I was raised in semi-rural Texas, not exactly a bastion of progressive thinking in the seventies and eighties, but home to a certain type of woman who, as I write in my Seventh Flag trilogy, has a way with a petticoat and a 30.30. I’ve had many such women in my life, including my mother, which is why the nuanced power of women is a focus of my novels.
Klara is not exactly a female character, she is a sentient female robot, an artificial friend, who a future family purchases as a companion and mentor to their dying daughter. I was drawn to this dystopic novel as much for its masterly storytelling and clean, crisp writing as for its depiction of a powerful, kind woman in a sentient robot. To me, Klara redefines the meaning of love, devotion, and motherhood.
*The #1 Sunday Times Bestseller* *Longlisted for the Booker Prize 2021* *A Barack Obama Summer Reading Pick*
'A delicate, haunting story' The Washington Post 'This is a novel for fans of Never Let Me Go . . . tender, touching and true.' The Times
'The Sun always has ways to reach us.'
From her place in the store, Klara, an Artificial Friend with outstanding observational qualities, watches carefully the behaviour of those who come in to browse, and of those who pass in the street outside. She remains hopeful a customer will soon choose her, but when the possibility emerges…
In a misogynist time under the pen of an author conflicted about women and his own masculinity, Lady Brett Ashley is the template for a modern, empowered woman. She trumps any man in the masculinity department without losing the feminine essence that draws all of them to her. I found this novel tragic and prophetic in the way that Ashley ends up alone and unfulfilled, like far too many women who are ahead of their time.
Jake Barnes is a man whose war wound has made him unable to have sex—and the promiscuous divorcée Lady Brett Ashley. Jake is an expatriate American journalist living in Paris, while Brett is a twice-divorced Englishwoman with bobbed hair and numerous love affairs, and embodies the new sexual freedom of the 1920s. The novel is a roman à clef: the characters are based on real people in Hemingway's circle, and the action is based on real events, particularly Hemingway's life in Paris in the 1920s and a trip to Spain in 1925 for the Pamplona festival and fishing in the…
To Do Justice is the first book in the White Winter Trilogy. The other books are To Love Kindness and To Walk Humbly. The Trilogy follows the same set of characters through eight tumultuous years in their lives and in the history of the world. To Do Justice starts…
Lydia Quixano Perez is every mother living every mother’s darkest nightmare when her journalist husband and family are murdered by narcoterrorists in Mexico. Forced to flee at a moment’s notice for America with her young son, Lydia is transformed from a prosperous middle-class woman into a desperate migrant fighting to survive the desperate journey to freedom and safety. What most shone to me in this novel is the clever way Cummins transforms a narco novel into a story of a mother’s relationship with her young son and her determination to deliver him from evil.
*NOW A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK AT BEDTIME* 'Breathtaking... I haven't been so entirely consumed by a book for years' Telegraph 'I'll never stop thinking about it' Ann Patchett
FEAR KEEPS THEM RUNNING. HOPE KEEPS THEM ALIVE.
Vivid, visceral, utterly compelling, AMERICAN DIRT is an unforgettable story of a mother and son's attempt to cross the US-Mexico border. Described as 'impossible to put down' (Saturday Review) and 'essential reading' (Tracy Chevalier), it is a story that will leave you utterly changed.
Yesterday, Lydia had a bookshop. Yesterday, Lydia was married to a journalist. Yesterday, she was with everyone she loved…
Lady Jessica, consort to the Duke, mother of the Messiah, and acolyte of the powerful Bene Gesserit sect of female warriors is about as kick-ass as they come. She is torn between her allegiances, but in the end, she stands by her son in battle and in all the soul-wrenching tests they face. The woman-warrior can be a tricky paradigm, but I think Herbert has nailed it in a way that does not sacrifice the essence of strong womanhood at the altar of cliché.
Before The Matrix, before Star Wars, before Ender's Game and Neuromancer, there was Dune: winner of the prestigious Hugo and Nebula awards, and widely considered one of the greatest science fiction novels ever written.
Melange, or 'spice', is the most valuable - and rarest - element in the universe; a drug that does everything from increasing a person's lifespan to making interstellar travel possible. And it can only be found on a single planet: the inhospitable desert world of Arrakis.
Whoever controls Arrakis controls the spice. And whoever controls the spice controls the universe.
Winner of the Robert F. Lucid Award for Mailer Studies.
Celebrating Mailer's centenary and the seventy-fifth publication of The Naked and the Dead, the book illustrates how Mailer remains a provocative presence in American letters.
From the debates of the nation's founders, to the revolutionary traditions of western romanticism,…
What twelve-year-old girl could survive alone for years stranded on an island in the Pacific Ocean. Read this book and meet Karana, a member of the Nicoleno Tribe, who does just that. Although largely for young readers, it explores themes of survival, resiliency, and feminism relevant to all ages. I read this with my young daughter several years ago and reread it recently while researching my third novel, which has a girl about that age as a protagonist. It helped me integrate her coming of age into the unusual circumstances of an apocalypse.
Twelve-year-old Karana escapes death at the hands of treacherous hunters, only to find herself totally alone on a harsh desolate island. How she survives in the face of all sorts of dangers makes gripping and inspiring reading.
No more kick-ass female character than Ademar Zarkan, who readers first meet as a young Muslim tomboy on a farm in the high desert of West Texas. Through the three works of historical fiction, the reader comes to know her as a barrel racer, football player, West Point Graduate, Army sharpshooter, wife, mother, and, in the final novel, the leader of the Free People of West Texas in a dystopic world set thirty years in the future.
A dystopian tale about Tayler's brush with deadly augmented reality players who are out to kill him, and a wise cracking robot keen to take over the world.
As reviewer Joseph Sullivan from Aurealis magazine wrote, “Virtual Insanity will resonate with readers who enjoy modern takes on science fiction…
A hundred years in the future, the world has been ravaged by climate change, dwindling resources, and pandemics – one of which has wiped out most of the men. A women’s republic has arisen, sustained by cloning, and privileged teenager Clara Perdue is desperate to become…