Lou is a girl in the lower sixth of a Liverpool comp. Her English teacher asks her to help Isobel acclimatise to school life - her family have moved from London. Initially, Lou and Isobel don’t like each other… but against the scarlet background of the city, A Levels and friendship… something blossoms.
A Scouse husband from Liverpool now living life in the Devon Countryside with my family. Writing, caring for my wife, home educating and generally being a legend. Scribbling about music, art, life and geeky stuff. Often to be found drinking tea, quizzing on the local radio and having light sabre fights with the family.
Wednesday, 12 June 2024
Ok, by now you should have sussed this is a teen Scouse version of Pride And Prejudice (Lou as Elizabeth and Isobel as Darcy). And that also works in the settings - substitute boho Liverpool, beach parties, Ladies Day at Aintree and going out in your PJ’s for balls and banquets. Isobel even has a nasty old bat of an auntie, Austenites will love that.
But this is no bad thing. It’s got an enthusiasm, a warmth and wit that I’ve not encountered this year. And although this is YA book that knows its audience well (with themes of sexuality, neurodiversity, revenge porn) it’s far too good for them. Buy it for the teenager in your life and read it first.
Leanne Egan should also be congratulated for writing a book that is both definitely Scouse, a brilliant debut and one of my favourite books this year. It’s published by Harper Collins on 4th July and I thank them for preview copy. #loverbirds.
Monday, 10 June 2024
Marigold Mind Laundry by Jungeun Yun
Jiuen is a mythical creature who arrives in Korea. She creates a laundry, where painful experiences can be wiped from your life and wisdom is dispensed with snacks.
The books is a massive success in its homeland and it will probably replicate that here. It’s written in a very child-like parable structure, with the stories appearing to be interlinked in some way. There’s also the element of Jiuen might well be millions of years old and can manifest metaphysical washing machines and the elimination of pain through magic.
About midway through, the novel becomes episodic, with each ‘life lesson’ delivered and the next one incoming. The narrative is also wrapped up far too neatly and with possibly the oldest of plot devices.
Often moving, sometimes too mythical for it’s own good this mix of self-help and magic realism never quite fits together, though it will have the same cultural place as Life Of Pi. It’s published by Penguin on October 3rd and I thank them for a preview copy. #marigoldmindlaundry.
Bless Your Heart - Lindy Ryan
In pre-millenial Texas, three generations of Evans women run a smalltown funeral parlour. Their business also covers protecting the town from Strigoi, the restless spirits of the dead. A major incursion, plus their granddaughter in high school causes big problems.
One look at the cover, you’d consider this to be both cute and arch. It’s not quite that, but the early sections work well - deep fried Southern wisdom, combined with some actually well-written gore (one victim is literally gnawed to death by a toothless pensioner).
Where the novel fails is in a clunking narrative and a mix of styles - high school novel, dark comic novel, police procedural and fantasy novel - and never really settles for either. The 1999 timeframe seems odd, but with a key event taking police 25 years before and with the way the novel ends; I feel this might be the last we’ve not seen of The Evan’s’. A sharper, more committed narrative might give the whole thing more bite, rather than gums. It’s published by Rebellion on 18th July and I thank them for a preview copy. #blessyourheart.
Sunday, 2 June 2024
Milf by Paloma Faith:
Normally, I avoid ‘celebrity’ books - they bring me out in a rash. However, I find Paloma Faith an interesting character. And this book doesn’t disappoint. Partially, is an attempt to reclaim the word and give it a positive spin. But that is only partially the purpose of it.
She is brutally honest about her own sexuality, miscarriage, motherhood, IVF, the break up of the relationship with her children’s Dad and her own life. Mixed in with that, is her perceptions for what it is like being a woman artist, raising two kids as a single parent and contrasting her own life with her Mother’s.
In broader terms, she talks about her own hopes for what the future of feminism looks like. And if that is the intention of this book - one that changes the world - time will tell. But it’s that non-linear, snapshot style of the book that shouldn’t work, does. Paloma Faith has added her another string to her bow in being such a skilled, candid and funny writer.
It is a pleasant surprise to find something that is both glitzy and gritty. It’s published by Ebury on June 6th and I thank them for a preview copy. #MILF
Thursday, 30 May 2024
The Divorce by Moa Herngren
In suburban Stockholm, Niklas and Bea have almost the perfect lifestyle, with two daughters and a circle of friends. One night, Niklas goes out and texts he’s not coming back. If that sounds like a murder mystery with fabulous knitwear, it isn’t. The first half of the book is Bea’s side of the story as she copes with the break up, the middle is Niklas version of events and the third is the final part of the story as the two threads come together at Christmas.
It’s in the construction of it that makes the novel sing. Not just that three act structure, but the significance of what seem to be insignificant small things at the time - a childhood friend, a tattoo, an incorrectly booked ferry crossing, a kitchen renovation.
Added to this, the sense of dislocation from the foreign location and the now, almost historical setting of 2015. Tribute must also be paid to the translation by Alice Menzies, which lays on the pain and mordant humour expertly.
If it owes more than a worktop to The Doll’s House, no matter. It’s a twisting, emotionally painful read. It’s published by Bonnier on 4th July and I thank them for a preview copy. #thedivorce
Sunday, 26 May 2024
Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe:
Margo is the result of a one-nighter between a professional gambler and a professional wrestler. She gets pregnant by her college tutor and has trouble paying the bills. She turns to camwork, negotiating running an Only Fans account, the legal process of proving she is fit to raise a child and repairing her damaged relationship with two equally damaged human beings.
It’s an outrageous concept and Thorpe makes the most of it, using American subculture (wrestling, gambling, porn, social media, LARPing) as the basis of a critique of misogyny and capitalism itself. That’s not to say this is a deep, angry novel - it’s one that is broadly comic and often very funny. Margo’s camwork is portrayed as ludicrous, surreal and the concept of what its purpose is, derided.
It’s a novel that matures rapidly and gets rid of its somewhat arch framework, the construction of a novel (Margo is a creative writing student) in the first half of the book. Ultimately though, it doesn’t quite hang together as a comic novel with a serious message. However, it’s one that has already sold internationally and the TV series is already in production, with Elle Fanning as Margo and Nicole Kidman as her Mum… it’s one that you’re going to need to have an opinion on. It’s published by Hodder And Stoughton on July 4th and I thank them for a preview copy. #margosgotmoneytroubles
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