Cover image for Death of a Bookseller by Alice Slater

Death of a Bookseller by Alice Slater: A trip down memory lane

Despite its billing as a thriller, it was impossible for me to resist ex-bookseller Alice Slater’s debut. Set during the run up to Christmas, her hugely enjoyable novel follows Roach, who’s worked in the dingy Walthamstow branch of Spines for nine years, and Laura, one of three seasoned booksellers parachuted in with the aim of […]

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Cover image for Pineapple Street by Jenny Jackson

Pineapple Street by Jenny Jackson: ‘Let’s talk about something real’  

The blurb for Jenny Jackson’s debut suggested a satisfying, unchallenging read which fit the bill for me at a time when I was too tired for much in the way of incisive thinking. It also has a very enticing cover which intriguingly shows an orange rather than the titular fruit. Pineapple Street is about two

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Cover image for Romantic Comedy by Curtis Sittenfeld

Romantic Comedy by Curtis Sittenfeld: ‘Hot eventually gets boring but funny never does’  

It might seem surprising but I have a weakness for romcoms. If done well, they have me snivelling happily on the sofa or in the case of the wonderful Rye Lane, at the cinema. Curtis Sittenfeld’s Romantic Comedy sounded like a pleasing subversion of the romcom rules with its averagely attractive introvert meets rock god

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Cover image for Breakwater by Marijke Schermer (transl. Liz Waters)

Breakwater by Marijke Schermer (transl. Liz Waters): ‘Everything is going to be fine’

Early last year I read Marijke Schermer’s quietly powerful Love, If That’s What It Is about the breakdown of a long marriage. I hadn’t twigged that it was her debut otherwise I might have been nervous about second novel syndrome when I spotted Breakwater on NetGalley. Like her first. Schermer’s new novel explores a marriage,

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Cover image for Close to Home by Michael Magee

Close to Home by Michael Magee: ‘There’s a lot you don’t know, son’

Michael Magee’s Close to Home first caught my eye on Twitter, partly thanks to that quietly striking cover, partly lots of people whose opinions I trust impressed by it. Drawing on his own experience, Magee’s debut follows Sean from his squalid Belfast flat the night after a bender has seen him assault a guy at

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