Book Reviews
First published 2003. Pan paperback, 2003. pp 338 c.86,000 words.
This is something of a period piece, set in 1996 in the run up to the general election that took place in 1997, and the making by Tony Blair of ‘New Labour’. It was a time...
First published 1970. Arrow paperback, 1981. pp 210 c.50,000 words.
What if we could use some device to transport us, and anything else, instantly to wherever a receiver had been set up? Harrison explores the possibilities of this notion in a...
First published 2016. Penguin paperback, 2017, pp 218, c.95,000 words.
Everything in this novel is ambiguous: we are never sure what is real and what is only desired or feared. Ostensibly it is a simple story, told from the point of view of a...
First published 1885. Penguin paperback, 1977, translated by Leonard Tancock, pp 499, c.175,000 words (main text).
Hell is an appropriate description for the working condition of miners in late nineteenth century France – toiling deep underground with...
First published 2022. Amazon paperback, 2022, pp 269, c.70,000 words.
Fundamentally this book is a celebration of friendship, couched in an amiable thriller/who-done-it. It is the fourth ‘Jon Ball’ story and it concerns a woman who went missing, last...
First published 2011. Atlantic Books paperback, 2011, pp 273, c.55,000 words.
This book notoriously was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2011, the year that Stella Rimington, thriller writer and former head of MI5, declared that one of the criteria...
First published 1988. Grafton paperback, 1988, pp 301, c.95,000 words.
This is the sequel to Dayworld (which I haven’t read) but it stands well enough on its own. It explores one of the dominant themes of mid-twentieth century science fiction...
First published 1977. Johnathan Cape hardback, 1977, pp 704, c.265,000 words.
The trouble with being a very successful writer is that when your next book is a turkey everyone is going to tell you it’s a swan. Fowles is quite capable of writing...
First published 2014. Picador hardback, 2014, pp 261, c.45,000 words.
There is no doubt that St Aubyn is a very clever chap, but unfortunately that doesn’t always make for good reading. Presumably this was a vanity project that the author’s publisher...
First published 1976. Pan paperback, 1998, pp 471, c.150,000 words.
One might expect a book with this title to somehow reference the moral fable from which the phrase is best known, but it doesn’t. Rather the reverse in that the world ignored...
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