Tuesday 23 July 2024

Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao:


In Tokyo, Hana takes over as the owner of her Dad’s pawnshop, which is the beginning of a mystical, magical journey through strange worlds.  

It’s the basis for an excellent fantasy book and I can see what it is aiming for here: a prose representation of a Studio Ghibli book, or the more fanciful side of manga that doesn’t involve exploding heads or teenage girls.  It’s got the semblance of that,  it is hidebound by it’s didactic narrative - barely a page passes without some life lesson, which often obscures the fantastical nature of the writing.

It’s the second book from the Far East I’ve blogged on this year (after The Marigold Mind Laundry) where the brilliant concept; is polluted by the ‘life lessons’.  More imagination and less illumination would have made for a better read.  It’s published by Bantam on January 16th, 2025 and I thank them for a preview.  #watermoon.  

Sunday 21 July 2024

 Another Man In The Street by Caryl Phillips:

Victor arrives in England from St Kitts in mid-1960’s England - the novel follows his life and career to the present day.  

Firstly, let’s praise the prose, which achieves a lot with its simple, first person narrative.  Structurally, is where the novel’s ambition falls short.  Our sympathies are with Victor in the early part of the novel, which switches when we learn more of his character in the final third. The narrative flashes back and forth and often, scenes break for decades to pass. 

The characters are well drawn (I particularly like Victor’s first British friend, a Scouse barman), but the author dispenses with them far too quickly. And again, it follows the recent trend of short, literary novels where the construction seems more important than the actual substance.  

It’s pitched as a post-Windrush novel of black British experience, but it is too brief, too inconclusive and on the edge of perfection to completely be that. It’s published by Bloomsbury on 16th Jan, 2025 and I thank them for a preview copy.  #anothermaninthestreet.  

Thursday 18 July 2024

 Hot Singles In Your Area by Jordan Shively:


Noah is a dissolute young man who needs a job.  He gets one with ‘Printed Matter’, a local freesheet; which is a front for an organisation that contains something a lot more mysterious than missing dogs and items for sale.  

If you were looking for something that was Harry Potter for grownups (and slightly less hateful), a little Lovecraftian and with a hint of Pratchett and Gaiman, you might find it here.  It’s weaknesses for me lie in its structure - the three POV construction seems too episodic.  See also, it’s use of pages from the newspaper itself, repeated words and illustrations use up what is an already short page count (just under 200).  

It’s emblamatic of an idea that could have done with more work and space.  It’s a weird read that some will find wonderful, but not for me.  It’s released by Unbound on 7th November and I thank them for a preview copy.  #hotsinglesinyourarea.  

Tuesday 16 July 2024

 The Fecking Fabulous Forties Club by Freya Kennedy:


Becca has a crisis of confidence, brought on the death of her best friend’s Mum.  This causes her to re-evaluate her life - socially, parentally, romantically. 

It’s a decent concept for this genre of book, but that market is so overcrowded, the book’s themselves have to be so distinctive to stand out.  It’s funny, where it needs to be funny, but structurally it’s too slow in the narrative.  That itself is propelled by dialogue, which leaves Becca as the only character in the whole thing with any depth.  Where it needs to say anything meaningful (about mortality, growing old, being a parent) the tone seems confessional, rather than what is pitched as a comic novel.  

If anything, it resembles a Marian Keyes book (the Irish setting, a wisecracking Mammy)… but it lacks the comic scalpel and mastery of plot.  It’s published by Boldwood Books on August 20th and  I thank them for a preview copy.  #thefeckingfabulousfortiesclub

Saturday 13 July 2024

Heart Be At Peace by Donal Ryan

If my blogging has been marked by anything this year, it is been debut authors,  it I’ve also read a number of books by Irish writers.  Ryan seems to be popular, the writing is efficient enough.  It seems to be a state of the nation novel, which is a trend in Irish fiction as the country itself sails into uncharted waters.  


It seems, at times to be an indentikit of what an Irish novel looks like in 2024 (the first person narrative of Orla Mackay’s Mouthing), the reflection of Irish history to predict it’s future (Niamh Mulvey’s The Ammendments, one of the best novels this year).  It’s also got some of Roddy Doyle’s sardonic wit and a little hint of Anne Enright’s Kubrickian aloofness. 

The narrative, however seems loose, disconnected.  There’s the odd current of darker waters, but it’s a short novel, in a year of short novels; that doesn’t always have the literary weight that it’s aiming for. It’s published by Random House on 8th August and I thank them for a preview copy.   #heartbeatpeace.

Friday 5 July 2024

 Star Wars - The Rise And Fall Of The Galactic Empire by Dr Chris Kempshall:


I was lucky enough to meet Dr Kempshall at an event organised by Agile Rabbit for his book, Death Stars And Democracy.  That was one where he traced the DNA of an increasingly labyrinthine Star Wars universe into history and politics.

This is as much more expansive work, with an impish, geeky but Jedi masterly tone.  Taking the persona of Beaumont Kin, a soldier in the Resistance, who in the aftermath of The Battle Of Exegol has returned to his role as a historian.  Exgeol is the final battle depicted in Star Wars Episode IX, but you knew that already, didn’t you?

It’s a book that wears that arch concept lightly.  But it is also one where he is able to draw together different aspects of that history, but also make it compelling, put a new spin on things and even question plot holes.  I also loved the odd wink to the fans, such as the end of the chapter on the attack on Yavin (‘How would the empire strike back?’) and the mentions of The Emperor’s emissary who would execute those who were underperforming. 

It’s an essential read for the Star Wars fan in your life and is available now from Doring Kindersley.  

The Quiet by Barnaby Martin:  Hannah is a college lecturer in the mid-21st century, she’s a mum to Isaac, a hearing-impaired child.  She liv...