JANUARY 2024 READING ROUNDUP

My 2024  reading year  got off to a good start, with the Martin McInnes literary novel , followed  by the Richard Osman Thursday Murder Club novel.

Notable that two of my most enjoyable fiction reads were written by writers (Osman and Das) who have strong backgrounds in the world of  TV productions /writing and I think this is what makes their books so readable. There’s plenty of action, stuff happens and the plots whisk along. Yes, the books both have moments of introspection, moral dilemmas, poignant decisions so there is emotional depth to the stories. But, mainly, the narrative moves.

FICTION

In Ascension – Martin MacInnes. Stunning 3rd novel from Scottish experimental writer, if you enjoy SF do not miss! And non-SF fans will also enjoy.  See my review 20 Jan, on this blog.

The Last Devil to Die. #4 Thursday Murder Club series.  – Richard Osman. Unputdownable comic mystery notable for endearing cast of characters, a lovable dog, plus a wild fox; the crime plot works, but I read the series for the characters. A cracking good read!

In the Time of our History – Susanne Pari. Another Americandiaspora novel; Persian/Iranian  culture give women short shrift. An autocratic patriarch versus his wayward daughter who refuses to bow to his traditional plans for her life, and opts for independence and a career. The family dynamics and insights into Persian culture made this an engrossing read. Recommended

Never Meant to Stay – Trisha Das. Insert a childhood friend into a dysfunctional Bombay family and watch the fireworks. Indian rom-com with a hilarious wedding debacle finale. Entertaining light read.

The Next to Last Stand – Craig Johnson. Walt Longmire rides again, tangles with art theft from an American veteran, and delivers chunks of history about Custer’s Last Stand. One for the fans and afficionados of History of the Old Wild West.

The Depth of Winter – Craig Johnson.  Walt Longmire rushes off to Mexico to rescue his daughter who’s been kidnapped by a particularly nasty Mexican drug cartel. The action does not stop but the ensuing challenges, fights and general mayhem nearly put an end to the heroic sheriff. Tough and wily he may be, but not indestructible.  Throughout all the mayhem, Walt doggedly sticks to his personal moral code which costs him dear. An excellent read.

NON-FICTION

The Anthropocene Reviewed – John Greene . I didn’t read all the essay, some were very America-centric, so I gave them a miss. But I read about 60 % of the book, and what I particularly enjoyed was the Writer’s long, long perspective ranging back millions of years, into primeval epochs , which certainly puts our confused, aggressive 21st century into a calmer perspective.

  Reading  the electronic version of JG’s book, I realized that for me, essay collections work better in hardcover format. Many of the essays deserved a slow, thoughtful  read and would benefit from many re-reads, but the LIBBY clock was ticking and telling me I only had another 3 … 2   …. 1   days left to finish my loaned book. Fair enough,  others were queued up to read the book, so I dutifully returned it. However, if I can find a second hand copy, with large-ish print, I shall certainly buy it and have a slow, satisfying re-read.

IN ASCENSION – Martin MacInnes [Book Review]

I fl

I’m still processing what I have read in this extraordinary novel.

I flicked the final page to Closed, and closed my eyes.  My head was teeming with questions. At book’s end, I definitely had more questions than answers.

During my long reading life, over more than 70 years, I have read literally thousands of books, but never anything like this book.

Firstly, it’s a genre blender of a novel. Yes, its SciFi. But: its also an eco-cli novel . It’s also a psychological portrait of a dysfunctional family: abusive father Geert, distant mother Fenna, scarred  eldest child Leigh (the main narrator), little sister Helena, who assumes the role of oldest child.

So the long novel ( 700+ pages in print, 1000 in e-bk)  has breadth, depth, nuance plus a ton of info about our solar system, the universe, and space travel. Despite this, and despite the leisurely pacing and detailed narrative, I continued to be engaged.

Leigh studies microbiology, and crews on a ship that’s exploring a hitherto  undiscovered deep sea vent, that yields mysterious, inexplicable phenomena. She’s then recruited to work on a secretive space programme that will aim for the very fringe of our known Universe.  The programme director reveals that an Unknown Object has been sighted In the sky, the implications of which are legion, but unclear. 

I found the detailed descriptions of a space travel training programme  interesting and absorbing. The writer  certainly did his homework on this.

To say more about the plot will bring us on to spoiler territory. Suffice to say  no hostile aliens or monsters inhabit this book; no manly heroics or triumphant returns to earth. This is not your Run of the Mill SF space opera.  Far from it.

The novel is a deeply thoughtful exploration of our role in the Universe, our place in the biological hierarchies of Earth, the future of life on Earth. It is a tour de force from a powerful imagination.

The ending offers no conclusive, tidy solutions. Rather, a number of loose strands, interconnected but inconclusive. I will be turning the ideas around in my mind for a long time to come.

Without doubt  the novel will be in my Top Three Reads of 2024.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/jan/22/in-ascension-by-martin-macinnes-review-a-deep-dive-into-sea-and-space

https://lonesomereader.com/   for another in depth review

Martin McInnes was long-listed  for the Booker Prize in 2023.