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July, August and September 2025 - The Heart In Winter, Caledonian Road

Wednesday 30 July  - " The Heart in Winter" by Kevin Barry.   Irish humour, doomed lovers, and bounty hunters, all set in 1890s Montana.  Variously described as "Exhilarating" and "a bad version of Dead Man." August - no meeting, to allow time to prepare for September's book (656 pp) Late September (date to be confirmed) - " Caledonia n Road" by Andrew O'Hagan.   A portrait of London society both dazzling and disgusting. The Guardian described it as "addictively enjoyable". Stay cool, and enjoy your reading.

Bookclub News June 2025

Dear Friends, in a first for the bookclub, the fourteen of us who met last night were serenaded from the garden by talented young musicians singing Mozart. Quite what Sadie Smith, the cynical unlikeable narrator of Rachel Kushner's latest novel  "  Creation   Lake "  would have made of it is hard to say. Another example of  ineffectual European dilettanti at play?  It certainly added  brio  to our discussion Our final average score of  7, 'Recommended ' masks a widely varied response. General appreciation of Kushner's  impressive research, fluid writing skill, powerful ideas and choice of subject matter,  but reservations about her scatter-gun approach. Were we really wiser in having quite so much information about Neanderthal society, mixed up with local ancient and modern French history, and did it add up to the "gripping philosophical thriller" promised by her publishers...

June 2025 - Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner

Our book for June is   " Creation   Lake " by Rachel Kushner,  a contemporary tale of a female undercover agent who infiltrates a radical ecocommunity in France. Our meeting will be a little later than usual, on  Wednesday 2 July . 

Bookclub News May 2025

Dear Friends, an admirably orderly discussion last night, given that there were 21 of us around the table, ready to dissect "Night Watch" by Jayne Anne Phillips.  Historical fiction, with maybe a dash of magic realism, the novel blends a series of inter-related stories of characters caught up in the aftermath of the US Civil War. Raw, often unsparing, and unafraid to reflect the racism, misogyny and violence of the times, it also offered a glimmer of hope in the empathy and enlightenment to be found in surprising places. While specific to a time and place, it was hard not to recognise the universal themes common to any conflict, especially among fellow citizens. "When the killing ends, the grief goes on." While the author's writing style had its detractors (overwritten?) the majority of the group were impressed by its overall quality. Many felt however a falling-off when the ending appeared to wrap up too many loose ends unconvincingly. Our overall average sco...

Possible Reads 2025 Listing

  Title Author Pages Comments James Percival Everett 336 A re-imagining of Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”, told from the standpoint of the enslaved Jim. Dazzling and very humorous. Orbital (READ) Samantha Harvey 138 A team of astronauts in the International Space Station observes the planet Earth and each other. Their communications dwell on the fragility of human life and of the planet itself. Winner of the 2024 Booker Prize. The Sunday Times described is as “Stunning, an uplifting book.” Victim Andrew Boryga 288 A young man in the Bronx learns to use his tragic background as the perfect route to fame and fortune, and to enhance his growing reputation as a writer. Praised for its exceptional character development, the novel draws the reader into the protagonist’s psyche, involving a blend of fear, rationalisation and occasionally guilt. The Safekeep Yale van der Wouden 288 Isabel is an uptight, controlled and humourless figure living in her family’s countryside ...

May 2025 - Night Watch by Jayne Anne Phillips

  Looking ahead to our May meeting, we are turning cross the Atlantic to read the 2024 Pulitzer Prize winning novel by  Jayne Anne Phillips, "Night Watch",   historical story-telling in the aftermath of the American Civil War.    Our meeting will be on  Wednesday 28 May.

Bookclub News April 2025

Dear Readers, award-winning British author  Kate Atkinson  is reported as having asserted, "I live to entertain. I don't live to teach or preach, or be political".  And after reading her latest novel  "Death at the Sign of the Rook" , it would be fair to say that our 18 (!) attendees at last night's meeting were in the main entertained. We had reservations about the book's structure and plot, and whether it was mere pastiche Agatha Christie or genuine satire, but most had found it a witty and skilfully written fun read and a welcome antidote to some of our recent choices. For those familiar with the author, there was a sense of disappointment that this book did not bear comparison with the best of her earlier titles, but new readers were intrigued and open to exploring more of her work. Overall, a vote of 6, Recommended. Looking ahead to our May meeting, we are turning cross the Atlantic to read the 2024 Pulitzer Priz...