Doug Johnstone
Two very different books have really stayed with me this year, both packing an incredible punch. I read Omar El Akkad’s One Day Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This (Canongate, £16.99) with increasing rage as it detailed the ongoing genocide in Gaza, focusing on the complicity of western leaders and the media in gaslighting ordinary people about the unbearable daily atrocities. Written with hope and fury in equal measure, it’s incredible.
In comparison, Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico is more measured, a novella examining the existential crisis of modern living in pinpoint prose and dry wit. Tom and Anna are millennial ‘digital nomads’ living in Berlin and struggling to find meaning in their performative, empty lives. Shimmering with despair, it’s bleakly hilarious and quietly profound.
Barry Pierce
Given its fairly high-concept premise and the proposed length of the project, it was remarkable to see Solvej Balle’s novel series, On the Calculation of Volume (Faber & Faber, £12.99 each) embraced so wholeheartedly by the reading public this year. Reading about the same day over and over again is a hard sell (as a part-time bookseller, believe me!) but Balle completely enthralls us with her masterful control over the planned seven-volume cycle. With the release of Volume III just last month, it’s slowly becoming clear how Tara Selter’s story will unfold. This is very much one novel, told in seven parts. Volume IV is slated for next spring and it’s easily my most anticipated release of the season.”
Read more:
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Things That Disappear by Jenny Erpenbeck
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Flesh by David Szalay
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Smart, flinty and detailed telling of the period around Stalin’s death and the aftermath.
Fall, Bomb, Fall by Gerrit Kouwenaar
Reissue of a funny and at times heartbreaking European classic coming-of-age tale, set right at the outbreak of WWII.
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Ghost Wedding by David Park
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The Predicament by William Boyd
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A Life in Letters by John Updike
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The Poems of Seamus Heaney, edited by Rosie Lavan and Bernard O’Donoghue with Matthew Hollis
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The best thing I read: readers pick their favourites
Colony by Annika Norlin is an ensemble cast story of a group of misfits living on the edge of a Swedish forest, trying to avoid society. It is wry and funny with some great social commentary on modern life versus a return to nature. Then it starts to highlight the dangerous and intoxicating power of charisma within the group, and in a way becomes a small-scale reflection of our political age. @wixey
Fair Play by Louise Hegarty takes the tropes of a murder mystery, and then messes about with them, ending up somewhere more soulful than you might have ever expected. Cosy? No. Full of cleverness and compassion? Yes. @BetaRish
Pereira Maintains: A Testimony by Antonio Tabucchi A short book that could be read in an afternoon, it’s a subtle, very clever tale that’s ostensibly about a few weeks in the life of Pereira, a newspaper editor in 1930s Lisbon. Half the book is about his daily routines and liking for lemonade, but in reality it’s about his political and moral awakening as he realises he can’t ignore what’s happening in his country any longer. Very readable yet very profound, and scarily relevant. @swintonwriter
The Friendship Fling by Georgia Stone is the easiest five stars I’ve given in a long time. It’s fresh, hilarious and packed full of chemistry between the main pairing. The bucket list plot built is well developed and doesn’t feel like a simple aside to the romance, and the side characters are just as built up as Ava and Finn. It’s a really refreshing way to do romance. Perfect for fans of Talia Hibbert or Sarah Adams. @Charliclement
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We Pretty Pieces of Flesh by Colwill Brown I knew I’d enjoy this book, but I didn’t expect it to absolutely floor me, especially for a debut. The Yorkshire dialect gives it a vivid, lived-in authenticity and once you settle into it, the story hits hard. Raw, gritty and tender in equal measure, it captures ’90s girlhood, the diet culture, whispered rumours, pressure to fit in – all of it. A powerful, poetic look at class and coming of age that’s stayed with me long after finishing. @kiki.reads.stuff
The Murder at World’s End by Ross Montgomery A perfect locked-room murder-mystery set in Edwardian England with the most unlikely duo combining to find out who done it: Stephen the new valet who is under suspicion, and the grand dame of the house – who has the best lines and is incredibly sweary! Love it. @aliruthpalmer
My Friends by Fredrik Backman This is a story with incredible humanity and understanding of those who don’t necessarily conform to societal expectations. It’s a narrative that is packed with humour and emotion so that the reader both cries and laughs. @ljh50hill
These books are available to buy from the Big Issue shop on Bookshop.org, which helps to support the Big Issue and independent bookshops.
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