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Featured image of CRUDO

CRUDO

Crudo, Olivia Laing’s first novel, is performance. Laing dons the mask of radical, experimentalist Kathy Acker, in a performance of experimental writing, and in text, her main character Kathy tries to resolve her commitment issues through the performance of marriage. Laing, a non-fiction writer, steps into the guise of Acker to bring a manic and Read More

Featured image of THE MERMAID AND MRS HANCOCK (SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2018 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

THE MERMAID AND MRS HANCOCK (SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2018 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

Imogen Hermes Gower’s debut novel, The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock, is a beautifully written slice of Georgian life that depicts the fortunes of a widower merchant, an ambitious courtesan, and a mermaid. Gower’s London is intricate and robust; she uses her background in archaeology and anthropology to breathe life into the city through the smallest Read More

Featured image of HOME FIRE (WINNER, 2018 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

HOME FIRE (WINNER, 2018 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

Kamila Shamsie’s seventh novel is a modern-day retelling of Sophocles’ Antigone. Though most of her novels have been decidedly international in flavour, Home Fire is a wholly British Greek tragedy. The complexities of incest and the law of god have been traded for the complexities of morality and the rule of state. A novel of Read More

Featured image of THE OUTSIDE LANDS

THE OUTSIDE LANDS

The Outside Lands is an evocative and sensitive exploration of the quiet turmoil of self-discovery in 1960s America; it is beautiful and painful. Death intrudes on the lives of Jeannie and Kip when their mother is killed the same week JFK is assassinated. As the nation grieves for its President, Jeannie and Kip grieve for Read More

Featured image of CROSS PURPOSE

CROSS PURPOSE

Cross Purpose is an energetic debut novel that attempts to perform a balancing act between a gritty Tartan Noir and a darkly comic detective novel. Claire MacLeary’s first novel jumps into Scottish crime fiction with both feet. She doesn’t flinch away from the torrid tedium of life in Scottish council estates, but embraces the dichotomy Read More

Featured image of The Essex Serpent (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

The Essex Serpent (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

A sleepy Essex village is roused to a simmering hysteria as rumours that a monstrous 17th century winged sea serpent has returned, causing an oppressive pall of paranoia to descend on those who live by the banks of the Blackwater. The local vicar, educated and thoroughly modern, battles the rising superstitions of the villagers, a Read More

Featured image of The Improbability of Love

The Improbability of Love

There are two major problems with The Improbability of Love. The first is that it’s just too long and the second is that it’s dull. The large cast of characters and their sub-plots are exhausting. There is an ensemble cast of at least eighteen different characters, each with a section dedicated to their point of Read More

Featured image of The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet (Longlisted for the 2016 Baileys Prize)

The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet (Longlisted for the 2016 Baileys Prize)

The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet is a science-fiction novel set in a distant future where humans have reached out beyond our solar system and joined the larger galactic community. It follows the interspecies crew of the industrial ship Wayfarer as they seek their fortune building a wormhole highway to a mysterious and Read More

Featured image of Undertaking

Undertaking

Rob Currie’s play, Undertaking, explores the dimensions of grief and loss by blurring the lines between reality, fantasy and memory, examining death as it were from a personal and professional point of view. Undertaking ushers the audience into the backrooms of a funeral parlour and the home of a grieving family, as both prepare for Read More

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