On 95bFM’s Loose Reads Kiran reviewed the incendiary novel Hurricane Season by Fernanda Melchor which is on the Booker International Prize shortlist. Set in a small Mexican village, this intoxicating novel has the feel of a Southern Gothic modern classic and looks at small town folklore and mythology, inequality, violence and superstition.
Bestsellers for June 2020 /
95bFM's Loose Reads: Humankind: A Hopeful History by Rutger Bregman /
In what’s been an incredibly strange and unsettling 2020, it can be good to read some non fiction with an optimistic outlook. Looking into well known psychological, economical and historical research within a new context, Bregman proves to us that humans are…really not that bad.
For fans of Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens. You can buy Humankind here.
Listen to Jenna. Rachel and Tess chat about this book on 95bFM’s Loose Reads below:
95bFM's Loose Reads: Nothing to See by Pip Adam /
Kiran was happy to be back in the 95bFM studio with Rachel and Sarah to talk about Pip Adam’s thrilling new novel Nothing to See. Kiran reckons Adam is one of the most interesting and exciting writers currently working in New Zealand fiction.
95bFM's Loose Reads: A Terrible Country by Keith Gessen /
One of the hardest requests booksellers get is for funny books! On 95bFM’s Loose Reads, Kiran reviewed A Terrible Country by Keith Gessen. It’s a hilarious novel about a failing academic named Andrei. He’s just split up with his girlfriend and moves from New York to Moscow to look after his ageing grandmother Seva, who is about to turn 90 and has accelerating dementia. This book is also packed with Russian history and politics and is super entertaining.
If you loved Olga Tokarczk’s Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead you’ll love this!
95bFM's Loose Reads: Fake Baby by Amy McDaid /
We’re reunited in Level 1!
Jenna’s in the studio to chat to Rachel and Tess about the new New Zealand novel, Fake Baby by Amy McDaid. Set over nine days in Auckland city, this novel is full of wry, dry humour as we follow a three down and out, yet charming characters as they navigate society, family and their mental health.
Bestsellers for May 2020 /
95bFM's Loose Reads: Breasts and Eggs by Mieko Kawakami /
Meiko Kawakami is a literary star in Japan (also a blogger, poet and former J-Pop star) and this is her first book published in English (translated by Sam Bet and David Boyd. )
Breasts and Eggs won Japan’s most prestigious writing award, the Akutagawa Prize, in 2007. Since then, it has expanded into two books within a book. In Book One, Natsuko is hosting her sister and niece over a sweltering summer in Tokyo from Osaka. Makiko is obsessed with getting breast implants while Midoriko is incredibly anxious about her impending body changes. In Book Two, it’s ten years later and Natsuko is exploring having a child using a sperm donor.
Throughout this novel, Natsuko is surrounded by solo, independent women and this book explores and makes a stand against Japanese patriarchal society. Grimy small apartments, bodily functions, ramen noodles and hostess bars are the background to an intriguing and fleshed out character study.
Also, highly recommended is Kawakami interviewing Murakami where she deeply takes him to task for his writing of female characters.
Listen to Jenna’s review with Rachel and Sarah below:
RNZ's Nine to Noon: Square Haunting by Francesca Wade /
A fascinating group biography of five women who lived on Melkenburgh Square between WW1 and WW2.
For fans of English literature, feminist leaders and the Bloomsbury set.
You can order the book here.
Listen to Jenna chat about Square Haunting as well as book store life in Level 2 below:
95bFM's Loose Reads: Underland: A Deep Time Journey by Robert Macfarlane /
How often do we think about and how much do we even know about the immense world that lurks beneath our feet? Robert Macfarlane is the poet of the natural world, the linguist of landscape. As we re-emerge from the “underland” of lockdown, his exquisite book Underland: A Deep Time Journey is the most thoughtful and beautiful book to gently dive into at this time. This exhilarating investigation into the world beneath the surface we walk upon, moves between catacombs, a laboratory underground in Yorkshire, and underground burial chambers for nuclear waste in Finland. Macfarlance explains that the underland archives the past, and tells us so much about the future… Kiran read this book in absolute wonder, and reviewed it on 95bFM’s Loose Reads.
AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Becky Manawatu /
Becky Manawatu’s Auē is shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction at this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. You can listen to Kiran’s rave review on 95bFM Breakfast’s Loose Reads here. Manawatu spoke to Kiran ahead of The Ockham NZ Book Awards Winners’ Ceremony which will be live-streamed from 6pm May 12 on the Ockhams YouTube channel where you can now also view readings from the shortlisted authors.
How do you balance fiction writing with journalism? Do you have a preference and do the two different forms inform each other?
My experience as a reporter helped me with editing, and has improved my writing in general. Writing human interest stories, interviewing people gives me a unique, though I admit sometimes sanitised, insight into people's lives. I just love working with words.
Arundhati Roy says fiction is her first love and greatest love, and that is true for me too. Fiction means so much to me. It does not keep me or my family fed or clothed, however if I could immerse myself in it more often, either reading or writing, I really would.
Congratulations too for your nomination for the Best First-Person Essay or Feature at the Voyager Media Awards for your striking personal essay published by Newsroom. Is this area of writing something you’d like to pursue?
I do enjoy personal essay writing, but it is a tough one, while writing them I am obviously mining my own life and writing with the belief that someone might be interested in what I tell them - about myself, this feels like an immensely indulgent thing to do.
But it is not just out of an interest in myself, but an interest in the world and people. And I guess I am my own access to other people and the world and I like to write with that access kept intact. I also prefer reading essays where that connection is kept intact. If it's severed, ie, the writer removes themselves completely from what they are expressing, I have to work harder to hold my attention on it. It is probably important I try to do that more often, maybe.
However, I have thought about cutting down on the number of personal essays I write, as I really want to write another novel. To write a novel I need to have a bright, burning hunger to say something, to feel heard.
If I keep saying things and being heard, I'm afraid it'll keep the fire in my belly just smouldering away, contentedly, the hunger consistently satiated. But I think the personal essays around Auē were important ones for me to write, and I hope I can continue to write the odd first person essay.
What was in your lockdown bookstack?
I read Bernadine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other. I re-read 'patches' of Renee's memoir These Two Hands, and re-read Janet Frames' Owls Do Cry. I read poems and prose in Sport 47 edited by Tayi Tibble. I listen to Zadie Smith on Youtube lots too, then read any of her essays I could find online. Every Saturday I read Newsroom's new short story.
What book is your comfort read/re-read and why?
Women who Run with the Wolves, by Clarissa Pinkola Estes. I like to reread parts of Witi Ihimaera's Tangi and parts of The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy. Tangi and The God of Small Things are both books to pick up and flick to a page and reread because they are poetic, as is Frame's Owls Do Cry.
Women who Run with the Wolves is to me, mostly about creativity. It's deep and yum and honours storytelling and makes me want to write.
I have ordered myself a wee stack of books from my main book squeeze. Order includes Hemi Kelly's A Māori Phrase a Day and Hurricane Season by Fernanda Melchor and Ice Monster by David Walliams for my 11-year-old girl who loves reading too.
What was the last book that really moved you, and why?
Janet Frames' Owls Do Cry. I love the feeling that I am moving around in other human's minds, not being held out, allowed into the strange landscape that is the human psyche. Frame makes these allowances like few other writers can.
What are you working on next, Becky?
I've started writing about this character, a young girl. I have given her a single experience from my childhood to plant a kind of seed.The experience is when I was very young, probably six,I squashed a fly on a windowsill at my house I lived in Birchfield (West Coast). I had been so bored and in my boredom, simply killed this little fly. Small maggots writhed out of it and I was stunned by them. (Mistrusting this memory, because I believed flies laid eggs I googled it and found flies can lay eggs or have live maggots in their bellies).
Anyway, I recall sitting there watching the maggots and looking at the dead fly and feeling like I had done something enormously bad.
Probably months later - I can't be sure - I was watching a nature show on TV and it was about termites, and when I saw the termites I was consumed by guilt because I thought they might have been the things that came out of the fly's belly and on the TV the termites were turning wood to dust and I thought 'Oh no - the termites will be eating our house too and then it will fall down and we will all die and it will be all my fault.'
So I have given this character this story, this grain of worry, guilt, and I just want to see what happens, what the worry forces her to think, feel, do and how it shapes her. Also I just find it interesting how children perceive the world, and I think this personal experience is a good example. Who knows, it'll probably come to nothing...
More about the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards here
AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Owen Marshall /
Owen Marshall’s Pearly Gates is shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction at this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. You can listen to Kiran’s review on 95bFM Breakfast’s Loose Reads here: Marshall spoke to Kiran ahead of The Ockham NZ Book Awards Winners’ Ceremony which will be live-streamed from 6pm May 12 on the Ockhams YouTube channel where you can now also view readings from the shortlisted authors.
Kia ora, Owen! Congratulations on being shortlisted for the Jan Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction! Pearly Gates is a charming novel set in a vividly evoked provincial South Island town. A sense of place and landscape is often a key element in your writing - how important is place and landscape to you?
Most of my writing is concerned with the investigation of character, and I like to give readers a sense of where my characters are, as well as who they are. Landscapes and cityscapes affect the people who live there, and the people in turn affect their settings. I enjoy the evocation of physical surroundings when I read and strive for that in my own work.
Pearly is a “good local son” who is accustomed to success in his life as a rugby player for Otago and a two term mayor. He is aware however, that the tide can turn. What were you interested in exploring there?
In regard to the themes of Pearly Gates - I wished to emphasise the complexity of personality even in apparently ordinary people, the moral ambiguities we all share. Pearly makes a bad decision and has to live with the consequences of that. Also I hoped to present a convincing portrait of provincial South Island life.
What book is your comfort read/re-read and what has been in your lockdown bookstack?
Despite the time provided by the present lockdown, I haven't been reading much over the last few weeks because we have recently moved to another home and chaos rules. I have been re-reading some of Alice Munro's fine stories from her collection Dear Life. As for a ‘comfort read,' I enjoy the Jane Austen novels and also the fiction of Irish writer William Trevor. In non-fiction, I find fascinating the works of neurologist Oliver Sacks. The novel that most moved and impressed me in recent years was Enduring Love by Ian McEwan.
What are you working on next, Owen?
After several novels, I have returned in my own writing to short stories, encouraged by a recent grant from Creative New Zealand. Short stories are not as commercially successful as novels, but have an especially honourable place in New Zealand literature and offer interesting challenges to both writer and reader.
95bFM's Loose Reads: Pearly Gates by Owen Marshall /
Kiran has worked her way through the Ockham NZ Book Awards Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction shortlist and reviewed Owen Marshall’s Pearly Gates on 95bFM’s Loose Reads. It’s a lovely, gentle novel set in a small North Otago town, and is based around Pat “Pearly” Gates. A good local son made good, Pearly is a real estate agent, two term mayor and ex rugby player. Marshall is great at evoking a sense of place and character, and Pearly Gates is charming.
The Ockham NZ Book Awards Winners’ Ceremony will be live-streamed from 6pm May 12 on the Ockhams YouTube channel where you can now also view readings from the shortlisted authors.
Bestsellers for April 2020 /
AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Carl Shuker /
Carl Shuker has been shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction at this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards for his novel A Mistake. Shuker caught up with Kiran to answer a few questions ahead of the awards.
Kia ora, Carl! Congratulations on being shortlisted for the Jan Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction! A Mistake is slim and concise, it’s neatly written and tightly wound. Stylistically, it’s a bit of a departure for you! It’s more clipped which suits the narrative. Did you enjoy writing in a different style?
Kia ora Kiran! Thank you! And thank you for the brilliant review you wrote. (You can read Kiran’s review of A Mistake here.)
Oh, I was so ready for a new way. The previous book (still in a drawer, still getting chipped away at) was all about multiclaused sentences and abstruse references, I suppose intellectual play, but geekery, really - it's set among a group of copy editors at a London medical journal after all, so it's about words and geeks who care about words.
This one, I wanted limits, I suppose because my life has new limits, but also because limits are fun and I've always wanted to do a short, brutally minimal book. There was a different story here and I wanted to be different. No more Pynchon, Wallace, Gaddis, Powers. That time for me - and I think for reading - is over. Also it's about New Zealand and so much of New Zealand is awkward, not quite socialised. So I realised awkwardness, the beauty behind the monosyllables, was the aesthetic.
Tell us about the character Elizabeth? Is she based on a real person and why did you call her Elizabeth Taylor?!
She's partially inspired by a real woman I know in healthcare who is brilliant but has no filters or time for politics. So she makes life hard for herself, almost on purpose. If she doesn't believe someone knows about something she has no trouble letting them know. It doesn't matter what that person is president of, or who they might know. This is obviously to her credit but also her detriment.
Of course what I see in this woman reflects myself to a great deal and I freely own Elizabeth has a lot of me in her too, the good and the less so. I wanted to create a character I could look to in life and say, what would Elizabeth do?
In regard to her name, it's both significant and not. I made a cover for the book early in the piece (as you may do when building up its world) and it was a heavily pixellated (real) Elizabeth Taylor. So there's both something about the transmutation of a "real" person in their complexity by media attention in its need for neat narrative.
But there's also that thing that characters' names don't mean anything. People's names don't. We imbue them with meaning after the fact. Most of my books have stuck to this rule - "Michael Edwards" for example (from The Method Actors). The more boring the better. However, there is the matter of the sculpture of words on a page, of which proper names are a part, and "Elizabeth Taylor" is a truly beautiful collection of syllables. But I also have secret resonances which I don't and won't let on. Lebanese names carry codes about religion that are very significant in that environment. So I know I'm contradicting myself.
You were a copy editor at the British Medical Journal in London and work as a Principal Publications Advisor to the Health Quality & Safety Commission - was there anything from your day job that inspired or informed your writing of A Mistake?
Yes - I was in the UK editing at the BMJ when they began publishing the individual outcomes of surgeons. It was a huge thing. It began happening here and we took quite a strong lead in this work and I basically had to read everything. And at the end of that reading I still wasn't sure of the right answer.
So part of this book was working out some of the issues for myself. An original drive was to have a chapter that was just a graph - a funnel plot - and it would by this point be for the reader so understood and laden with significance she might just see the graph and gasp. Also, in both jobs I am constantly surrounded by these brilliant, awe-inspiring people, predominantly women. A lot of my previous stuff has been about masculinity because I am a man, but I wanted to write about women.
What has been in your lockdown bookstack?
I'm reading David Coventry's new novel in manuscript (Dance Prone, forthcoming from Picador UK and VUP) - and it's like mid-period Don DeLillo writes the early 80s US punk scene. You would LOVE it. It's nasty and transcendental and right and wonderful. I'm reading Middlemarch for the first time. I'm reading the same ton of graphs we all are. I love dipping into M. John Harrison's Viroconium before sleep to enrich my dreams.
What book is your comfort read/re-read and why?
My comfort re-read is Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare. I know parts of it almost by heart. I don't know - it's funny, it's mean, it's exquisitely beautiful, it's both utterly silly and completely serious. It contains everything and it reminds me of years of connections - studying it in university, deciding it would guide and be central to what for me was a huge book, so I was intimate with it for years on end, finishing that book and it going into the world, and now my daughter, age eight, reading it, getting the jokes. She transmuted the characters of Sir Andrew Aguecheek and Sir Toby Belch into "Hollowcheeks" and "Burp", which, you can't get any better transmuting than that. It's always been enriching to me, good luck, anchor and balloon.
What was the last book that really moved you, and why?
Aspiring by Damien Wilkins. Male adolescence is such a dangerous time I'm surprised we're not more organised about it as a society. I only say male because I am one and my own is quite personal to me, and the facts, dangers and failures of masculinity in New Zealand still concern me.
Also the consequences of failed male adolescence always affect others so much. The suicides and car crashes, all the physical acts and acting out. It's incredible to see people lose their way. It happens less and less as we get older and our bubbles shrink. We see people die. In high school we see all their changes up close - the deaths, the accidents, but also the triumphs, the transformations, the willed personality changes where people become other people sometimes over the space of months. The awful, rapid, rapid declines. It's a terrifying time and Damien captured it so well.
What are you working on next, Carl?
I'm working on work at the moment, gotta pay the bills, but I have a manuscript in a drawer I love to tinker on, one I love and may one day be ready for the world.
More information about the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards can be found here.
Customer Review: Lizard's Tale by Weng Wai Chan /
by Peggy Taylor (11)
Lizard’s Tale is an amazing book! This truly captivating mystery is set in Singapore when World War 2 was being fought. It tells the story of Lizard, a poor boy surviving on odd jobs and petty theft, and the people around him. Lizard’s Tale has it all - murder, mystery, codebooks, liars, friendship, traitors and even a little bit of history.
I would recommend this book for kids who love mysteries or want to try something new. After all this book has a little bit of everything, and I really enjoyed it.
Overall, this book is impossible to put down! So what are you waiting for? Go order yourself a copy!
AUTHOR INTERVIEW: David Vann /
David Vann has been shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction at this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards for his novel Halibut on the Moon. Vann took time out from building a 50-foot aluminium sailing trimaran to catch up with Kiran ahead of the awards.
Kia ora, David! Congratulations on being shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction! Halibut on the Moon is a powerful but dark read. It re-visits a theme you have previously examined in your fiction - the suicide of your father Jim. How do you retain a sense of perspective when you are writing about such heavy personal history?
Interesting question, because I guess in fiction we don’t try to retain a sense of perspective. That implies a distance and not being affected, and the point here, in writing or reading Greek tragedy, is to suffer and be broken in order to see.
I was trying to get as close as possible to my father’s despair and final days and trying to forget my own perspective. I was writing without a plan or outline and was often surprised by what the characters did or said or felt.
Tragedy is refreshing because it offers us a descent within a safe space, art, and then we emerge refreshed. But we have to suffer first.
You’ve explored the men in your family from different angles - has this helped you understand them on a deeper level? And what angle are you interested in exploring next?
Writing about my father and grandfathers and uncle has helped me tremendously in understanding them better, understanding our past, and having some context for understanding who I am now. I don’t have a plan at the moment of writing more about my immediate family but instead am writing about our Cherokee heritage, a longer ancestry.
What was the last book that made you laugh, and why?
Less, the Pulitzer prize winning novel by Andrew Sean Greer, made me laugh a lot. The main character is a writer about my age who is seeing his career descend, so it was uncomfortable laughter at times, with too much recognition, but still wonderful fun. Everything he writes about what it’s like to have your career spiral downward in middle age is certainly true.
What was the last book that really moved you, and why?
So many. I’m often moved by books. I’m an easy audience. I cry even in bad movies. Like, The Rock has a nice moment with the ape and I cry.
But the book I’ll never forget for being so beautiful and wrenching is Shadow Child by P.F. Thomese, a Dutch author. It’s only 100 pages but so sad and also illuminating about writing, about making meaning again after it has left.
What has been in your lockdown bookstack?
I’m actually building a 50-foot aluminium sailing trimaran during the lockdown, a couple months in now. So I saw, grind, and weld aluminium all day. My stack has been only various aluminium extrusions and plates. I’m looking forward to finishing within the next six weeks and getting back to reading and writing.
What book is your comfort read/re-read?
I’ve read Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian six times now in full, and in sections many more times. A violent book about an America born in war with a future of endless war, but so beautiful in every sentence. It’s a comfort because it reminds me that good writing matters and endures, despite all the pressures to the contrary.
What are you working on next, David?
I’m working on a novel about my Cherokee ancestors. I come from two Cherokee chiefs from about two hundred years ago, and I’ve written the first 65 pages of Cherokee creation myths revisited and will be writing about DeSoto next. I’m hoping for a longer book, and since no one wants anything from me at the moment, so I have plenty of time!
More information about the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards can be found here.
95bFM's Loose Reads: Recollections of my Nonexistence by Rebecca Solnit /
Recollections of my Nonexistence is Rebecca’s Solnit’s memoir - giving background and context to her body of work - 20 books on feminism, place, culture, ‘wandering and walking, hope and disaster.’
Solnit writes about reading here:
‘Sometimes when you are devastated you want not a reprieve but a mirror of your condition or a reminder that you are not alone in it. Other times it is not the propaganda or the political art that helps you face a crisis but whatever gives you respite from it.’
Solnit never feels like she’s speaking above you as a reader. You’ll underline and bookmark the many powerful lines in this book. It’s an intelligent and thoughtful read for both new readers and established fans.
#BookshopsWillBeBack
Listen to Jenna and Rachel chatting across the interweb below:
A Mistake by Carl Shuker: Reviewed by Kiran Dass /
A Mistake is shortlisted for the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction.
One of my favourite novels from 2019, A Mistake is a clipped and refined novel from Wellington-based writer Carl Shuker who is excellent at illustrating the nuances of place, character and plot. Slim and concise, it’s neatly written and tightly wound. I loved Shuker’s 2006 novel The Lazy Boys. A white-knuckled, striking and believable depiction of toxic masculinity and scarfie culture in Dunedin, it was a thrilling, brutal and unforgettable read. I’ll pick up anything with his name on it.
Written in a diagnostic style, A Mistake is based around a woman named Elizabeth Taylor, who at 42 is the youngest and only woman consultant general surgeon at Wellington Hospital. With a pristine track record, she’s extremely talented, driven and committed to her craft and patients. A stickler for detail, Elizabeth is very process-focused. An intense scene early in A Mistake sees her leading her team in theatre for what should be fairly routine procedure. Her background music of choice is the punishingly pulverising and exhilarating ‘Angel of Death’ by thrash metal band Slayer. So it’s all very heightened and the tension is palpable. But then something goes terribly wrong. And people want answers as the implications for Elizabeth and the people around her escalate.
There are so many interesting issues at play, here. A Mistake examines process and burnout, but also the complexities and frailties around human error. Shuker intersperses chapters with pieces about the American Challenger space shuttle disaster in 1986 which broke apart 73 seconds into flight killing all seven crew members. The Challenger was troubled from the outset, and these interesting interjections punctuate the tension here.
Shuker plainly lays it all out: if you want to understand the implications of massive systems failure determined months in advance but happening in microseconds in front of you as you try to cope in real time, The Challenger timeline is the first thing you might read.
Elizabeth is co-writing a paper examining the public reportage of surgical outcomes for the Royal London Journal of Medicine. Meanwhile, at the hospital, there’s a new reporting system being introduced around big data. The atmosphere around this is increasingly paranoid and on edge. A Mistake is set in a strikingly vivid and recognisable Wellington, with additional scenes in Auckland and an uncomfortable conference in Queenstown.
I love the way Shuker has written this character. Elizabeth Taylor has a fixed smile, like a mask. All muscle and no feeling. She’s up for 27 hours straight and is so constipated that she hasn’t used the toilet in two days. But, she observes, that is quite useful for long stints in the operating theatre.
Elizabeth Taylor is an alluring and fascinating character. I want to know why Shuker called her Elizabeth Taylor! The obvious comparison is to the famous iconic raven-haired, violet-eyed film star. But beyond that, her name actually immediately made me think of that great one-of-a-kind dystopian writer J.G. Ballard. In Ballard’s seminal 1973 novel Crash, the character Vaughan has an intense fantasy about dying in a car crash with Elizabeth Taylor. A far-fetched connection? Maybe, but both books share a similar clinical coolness, inner weirdness and steelyness.
A Mistake is a razor sharp and compelling novel from a singular, sophisticated literary voice in contemporary New Zealand fiction.
More information about the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards can be found here.
Staff Blog: Jenna's Top 10 for Ten Years /
By Jenna Todd
In the midst of this lockdown madness, I’ve celebrated ten years of both working at Time Out and being a bookseller. I fell into this book world by accident (with a sprinkling of fate) and have since become completely immersed - I can’t imagine doing anything else.
Starting in 2010, I worked the 9pm nightshift, sharing the counter with our tiny shop kitten Lucinda (now in early retirement) and spent the days devouring book recommendations from my colleagues such as Donna Tartt’s The Secret History, Elizabeth Strout’s Olive Kitteridge and Eleanor Catton’s The Rehearsal.
Since then, it’s been a joy to work with the most incredibly smart, caring and passionate coworkers, collaborate with our generous and hilarious owner Wendy and connect with our likeminded community - including customers and industry colleagues - who all share an overwhelming love and enthusiasm for our wee store.
Here are my favourite reads for the last decade, I’m sure I’ve shamefully missed a few out - but this is to the best of my memory:
2010 Just Kids by Patti Smith
The Spirit Level by Richard Wilkinson & Kate Pickett
2011 Once Upon a River by Bonnie Jo Campbell
Swamplandia! by Karen Russell
2012 The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson
Civilisation by Steve Braunias
2013 The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton
A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
Life after Life by Kate Atkinson
2014 My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante
2015 The First Bad Man by Miranda July
The Story of a New Name, Those who Leave and Those who Stay, The Story of the Lost Child by Elena Ferrante
2016 Deleted Scenes for Lovers by Tracey Slaughter
2017 Sour Heart by Jenny Zhang
Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders
The New Animals by Pip Adam
2018 My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh
The Ice Shelf by Anne Kennedy
2019 The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead
The Friend by Sigrid Nunez
Ducks, Newburyport by Lucy Ellman