A Few Good Books
On our blog, we talk about our favourite books and authors, old and new, books that stayed with us long after we were done reading, the ones we might gently press into the hands of other readers.
Book Recommendation: The Seige of Krishnapur by J G Farrell
James Gordon Farrell (1935–1979) is best known for three thematically linked novels: Troubles, The Siege of Krishnapur, and The Singapore Grip, collectively known as the Empire Trilogy. The Siege of Krishnapur, published in 1973, won that year's Booker Prize and was later shortlisted for the Best of the Booker in 2008...
Favourite Reads: In Memoriam by Alive Winn
Alice Winn's debut novel, In Memoriam, was published in 2023. This was one of my favourite reads that year and it's become a permanent fixture on my bookshelf. I’ve just been re-reading it and I love it as much as I did the first time...
Book Recommendation: The Persian Boy by Mary Renault
The Persian Boy is a work of historical fiction by Mary Renault, published in 1972. It's the second book in her trilogy about Alexander the Great, following Fire from Heaven and preceding Funeral Games. However, it works perfectly well as a standalone novel...
Book Recommendation: Enter Ghost
This novel, set in contemporary Palestine, centers on Sonia, a British-Palestinian actress who returns to Palestine after a long absence to visit her sister Haneen, who lives in Haifa and teaches at a university in Tel Aviv. While Haneen and Sonia are not estranged per se, there is a distance there, to be bridged. Haneen introduces Sonia to a close friend of hers, Mariam, a theatre director who is putting together a production of "Hamlet" in the West Bank. It is art but it is also an act of resistance...
Book Recommendation: Miss Buncle's Book by D E Stevenson
This is a charming book. It’s warm and funny and gently satirical. It has a fairly unusual plot, and it's very entertaining. It's an easy read in the sense that the narrative carries you along, and it's so absorbing that it's hard to put the book down. This book is set in the 1930's, in a small English village called Silverstream...
Book Recommendation: Midnight in Vienna by Jane Thynne
It is 1938, the eve of WWII. London. There is tension in the air as war seems inevitable. Stella Fry, a young Englishwoman who has recently returned to London from Vienna, finds herself jobless and heartbroken. In search of employment, she answers an advertisement from the renowned mystery writer, Hubert Newman, who needs a manuscript typed. However, the very next day, Stella is shocked to learn of Newman's sudden and unexplained death...
Writers in Profile: Italo Calvino
Italo Calvino is a writer who constantly reinvented himself, moving from gritty realism to whimsical folk tales to some of the best non-linear experimental fiction of the 20th Century.His early work was realistic and reflective of the political climate of the day, but he gradually began to drift away from realism. Calvino spent years collecting and translating hundreds of traditional Italian folk tales. It's perhaps because of this that a lot of his stories read like modern myths...
Writers in Profile: Barbara Pym
Barbara Pym is one my favourite writers, someone who deserves to be better known than she is. She was born in Shropshire in 1913. Her father was a solicitor, and her mother was an organist in their local church. Her mother’s involvement in the parish and what it did to their social life had a clear impact on Pym’s novels which are full of entertaining vicars and curates...
Favourite Reads: Middlemarch by George Elliot
This book is a sprawling exploration of English society in a period of tumultuous change. Set in the fictional town of Middlemarch in the early 1830s, it explores, through the lives of the inhabitants, ambition, idealism, the status of women, and the intricate web of social relations in a community on the cusp of modernity...
Tolkien and the Wonderful World of Middle Earth
While the Lord of the Rings is the most popular of Tolkien’s works, this is a book that he never intended to write. He was first and always a philologist, and it was languages that fascinated him. He began to make up and create languages as a teenager, and it was the urge to give these languages a people, a culture, and a history that drove him to create an entire mythology, which eventually, became The Silmarillion...
Book Recommendation: Em and the Big Hoom by Jerry Pinto
This is a poignant, and often humorous, story of the Mendes family in Bombay, about living with a family member struggling with mental illness and the profound impact this has on all their lives. The story is narrated by the unnamed son, who is trying to come to terms with his mother Imelda’s (Em) recurring battles with bipolar disorder, while his father, Augustine (‘The Big Hoom’) serves as the family’s stoic anchor amidst the chaos, of which there is plenty...
Book Recommendation: The Cafe with no Name
The novel is set in Vienna in the 1960’s, in a café that becomes the gathering place for a varied and initially unconnected group of people, who eventually grow into a community. The story begins when Robert Simon, a young man, who spent years working in the market stalls takes a leap of faith to open his own cafe...
