women …

Continue reading Feminine Ingenuity—How Women Inventors Changed America: Anne L. Macdonald

The New Wilderness: Diane Cook

Published by Oneworld Publications, 2020, 416 pages. This book is set in a dystopian future in the United States at a time when all the natural resources have been used up by humans. Cities are polluted, the air is almost unbreathable, and children are dying as a result. One of these sick children is Beatrice’s …

Continue reading The New Wilderness: Diane Cook

The Desert and the Drum: Mbarek Ould Beyrouk

Translated from French by Rachel McGillPublished by Dedalus, 2018, 170 pages. Original version published in 2015. “There was no moon, no stars. The light has been drained away, the sky left mute. I could distinguish neither colours nor shapes. Dunes and trees had been engulfed by the universe, sucked into its sidereal blackness. … I …

Continue reading The Desert and the Drum: Mbarek Ould Beyrouk

The Bone Readers: Jacob Ross

Published by Little, Brown and Company / Peepal Tree Press / Sphere, 2016, 264 pages. This is a thoroughly enjoyable whodunit from a Grenadian writer. Michael Digson (“Digger”) is out of work, living on the island of Camaho.[1] He is the illegitimate son (“outside child”) of a maid and her employer, the Commissioner of Police. …

Continue reading The Bone Readers: Jacob Ross

Real Life: Brandon Taylor

Published by Daunt Books, 2020, 336 pages. “It was a cool evening in late summer, when Wallace, his father dead for several weeks, decided that he would meet his friends at the pier after all.” Wallace is a young, gay, Black man who is four years into a degree in biochemistry at a predominantly white …

Continue reading Real Life: Brandon Taylor

The Ayah and Other Stories: Chanis Fernando-Boisard

Published by Amaryllis, 2017, 132 pages. The short stories in this collection capture the small but seismic shifts in a person’s life: the distraction of a tutor whose wife has left him; the regret of a woman who has walked out of her marriage of 30 years; and a woman realizing that her dream house …

Continue reading The Ayah and Other Stories: Chanis Fernando-Boisard