Fiction

Adrift in strange lands: The Accidentals, by Guadalupe Nettel, reviewed

26 April 2025 9:00 am

A sense of unease runs through Nettel’s latest short stories as the protagonists start to lose their bearings in increasingly unfamiliar scenarios

The road trip from hell: Elegy, Southwest, by Madeleine Watts, reviewed

26 April 2025 9:00 am

Watts skilfully conjures a sense of impending doom as a young couple’s expedition to the American Southwest is threatened by deadly fires sweeping through California

Bring back gory book covers!

12 April 2025 9:00 am

Looking for a light, breezy read? If you happened to be browsing the bestseller bookshelves this summer your eye might…

A gruesome bohemian upbringing: Days of Light, by Megan Hunter, reviewed

12 April 2025 9:00 am

With clear parallels to Angelica Bell at Charleston, young Ivy believes herself a constant disappointment to her family of avant-garde writers and artists

Marriage, motherhood and money: Show Don’t Tell, by Curtis Sittenfeld, reviewed

12 April 2025 9:00 am

Funny, smart stories explore the ‘stale’ married state, the anxieties of parenthood and the sweet-sour nature of female friendship. But do they go far enough?

Urban gothic: I Want to Go Home, But I’m Already There, by Roisin Lanigan, reviewed

12 April 2025 9:00 am

A rented London flat starts to exude hostility and malevolence – or could our impressionable heroine just be imagining it?

Deep mysteries: Twist, by Colum McCann, reviewed

29 March 2025 9:00 am

An enigmatic captain tasked with repairing undersea communication cables disappears, and it’s up to his shipmate to discover why

A novel in disguise: Theory & Practice, by Michelle de Kretser, reviewed

29 March 2025 9:00 am

De Kretser’s witty, innovative take on the immigrant’s predicament tries ingeniously to persuade us that we are not reading fiction but documentary truth

Escape into fantasy: Stories of Ireland, by Brian Friel, reviewed

29 March 2025 9:00 am

Friel’s tightly knit rural communities like to cling to illusions, whether it’s belief in sunken gold in the bay or in the continual prosperity of impoverished gentry

Don’t write off literary fiction yet

22 March 2025 9:00 am

I don’t intend to start a feud. Most of Sean Thomas’s essay on The Spectator’s website last week, titled ‘Good…

Fight or flight?: 33 Place Brugmann, by Alice Austen, reviewed

22 March 2025 9:00 am

Residents of a sedate apartment block in Brussels react in very different ways to the Nazi invasion of Belgium in 1940

A picture of jealous rivalry: Madame Matisse, by Sophie Haydock, reviewed

22 March 2025 9:00 am

Henri Matisse’s wife and longstanding model was understandably enraged when the artist, in later life, preferred his much younger Russian mistress as a sitter

The mystery of the missing man: Green Ink, by Stephen May, reviewed

15 March 2025 9:00 am

Things look bad for the former socialist MP Victor Grayson after he threatens to expose David Lloyd George’s cash for honours scandal in 1920

A satire on the modern art market: The Violet Hour, by James Cahill, reviewed

8 March 2025 9:00 am

A world-renowned painter becomes the ghost of his former self, betraying his instincts to embrace sterile abstraction – and even outsourcing his work to ‘a fabricator in Zurich’

Clouded memories: Ballerina, by Patrick Modiano, reviewed

8 March 2025 9:00 am

An ageing narrator looks back 50 years to ‘a most uncertain’ period of his life in Paris and his relationship with a mysterious, elusive ballet dancer

Nazis, killer dogs and weird sex: Empty Wigs, by Jonathan Meades, reviewed

8 March 2025 9:00 am

Meades’s 1,000-page doorstopper is also vast in scope, containing 19 overlapping stories of a family scattered through time and space, and their role in a variety of nefarious goings-on

Things Fall Apart: Flesh, by David Szalay, reviewed

8 March 2025 9:00 am

The fluctuating fortunes of an ambitious young Hungarian in London provide a gripping study of the choices that can make or break a life

Hope springs eternal: The Café with No Name, by Robert Seethaler, reviewed

1 March 2025 9:00 am

It’s Vienna, 1966, and a young labourer casts a speculative eye on a ramshackle café in the corner of the Karmelitermarkt, daring to restore it and improve his lot

Three’s a crowd: The City Changes its Face, by Eimear McBride, reviewed

1 March 2025 9:00 am

Tension mounts between young Eily and her 40-year-old partner, Stephen, when Stephen’s daughter, Grace, appears, underlining the couple’s different ages and experiences

A gloom-laden tale: The Foot on the Crown, by Christopher Fowler reviewed

22 February 2025 9:00 am

Returning to his roots in horror fiction, Fowler portrays Londinium as a dismal citadel, ruled by an enfeebled dynasty clinging to pointless rituals

A mild diversion for a wet afternoon: Three Days in June, by Anne Tyler, reviewed

22 February 2025 9:00 am

Tyler is known for making the ordinary compelling, but this quiet tale of family relationships is subtle to the point of stupor

The pursuit of love letters: My Search for Warren Harding, by Robert Plunket, reviewed

15 February 2025 9:00 am

Our magnificently monstrous anti-hero goes in quest of a cache of reputedly pornographic letters written by the former US president to his mistress

The perils of poaching: Beartooth, by Callan Wink, reviewed

15 February 2025 9:00 am

Two impoverished brothers from the Montana backcountry are tempted by the prospect of a daring heist in Yellowstone National Park

Putin’s éminence grise: The Wizard of the Kremlin, by Giuliano da Empoli, reviewed

15 February 2025 9:00 am

Modelled on Putinism’s founding father, Vladislav Surkov, the protagonist of this internationally acclaimed novel pales by comparison with the real-life ideologue