Book reviews by Liz

The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman

In literature, nothing dates like tomorrow. The hypothetical readers of the late 21st century may look back on the Armageddon fixation of some of today’s dystopic fiction with an indulgent smile. But they may also be struck by how much of the political and physical landscape they recognise. That the radically altered world on the […]

We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler

“I wanted you to have an extraordinary life,” confesses Rosemary’s mother in Karen Joy Fowler’s wise, provocative and wildly endearing take on family love. Did no one warn Mrs Cooke to be careful what she wished for? Had she any inkling of the family cataclysm her innocent desire would engender, and the complex repercussions her daughter […]

Kerrigan in Copenhagen by Thomas E Kennedy – review

Thanks to television drama, every British TV licence-payer now has a passive acquaintance with Danish, and Copenhagen is at its most globally recognised since Hans Christian Andersen’s day. It seems we can’t get enough of the place. Read more

A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki – review

If a Japanese-American writer who is also a Zen Buddhist priest wrote a post-Japanese tsunami novel, what themes might you imagine she would address? Biculturalism, water, death, memory, the female predicament, conscience, the nature of time and tide? Tick. All there. Throw in the second world war, the reader-writer relationship, depression, ecological collapse, suicide, origami, a […]

Flight Behaviour by Barbara Kingsolver

Climate change: the spectre hanging over every child, is the single most urgent issue of our times – and a challenge to any novelist. But how to write fiction about the Earth’s storm-filled future without a whiff of the pulpit? Barbara Kingsolver’s paradoxical solution is to set her story on a sheep farm in the […]

Galore by Michael Crummey – review

“Newfoundland seemed too severe and formidable, too provocative, too extravagant and singular and harrowing to be real,” notes an American doctor when he first encounters the remote settlement of Paradise Deep. Read more