Category: My Reading & Reviews

The Dogs of Littlefield by Suzanne Berne

In 1999, Suzanne Berne won the Orange Prize with A Crime in the Neighbourhood. The Orange Prize has been reborn as the Baileys’ Prize and Berne is once again on the list with a different crime in another neighborhood. Littlefield, according to a (fictional) survey, is the sixth best place

Read More »

Eleven Days by Lea Carpenter

Novels set in the First and Second World Wars continue to come thick and fast – Anna Hope’s Wake, Louise Walters’ Mrs Sinclair’s Suitcase, Audrey Magee’s The Undertaking, Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life, Alison Macleod’s Unexploded to name just a few of the very recent ones. They’re wonderful novels; however

Read More »

The Shadow of the Crescent Moon by Fatima Bhutto

One of six debuts on the Bailey’s Prize long list, The Shadow of the Crescent Moon is set over the course of three hours in Mir Ali, a small town in Pakistan, close to the border with Afghanistan. Three brothers all set off for separate mosques for their Friday prayers

Read More »

Reasons She Goes to the Woods by Deborah Kay Davies

Deborah Kay Davies’ first novel, True Things About Me, saw its author selected as one of twelve best new British novelists by the BBC’s Culture show, and was selected by Lionel Shriver as her personal book of 2011. Reasons She Goes to the Woods is a confident and accomplished second

Read More »

Burial Rites by Hannah Kent

Hannah Kent discovered the story of Agnes Magnusdottir, the last woman to be executed for murder in Iceland, during a year as an exchange student, and Burial Rites is the result of Kent’s desire to give the condemned woman a voice.  Kent’s novel featured alongside those of Man Booker longlistees

Read More »

Anna Quindlen – Still Life with Breadcrumbs

Anna Quindlen is a name new to me, but I seem to have come a little late to the party. Still Life with Breadcrumbs is Quindlen’s seventh novel; she’s been number one on the New York Times bestseller list with her memoir Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake, and she’s

Read More »

The Undertaking by Audrey Magee

The popularity of the Second World War as a subject for a novel shows no signs of waning. Alison Macleod’s Unexploded was longlisted for the Man Booker last year; Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life and Louise Walter’s Mrs Sinclair’s Suitcase were both eligible for the Bailey’s Prize, and The Undertaking

Read More »

The Bear by Claire Cameron

In October 1991, Raymond Jakubauskas and Carola Frehe were killed by a bear whilst camping in Algonquin Park, Canada. An a examination of the scene provided no rationale – investigators were left to assume, as Cameron says in her introduction, that the bear had ‘decided to take a chance on

Read More »

Bailey’s Prize 2014

And So It Begins – The Longlist is Announced So the speculation is over. Not only have the longlisted books been named, but the debate about whether the nature of the prize would change with its sponsors has been answered with a resounding No. The longlist is unashamedly, unapologetically literary.

Read More »

The Man Booker Prize *faints with excitement* *gets up again*

I thought I’d be more excited today. Having read every single book on the Man Booker longlist, I thought I’d be hanging on in there for today’s announcement. The day the shortlist was announced, I was checking Twitter every thirty seconds in case I missed it.  But today – no.

Read More »