Thursday 15 August 2024

Really Good, Actually by Monica Heisey: 

You may know the author from her journalism, her work on Schitt’s Creek, you may have even heard on This Way Up.  

Leave all that aside.  This is that sweet spot between funny and heartbreaking. Maggie’s marriage ends after just under two years and she navigates single life, sexuality and picking up the pieces.  

This alternates between deadpan humour and the pure emotional carnage of a break up. It’s heartfelt, filthy and warm at the same time. 

Wednesday 14 August 2024

 Friends Of Dorothy by Sandi Toksvig: 


This is Toksvig’s sixth novel.  It’s an amiable read, but offers little in plot development.  Stevie (a policeman) and Amber (a paramedic) but their first home in a quiet part of London.  The only trouble is, the previous resident, an old woman called Dorothy is still there.  As Stevie and Amber cope with a new home, deciding to have children and demanding, often dangerous jobs Dorothy becomes a constant presence in their lives.  

Fan’s of her warm, yet cheeky humour will lap this up.  Dorothy (who likes pop music and Minecraft) is a fabulous creation.  And it is nice to see such a queer friendly, acceptant novel.  The real problems lie structurally.  There is no real sort of plot, it sort of ambles from situation to situation.  That episodic nature will work on TV.  And although the novel ends on a sweet note, a shocking situation in the final third is resolved far too easily.  

Some may enjoy this, but I found its lack of focus problematic.  It’s published by Little Brown on September 26th and I thank them for a preview copy.  #friendsofdorothy.

Monday 5 August 2024

 The Secret Public by John Savage: 


This is a high concept book, discussing LGBTQ in culture.  It’s as enriching as any of his previous books, even with such a high concept as Sylvester being the last gay pop star and Little Richard as the first.  

You can’t argue with near 700 pages of book, with another 100 of notes.  We move from Richard, through the sixties with Joe Meek and Epstein.  The 70’s see Bowie declare his gayness, and backtrack whilst Jobriath crashes and burns. 

It’s a book that admits it’s own failings (the lack of lesbians, those who chose not to come out). Plus vinyl nerds will debate whether ‘Soul Makossa’ was the first disco record. 

But as music journalism becomes more what Zappa said, Savage is the exception that proves the rule.  It’s published by Faber And Faber.  

Thursday 1 August 2024

 Fox and Haze are the proverbial couple goals.  He’s an investment banker, she’s an artist.  They have an adorable baby daughter.  But the relationship has become stale, lately.  Since they agreed to stop serial killing domestic abusers, paedophiles and gropers.  Who’s gonna crack first?


As you’ll have noticed, this is a darkly comic, hands over the eyes, read.  But look a little deeply and you’ll see this a metaphor for several things: relationships, raising children, family, intimacy, creative block…

And the main characters are so well-written, you’ll find yourself cheering each kill. Yes, you will.  The humour is some of the most deadpan I’ve read recently. Such as, Fox meeting Haze in Paris. When she’s having trouble finishing off a murder.  Mackay is always in control of the narrative and keeps it both funny and thrilling with two great twists midway through the book.  

Judging by the praise from actors; I think it’s a matter of time before you see this on a screen.  Plus, the book ends on an open note.  We may not have seen the last of Haze and Fox’s bloody/hilarious adventures.  It’s published by Headline on January 14th, 2025 and I thank them for a preview copy.  #aserialkillersguidetomarriage. 

Sunday 28 July 2024

 The Woman Behind The Door by Roddy Doyle:


I lost touch with Roddy Doyle’s books after The Guts ten years ago.  I have to say this is a massive return to form, or maybe all the books I have missed in the last decade have been up to this standard.  Either way, Doyle has returned to Paula Spencer - the protagonist of The Woman Who Walked Into Doors and the eponymous sequel.  

In this book, Paula is in her late sixties. She has a great group of friends, a dull (but dependable and decent) man in her life and a bunch of children - some of whom are distant, one (Nicola) considers herself damaged by Paula’s marriage.  Against the backdrop of COVID, cost of living and  modern day Dublin; things come to a head.  

It’s a powerful cocktail and those who love Doyle’s dialogue driven style can see it here.  He’s always in control of using events in a bigger story about coming to terms with your own child, let alone your past.  And although readers may be familiar with what happened to Paula in the previous two novels, it stands alone as a funny, brutal, warm, touching read.  

In this book, Paula reads Marian Keyes’ novel The Break.  Perhaps he’s impishly nodding at a universe where both novelist and novel are fictional and real at the same time.  Either way, this puts Doyle alongside Keyes and Enright at the top table of Irish literature. 

It’s published by Random House on 12th September and I thank them for a preview copy.  #thewomenbehindthedoor

Saturday 27 July 2024

 Life Is Like A Banana by Tony Wilson: 


Tony Wilson is an amateur artist, captain of industry, husband, brewer, grandad… and all round eccentric.  Although born in Ireland, I am claiming him as one of our own.  This is a collection of his diaries. 

The diaries reveal his private thoughts, his marking of historical events, his holidays abroad.  These are accompanied by what can only be described as beautiful watercolour pictures.  In between this, the author is working on a grand unified theory of life turned down by everyone from The Telegraph to philosophy magazines.  And has since been published!

Alongside this is the ebb and flow of human existence -  becoming a grandfather and the death of his beloved wife.  The book ends with a nude portrait of himself and that is a fitting way to end it.  It’s not a long read at 49 pages, but it has a haunting, human quality that you’ll be returning to for years.  

It’s published by Anthony Eyre on June 9th and I thank Grace Pilkington for a preview copy.  

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...