Celia Fremlin has been my
discovery of the year. Her books have been described as “domestic noir” – and The Hours Before
Dawnis nothing if not “noir” as the heroine, sleep-deprived mother Louise, is
forced to confront the terrible danger that has infiltrated her home.
Fremlin’s
writing is elegant, witty, and perceptive, and the book is a real page-turner
that kept me reading long into the night.
But what really drew me in was Fremlin’s
exposure of the dark side of the domestic with her dissection of the gendered
family dynamic – the pressure on Louise to be a good wife and mother, to take
on the entire burden, emotional and physical, of running the home. At the same
time, no one takes her or her concerns seriously. That’s almost the most
terrifying thing – that this is how it was for women – and to a large extent,
still is.
Fremlin wrote sixteen novels, and I’ve binge-read every one of them, as
well as three short story collections.
One of CrimeRead's 10 Best Reissued Mysteries of 2018
In this Edgar Award–winning thriller, a young housewife with two lively daughters and an endlessly crying baby battles domestic chaos as well as growing suspicions of the household's new lodger. Are Louise's fears the product of sleep deprivation, as her unsympathetic husband suggests, or is there really something sinister about the respectable-seeming schoolmistress? During the hours before dawn, Louise suspects, people with a precarious grip on sanity are likeliest to slip over the edge into madness — especially if there's someone ready to give them…
I love reading books about creativity and learning from other writers and artists how they approach their work. I
didn’t know much about Cave or his music, and I came across this book after
reading a newspaper interview he gave to Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of
Canterbury.
I was impressed by the intelligence, passion, and honesty of Cave’s
conversation. A man willing to talk about Jesus, the Bible, faith, religion, grace,
the sacred, and defy the dreadful silence surrounding bereavement, loss, and
grief was someone who was surely worth finding out more about.
He was. Faith, Hope and Carnage is
about all those things: about creativity, faith, hope, and love. And I loved it.
A BOOK OF THE YEAR, ROLLING STONE, NPR, PITCHFORK, THE TIMES (LONDON), TELEGRAPH
“An astoundingly intimate book-length conversation on art and grief spanning the duration of the pandemic years . . . As with Cave’s music, you might flinch, but you will feel alive.” ― Pitchfork
Faith, Hope and Carnage is a book about Nick Cave’s inner life.
Created from more than forty hours of intimate conversations with the journalist Seán O’Hagan, this is a profoundly thoughtful exploration, in Cave’s own words, of what really drives his life and creativity.
The book examines questions of belief, art, music, freedom, grief…
Wuxia. Need I say more? Wesley Chu’s The Art of Prophecy
has it all: an intriguing fantasy world, epic struggles between empires, battles,
thwarted destinies – and martial arts.
It poses the fascinating question: what
happens to the prophesied hero when it turns out the prophecy is wrong, and he
isn’t a hero after all?
What I loved most about this book are the female characters: warrior
Sali, assassin Qisami, and Taishi. The scene-stealer for me is Taishi. She’s a
master of martial arts, she can travel on the wind, she’s harsh, bad-tempered,
an exacting teacher to the unfortunate-prophesied-hero-who isn’t (Wen Jiang, a spoiled
young man who has to learn the painful lesson that he isn’t the marvel he thought
he was), and she’s old.
The story unfolds from their conflicting points of view, and an
exciting story it is. I can’t wait to see how it continues in the second in the
series, The Art of Destiny.
'In this superb fantasy saga of tough, old martial-arts masters and inexperienced young heroes, Wesley Chu has given us a richly inventive page-turner that delights on every page.' - Helene Wecker, author of The Golem and the Jinni
An epic fantasy ode to martial arts and magic about what happens when a prophesied hero is not the chosen one after all, from the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Lives of Tao.
So many stories begin the same way: With a prophecy. A Chosen One. And the inevitable quest to slay a villain, save the kingdom, and fulfil…
Somerset, 1796. When Lord Oldfield encloses Barcombe Wood, depriving the people of their ancient rights to gather food and fuel, the villagers retaliate with vandalism, arson and riot. Then Lord Oldfield's gamekeeper, Josh Castle, is murdered during a poaching raid. Dan Foster, Bow Street Runner and amateur pugilist, is sent to investigate.
Dan's job is to infiltrate the poaching gang and bring the killers to justice. But there's more to Castle's death than at first sight appears. What is the secret of the gamekeeper's past and does it have any connection with his murder? What is Lord Oldfield concealing? And did someone beside the poachers have a reason to want Josh Castle dead?
As tensions in Barcombe build to a thrilling climax, Dan will need all his wits and his fighting skills to stay alive and get to the truth.