Fiction Reviews

If you would prefer a searchable / sortable linear index for this category you can find one here

Beneath the Neon Egg by Thomas E. Kennedy: A Scandi novel written by an American

I’ve been meaning to read Thomas E. Kennedy’s Copenhagen Quartet for some time and was sent a copy of the final instalment recently. This might seem an odd place to start a series but I’d been assured that all the novels stand alone, as indeed this one did although I am left wondering if I’ve […]

Beneath the Neon Egg by Thomas E. Kennedy: A Scandi novel written by an American Read More »

Books of the Year 2014: Part 3

The last of my ‘books of the year’ posts begins with one of my two September favourites, Steven Galloway’s The Confabulist which tells the story of the man who killed Houdini not once, but twice. Far from a straightforward reimagining of the Houdini story Galloway’s novel is a very clever bit of business which didn’t

Books of the Year 2014: Part 3 Read More »

When the Night Comes by Favel Parrett: The story of a sailor, a girl and the Nella Dan

I was drawn to Favel Parrett’s novel by the slimmest of synopses when checking out titles for my Books to Look Out for in November post. Antarctica was the lure. I’ve read several non-fiction books about it and had particularly enjoyed Jenny Diski’s Skating to Antarctica. In the event it’s not really about that but

When the Night Comes by Favel Parrett: The story of a sailor, a girl and the Nella Dan Read More »

Cover image

If I Knew You Were Going to be This Beautiful I Never Would Have Let You Go by Judy Chicurel: Novel or short stories, and does it matter?

Now there’s a title certain to be mangled in bookshops throughout the land and a brave one for a debut. I wonder if Judy Chicurel’s publishers tried to talk her out of it. It’s the title of the final chapter of the book whose meaning becomes clear towards its end. Set in the summer of

If I Knew You Were Going to be This Beautiful I Never Would Have Let You Go by Judy Chicurel: Novel or short stories, and does it matter? Read More »