by Georges Simenon
A seemingly gentle, respectable man is found murdered in a Paris alleyway.
However, he had another side to him.
Intriguing story amid a wet and soggy Paris. 8/10
by Georges Simenon
A seemingly gentle, respectable man is found murdered in a Paris alleyway.
However, he had another side to him.
Intriguing story amid a wet and soggy Paris. 8/10
by Simone Buchholz
The second book featuring Chastity Riley, the Hamburg based public prosecutor.
Men from a certain media company start turning up in cages badly beaten up. The links take the case back to a school in Bavaria and a complicated past. Quirky 7/10
by Mark Twain
Described by many as the great American novel and still taught widely in their schools I came to this novel as a result of wanting to read James by Percival Everett.
The story of adventures down the river is fun and full of farce at times but the portrayal of slaves and the continuous use of the N-word came as a shock and made reading the book difficult. The entry into the story of Tom Sawyer at the end of the book was disappointing and undermined the tension that had been building before. For me I can think of many better American novels-it seems very much of its time. 6/10
by Salman Rushdie
A look back on a horrific knife attack that cost Rushdie the sight in one eye and multiple stab wounds that nearly cost him his life. The book is mesmerising in places and although it went a bit flat for me when he started an imaginary conversation with his attacker, it did sort of make sense.
I assume it was all true but he is such a good story teller that you feel in the middle of a plot of some novel at times. Enjoyable is probably the wrong word to say how I found this book. Fascinating works better 9/10
by George Simenon
Book 40 in the Maigret series and somebody steals a gun that Maigret has been given as a memento of his visit to the US. It leads to another murder and a visit to London, and he gets his revolver back unused. 7/10
by Andrew O'Hagan
A long novel set in London in the early 2020's it tells the story of Campbell Flynn a celebrity art historian and his family over the course of a year in which Campbell and those close to him slowly unravel as they face up to the new realities of the age we live in. While it kept me hooked the story never really got going for me with the characters almost walking cartoon like out of current news stories. They were interesting but never became totally real. 6/10
by Simone Buchholz
The first book in a series featuring a quirky district prosecutor based in Hamburg, called Chastity Riley. We soon learn she has been sidelined for stepping out of line but she is soon involved in a major drugs case as well as mixed up in her retired bosses attempts to bring down an Albanian godfather. A good relaxing read. 8/10
by Hisham Matar
The story of three Libyan friends, Khaled, Mustafa and Hosam brought together in Edinburgh and London by events in their homeland and the shooting of a police officer at the Libyan embassy in 1984.
Khaled has just said goodbye to Hosam at St. Pancras, probably for the last time. On the six mile walk back to his flat in Shepherds Bush he reflects on their friendship over the previous 30 odd years and on other friendships that have come and gone. It is a moving book, a sad book but also a life affirming book that is beautifully written. 8/10
by Nabila Ramdani
This is a very frustrating book.
It has editorial errors-claiming the returning Bourbons were on the throne until 1848 for instance-that could easily have been fixed. It is very repetitive, telling us the same thing in different chapters. The author also seems enamoured with the Anglo Saxon world and the UK in particular. She highlights institutional racism in the French police but forgets the problems of stop and search in the London met and the ongoing reports of racism there. Also, while berating the French education system it would have been helpful if she had outlined how she managed to beat the system.
Having said all this, the book is well structured, looking at different facets of society in different chapters and it is great to have the anger of ethnic minority groups spelt out. The call for a sixth republic is heartfelt and well reasoned. I also found the final chapter on foreign policy informative and scary. 7/10
by Georges Simenon
Almost by accident Maigret gets involved with a US organised crime gang playing out some grievances on French soil and ends up clashing with the FBI. Good story with normal Maigret ambivalent ending. 8/10
by Posy Simmonds
A graphic novel-shock horror!
A short story really, involving a grumpy old woman, a gun, her niece, an actor and some ne'er do wells. I enjoyed the drawings and, for me, the novelty of a graphic novel not written in French. The story was quite light though and not sure I will be embracing the genre to the exclusion of all others! 6/10
by Kazuo Ishiguro
Set in 1930's London and Shanghai this is the story of Christopher Banks and his lifelong search to find out what happened to his parents who disappeared when he was ten years old and living in Shanghai.
He has been brought up and educated in England and has become a famous detective but this story is more than a detective story-in fact it is never really that. It is about chasing dreams, obsession and disappointment. It is about unreliable memory and about growing up an orphan. It keeps giving but never answering the reader's questions. I loved it 8/10
by Sheila Heti
In 1960 Raymond Queneau and others founded the group OuLiPo which in French is short for Ouvroir de littérature potentielle. It translates as workshop for potential literature. The authors who formed the group would write under certain self imposed constraints. So for instance Georges Perec wrote a novel which never used the letter 'e'. Queneau wrote a novel telling the same episode in 99 different ways, each one using a different style.
This book reminded me of this group in that this supposed diary has been culled from 10 years of the authors journal and rearranged in alphabetical order with each letter providing a chapter (with the exception of x).
As an exercise in style it is an interesting idea. As a read I found it tedious, with the occasional piece of humour or beautiful sentence. As with any journal I guess, it was all rather self-absorbed. 5/10
by Georges Simenon
This is a story of Tati, who is the eponymous widow of the title. She lives an unusual life looking after her husband's family smallholding as well as her father in law. She meets Jean on the bus and takes him in to help look after the property. The relationship that develops between them is fraught with tension from the start and you know it cannot end well. The tension holds throughout but I felt the story unravelled towards the end. 7/10
by Kingsley Amis
This book won the Booker prize in 1986 but I do not think it has aged well. Very much of it's time many of the references seem a bit off nowadays. Having said that a lot of the humour is very funny and the last 50 pages are a very good read. Much of the rest of the book I found hard to follow as the characters were quite shallowly drawn so it was hard to differentiate one ageing drinker from another. 5/10
by Paul Auster
The musings of a man in his early seventies who lost his wife ten years before in an accident.
He is still dealing with grief and is having to handle getting older and falling down stairs and forgetting things.
I imagine the book would only resonate with people over sixty but I enjoyed it with its at times rambling nature. I also wish somebody would write Sy Baumgartner's book, Mysteries of the Wheel! 8/10
by Georges Simenon
Maigret gets approached by an old prostitute when her safe breaking husband disappears after finding a dead body in a house he was burgling.
A long investigation takes place involving the dentist and his mother who live in the house. A good story but we never found out if the safebreaker came back to Paris! 8/10
by Colin Walsh
A fast moving mystery about an old case of a girl who disappeared in Ireland 15 years ago, but some bones have been found just as some of her old friends are returning to the home town. Is it Kala? If it is what happened all those years ago. Good story 7/10
by Robin Ince
Subtitled An Obsessive's tour of the Bookshops of Britain, this is a diary of that tour which did what it said on the can. It is tiring just to read but what a trip that must have been. It leaves you with a list of shops you want to visit and another list of books you want to buy.
A good book to read when you don't want to be concentrating too much and are happy to let the references you don't get float off into the ether 7/10
by George Simenon
One of Maigret's officers is shot and wounded on a stake-out. As Mme Maigret is away, Maigret stays in a small boarding house on the street where the shooting took place and as ever the plot is more complicated than first appears. 8/10
by Edouard Louis
A bleak French tale of growing up poor and gay in a small northern manufacturing town. It was a tough read and drew comparisons with Shuggie Bain-a book I preferred. 6/10
by Richard Mullen
This book, published in 1990 is clearly written by a Trollope enthusiast and is none the worse for that. It is a very readable and comprehensive introduction to the man and his writing. It quotes widely from the novels showing how his writing is drawn from his life which was lived at a crazy pace. As well as writing 80 books he had a 30 year career in the post office and travelled widely around the globe and Europe.
The writing is very readable and the author's asides (mimicking Trollope?) are very amusing. A very enjoyable read. 9/10
Another interesting year but no totally stand out books. I read three Rushdie novels of which Shalimar the Clown was good and the Enchantress of Florence fun. His latest book Victory City, I did not enjoy so much.
On the Booker front my two favourite books did not make the shortlist(Sebastian Barry and Tan twe Eng) but the winner Prophet Song was ok but not standout.
In non fiction Technofeudalism was interesting and tied in well with Runciman's How Democracy Ends, but my favourite was probably writers and revolution about 1848 as seen through different writers eyes.
My standout book of the year. There were some good new books from Barbara Kingsolver, Zadie Smith and Sebastian Faulks but the most memorable book was a Simenon book. Not Maigret, although Maigret's Memoirs was great fun, but The Man who Watched the Trains go By. It was scary and compelling. This probably was followed by The Wide World, the first in a new trilogy by Pierre LeMaitre.
by Florian Illies
The sub-title of this book is Art and Passion in the shadow of War, 1929-1939. It is a wide ranging look at numerous artists during that period and their complicated love lives. That said the vast array of people covered is also the books weakness as it becomes impossible to keep up with who they are all as we jump in and out of stories. 6/10
by Sebastian Faulks
Seth was the seventh son of Adam and also the name given to the hero of this book who is born to two London based people via a surrogate mother supposedly using their eggs and sperm. However, the rich entrepreneur who runs the clinic has some problems of his own regarding the dementia that is killing his father and he uses his clinic to carry out some "research" that impacts on the child born in 2031. It is a thought provoking story as we follow Seth and his parents and surrogate mother over the next 25 years with some twists and turns along the way. 8/10
by George Simenon
One of the best Maigret novels as this is Maigret writing about Simenon and filling in some of the gaps and correcting some of his minor errors, It is very funny in places but also quite poignant in others when he talks about real issues of society seen on a daily basis by the police. 10/10
by Nolwenn le Blevennec
A french book about an affair. The affair started three years before the time of the book and lasted three months but then spent three years coming to an end and we get taken through it on a self absorbed retelling of the time by the narrator.
The saving grace of the book is that it is very funny in places and made me laugh out loud. Otherwise too introspective for me. 6/10
by Zadie Smith
I think this is Zadie Smith's first historical novel but it is a lot of fun. It is based around real people and events, but the main characters have been largely forgotten by history. Characters such as Dickens and Maclise also make an appearance, and we don't always see their best sides!
The story follows Mrs Touchet and her cousin Ainsworth through their colourful lives and their interaction with a celebrated legal case over the identity of Roger Tichborne and whether the claimant of an inheritance is actually him. Great larks! The story moves from London to Jamaica to Australia and my only disappointment is that the story ran out of steam about two thirds of the way through. The earlier parts of the book I really enjoyed 7/10
by Yanis Varoufakis
A book examining the rise of the big tech companies. The argument is that the rise of cloud capital has brought about the death of capitalism as we know it and that power now lies with a few cloudalists for whom most of us work for free.
YV loves to come up with new terms-indeed, one chapter of this book is devoted to explaining why the term used in the title is important- and we have many in this book including cloud proles and cloud serfs.
I found the argument difficult to follow at times but this is a very thought provoking book that will leave me wondering about the way this will move. The most sobering part of the book was his chapter looking at China and the USA and the new cold war. The most disappointing was the last chapter which paints a utopia that we are unlikely to ever reach and left to many questions unanswered 6/10
by Paul Lynch
A dystopian vision set in present day Ireland but could be anywhere in the western world. The country descends to civil war as a far right party takes over the country and bit by bit clamps down on dissent. A depressing but captivating read as a mother tries to keep her family together after the husband is arrested.
Some of the characters were a bit unbelievable but still powerful storytelling 7/10
by Pierre LeMaitre
The first in a planned trilogy of the post war years but there is a surprise appearance of characters from the previous trilogy of the interwar years!
This story revolves around the Pelletier family. The father runs a very successful soap company in Lebanon but his four children are still finding their way in life with mixed results. This is the tale of how it unfolds, which takes us from Lebanon to Saigon to Paris and in true LeMaitre style is peppered with surprises along the way. A bit gruesome in parts, along with a smattering of humour this is great storytelling 9/10
by Paul Murray
The longest book on this years list it is set in a small town in Ireland a couple of hours from Dublin.
It tells the stories of the four members of the Barnes's family as the family faces up to various challenges such as bankruptcy, mid life crisis, marriage breakdown, male rape, bullying, transition to college life, climate change etc etc. It is very funny in places and exceedingly dark in others and I felt it ran out of steam by the end with an ending that left you guessing. I enjoyed the structure as the four members took it in turns to be central stage and tell their story. Not sure why the mother had to do this without punctuation but no doubt it made sense to some! 6/10
by Deborah Levy
This book was written as a response to George Orwell's essay called why I write. In that he identifies four things he believes motivate writers to write.
Levy's response as a woman living in the twenty first century is both thought provoking and interesting. I loved it and it was beautifully produced by Notting Hill Editions 9/10
by Georges Simenon
A new twist, with Mme Maigret being given a central role in this mystery of what turns out to be a double murder and in which Mme Maigret's conversations on a park bench turn out to be the key to solving the crime. 8/10
by Paul Johnson
A 2023 take on the British economy, looking at where the money comes from and how it is distributed. Along the way he comments on the good and the bad of the British tax system and the failings and strengths of the various spending departments.
You may not agree with all of his analysis but it does offer food for thought. It is fairly well balanced in its swipes at politicians from all sides but it is written by somebody who rising from modest roots, has embraced the establishment of which he is now a part. As such he comes across as a bit arrogant in places but I still found it an enjoyable and stimulating read 8/10
by Elaine Feeney
You get the impression as you read this that Elaine Feeney may well have built a boat at some time in her past.
This book is about a lot of things other than boat building though. It is about grief, growing up on the spectrum, single parenthood, relationship breakdown, abuse and misogyny in the catholic church and more. In fact, although I enjoyed this book its weakness is that it tries to deal with too much and feels missing something as a result. Definitely an author I would read again though 6/10
by Paul Harding
A small island community made up of black and mixed race poor is forcibly evicted from their homes in a story, based on fact, about our inability to tolerate difference. It is a sombre tale, told brilliantly with a poetry to the language that makes the darkness of the story even more painful. It took me a while to get into it but I ended up racing through the second half 8/10
by Viktoria Lloyd Barlow
This is, I suppose, a story of three women set in a rural town not far from Lancaster. Dolly is sixteen and growing up fast. She lives with her divorced mother. There summer is disturbed when new neighbours move in next door. They are from London and looking to do some property deals in the area. Dolly becomes thick with Vita and starts spending more and more time with them. So far so normal but thrown into this mix is the fact Vita has always wanted a daughter and Dolly's mother, Sunday, is on the aspergers spectrum. The tale is told slowly and keeps and element of gentle tension throughout.
The book focuses a lot on pronunciation and hearing it read on an audiobook worked really well. It is spliced with humour but I felt it was too long in the end with repetition that was unnecessary. An interesting ending though 6/10
by Ayobami Adebayo
A story set in Nigeria detailing how the lives of two families from different parts of society are altered by external events. The stories overlap in a deadly way and from the moment the title of the book is explained it is clear the story can only end badly which is does for all concerned. Both sad and moving it is not a book I would read again. There was no redemption here, no hope. Must be in with a chance of winning! 5/10
by Sebastian Barry
Set in 1990's Dublin this is the story of a recently retired police officer dealing with grief and getting old, overshadowed throughout by child abuse in the Catholic Church and the impact on him and his immediate family.
The book constantly unsettles you from simple things like the main character's references to cheese on toast as welsh rabbit through to whole sections of the book, which are told as fact suddenly becoming dreams or the misplaced memories of the protagonist. Excellent novel 9/10
by Jonathan Escoffery
A collection of stories about a Jamaican family making its way in America which hangs together fairly well. The ending had some sort of resolution but felt rushed compared to much of the rest of the story.
The way it deals with feelings of belonging and displacement I found really good and there were also some shocks I was not expecting as well as moments of humour. 7/10
by Chetna Maroo
An unusual storyline that includes a lot about squash!
It is the story of a young teenage girl who has lost her mother. She has two sisters and their father at a loss what to do with them starts taking them to the local squash court.
The story unfolds of how they deal with grief and growing up. It was beautifully told and ends on a bitter sweet but positive note 8/10
by Sarah Bernstein
Bernstein has been listed as one of Granta's best young novelists in 2023 although her dust jacket biography says she is from Montreal. This ambiguity flows through into this book where it proves difficult to pin anything down.
The writing is superb in places but I ended the book feeling it was an exercise in style rather than a telling of tales. I found myself asking the question how much can a novel be pared down before it ceases to be. The book has little plot-a woman travels North to care for a brother and never is accepted by the locals due to certain events she believes the town blame her for. Little in the way of subplot. The location is never clarified other than North and it gets cold in winter. The two main characters are not named and we learn little of them other than mystery. There are few other characters, all anonymous and from the town.
Having said that I keep thinking it through and trying to work out what was going on and I like that. Vintage booker material :). 5/10
by Eric Hazan
A series of vignettes about the history and current state of the city of Paris. In Hazan's normal style it is a no holds barred account where he praises and disparages in equal measure. It is a short and very enjoyable read for anyone who loves the city and will certainly provoke discussion. 8/10
by George Simenon
Maigret is off to the Normandy coast following the poisoning of a maid. The glass she drank was meant for her mistress. As you would expect not everything is as it seems as we learn more about the family history the true story behind the poisoning comes to light. Vintage Maigret 9/10
by Pierre LeMaitre
A great novella featuring the french police officer Camille Verhoeven.
Following an explosion in the middle of Paris a man hands himself in and says he has planted six other bombs due to go off at 24 hour intervals.
The pace is relentless and nail biting. Lemaitre at his best 8/10
by Salman Rushdie
A complicated tale moving from India and the Moghuls to renaissance Florence with a cast of characters who appear to move through time and have several names to boot! But, Rushdie is such a great story teller that this is an enjoyable yarn about a beautiful princess and the way her life unfolds and her son?/grandson?/none of the above? who is telling her tale to try and be recognised as a prince. We are kept guessing until the end but it was a very enjoyable journey 8/10
by Han Kang
This is a very gentle, meditative book about a lecturer in ancient greek who is going blind, and one of his students whose life experiences have left her unable to speak. The language is beautiful in places even in translation but I was halfway through before I got drawn in to the story 6/10
by Victor Heringer
A brazilian author and set in Rio in the 1970's it is the story of a young man discovering his sexuality and love in the midst of a poor district of the city. Well written and engaging I found it hard to come into land with as it was dealing with things far outside my experience, 7/10
by E. M. Forster
A short story set in the future. It was written in 1928 but following a pandemic and the rise of AI this seems a very prescient story where a community rarely meets in person and lives are regulated by the machine. A little bit eerie! 6/10
by Georges Simenon
Maigret is back in America but this time on an exchange visit much like he hosted in an earlier novel, a guest from Scotland Yard.
In the same way Maigret tried to get rid of his English guest, his American hosts try to find ways of depositing Maigret in out of the way places and so he ends up in a coroner's court where they are trying to establish the cause of death of a young woman found dead on a railway line in the middle of desert. Four airmen were with her. Maigret begins to find that human nature is the same wherever you are even if the American's go about things in a different way. In true Maigret style we never do find out the verdict of the court. Really enjoyed this one. 9/10
by John Merriman
A book about late nineteenth century France and the anarchist movement told by following the story of Emile Henry who exploded two bombs in central Paris. It is a fascinating story and told in a very engaging way.
Merriman concludes that there was no Dynamite Club as such but it is easy to draw parallels between the motivations of nineteenth century anarchists and modern day terrorists. Surely, it behoves society to look at the reasons for such actions 8/10
by Jennifer Egan
A book looking just a short way into the future and where social media and technology might take us, when a social media guru invents a technology that can retrieve memories and download them, and also upload them to the collective conscience. Scary stuff. It has a huge cast of characters who interlink over time and place. Some of these characters appeared in A visit from the Goon Squad. Keeping track of them all required a fair bit of mental gymnastics. I enjoyed the first two thirds of this book but for me it lost its way toward the end and as such lost me as well 7/10
A bit less crime this year-only 5 Maigret's, all enjoyable, and a smattering of others, including The Secret Life of Writers
The Booker list was ok but not a classic. My favourite by far was The trees by Percival Everett, a truly different book. I enjoyed the winning novel, The seven moons but a number of the other novels were pretty ordinary imho.
The year was dominated by a couple of Trollopes from the Palliser series, The Forsyte Saga trilogy-which I thoroughly enjoyed, and to celebrate it's centenary, Ulysses. This book was like climbing a mountain but was in equal measure entertaining and so opaque that it became a slog to get through.
Pierene continue to produce good books in translation with my favourite this year being Marzahn, mon amour.
by George Simenon
We go back in time to Maigret's beginnings in the police force and a case which ends unhappily for Maigret but where his methods shine through all the same. A murder in the house of a wealthy coffee merchant gets covered up by the elite-including Maigret's boss. Interesting back story for the other novels 8/10
by John Galsworthy
The second Forsyte novel takes us into the 20th century and the pain of Soames and Irene's divorce set against the background of the Boer war and the end of the Victorian age. Soames continues to be a bastard but is such a great character. 8/10
by Terence Killeen
The guide referred to in the previous post. This book was invaluable in guiding a layman like me through the maze that is ulysses, giving a guide to the style, to the references to Homer's epic and to the many real characters and places referenced in the text. Great reference book 9/10
by James Joyce
Well, well. I have finally finished this book in the year celebrating the centenary of its publication. What can I say. This was a hard read but at times incredibly engaging, as we follow Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus through one day in Dublin. Each section is told in a different style and sometimes different styles within a section. I have to say without a guide to help I would have struggled but I am glad I have read it. As a novel I would give it 3/10 but as a work of such significance you have to give it more and it will stay with me for some time. 7/10
by Manuel Astur
A book about Marcelino, a lone uneducated man who has killed his brother and has to go on the run. But, it is far more than this. A meditation on rural life, on history in this context and what it means to be human. I felt it lost its way toward the end but an enjoable short read. 7/10
by Shehan Karunatilaka
A book based in Sri Lanka at the time of the civil war. Maali used to be a war photographer but now he is dead. We meet him in the immediate afterlife and he has seven nights to decide whether to go into the light or be condemned to living in the halfway house he finds himself in.
He wants to find out how he died and why, and most importantly, to have his photos found and published. We follow him on this journey. It is both funny and sad and contains some horrifying scenes from the war but I found it gripping and thought provoking and one of three books on the booker shortlist I would like to see win 8/10
by NoViolet Bulawayo
A history of modern Zimbabwe where all the characters are animals and apart from Mugabe and the party of Power, only one individual goat is fleshed out in any storyline.
The book is very funny in places and gut wrenching in others. She uses the device of repetition a lot to emphasise a point and overdid it in places in my opinion. I also struggled with the animals a bit. I sort of get Mugabe as a horse and his wife as a donkey but who then are the cows or the ducks or the pigs and goats and why is someone a chicken and not a duck?
If I was more aware of the history I think I would have got more from the story than I did. 6/10
by Cara Black
The first novel featuring Aimee Leduc, a private detective in Paris. The good news is the fact that it is set in Paris and has some great descriptions of areas of Paris.
The story is a fast paced thriller about a murder in the Marais that has links back to wartime occupation and a murder that took place then. I had identified the killer fairly early on and some of the scenes were operating in marvel comic territory. There is also one scene near the end that is like a stage direction for a Puccini opera. I may read another one but Maigret still gets my vote when it comes to Paris detectives 6/10
by Karen Joy Fowler
A historical novel telling the story of the family of the man who killed Abraham Lincoln.
It is the story of a remarkable family but in the end I found it a bit too long and some of the characters not so interesting. However, the writing was very good and kept me hooked until the end, even though we knew all along what the end was. 7/10
by Selby Wynn Schwartz
So the first question I have is whether this is a novel. The author of course answers this by referencing Orlando as biography.
It is a fascinating journey through intellectual, artsy lesbianism of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, referencing real life people and events. The unnamed narrator seems to be the lesbian corpus looking and cheering on.
It uses this looping device so the characters keep coming around again. This does mean you want to read it quickly or you can lose track easily.
I really enjoyed the book, although i haven't answered my question but it sent me scurrying to discover more about people like Romaine Brooks and Natalie Barney and that's got to be a good thing. 8/10
by Leila Mottley
This book is set in Oakland and is a fairly depressing tale of poverty in the US and survival against the odds. Despite the grim story line of a young girl, Keira, getting pulled into prostitution this book has an underlying hope and resilience that keeps you hanging in and desperate to see how it ends. 8/10
by Elizabeth Strout
A well told story about William and his ex-wife, Lucy Barton.
William's third wife is leaving him and he has discovered he has a half sister he didn't know existed. This is a third book about Lucy Barton and maybe if I had read the previous two I would have been more engaged but this did not really do much for me 5/10
by Percival Everett
So every so often a book hits the Booker longlist that doesn't feel like it belongs there.
In some ways this is such a book. It is a crime novel and it is very funny in places. It is also a book about racial tensions and hate crimes and the history of black Americans. All in all a strange mix that works and in true Booker style is less unresolved at the end with questions dropped into the readers lap to deal with. A great book but I will be amazed if it makes the shortlist. 9/10
by Hernan Diaz
Always difficult to score the first booker book of the year but this novel grew on me and I enjoyed it.
It tells the story of a rich financier and his wife in the inter-war years but uses a great device which undermines the telling of history and biography. The story unfolds in 4 different books written by different people, the last being the diary of the financiers wife which unlocks the truthfulness-or does it- of the previous three. Great storytelling either way. 9/10
by Georges Simenon
I much prefer generally(maybe with the exception of The Yellow Dog) the novels set in Paris. This novel is very much set around the streets of Paris - although the crimes have largely taken place in Normandy.
Maigret is his normal obsessive self, enjoying the Parisian way of life while fighting crime. Marvellous 8/10
by E.C.R. Lorac
Subtitled a Devon mystery this crime novel was excellent. Although writing as a man ECR was actually Edith Caroline Rivett and she died a year before I was born. This novel was published in 1946, and concerns a man invalided out of the army who rents a farm cottage and works hard renovating it and the garden with it. When he dies in a fire the mystery begins and many false trails are laid. I will try and find more of her writing 9/10