Susan Osborne

Cover image for To Coook a Bear by Mikael Niemi

Five Swedish Novels I’ve Read

Given how much of my viewing time has been spent there thanks to Walter Presents, you’d think I’d have read more Scandinavian fiction but perhaps it’s because so much of the translated variety is crime related. Below are five striking Swedish novels I’ve read, all with links to my reviews, beginning with an award-winning piece […]

Five Swedish Novels I’ve Read Read More »

Cover image for Bourneville by Jonathan Coe

Bournville by Jonathan Coe: ‘Everything changes, and everything remains the same’

I’ve not had much success with Jonathan Coe’s recent novels. Despite winning the Costa Novel Award, Middle England hit a low point for me but I liked the sound of Bournville which tells the story of Britain from V. E. Day in 1945 to its seventy-fifth anniversary in 2020 through one extended family who begin

Bournville by Jonathan Coe: ‘Everything changes, and everything remains the same’ Read More »

Cover image for Flight by Lynn Steger Strong

Flight by Lynn Steger Strong: In the bleak mid-winter

I’m not sure who tweeted their happiness about receiving a proof of Lynn Steger Strong’s Flight having enjoyed her fiction before but I’m grateful to them. That lovely, understated cover also added to its allure. Set in snowy New York state, Strong’s novel follows three siblings and their families facing their first Christmas without their

Flight by Lynn Steger Strong: In the bleak mid-winter Read More »

Cover image for They're Going to Love You by Meg Howrey

They’re Going to Love You by Meg Howrey: ‘A question of morals’

I’d not come across Meg Howrey before a blurb promising an ‘80s New York setting together with a resounding recommendation from Ann Patchett caught my eye. They’re Going to Love You, Howrey’s fourth novel, explores themes of love, betrayal and dedication against a background of the dance world as Carlisle is faced with visiting her

They’re Going to Love You by Meg Howrey: ‘A question of morals’ Read More »

Idol Burning by Rin Usami

Idol, Burning by Rin Usami (transl Asa Yoneda): ‘My life without him was only an afterlife’  

I’ve long felt uneasy about the relationship between celebrities and the public, not least the way the media refers to them by their first name as if we know them intimately. It’s particularly painful when the celebrity in question was a child star. Rin Usami’s Idol, Burning examines that relationship through a young girl who

Idol, Burning by Rin Usami (transl Asa Yoneda): ‘My life without him was only an afterlife’   Read More »