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| Photograph by Saira Archer |
Book reviews by writers or independent booksellers, with occasional special features. We choose our own recommendations: fiction, non-fiction, memoirs, poetry, nature writing. We hope you'll enjoy our selections and keep coming back for more. Follow us on Facebook, X (Writersreview1) and Bluesky (@writersreview.bsky.social). Our new venture, Writers Review Publishing, launched in April - see website link in sidebar and Q&As with the authors.
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| Photograph by Saira Archer |
The Impossible Thing is published by Bantam.
Nicki Thornton's Little Bookshop of Murders is published by Chimneys Publishing.
"Despite the plainly terrifying nature of some of the stories and characters, there was something essentially benign about 2000 AD ..."
Paul Dowswell's journey from foolish youth to mithered old codger is near to its end. In between these two points he has written some books and hopes to write some more. His website can be found here.
Typically pithy dialogue from the Judge Dredd story ‘The Apocalypse War’ where America goes to war with the 22nd Century version of the Soviet Union.
Read again, forty years later, the Dredd stories remain the
most engaging in the comic, not least the extraordinarily creepy tale of Judge
Death and his three companions: Fire, Fear and Mortis – a parallel-world
quartet of unnerving Judges whose mission in life is to wipe out all living
things. One story ends with Judge Death captured inside of the mind of the
Psychic Judge, Anderson (also featured in the illustration above), and both are
then encased in a single plastic cocoon to prevent Death escaping – something
to give any child nightmares.
2000 AD’s most
terrifying baddies, the four Dark Judges.
But Dredd could also be funny and topical. Here below are a
few frames from ‘High Society’, a story where low-life slum dwellers are
relocated by Mega City One’s municipal housing department to a posh orbiting
satellite for the ultra-wealthy. Another story pits two huge social housing
blocks against each other in an all-out war. The buildings are named Carole Munro
Block and Vince St Clair Block – the aliases Coronation Street’s Jack and Vera
Duckworth adopt when they both surreptitiously sign up to a video dating agency
in 1983. And I loved the story about Carl Heinz Pilchards-In-Tomato-Sauce
Clayderman – a name inspired by the avant-garde composer Stockhausen and the
French easy-listening pianist. At a classical music concert in Mega-City One,
the composer turns on his audience and starts murdering them in a variety of
ludicrous ways which coincide with his music. Judge Dredd, of course, is in
attendance and intervenes…
One Judge Dredd episode from 1984 sees a high society orbital suburb occupied by rehoused slum dwellers from Mega-City One.
Like its 1980s contemporary the music magazine Smash Hits,
the comic was cleverly designed to make the reader feel like they were part of
a secret society with its own insider slang. The editor was an alien from Betelgeuse
called Tharg (of course he was) forever reassuring his readers their stories
were charged with ‘thrill-power’. 2000 AD even invented its own pretend
swearwords ‘Grud’, ‘Drokk’ and ‘Stomm’, like ‘Frak’ in Battle Star Galactica
and ‘Pigging’ in Jack Rosenthal’s The Dustbinmen.
Reading again from a distance of 40 years it’s easy to see
how many of the strips were borrowed from other sci-fi films and books. ‘Rogue
Trooper’ for example, owes a debt to Blade Runner, as does ‘Robo-Hunter’,
which also comes with a large dose of Sam Spade. ‘Mean Arena’ was clearly
inspired by Rollerball. Inspiration also came from history. In ‘Nemesis the
Warlock’ a strangely horse-like alien defends his fellow extra-terrestrials
from Spanish Inquisition style human space explorers intent on genocide. The
stories, illustrated in a detailed steam-punk style, also have more than an
echo of the Nazi racial state, with its evil baddies banging on about ‘keeping
pure’.
Plagiarism, or maybe it’s ‘homage’, also abounds in Alan
Moore’s ‘DR and Quinch’ a cheeky lift from National Lampoon’s OC and Stiggs,
itself a deplorable but amusing tale of two repellent high school students from
the Eisenhower era who create Olympic standard mischief. Moore’s version is set
in the far future and features two bizarre aliens getting up to malevolent
high-jinx on their home planet.
Waldo ‘DR’ Dobbs and Quinch fall foul of Judge Thorkwung
in the episode ‘DR and Quinch Go Straight’.
But my favourite story of all takes inspiration from E.T. and, incongruously, Boys from the Blackstuff. Running in 1983, ‘Skizz’ is another invention of Alan Moore and reading this again I still found it engaging and moving. Here an alien interpreter from some far-off planet’s diplomatic corps crash-lands in the West Midlands and is taken in by two kindly and unemployed Brummies, Roxy and Loz. They help him learn to speak English and adjust to life on Earth while also keeping him out of the clutches of a brutal South African policeman who bears a passing resemblance to PW Botha, who is working in league with the British military.
Stranded Interpreter Zhcchz (Skizz) is taken in by kindly Brummies Roxy and Loz. Uneasily adjusting to Earth food and atmosphere he vomits frequently, an event he thinks the Earthlings call ‘Flippi-Neck’.
The copies I have were produced during the high tide of
Thatcherism and fortunately 2000 AD was not on the radar of the Daily Mail.
The insult ‘Woke’ was, of course, decades away from coinage, but they would
have gone into orbit at the comic’s anti-establishment stance. Almost all the
characters are either brutal representatives of a repressive state or men and
women who have been done wrong by authority.
Like Viz, the quality of the artwork and stories was variable and sometimes you had to sift through a lot of dross to get to the gold. The weekly schedule put tremendous demands on the artists who often produced highly detailed work, so they were rotated to keep to the deadlines. But despite the plainly terrifying nature of some of the stories and characters, there was something essentially benign about 2000 AD. Occasionally a strip would feature editor Tharg and his office ‘droids’ – robot caricatures of the staff and freelancers – and in one story the office is infested by mice. The staff buy mousetraps in an effort to exterminate them but Tharg is having none of it. He opens a space portal, gets out his magic flute, and leads them across space to a planet entirely made of cheese. The snowflake!
2000 AD was formerly published by IPC Magazines Fleetway Publications and currently by Rebellion Developments
I’ve also been re-reading my way through my extensive Anne Tyler collection and am six books in so far. I got the latest Jackson Brodie novel by Kate Atkinson at Christmas last year – Murder at the Sign of the Rook (Doubleday), so of course I then had to re-read all the others. And I belong to a book group which also sometimes supplies titles I know already, including my own choice, The Leopard (Collins and Harvill Press) by Giuseppe Tommasi di Lampedusa, partly inspired by the recent Netflix series, which played fast and loose with the plot but was beautifully cast and filmed. It was first published in Italy in 1958 and the English translation two years later, both after the author’s death. I must have first read it in sixth form; anyway, I seem always to have known it and it remains one of my favourite books.
Other favourite re-reads of the years have been Hilary Mantel’s The Mirror and the Light, which I enjoyed much more second time round and Irène Nemirovsky’s Suite Française, which ditto. Our last book club title of the Year is Pip Williams’ The Dictionary of Lost Words and it is a corker. It may be hard to write a page-turner about a (fictional) girl helping to compile the OED, but Williams has done it. Happy reading!
Mark Davies has also chosen The Dictionary of Lost Words: Set largely in Oxford, the novel is structured to track the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries through the life of the first-person character, Esme. As the daughter of one of the editors, Esme's awareness of the significance of words begins as a small child. As a adult, she is employed at the Dictionary, and determines to try to include 'lost' words of a more feminine derivation, having realised that the Dictionary was a male-dominated domain: the editors and compilers were men, the majority of cited sources were written by men, and most of the researchers were men. By retrieving otherwise ignored or mislaid words, and by talking to working class women, Esme collects the basis of her own small alternative 'Lost Words' dictionary. This feminist theme is interwoven with the simultaneous activities of the suffragette movement and the nursing of soldiers injured in the First World War, making the book both engaging, thought-provoking, and educational.Jane Dalton: My pick is The Glass Hotel by Emily St John Mandel. Ostensibly a warning of the devastation wreaked by ponzi schemes, this strange and haunting novel carries an undercurrent of a world in which women pay the price for men’s crimes and selfishness.
Jane Dalton is a journalist for the Independent. Her first novel is currently out on submission to publishers.
Leslie Wilson's choice is When I Was, by Miranda Miller. What struck me about this novel was the vulnerability of people trying to be adults, and somehow never managing it; the deeply insecure parents are imprisoned by their class and difficult background, trying to negotiate the world without enough tools to do so, at least not enough to fool other adults that they know what they're doing, and aren't we all like that at times? The four children are also struggling through their lives, particularly the youngest, an observant, sometimes truculent little girl who loves her parents in spite of their failings. The family relationships ring absolutely true.
There are passages of wonderful comedy, particularly the abortive excursion to
Brighton in a hire car, which turns out a disaster, particularly for the car.
There's also deep and devastating sadness.
Engaging, perceptive and compassionate, this is a novel that’s hard to put
down.
Leslie Wilson’s latest novel is The War’s Not Over Yet.
Jane Rogers chooses Juice by Tim Winton: I love Winton’s work but I’d read enough utterly depressing cli-fi dystopias to feel reluctant about starting this. Juice is set in a lawless, scorched, barren Australia 200 years in the future – how could it not be grim? But Winton is a compelling writer. His narrator spins his tale to save his own life, at the hands of a lone killer who holds him, and the child he is trying to protect, captive. There are layers and layers of suspense, not just about the narrator but about his mother, wife, and child, and about the violent climate justice organisation both he and his captor have worked for (the chief targets are heirs to Big Oil). Winton is brilliant at raising complex moral issues; blame, revenge, honesty, and love. The astonishing humanity of the story makes it much much more than the recital of bleakness I was fearing. And his introduction of honourable AI in the final third of the novel raises questions which continue to haunt me.In The Colony, the inhabitants of a small island off the coast of Ireland are visited by an English artist and a French linguist, who battle one another for the soul of the island’s people and their language, to the bewilderment of the islanders themselves. In a microcosm of colonialism, their desires and actions have profound consequences. This is a beautifully written, engaging read with brilliant characterisation and dialogue, and so much between the lines.
Other excellent island-based novels I’ve read this year are: Little Great Island by Kate Woodworth; Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy; Muckle Flugga by Michael Pedersen; Island by Jane Rogers. Maybe I’ve been drawn to island-set novels recently as my novel, After the Clearances, is largely set on the fictional island of Ynys Hudol, inspired by Bardsey off the north-west coast of Wales.
Alison Layland's latest publication is After the Clearances.
Slow Down and Be Here Now is a book that immediately needs to be introduced into children’s lives (maybe adults too). As are other titles in the Slow Down series. Written by Laura Brand and illustrated by Freya Hartas, it starts off with a simple tip - Be Here Now!
Each of the short 46 chapters is fascinating and some of my favourites are: Watch a Duck Coat its Feathers, See a Grasshopper Jump, Watch a Family of Hermit Crabs Move House. And if I get the time, I will do just that.
The book’s premise?
When it is almost impossible to find joy, feel peace or follow curiosity, there
are ways you can look after yourself, calm your body and mind, and being
immersed in nature is just one of them. All you need do to see them is slow down.
Venkatesh Swami is the proprietor, with Swati Roy, of Eureka! Bookstore in New Delhi.
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Mary Hoffman: My Book of the Year is Helen Castor’s magnificent The Eagle and the Hart, an imaginative historical comparison of the two first cousins Richard II and Henry IV. Richard, with his effeminacy, love of luxury, preference for male “favourites” and refusal to name an heir, was unsuited to kingship in every way but he was the legitimate next in line to the throne, the remaining son of Edward (later known as the Black Prince). His grandfather, Edward III, and his older brother, another Edward, predeceased him, so Richard became king at the age of ten.
Henry, on the other hand, had every quality needed in a king. He was intelligent, brave, a champion jouster, happily wedded to his childhood sweetheart and the father of four lusty sons and two daughters before tragedy struck and his wife Mary died in her last childbed. But Henry was not the heir. The two men were born within months of each other, married close together and lost their wives only weeks apart.
Henry’s father was the great magnate John of Gaunt, the
richest man in England after the king, Edward III’s third son. They were both
mistrusted and overlooked by King Richard. Things came to a head when Richard
sent Henry, who had not been tried or convicted for any crime, into exile in
France. Gaunt died months later and Richard stole Henry’s great inheritance –
all titles and lands. It was a disaster waiting to happen.
Historical storytelling at its best.
Mary Hoffman's latest publication is David: the Unauthorised Autobiography.
From Cathy Cassidy: This is Happiness by Niall Williams had me hooked from the first sentence. Fiction disguised as memoir, it's light on plot but brimful of heart, humanity, grief and love, a kind of time machine taking you back to 1950s rural Ireland. Both place and character are drawn perfectly, and the prose is clean, clever and beautiful in its simplicity. The novel charts the unlikely friendship between seventeen year old Noe, fresh from the seminary, and sixty-something Christy, who has been tasked with siting the poles that will connect the village of Faha to the National Grid. The novel unfolds slowly, but along with the details of village life come shards of pure beauty and insights into love, life and loss. I've read a LOT of books this year, but none have moved me as much as this one. I absolutely loved it.Cathy Cassidy is the author of the Chocolate Box Girls series and other children’s books.
Pippa Goodhart chooses The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley: this novel is a breath of fresh air. Far from perfect, but full of energy, ideas and beautiful writing, it’s rich and original, and I’ll certainly read it again.
Pippa Goodhart's latest publication is You Choose Bedtime, illustrated by Nick Sharratt.