Undermajordomo Minor by Patrick de Witt – a comic tale with a touching protagonist

One of the great joys of comic fiction is that it can do anything it wants. It can explore the sexual possibilities of a giant salami, provoke empathy with a merciless killer, or throw the English language into a blender and make it taste like high gastronomy despite the weird colour and the lumps – or perhaps because of them.

Read more

We are Pirates by Daniel Handler- A Funny, Creepy Voyage for All Ages

In darkly interesting times, authors who can satisfy a previously unidentified hunger have the world at their feet. Writing as Lemony Snicket, Daniel Handler gave young readers a drug they didn’t know they craved until they tried it. The wild gothic of the Unfortunate Events series was the literary equivalent of a scorpion lollipop: a macabre treat.

Read more (outside link)

 

House of Ashes by Monique Roffey – the story of an insurrection

Gun-toting rebels seize government buildings, take hostages and appear on state television to announce the overthrow of a “corrupt” regime. The army intervenes, and the insurgents become the heroes of the moment – or its cannon fodder. The BBC arrives. Welcome to the generic coup d’etat.

Read more