Fiction

Waifs and strays: Gliff, by Ali Smith, reviewed

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Two lonely, recalcitrant children, Briar and Rose, find themselves among a bunch of other rag-tag misfits resisting ‘re-education’ by the brutal regime in power

A geriatric Lord of the Flies: Killing Time, by Alan Bennett, reviewed

2 November 2024 9:00 am

Chaos reigns at an old people’s home when Covid strikes, but the more rebellious residents won’t take the situation lying down

An otherworldly London: The Great When, by Alan Moore, reviewed

26 October 2024 9:00 am

Is occult knowledge even possible in the age of the internet? If a recondite author obsessed you back in the…

Doctor in trouble: Time of the Child, by Niall Williams, reviewed

26 October 2024 9:00 am

In the early 1960s, glimmers of change start to appear in the Irish ‘backwater’ parish of Faha. A smuggled copy…

A scorched Earth: Juice, by Tim Winton, reviewed

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Winton’s teenage Australian protagonist is recruited by the sinister Service organisation in its crusade against the billionaires whose profiteering has cooked the planet

The magic of carefully crafted words

19 October 2024 9:00 am

A collection of essays, poems and fiction – ‘offcuts’ of a lifetime spent ‘working with a pen’ – marks Alan Garner’s 90th year

Mounting suspicion: The Fate of Mary Rose, by Caroline Blackwood, reviewed

19 October 2024 9:00 am

Terror and distrust build in the Anderson family after a six-year-old girl is found murdered in a quiet Kent village

Panning for music gold: The Catchers, by Xan Brooks, reviewed

12 October 2024 9:00 am

They were known as song catchers: New York-based chancers with recording equipment packed in the back of the van, heading…

Life’s little graces: Small Rain, by Garth Greenwell, reviewed

5 October 2024 9:00 am

An unnamed narrator, confined to hospital with a torn aorta, reminisces about his past life in Bulgaria, his love of poetry and the happy domesticity he shared with his partner

A wish-fulfilment romance: Intermezzo, by Sally Rooney, reviewed

28 September 2024 9:00 am

Rooney’s fourth novel is another case of compare and contrast, with various pairings of anxious characters struggling through their twenties and thirties in picturesque Dublin

The Crimean War spelt the end of hymns to heroism and glory

28 September 2024 9:00 am

Writing from opposite sides, Leo Tolstoy and William Howard Russell exposed the horror of conditions in a quagmire war which seemed to have no meaning

A dark satanic cult: The Third Realm, by Karl Ove Knausgaard, reviewed

28 September 2024 9:00 am

Knausgaard’s unsettling novel continues to explore previous themes in the series, including the strange phenomenon of the black metal music scene in socially balanced Norway

Mysteries and misogyny: The Empusium, by Olga Tokarczuk, reviewed

21 September 2024 9:00 am

Tokarczuk revisits Thomas Mann’s masterpiece The Magic Mountain in this ‘health resort horror story’ set in a Silesian guesthouse on the eve of the first world war

Unrecorded lives: Tell Me Everything, by Elizabeth Strout, reviewed

21 September 2024 9:00 am

The pandemic’s aftershocks are still felt in Crosby, as Strout’s best-loved characters, Olive, Lucy, Jim and Bob, reminisce about people they have known, imbuing their lives with meaning

Heartbreaking scenes: Annihilation, by Michel Houellebecq, reviewed

21 September 2024 9:00 am

Set in 2027, with France in a state of economic and moral decay, Houellebecq’s deeply affecting novel is really a meditation on love and death and the way we treat the dying

Undercover in the Dordogne: Creation Lake, by Rachel Kushner, reviewed

14 September 2024 9:00 am

An American spy-for-hire uses her feminine wiles to infiltrate an eco-warrior group in rural France. But will she go off-piste and become indoctrinated?

The pitfalls of privilege and philanthropy: Entitlement, by Rumaan Alam, reviewed

14 September 2024 9:00 am

An ambitious young black woman working for a charitable trust clashes with its white octogenarian founder over what each thinks they deserve

From tragedy to mockery: Munichs, by David Peace, reviewed

14 September 2024 9:00 am

The devastating crash at Munich-Riem airport in 1959 haunts Manchester United fans to this day. Peace defies anyone to read his novel and use ‘Munichs’ as an insult ever again

An outcast among outcasts: Katerina, by Aharon Appelfeld, reviewed

14 September 2024 9:00 am

A peasant girl flees her abusive home, to find happiness working for Jewish families in the lush Carpathian countryside – until anti-Semitic pogroms change everything irrevocably

An accidental spy: Gabriel’s Moon, by William Boyd, reviewed

31 August 2024 9:00 am

Having chanced to interview the Congolese politician Patrice Lumumba shortly before his assassination, a travel writer finds himself targeted by British Intelligence

Rather in the lurch: Small Bomb at Dimperley, by Lissa Evans, reviewed

31 August 2024 9:00 am

In 1945, a dilapidated Tudor manor risks being demolished – unless an impoverished evacuee with a gift for organisation can galvanise its despairing owner

More curious canine incidents: Dogs and Monsters, by Mark Haddon, reviewed

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Mesmerising accounts of dogs feature in these latest stories, including Actaeon’s tragic hounds, St Antony’s comforting mutt and Laika, the husky hurled into space

Two young men in flight: Partita and A Winter in Zürau, by Gabriel Josipovici reviewed

24 August 2024 9:00 am

Kafka, spitting blood, escapes Prague to join his sister in Bohemia, and a fictional lover flees the wrath of an outraged husband in Josipovici’s delightful two-in-one trick

Tales with a twist: Safe Enough and Other Stories, by Lee Child, reviewed

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Child has fun with the short story form, shooting from the hip. Sometimes the bad get their comeuppance, sometimes they don’t – but the good are rarely rewarded or even recognised

A death foretold: The Voyage Home, by Pat Barker, reviewed

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Cassandra prophesies Agamemnon’s death as punishment for his crimes in Troy. But she knows that she too must share his fate -- since ‘you can’t cherry-pick prophecy’