Bringing the year's reading up to date.
Ordinary Thunderstorms by William Boyd.
When I was much younger I read Boyd's The New Confessions and loved it so much that not only did I read Rousseau's Confessions (which Boyd gives a nod to in his title) but I also read every book of Boyd's as it was published. None gripped me quite as The New Confessions did, although they were all excellent in their own way. Somehow along the way though my Boyd habit abated. Out of curiosity I picked up Ordinary Thunderstorms at the library, looking, I think, for that elusive animal, the well written, intelligent, readable literary novel.
Ordinary Thunderstorms ticked four and a half of those five boxes. It is well written (and by this I mean the prose is not dull, pretentious, a distraction from the subject matter or wincingly tone deaf and on the positive side is well made, fresh and interesting - a pretty high hurdle, I am a picky reader nowadays), is readable and literary (and this word I use loosely and controversially to mean 'non-genre').
The story is broadly that of a man who stumbles into a murder scene, becomes the main suspect and thereby tangles himself up in a conspiracy, all of which force him to live rough in London and then find an alternate identity. It's a great plot and well executed. My only reservation was the conspiracy element: big pharma as the villain. Again? If this hasn't become a cliche by now, the idea is at the very least severely fatigued. But it didn't ruin a good read.
Great House by Nicole Krauss.
Great House by Nicole Krauss is definitely in with a chance of being my book of the year. It won't be to everyone's tastes: you will need to love being inside the head of at least two introspective, self-absorbed female characters who write; you will also need to be tolerant of interior monologue and an overall atmosphere of loss and anxiety. If you can manage that then here is a beautifully written book of deep thought and loveliness.
Theodora by Stella Duffy.
I read this whilst deep in some unproductive writing endeavours of my own and my review here was heavily influenced by my frustration with some elements of the craftsmanship of the writing. I gather that the novel has now been optioned by HBO. I suspect it will be better on the screen than the page.
The Privileges by Jonathan Dee.
Another contender for book of the year.
On a writing course I attended a while ago the tutor declared that there is nothing as boring as reading about money in a novel. I was astonished. I love reading about money. Money, property, inheritance, debt are all motivating factors in of several of my best loved novels: Madame Bovary, anything by Edith Wharton or Jane Austen, Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, swathes of Henry James. So this glimpse into the lives of the super-rich and the murky means by which their money was acquired and what they did with it was fascinating for me. It was especially well written: half way through I realised that the author had entirely convinced me of the wealth involved without giving me a single description of an opulent interior. Also, despite their moral dubiousness and their extraordinary lifestyle these were recognisably human characters, not caricatures, each with their own inner lives. And that is an achievement that is rarer than it should be in contemporary fiction. And if this doesn't convince you to read the book then at least sample the first chapter: the description of the wedding and family tensions is one of the best things I've read in years. But not if you think reading about money is dull.
The Journal of Dora Damage by Belinda Starling.
A Victorian woman is forced by her husband's illness to take over their book binding business and then finds herself working for a highly placed ring of pornographers on whom she eventually turns the tables.
The book was excellent on the detail of London life (although overlong in places) but rather unconvincing in its plot. Renews my admiration for Jack Maggs.
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan.
Wonderful. If you haven't read it already, then go now and get a copy. Inventive and interesting and lovely. Though not quite personally engaging enough for book of the year.
The Return of Captain John Emmett by Elizabeth Speller.
Mystery set in the aftermath of the First World War. A page turner with a lot of loose plot ends and a serious need of an editor but engaging nevertheless. An author I have mentally noted to seek out again.
Gillespie and I by Jane Harris.
There is no way to do justice to this novel without giving away a major plot point so you will have to take it on trust from me, without much further explanation, that this is a marvellous novel. It may look long but it is such an excellent involving read (single woman becomes embroiled with an artist and his family in late nineteenth century Glasgow leading to .... complications) that the pages turn themselves. And the plot twist that comes about half way through is magnificent.
The Observations, Jane Harris's first novel was also wonderful.
A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness.
So, this turned up for me at the library. Although I had no recollection of doing so, at some point I had clearly ordered it. How had I heard of it? No idea. What was it about? Finding an old book according to the blurb on the inside flap. I placed it on my shelf. Then someone else wanted it from the library and I either had to read it or return it unread. I read the first few pages. I discovered that the narrator was a witch. And then she met a vampire.
I am an out and out literary snob. I do not read books about vampires or witches. Not Harry Potter (well, not for a long time) nor Twilight (unreadable boring pap).
I could not put this book down.
I read 600 pages in two days. I bought it on my Kindle so I could read anywhere and everywhere without lugging the equivalent weight of two house bricks with me. I read late at night and I read early in the morning.
And even when I got to the end and found that it was not the end, that it was simply the beginning of a trilogy and that nothing, absolutely nothing, was resolved and that I was left hanging like something on a Christmas tree, I was still happy.
I can't begin to explain how the author made a book about magic compelling and readable but she did. (Although it obviously helps that she can write good prose. No story is good enough to withstand bad prose).
So, there we have the year's reading so far. The usual mixed bag: several duds, a surprise, some discoveries, some old favourites. Nothing life changing. Yet. Because of course it is the search for the book that will change my life and explain it all to me that keeps me reading. Like Captain Ahab, I know it is out there and I am determined to hunt it down.