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Fiction

Featured image of Endland

Endland

Everything seems to be going wrong in Endland. Gods are being banished from Olympus and forced into dead-end jobs, a teenager vanishes after she uploads herself to the internet, and even the space-time continuum is in danger thanks to two alcoholic, quantum physics enthusiasts. It is a place of abuse and negligence, and all its Read More

Featured image of THE UNMAKING OF ELLIE ROOK

THE UNMAKING OF ELLIE ROOK

A psychological thriller, entwining local myth and legend with modern day themes of love, loyalty and survival, The Unmaking of Ellie Rook leads on from Sandra Ireland’s previous works, Beneath the Skin and Bone Deep, to explore the dark side of family dynamics, skewed loyalties and emotional manipulation. Set in a fictional village based around Read More

Featured image of DUCKS, NEWBURYPORT (SHORTLISTED, THE GOLDSMITHS PRIZE 2019)

DUCKS, NEWBURYPORT (SHORTLISTED, THE GOLDSMITHS PRIZE 2019)

Ducks, Newburyport is Lucy Ellmann’s eighth novel. This is a big book by any standard. In it I met a woman who made me look at the world her way: a working Mom, anxious about her four children, worried about Trump, the state of America, gun violence, and broken by the death of her mother, Read More

Featured image of We Are Made Of Diamond Stuff (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

We Are Made Of Diamond Stuff (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

A 36-year-old queer working-class migrant arrives on the Isle of Wight and gets a job with best friend Shae in a trashy hotel with an absent boss and equally hard to pin down wages. Attempts to gain citizenship amidst the Brexit chaos are constantly thwarted, UKIP supporters lurk on street corners, and an alcoholic parent Read More

Featured image of Slip of a Fish (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

Slip of a Fish (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

Amy Arnold’s novel Slip of a Fish is an exuberant exploration into whether language can be trusted to convey meaning; the protagonist, Ash, collects words as a way of coping with the confusion they cause her, whilst Arnold’s own inventive literary styling gradually exposes this complex inner mind to readers. Abbott says there’s no need, Read More

Featured image of The Man Who Saw Everything (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

The Man Who Saw Everything (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

The Man Who Saw Everything is Deborah Levy’s seventh novel and her third, along with Swimming Home and Hot Milk to be nominated for the Man Booker Prize. Levy has also written plays and short stories, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. The novel’s protagonist, Saul Adler, narrates two separate incidents Read More

Featured image of Good Day? (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

Good Day? (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

Twenty four years of marriage and two children might make everyday conversations mundane, unless the object of these discussions is somebody else’s life. Following an unnamed couple, Main documents their lives through short dialogues, each beginning with ‘Good day?’. It quickly becomes apparent that both parties are hiding more than they would be willing to Read More

Featured image of The Porpoise (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

The Porpoise (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

Mark Haddon is best known for his 2003 bestseller, The Curious Incident of The Dog in the Night-time. The Porpoise is his fifth novel for adults and it begins with a tragic accident; a light aircraft collides with a grain silo. Philippe, a wealthy businessman loses his pregnant wife in the crash, but his baby Read More

Featured image of The Hope Fault

The Hope Fault

‘No earth move, no jolt, just empty whisper’. Not all fault lines cause violent eruptions. Often the plates do not collide but slowly shift, causing imperceptible change, yet over time, creating powerful new landscapes with small movements. Tracy Farr’s elegant and pensive novel, The Hope Fault, honours the force of the fault lines that run Read More

Featured image of West

West

Carys Davies has been honing her short form craft for many years, with two collections of short stories to her name and a slew of impressive writing credits that include the 2015 Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award and the Royal Society of Literature’s V.S. Pritchett Prize. It should be no surprise then that her Read More

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