Reviews
A Shirt Box Full of Songs, By Barbara Dickson
Looking for talent? No contest!
Inside Reviews
Voices Against War: A Century of Protest, by Lyn Smith
Monday, 9 November 2009
My father had a bad war, but then most pacifists did. He didn't have a very good peace either, as soldiers returned from a victory in which he was only too aware he had played no part.
Conquest: The English Kingdom of France, By Juliet Barker
Sunday, 8 November 2009
How a cast of despicable characters and warring factions kept France on its knees post-Agincourt
False Dawn, By John Gray (Rated 5/ 5 )
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Events since False Dawn was first published in 1998 would seem to bear out John Gray's thesis that global capitalism leads not to universal prosperity but to chaos. In chapters on the US, Russia, China, Japan and developing countries, Gray shows again and again that laissez-faire capitalism is the problem, not the solution. On virtually every page there is some insight that makes you think: for instance, Gray points out that America's unemployment figures look far better than they are if you factor in the US prison population of more than a million.
Nation, By Terry Pratchett (Rated 2/ 5 )
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Nation, Terry Pratchett's latest novel for younger readers, starts promisingly: with the creation myth of an island people in the South Pacific – sorry, in Pratchett's alternative world, that's the South Pelagic Ocean. Then Mau, a boy of the Island people, returns from a solitary ordeal on a neighbouring island to find his whole nation wiped out by a tidal wave. He loses his faith in the Nation's gods – though they will keep jabbering to him in his head – and braces himself to deal with an influx of refugees from the tsunami, including Daphne, daughter of the heir to the British throne. The stage is set for a clash of cultures.
A Freewheelin' Time, By Suze Rotolo (Rated 2/ 5 )
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Suze Rotolo is the girl nestling up to Dylan on the album cover of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. She met him in 1961 when she was 17 and he was 21, and this book is a record of their time together in folky, smoky Greenwich Village.
The People's Train, By Thomas Keneally
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Thomas Keneally pierces the heart of the revolution
The Vagrants, By Yiyun Li (Rated 5/ 5 )
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Yiyun Li takes on the omniscient voice of a 19th-century realist novelist for this bleak story set in a provincial town in China, 1979. A people who had endured the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution might have expected a thaw after the death of Mao – but it was a long time coming.
Telling Tales, By Melissa Katsoulis (Rated 3/ 5 )
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Melissa Katsoulis's entertaining account of literary hoaxes from the ancient world to the present day covers all three main kinds of hoax: the "genuine" hoax, that is to say the hoax that was never intended to be discovered (the Hitler diaries, the Ossian poems); the mock hoax, where a writer adopts a persona to create a new literary voice, such as James Norman Hall's invention of the 10-year-old poet Fern Gravel; and, most deliciously of all, the entrapment hoax, perpetrated to make a fool of a specific target.
Winning At All Costs, by Paul Gogarty & Ian Williamson
Sunday, 8 November 2009
"I blame the parents" goes the cliché, and in their exploration of what psychological forces make great sporting heroes great, the authors – a journalist and a children's analyst – seem to agree. The core of their book is the proposition that a desire to please their mother and vanquish rivals for her affections, be it father, siblings or others, is what drives most sportsmen on; their sporting opponents are surrogate foes (for women, substitute father for mother).
Tell It to the Bees, By Fiona Shaw
Friday, 6 November 2009
Lydia Weekes is devasted by the disintegration of her marriage. Her son Charlie, a withdrawn young boy, is keyed into his mother's every mood change and emotion.
Most popular in Arts & Entertainment
Read
1 'Deluded' Jedward getting worse, says Cowell new
2 Last Night's Television - Collision, ITV1; The Execution of Gary Glitter, Channel 4
4 The ten biggest Broadway turkeys
5 Hitler's art of self-delusion
6 BANNED: The most controversial films
8 Why Simon Cowell didn't boot Jedward out of The X Factor
9 100 Best Films: The final countdown, 20-1
10 Behind the scenes of Sesame Street
11 Prince of Persia trailer released
13 Watchdog to probe X Factor voting complaints
Emailed
1 Madresfield: The Real Brideshead, By Jane Mulvagh
2 What did you Puritans ever do for us, Oliver?
3 Telling Tales, By Melissa Katsoulis
4 Trip of a lifetime: How LSD rocked the world
5 Day In The Life: Billy Grant, MD of 2Point9
6 Anselm Kiefer: 'The Independent wants to know if I am a Nazi!'
7 Akram Khan: 'You have to become a warrior'
8 The secret blood-sucking world of Mr Darcy
9 How not to run a club: Peter Hook on the true story of the Haçienda
10 The Secret Lives of Buildings, By Edward Hollis
13 Francis Bacon: A brush with Bacon
14 Steve Martin with The Steep Canyon Rangers, Royal Festival Hall, London
Commented
1'Big Brother' database cancelled by ministers
2Labour forces secret inquests Bill through the Commons
3Dominic Lawson: The only options are to double up in Afghanistan or leave
4Last Night's Television - Collision, ITV1; The Execution of Gary Glitter, Channel 4
5Demands grow for 'weapon dogs' to be brought to heel
6Leading article: A vicious and unfair personal attack
7Tensions grow as Chavez masses troops on border
8Brown pays tribute to troops killed in Afghanistan
Independent Books Direct
| Choose from our latest reviewed book titles or use the search facility to browse our full range of UK books in print. |

