Every serious reader of fiction loves a good mystery or thriller novel. Unfortunately, it’s really hard to find one that takes your breath away and leaves you on a high every page of the book. Luckily however, I found one recently, and I’d like to recommend it to you:

“Compulsion” by Jonathan Kellerman; (Alex Delaware Novel), Ballantine Books, New York, NY. 2008 ISBM 978-0-345-46528-3

After you read this you understand why a clinical psychologist is able to peg the characters the way he does, and it is no wonder that Kellerman is one of the greatest fiction “Thriller” authors of all times. Perhaps one of his most famous books was Bones, but if you ask me, I think this is one of his best.

Several murders appear unrelated, yet, all with very curious circumstances, thus triggering the intense mind of an LAPD homicide detective that will not leave well enough alone. The thrill of the chase, the gathering of clues and getting inside the mind of the killer, takes the reader through a myriad of suspense, intrigue and keeps you flipping pages, until you are done.

Just wait until you find out what happens, I’d love to tell you right now, because this is a cool story and the beginning, middle an end are blurred together in a fog that lifts into the face of terror. My gosh is this a great book. I think Jonathan Kellerman has truly out done himself this time, or should I say; again! I’d recommend this book to anyone who can handle the suspense of this thriller of a novel.

A drifter came into Sam Johnson抯 garage and his life would never be the same again. Sam humbly tells the drifter Eddy抯 story.

It was an ordinary day, if there is such a thing, when Sam meets Eddy. Eddy reminded him of a hippie as he walked down the road with a large dog by his side. The stranger warmed Sam抯 heart. Sam offered Eddy and his dog Mica a place to stay, food and work. That evening he introduced Eddy to Mary. Mary was bedridden and had only a short time to live; cancer was eating her body. When Eddy touched her, she felt a strange warmth. Sam noticed that afterward Eddy seems extremely tired. The next morning Sam awoke to Mary cooking breakfast, at first he thought he was dreaming but it wasn抰 a dream; Mary had been healed. Their doctor confirms the fact that Mary no longer has any sign of cancer. Her healing was an answer to prayer. Later Eddy touched others that are also healed. Eddy has a gift but sometimes it seems a curse. Some are frightened by his gift for when he touches them he can see their secrets and almost everyone has secrets. Eddy has been running from one town for several years. Some call him a witch; few offer him love and support. Sam and Mary suggest that, it抯 time to stop running.

揟he Vagabond Healer?by James R. Olson is one of the most touching books I抳e ever read. Mr. Olson is an extremely talented author. The plot is heartwarming and kept me on the edge of my seat. Olson manages to convey emotion in a way that few authors can. I was drawn into the plot and brought to tears on several occasions. Sam and Mary Johnson are the kind of people we all want to be, Sam has a few rough edges and came across as being very human. Eddy is a very vulnerable character. He displays selfless love and yet has a fear of having those he loves being hurt. Eddy would willingly sacrifice his life for others. Ernest is the perfect antagonist for this story. He is ruthless and arrogant; he抯 the worst of humanity. The cover is beautifully done with the profile of a young man where the air around him appears to have a mystery. I truly enjoyed this book and read it at one sitting; I literally could not put it down. I highly recommend this book to those that enjoy Christian fiction. Well done Mr. Olson.

In his Booker Prize winning novel, The White Tiger, Aravind Adiga has achieved success where other illustrious writers have fallen short in recent years. Kiran Desai, Monica Ali and Salman Rushdie have all entered the fray and achieved considerable success of their own around themes rooted in the ramshackle, disorganised, free-for-all, cost-cutter basement of globalisation. Characters in their novels might live in New York or London, but their thoughts continue to live in rural south Asia. They might, through their labour, service the desires of the First World rich, but their personal priorities might remain rooted in the concerns of Third World poor. I accept that the grouping of these authors is unfair, since Salman Rushdie’s Shalimar The Clown is an overtly political book, whereas Monica Ali’s is largely domestic and Kiran Desai’s is familiar. But they do all share an overt interest in characters who have left their humble, Third World origins for a First World status that is less than desirable, though their motives might be diverse.

In The White Tiger, Aravind Adiga tries a different tack, and achieves much. The scenario is unlikely, deliberately comic. The book presents a narrative – apparently constructed in just seven evenings at a personal computer – by one Belram, a man with origins in a poor area of an Indian countryside he calls Darkness. Essentially, there are seven blogs or emails addressed to Wen Jiabao via the Premier’s Office, Beijing, China in which the first person narrator tells his story. Belram, presumably, believes that the Chinese people, via their leader, need advice on how to succeed in the globalised twenty-first century. Since Belram has indeed succeeded, he wants to share his experience as potential assistance to the most populous nation on earth.

Belram’s rise can be listed without jeopardising the potential reader’s interest or involvement with the book. He was of utterly poor rural origin, but luckily – and also perhaps rather deviously – secured a job as a driver for the middle-class, urban Mr Ashok. By the end of the tale Belram has his own business in Bangalore, a place as far from his own origins as any international destination. He now owns a taxi fleet that services the anti-social working hours of the growing city’s relocated call centres, whose First World cost-cutter owners provide the financial umbrella-shade in which budding entrepreneurs like Belram may shelter and prosper. Thus he eases himself a rung or two up the social and economic ladder. If only the elevation might have happened without treading on others…

The White Tiger is a delightful and engaging book. The narrator’s humour and world-outlook are both entertaining and stimulating. The book’s improbable structure presents no problem whatsoever once Belram’s engaging style is established. His story is simple, devious, credible and incredible in one, and perhaps as close to a truth as one might ever approach. Literature is full of schemers and opportunists. Anti-heroes, however, rarely convince. Belram, on the other hand, almost demands we share his success via emulation, and I encourage all readers to enter his world on his terms.

Recently my good friend Godfrey Redburn asked me to check out a novel that he is publishing through his company Multisick Press called Kafe Gavani. Godfrey enthused to me that this was “something special” and having had a good track record accepting his recommendations, I told him I would look at it. Upon reading the novel I quickly found this was indeed something special.

I’m not sure how to begin to dissect Kafe Gavani, let alone explain it. It is to put it lightly a unique piece of literature. Set in an outlandish alternate reality where anything is possible (and permitted) Kafe Gavani is a surreal, patchy, with unashamedly contradictory and at times incomplete plot lines.

The novel incorporates and at times parodies many recognisable literature styles, however manages to re-interpret them into a distinct voice that is raw, vibrant, hilarious, earnest, while simultaneously being acutely offensive and strangely erotic. I can assure you, that this features a narrative unlike anything you have read before and will leave some who come in contact with it irrevocably scarred.

At this point I am obliged to give more than a word of caution. If you have any sense of morals, this book will undoubtedly repulse you. Some segments appear to be written solely to offend. On the flip side, if you are like me and subsist in a moral vacuum and are amused by concepts like felching, then Kafe Gavani will have you pissing yourself with laughter.

The story goes that Edgar J Barrett wrote a series of stories set in a parallel universe spanning several thousand pages, which he called his Hate Manifesto. It was written over a number of years, during which Edgar apparently went through bouts of alcoholism, drug addiction, depression and several stints inside prison. And it shows! Now it seems to keep his Hate Manifesto in some orderly fashion was far too simple for Edgar. According to Godfrey Redburn, various pieces from his stories have been scattered in various places, including with friends, in prison libraries and attached to (sometimes as) letters to various publishing houses…

What was remaining was given by Edgar to Godfrey Redburn to edit and publish as he saw fit, with no further contribution from the author himself. Godfrey Redburn assembled a group of eager literature students to painstakingly trawl through the Hate Manifesto to transform it in to a reasonably coherent work of fiction. After several botched attempts the editors eventually settled on the concept of restricting the focus to the stories of several characters, with particular a focus on the character J, a misanthropic drug fuelled vocalist of the appalling punk band The Jizzbuckets. It has been explained to me that they decided to use this, as it was the only narrative that was mildly coherent and complete in both theme and plot. The result of their editing is the publication that is the novel Kafe Gavani – and what a novel it is.

Edgar J Barrett is unmistakably a well read scribe. Any fan of literature or popular culture can pick up some of the countless and sometime obscure references. Reading Kafe Gavani, it becomes evident he has a love hate relationship with the very culture he devours.

I am at pains not to reveal the various plot lines of the novel as I feel it is imperative that the reader enters the world of Kafe Gavani with minimal preconceptions. On the surface Kafe Gavani is odious with what appears to be a ludicrous plot. However additional scrutiny reveals that Kafe Gavani is an intelligent laugh out loud comedy featuring a savage assault on the ostentatious world of high art. Somewhat paradoxically Kafe Gavani mixes under-graduate humour with the conventions of highbrow literature to dissect and defecate that very culture. As for the plot line, this is on close inspection a clever little beast. While on the surface it may appear preposterous, it is in fact a subtle and enchanting parable on how J (and one suspects the author) reconciles with his inner critic.

If I were to describe the writing of Edgar J Barrett (and I am extremely hesitant to do this), I would start by asking you to visualise the funniest and most obscene scatological piece of fiction possible and you wouldn’t come be anywhere in the neighbourhood of Kafe Gavani. Hell you wouldn’t even be on the same planet. This is just way out there.

I expect that once Kafe Gavani is released, there will be a vigorous debate about the value of this novel. Is it quality writing or just the literature counterpart to snuff pornography? I for one personally hold no doubt that this is the former. I believe that anyone with an appreciation of literature who reads Kafe Gavani objectively will undoubtedly agree with me.

I spoke to Godfrey about the likelihood of a sequel to Kafe Gavani and he felt that is highly improbable. Regrettably there is little else in Edgar’s Hate Manifesto that is even close to publishable. Instead Godfrey enthused about a follow up work of Edgar’s called Ease, which has been described as more articulate and mature. Multisick Press are expecting to release this sometime “late 2008″.

Personally I can’t remember the last time I had to stop reading because of uncontrollable laughter – Kafe Gavani achieved that. I can’t remember the last time I read a book that made me want to vomit – Kafe Gavani achieved that. I can’t remember the last time that I masturbated over a book, and (I am not ashamed to say it) – yes, Kafe Gavani achieved that. If you are interested in finding something that is distinctive, something excessive, something that assaults and redefines the very nature of literature, I urge you to go and read Kafe Gavani.

Elden Publishing (2007)

ISBN 9780978927110

揝econd Half?is the second novel in the 揝econd Half Trilogy?series. A third novel is on its way. In this novel, Jane is a sixty-year old woman who has never been married or had children. She has two wonderful best friends in her life. The story begins with Jane burning out in her career. She decides to start a magazine called, 揝econd Half.? It is directed towards women who are over 45-years old. Jane has to deal with the stresses of starting a magazine. Her experiences with her employees also teach her some huge lessons.

At this time, Jane also falls for a handsome widower named Gordon and she buys a dog. Gordon brings a spark of life into Jane抯. Through Gordon抯 family, Jane discovers what she has been missing out on. She learns about both the good and the bad sides of having a large family and pets. When Jane first meets his family, 搒he felt like a drop of water in the ocean as a wave moved toward the shore.? As time passes and she acclimates and feels accepted by them, 搒he still felt that way, but she belonged with that wave.? Gordon also teaches her about what she has been missing out on sexually. At 60, she finally has a man that rocks her world.

I loved this novel. I could really relate to it. What Jane was feeling at 60, I am feeling at 40. Her character gives me a feeling of hope in that it is never to let to start a new lease on life, nor it is too late to find the true love of your life. Jane抯 relationships in this story are very interesting and present some challenges. I enjoyed watching her grow through her experiences with them and the pets. Animal lovers will especially love reading about Jane抯 experiences with the animals. It definitely isn抰 easy for her to adapt to both the new family members and the animals but she knows that the hard work is worth it.

Susanna Chelton Sheehy has written the perfect book to be given as a gift. 揝econd Half?is definitely one that a woman can curl up with and enjoy on a quiet afternoon. It is also an excellent choice for a women抯 reader group.

Black Snow is a novel by Mikhail Bulgakov. This apparent platitude is full of contradiction. The book is perhaps better described as an autobiographical episode, with Bulgakov renamed as the book’s central character, Maxudov. It’s also a satire in which the characters are precise, exact and often vicious caricatures of Bulgakov’s colleagues and acquaintances in the between-the-wars Moscow Arts Theatre, including the legendary Stanislawsky. In some ways, Black Snow is a history of Bulgakov’s greatest success, the novel The White Guard, which the theatre company adapted for the stage under the title The Days of the Turbins. The play ran for close to a thousand performances, including one staged for an audience of a single person, one Josef Stalin who, perhaps luckily for Bulgakov, liked it.

Black Snow is also a sideways look at the creative process, itself. Maxudov is a journalist with The Shipping Times and hates the monotony and predictability of his work. Privately he creates a new world by writing a novel in which the author can imagine transcending the mundane. But the product of this and all creation is useless unless it is shared. Only then can it exist. Only then can the author’s relief from the self he cannot live with be realised. But when no-one publishes the novel, when no-one shows the slightest interest in it, the author is left only with the isolation that inspired the book, but now this is an amplified isolation and more devastating for it. So he attempts suicide. But he is such an incompetent that he fails. It’s the same middle class Russian incompetence that Chekhov celebrated in Uncle Vanya where no-one seems able to aim a shot.

But then this unpublished book is seen by others, for whom it seems to mean something quite different from the author’s intention. Instead of a novel, they see it as a play. They ask for a re-write, complete with changes of both plot and setting. Effectively, the only way the work can have its own life, its own existence, is for it to become something that denies the author’s own intentions and thus nullifies the reason for writing it. And so Maxudov goes along with things and thus in effect he is back again doing what he does for The Shipping Times, in that he is writing things that others want.

And here is where Black Snow becomes a parody of what was happening later in Bulgakov’s own career. He wanted to write a play about censorship and control. This, obviously, was impossible in Stalin’s Soviet Union, so he set the play in France, basing it upon the historical reality of Moliere. After four years of tying to prepare the play for performance what finally emerged was a costume drama from which all allusions to censorship had been removed or watered down. So Bulgakov’s intended comment on Soviet society was lost. And the play flopped.

So the satirical caricatures are truly vicious. We have an impresario who is incapable of remembering the playwright’s name. We have the opinionated arty intellectual, full of biting criticism and dismissive posturing until he realises he is speaking to the author and then he does an instant, blushing volte-face. We have a character that is so sure about every detail of organisation and experience that they are almost always wrong.

Ultimately, Black Snow is about a creative process where a writer can create whatever is imaginable. But then in communicating it, the receivers change it, transform it into what they want it to be. The writer makes the snow black, the recipients read it as black but change it to white and then probably argue whether it has already turned to rain. Black Snow is an enigmatic, super-real and surreal satire.

A Ruby in Her Navel is yet another superb historical novel by Barry Unsworth. By his phenomenal standards, this book might at first appear somewhat one-paced, even one-dimensional, with its action set firmly in the place and time of its main character, Thurston Beauchamp, a young man in the service of King Roger of Sicily in the twelfth century. But if A Ruby in Her Navel might lack the immediacy and complexity of Stone Virgin, it approaches the beautifully portrayed picture of medieval life presented in Morality Play. Indeed, a group of travelling players also features in this novel, as in Morality Play, but this time it’s a troupe of belly dancers from Anatolia, on tour in southern Italy. The ruby and navel of the title both belong to Nasrin, the youngest, most beautiful and most provocative member of the group. But having written that they were touring Italy, a country name that in our eyes is merely mundane and perhaps innocuous, I am reminded of one of the most enduring features of Barry Unsworth’s book, which is its ability to re-draw one’s understanding of who we were.

It was Alison Weir who first did this for me, if you see what I mean. I read her biography of Eleanor of Aquitaine, the marriageable lady who became King Henry the Second of England’s queen. Again, there’s the name of a country… You see, at school we British school children learned a variety of history that filtered everything through a sieve of contemporary national requirements. I can remember being taught that during the medieval era, the English ruled most of France and largely held onto it until the Wars of the Roses (I was brought up in Yorkshire, another irrelevant aside). Possessions remained until Queen Mary finally gave up Calais with a cardiac etch. Alison Weir undid a school lifetime of history when she described the Angevin Empire, part of the pan-European expansion of the Franks. Based in Anjou, this empire comprised what we now call southern, western and northern France, plus all of England and Wales, and other bits at times (though never Scotland, hence that nation’s long-lasting alliance with the rival empire based on the Ile de France). When interpreted this way, it wasn’t English kings that ruled France, or vice-versa. It was an empire with its own lingua franca, langue d’oc. The countries, and with them the geographical, ethnic and cultural assumptions upon which we falsely base our interpretation of the past, simply did not exist. Thus the paradigms upon which we base our understanding of English-ness or French-ness become both irrelevant and inapplicable. And thus the troupe of belly dancers in A Ruby in Her Navel weren’t, therefore, in Italy. They were in the Kingdom of Sicily, a small but powerful and ambitious little Norman empire created out of the same Frankish expansion that spurned the enduring conquest of the Anglo-Saxons in 1066.

In A Ruby in her Navel Barry Unsworth presents medieval Europe in a way that brings the historical issues into focus and gives them life. Lands were conquered and their Muslim leaders deposed. But the new rulers had to politic their way to continued incumbency, recognising the interests of land-hungry knights, only temporarily defeated Muslim predecessors with friends nearby, Jewish merchants who did pragmatic business with anyone and everyone. And even within these groups there were divisions. Amongst the Christians there were two competing blocks, the Germanic Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantine remnants of Imperial Rome. And then there was the Pope with his own empire, interests and ability to raise an army. And then there were those who aspired to power from within and sought to depose a rival in their own house. The Crusades that primary school history presents has having something to do with religion thus become mere wars of conquest for booty.

In A Ruby in Her Navel Barry Unsworth thus gives immediate, tangible life to the feudalism of the time. We really do understand the politics, the interests, the motivations of the era. But we are led to it by our experience of the characters’ lives, not via instruction or polemic. And the message is more powerful for Thurston Beauchamp, because he aspires to the knighthood his father relinquished in favour of monasticism. Thurston is currently King Roger’s entertainments manager and has to travel to Italy (I am doing it again!) to buy herons, caged prey for the King’s peregrines. He does his deal, but meets the troupe of dancers and the resulting stirrings of the spirit provoke him to ship them back home to do the same for his master. He falls in love with Nasrin, one of the group. Meanwhile Alicia, Thurston’s childhood sweetheart, suddenly reappears in his life. They were at school together until she was whisked away at a marriageable fourteen to be conjoined to a knight with a big sword and real estate in the Middle East, the Norman Outremer. Alicia’s husband, it seems, has now snuffed it, and again Thurston’s spirits rise when he realises that she is again available, again an unaccompanied, unclaimed, newly-vacated vessel.

The belly dancers go down well at home, of course, and so Thurston’s star is in the ascendant. He gets a new mission, commissioned by he knows not who and which causes accounting difficulties for the Muslim “head of civil service” to whom he reports.

By now you have probably guessed that there is a plot. And it’s a vast one, involving insiders, outsiders, a pope or two, Muslims, Germans, Jews, Byzantines and all the other interests competing their share of or their consolidation of feudal power. This really is top-down government, but the trick, once power is achieved, clearly is just to hold on. And sometimes you consolidate your home base by having a fiddle or two on foreign soil, a political strategy not unknown in our own times.

Our Thurston analyses the plot, works it all out and then acts to influence the outcome. Along the way he grapples with his rising dilemma in relation to Nasrin and Alicia, and thus his life is eventually transformed. As in all ages, he follows his heart (by which, of course, I mean his brain). A Ruby in Her Navel thus reveals that, as ever with Barry Unsworth, it is a multi-layered, complex, surprising and yet deeply human tale.

From amongst a small but distinguished crowd of novelists of Indian origin in this country, Pronoy Chatterjee may not be a name that stands out in the public eye. The more famous authors like Jhumpa Lahiri, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, Amitav Ghosh and others have enjoyed the limelight more than some of the less famous writers like Pronoy who write for the love of writing, who write to express their deepest feelings for humanity – in the little time they can extract out from the busy daily life of a well renowned professional. But, it is the authors like Pronoy, who can sometimes tell us the tales that we have lived though all our lives, the tales that bring back memories of a past that we long for, bring in hopes for a future that we all dream about.

“A Living Memory” is Pronoy’s second novel (published by Author House) where he tries to “capture the complexities of desire and conflict in a small village in colonial India”. I have not read the book as yet, but the story line (given below) has attracted me enough to get a copy for myself to read. India during the 1930s and ’40s was in a state of turmoil. Violent revolution against British rule, ethnic riots and widespread famine and disease on the national scene were eventually reflected in even the most remote villages. “A Living Memory”, retreats to that local, personal level, revealing the intricate psychology of social stigma, of love under adverse circumstances, and of the inescapable duality of dreams and disappointments. Surrounding a sugar mill, the village of Alipur on the Mahi River is a close-knit community where families live in harmony. Bloody revolts against British colonialism, Hindu-Muslim riots that turn into massacres, and famine and epidemics have not yet disturbed the village’s tranquility.

One day a young girl, Runu, is found missing from her home. She has been taken captive by Mr. Bose, the most influential man in Alipur, who thinks he can take whatever he wants. By coincidence Runu is recognized by a boy named Tushar, who brings her back home, and a bond forms between them. Over time their intimacy deepens, but circumstances keep them apart. Runu’s life is filled with uncertainty and disappointment, with love and hope. Although she enters into an arranged marriage, her dreams of Tushar remain. Fourteen years later, her husband dies of a heart attack. Runu becomes obsessed with returning to Alipur and reuniting with Tushar. But everything has changed. The mill has been shut down. Rampant ethnic discrimination has robbed workers of their jobs. When Runu finally finds Tushar after a hard and complicated journey, she cannot connect with his world. Dismayed that the harmony of her youth and the promise of her happiness have been shattered, Runu is left with only “A Living Memory”.

I had asked Pronoy, what motivated him to write a novel about a period that seems almost like a long lost nightmare? He answered “My initial motivation for writing this book was to have a glimpse of my own childhood. First few chapters illustrate the environment under which I grew up till age 10, in Bihar and in a sugar mill community. However, as I was writing it developed as a fiction based on facts, not necessarily happened at the same place or to the same characters that I portrayed in the book. However, the incidents were true, happened to somewhere and to someone. Because I started with my childhood so I had to chose that specific period, late 1930s onward. I also wanted to illustrate the the incidents of Independence movements and the horrors of famine, flood and riots during that era.”

I have seen many movies of this period (Ashani Sanket – The Distant Thunder by Satyajit Ray comes to my mind), read several books and heard stories from my parents and grand-parents and the period always intrigued me, horrified me. I thought we were really blessed to have not experienced those days. But I guess the period has also helped us to identify ourselves, to understand our vulnerabilities and develop as a better human being and a better nation. Pronoy’s “Living Memory” will once again help us to reflect upon those days and appreciate the struggles and pains that our earlier generation had to go through to make our lives better.

I look forward to read this book. On a separate note, I had asked Pronoy another question, “Pronoy-da, English is not your mother tongue, but still you write in English. Is it because you feel you can express better in English or you want to reach a wider readership?” And Pronoy-da answered, “No, it’s neither one that you stated. I like to write in Bengali, but I cannot type Bengali and never took time to practice it. Writing a 300 page book in longhand and then to keep on revising and rewriting is extremely tedious and I don’t have that patience. Typing in English and making revisions and editing have become technically very simple with Microsoft Words and that’s the only reason I wrote in English.”

Flaubert’s Parrot by Julian Barnes is a book I have had queuing up to read for some time. I don’t know why I have never got round to reading it. Perhaps it’s because of the overtly “literary” tag that was attached to it when it was short-listed for the Booker Prize. I am not against “literary” fiction. Far from it: indeed I aspire to write it, after a fashion. My avoidance of Flaubert’s Parrot was never conscious, but was probably a result of thinking that I knew what to expect – word play, experimentation with form, biography, dissection of the writer’s role, relationship between art and life, in fact all the mundane things that your average novelist has for breakfast. The less than average ones, by the way, always have corn flakes. It is their convention. Having just finished the book, I can declare that I found all I expected and much, much, much more.

Julian Barnes has his character, a doctor called Geoffrey Braithwaite, consider various literary ideas. One, which only really applies to writing prose fiction, is the relation between form and content. Most novels, certainly most pulp fiction, never address this, since the authors usually present apparently literal material merely literally or, perhaps even more commonly, fantastical material literally. Generally within some recognisable genre, these offerings tend to preoccupy themselves with simple narration. In effect, most novels are presented in pictorial form, like a comic strip running a frame at a time through the author’s mind, with only minimally extended commentary. Their presentation is invariably linear, with the writer’s aim to spoon-feed the reader with bite-sized chinks of easily digestible plot in a context aimed at simplifying the experience.

Flaubert’s Parrot is the polar opposite of this. The only plot is Flaubert’s life, both physical and intellectual, alongside that of his enthusiastic intended biographer, the doctor, Geoffrey. Geoffrey’s research, notes, speculations and musings provide the book’s utterly original form. Since the adultery of Flaubert’s fictional Madam Bovary provided the scandal that created his fame, evidence of his attitudes towards women and sex in his own life provides a fascinating backdrop against which we can assess the author’s motives and desires. The death and revealed adultery of the narrator’s own wife provides motive for his obsession with Flaubert and his femme fatale, and, quite unexpectedly, this culminates in a truly moving moment of emotional empathy that the author, Barnes, not Flaubert, not the narrator, evokes in his reader.

This emotional intensity developed as a real surprise towards the end of the book. Through it, Julian Barnes achieves a perfect marriage of form and content, the finest I have ever encountered. No matter how much we analyse the creative process, it is our emotional lives that provide the stuff of art. The writer moulds it, contextualises it, formalises it, but eventually the rawness of the experience, the chasm of bereavement, the hollow of betrayal, the consonance of love that makes us laugh or weep as we read, and Julian Barnes provokes both responses in this beautiful book.

There are some stunning moments of virtuosity. There are, for instance, three concatenated chronologies of Flaubert’s life – an encyclopedia of success, a record of failure and a personal diary. This is a masterstroke, effectively answering the rhetorical question of why we remain interested in the author, even when we consider a work as iconic as Madame Bovary. The narrator’s dissection of “correctness” in fiction is utterly poignant, especially so when we cannot even agree on the detail of reality. And so what if the writer decides to change things around? Isn’t it supposed to be fiction?

But the enduring memory of Flaubert’s Parrot is that masterstroke of marrying motives via Falubert’s real life, whatever that was, the imagined world of his femme fatale and the apparently real life of Geoffrey Braithwaite, with its own experience of adultery and bereavement. And then, of course, we have Geoffrey’s obsession with Flaubert, through which we reflect on the ideas of the self and its selfishness. Stunningly beautiful.

And the parrot? Probably a fake. Or perhaps just faked. Or then again….

Remember Ska and the Coventry Sound? UB40, Two-Tone, the Specials, Selekter? 1980’s Coventry gave us great bands and now, in this impressive debut novel, provides the backdrop for a cool, highly-readable and gutsy ‘caper’ tale about a group of 20-somethings enmeshed in rescuing their big-drugs-deal-gone-wrong.

Among Thieves brings Thatcher’s Britain back with a bang. Set in Coventry, a city emerging late from the ruins of war and a bungled reconstruction into the political chaos of the early 1980’s, it features a most motley crew of characters and fixers, black and white, each telling his story in his own, beautifully rendered voice.

Charismatic politico-hedonist Andy leads the group, with posh Pads – his friend or, perhaps, rival – beside him. As the novel begins both are students – in theory attending University but in reality making hay in the School of Life, dealing drugs and living close to rude-boy locals like Bas and Jez on the criminal fringes of radical politics. When one of those fringes shows its true cut, Andy loses a packet – but it’s not his to lose, and suddenly the game’s on to see if they’re clever and bold enough to save their kneecaps from the nastier element who want their investment back…with interest.

Mez Packer gives us every ingredient for a cracking good read – from a twisting, churning plot-line to great locations and something to say about race, justice and revenge, all from a superb story-teller we’re sure to hear more about.

Beg, borrow… or steal it before the rest of the world catches on.

(c)2009 Alex Brunel. All rights reserved.

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