October Reading

October Reading Update

I’m currently enjoying the first fruits of autumn – meaning I’m sitting with the cat curled up next to me. The heating has finally been switched on after a LONG summer hiatus. Everything is spiced, the coffees, the candles, the cakes. You don’t get this in the summer. It makes for very cosy reading.

I have always loved Graham Norton’s books. Since his first novel, he’s managed to navigate small town drama juxtaposed with the call of the big city beautifully. Growing more ambitious each time, without losing the heart – and the humour – that makes him such a fabulous writer.

His latest, Frankie, turns everything on its head, though. It is so much larger in scale and honestly, so much more ambitious. Frankie is an epic tale of an entire life, start to finish. Well, the best bits at least. Every moment of heartache is carefully laced with enough levity to keep the story flowing without any awkward jilts. This is not a celebrity novel in any way, shape, or form.

If the slowly unfolding tale of a orphaned little girl in small town Ireland, crossing the Atlantic only to find herself still stuck in a perpetual chain of life changing events isn’t enough to get you to pick this one up… I don’t know what will. It combines some of my favourite things in a novel; inter-generational friendship, the pains love (found, lost, and unrequited), and depictions of mammoth wealth. Who doesn’t love a tail of rags to riches?

I would probably struggle to explain what it is that makes this novel work so well, if a friend of mine hadn’t put it so perfectly. Norton doesn’t get bogged down with boring details. He just keeps the story moving. And that’s what makes him stand out – there’s not a spare word, not a page of filler. One of my favourite moments in the book is a nod to this very idea. Where Frankie and Nor (our protagonist’s life-long best friend) explain to Damian, the agency carer she’s been recounting the highlights of her life to, that the period between the excitement of New York and the present day she hasn’t touched upon, ultimately don’t matter.

The overwhelming longing that comes with knowing when your best years took place, can’t be avoided. Maybe one day, we will all look back at the life we’ve lived, and wish just for a moment we could revisit that feeling of being so alive.

Speaking of the pains of wealth, reading about how the other half live isn’t just fabulous (and very troubling) in novels. Just like Frankie, Gary Stevenson’s The Trading Game also charts the rise of an underdog. As well also very nearly – but not quite – becoming a globe trotting adventure. But more on that later.

Stevenson has a fantastic ability to explain complex economic theory to his audience of online followers (those subscribed to the Gary’s Economics YouTube channel). But, it’s during his tales of how he fell into the mysterious world of trading, that I began to understand how he is able to do so, with so much clarity, for those without an economics background. When an older trader he looks up to tells him to throw away his old university textbooks, and start to pay attention, it becomes very clear that this isn’t really the world his academic tutors were preparing him for at all. They were preparing him for their own.

Like any good story, this book charts the rise and fall of an underdog you can’t help but root for. Gary’s constant reminder of home, through his childhood best friends equally chaotic journey into the world of banking, serves as a grounding for this story. Look how easily you can fall into the wrong habit, the wrong crowd, even the wrong career. And look how difficult it is to leave it all behind.

I think what I found the most jarring about this book, and what other readers will too, is how humanising it is of the people who made a killing off the back of the 2007-2008 global financial crisis. There are humans, not just a huge instutition, making decisions that affect our lives. Making themselves rich off the back of our struggle. But there’s a worthwhile lesson here about how global institutions not only normalise this distancing between your actions in work and the wider societal rot that that large corporations are inflicting on society. And how the well-being of their employees, their freedom to move on, to find meaningful work elsewhere, to restart their lives away from the constant grind of trading, inevitably falls to the wayside when there is still profit to be made. Meanwhile, the rest of us find ourselves working more and more, for less and less in return.

My main takeaway, without spoiling anything, is really how validating it feels to have someone explain verbatim how the anxiety we all feel about money and how far it goes, is the product of the terminal decline global economies are now experiencing. And how it’s allowed to continue, despite the destruction it causes to people’s quality of life, their happiness, and the planet. Gary’s story is a testament to that, in fact. What it takes to win in a fight with one of the world’s largest banks, is the kind of nerve we could only dream our politicians had.

Perhaps not the biggest jump from the world of banking – let’s talk about crime. Ann Cleeve’s Vera novels have long been some of my absolute favourites of the genre, and the latest (The Dark Wives) was absolutely no exception. Something I think crime fiction often isn’t given enough credit for, is the care authors in the genre take to accurately depict the landscape they cover. This might be understandably masked by the neverending stream of murders they force on the poor locals. But that doesn’t mean it should be overlooked. Vera Stanhope – the character I will passionately argue is the 21st century’s most iconic detective – traverses the Northumbria area in her equally iconic Land Rover, moving between the metropolitan Newcastle and the Northumberland countryside. In The Dark Wives Cleeve’s tackles the heartbreaking state of children’s homes – in a post privatisation world. Where Council’s are struggling, and every child is a cash cow to their wealthy CEOs.

What I read in Feb!

Photo by Ena Marinkovic on Pexels.com

I did a fair bit of traveling here and there in February, and what’s better than a long train ride for doing some reading? Well, maybe not my journey back from Liverpool to Cardiff. I’ve never been in a carriage packed so tightly in my life. But I won’t dwell on that for too long, because other than those hellish 4 hours, it’s been a great month!

Let’s start with Claire Keegan’s Foster. I was bitten by the bug when I read Small Things Like These in January. Foster’s writing is so beautiful that she manages to make novels as short as these two feel every bit as hard hitting as an epic. In fact, perhaps the shorter length is what lends itself so well to such beautiful storytelling. It’s not just the level of emotional detail that makes her such a phenomenal writer, the real skill is how nothing feels spare. Every sentence is so rich, you won’t be worried about Keegan running out of words.

Next was Pamela Anderson’s fabulous memoir Love, Pamela. And let me tell you before we get into it; if you haven’t signed up for Pam’s newsletter, you’re missing out. I look forward to her weekly journals more than I do to my Saturday Starbucks.

For a relatively short memoir, I was impressed by how much of Anderson’s life is covered. My favourite chapters were the one’s where the author dove head first into some of the wildest stories of her political activism. Such as taking vegan meals to Edward Snowdon, or challenging Russian politicians on their animal rights policies. Not only is Pamela fearless, her perspective is crystal clear.

I love romance. I have to say it. The cheesier the better. But occasionally you stumble across something special. May Archer’s The Easy Way was something special. Besides hitting on some of the most tried and true romance tropes, Archer manages to work in exciting plot, giving her characters not just carefully detailed emotional stakes, but some dramatic ones too.

Finally this Feb, I went back for another Anglesey Crime Thriller from Simon McCleave. In Too Deep follows DI Laura Hart as she officially gets back to work. Now, I’ve said it before, but I’ll say it again: McCleave’s care in building DI Hart’s backstory is really where these novels shine. Nothing is throwaway. Chuck in some double agents for the Real IRA and murder on the Isle of Angelsey, and you’re in for another ride!

McCleave did not disappoint, but now I’ve got three more months until the next installment!

Overall, another fabulous month. I can wholeheartedly recommend everything I read in Feb. Genre-wise, there’s something for everyone at the very least!

What did I read in January 2023?

January was a good start to the year! Though I have to admit, I’m finding book shopping and stumbling across something I’d like to read quite difficult at the moment. Perhaps this is something to do with the new year being a generally low energy time for most of us (those who aren’t going mad at the gym or taking up new hobbies).

Photo of the cover of 'The Secret Life of Albert Entwistle' by Matt Cain being displayed on a Kindle.

I started the year with ‘The Secret Life of Albert Entwistle’ by Matt Cain. An absolute joy. I love reading fiction with older protagonists. What this book did so beautifully was share how universal the search for love and acceptance is. Anyone struggling with the idea that they’ve wasted any portion of their life on worrying what others think, or let it force them out of doing what they really wanted, will find this massively soothing. The reality of life is, we can change our minds, and lives, at any age. It’s never too late.

The book also handles class and inter-generational friendships beautifully too. Albert’s relationship with Nicole, a young mum trying to change her life by attending the local college, is also handled brilliantly. Nicole’s experience of living on a council estate rubs up against the expectations of her new boyfriend’s parents in a way that felt genuine. I’d definitely recommend for anyone looking for something feel good.

Claire Keegan’s ‘Small Things Like These’ is set in 1985, in small-town Ireland. While this may have been more appropriate as a Christmas read, it didn’t hinder my enjoyment one bit. Claire Keegan is a master of storytelling. How she crams so much emotion into such short books is beyond my comprehension. Nothing feels rushed, every word is intentional. It’s sent me on a journey through the rest of her work, but more on that next month! I can’t recommend this enough!

‘Boys Don’t Cry’ by Fiona Scarlett didn’t disappoint either. I don’t know if Irish authors are capable of disappointing. I like to think it’s the Celtic storytelling gene. Irish, Scot, or Welsh, we won’t shut up for the life of us. That’s a lot of practice spinning a yarn.

The novel takes place in a Dublin tower block. Even though I had seen reviews describing the book as heartbreaking, I still didn’t feel prepared. This book is a reminder that we are not all dealt the same cards. And some families are given more than their fair share to contend with.

Finally, and perhaps the most surprising based on everything else I read in January, is Simon McCleave’s ‘The Dark Tide’. Having grown up in North Wales, and missing home from the ever-so-slightly sunnier climes of Cardiff, I was desperate to read something set where I grew up. Perhaps a crime thriller wasn’t the cosiest of vibes, but it sure did it keep me gripped from the first page.

McCleave does a really great job of showing how interwoven small-town life is with the city. Everyone knows someone who’s either left for it, or returned. And with it, brought plenty of baggage. As the first in a series, this book does an amazing job (better than any crime novel I’ve read before) of setting up our protagonist’s origin story. DCI Laura Hart was a top negotiator working for the Manchester police force, and now she’s living in a small town on Anglesey, riddled with both grief and guilt.

It is undoubtedly impressive how McCleave weaves in elements of DCI Hart’s backstory into the plot, and even sets up even more drama in the books to come. I’ll certainly be reading the next in the series.

If you’ve read any of the books mentioned, let me know what you thought!