We’re on the home strait, heading towards spring here in the UK with some interesting fiction to ease us along although I wasn’t entirely sold on March’s first
Quite a lot of pre-publication brouhaha around Eliana Ramage’s ambitious debut, To the Moon and Back, which follows Steph who arrives with her sister in Oklahoma after her mother fled their violent father, telling them he died in an accident. As they grow up Kayla happily fits in while Steph single-mindedly focusses on her ambition to walk on the moon. When she’s accepted as an astronaut candidate, it’s the first step on a long arduous path that sees her family and career clash in a way that endangers both. From her author’s note, it’s clear that many of the incidents in Ramage’s novel are based in fact and although I enjoyed it, I felt her research got the better of her. Review soon…
Tayari Jones’s new novel Kin sees two women born on the same day in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, neither of whom will know their mothers. They grow up against a background of segregated America in the ‘50s and ‘60s, both leaving their home town but whereas Vernice looks to the future Annie’s decision to try to find her mother proves to be a dangerous one from which she needs to be rescued. ‘Tayari Jones returns with an exuberant, richly told novel about mothers and daughters, about a lifelong friendship, and the complexities of being a woman in the American South’ promises the blurb. I enjoyed both Jones’s Women’s Prize for Fiction winner, An American Marriage, and Silver Sparrow so have hopes for this one.

Spanning thirty-five years, Kiran Millwood-Hargrave’s Almost Life follows Laure and Erica who meet one summer morning in 1978 on the steps of Sacré Coeur when Erica smiles at Laure after spotting they’re reading the same book. She’s spending August alone in Paris before university. Several years older, Laure is studying for a doctorate at the Sorbonne, dishevelled, confident and sizing Erica up as a potential lover. Hargrave’s richly immersive love story hinges on coincidence and miscommunication, so that we’re left after each seven-yearly meeting wondering if this will be their last. A novel to savour. Review shortly…


Australian author M. L. Stedman’s A Far-flung Life begins in 1958 with a family tragedy from which there’s only one survivor. Matt is injured so badly he will take many months to recover, returning to the MacBride homestead irascible, unpredictable and beset by memory problems, leaving his sister wracked with guilt at having persuaded him to take her place that day. Stedman’s compassionate, engrossing novel is full of secrets, the family’s fate pivoting on a fundamental one. The ending was a little too neat and tidy for me but the journey to it was so enjoyable I’m not going to quibble. Review to come…

That’s it for March’s first batch of new fiction. As ever, a click on a title will take you to a more detailed synopsis for any that take you fancy. Part two soon…
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Super excited about the Groff and the Ramage (from my point of view, the more research she can pack in about astronauts, the better!) Jones has been a bit hit and miss for me – I loved Leaving Atlanta and An American Marriage but felt lukewarm about her others – so only moderately looking forward to Kin.
The Ramage will be right up your street, then! I doubt I’ll be reviewing Kin but I’ll definitely read it, ditto Brawler.
Oh I was a huge fan of the Ramage (read a US proof copy) and have a copy of the Taylor, which I’m keen for. I also really rate Groff’s short stories – I haven’t read many of them, but what she’s published in the New Yorker has been outstanding.
I so enjoyed the Taylor and I’m glad the Ramage worked well for you. Cautiously optimistic about Brawler.
You’ve sold me on the Taylor. I loved Blue Ruin!
Hurrah! Hope you enjoy it as much as I did, Cathy.
I’m quite tempted by Almost Life – looking forward to your review!
My expectations weren’t particularly high when I started it but by the end I’d come to love it. One to sink into.
Brawler was incredible. (I actually find Groff’s short stories more consistent than her novels.) I’ll certainly read your first four picks as well!
That’s good to know! I can certainly vouch for the Taylor and Hargrave.
Yes to all of these! Just, yes.
Bingo!
I remember being a bit luke warm about Matrix. So I’ve gone for a sandwich and ordered the four books above that from the library. It’s a bit dangerous that. Nothing happens for weeks, then suddenly, as has just happened, nine come at once ….
Perhaps it’s just as well the weather’s lousy. I can vouch for three of those.
I’ve just finished To The Moon and Back, I know what you mean about the research and I felt like the balance between the chapters for the characters was a bit off, also THAT THING THAT HAPPENED???? but I did enjoy it on the whole! I really want to read Kin.
It was all a bit much, wasn’t it! Looking forward to Kin.