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The Discomfort of Evening by Marieke Lucas Rijneveld review – a family’s grief [20 Mar 2020|07:30am]
Tragedy shapes the darkly ritualistic world of three children in a Reformed farming family, in this bestseller from the Netherlands

On a cold winter day in the rural Netherlands, a boy goes ice skating on the local pond. His sister Jas, who had asked to come along, is resentful at being excluded. Fearing that her father might serve up her pet rabbit as a Christmas meal, she prays that God might take Matthies instead. When her brother falls through the ice, her impulsive wish comes true. Grief and trauma begin to tear the fabric of Jas’s deeply religious farming family apart.

From that day on, three forces shape Jas’s world: death, sex and religion. Grief rules the house where Matthies’s name must no longer even be mentioned. As the parents prove incapable of taking care of their remaining three children, the siblings’ fear of and curiosity about death leads them into spirals of magical thinking that involve rituals and sacrifices of increasing violence. Raised in a strict Reformed household, Jas perceives the world through scripture, which she quotes frequently. Her father quizzes his children about the Bible and beats Jas’s brother for taking the Lord’s name in vain. Her mother’s favourite day is Sunday, a day ruled by the “bare essentials” – “the love of God’s word and Mom’s vegetable soup”. The rules Jas and her siblings invent for themselves join the many rules their parents and church already impose on them.

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'I’m no snowflake': Anne Glenconner on Margaret, marriage and Meghan Markle [20 Mar 2020|08:58am]

The former lady-in-waiting’s memoir is a surprise bestseller. She discusses family tragedy and why Princess Margaret was more fun than people think

Since it came out five months ago, a debut work by an 87-year-old has become a publishing phenomenon. Lady in Waiting: My Extraordinary Life in the Shadow of the Crown by Anne Glenconner has sold more than 200,000 copies in the UK and retains a tenacious hold on the bestseller lists. Written by the former lady-in-waiting to Princess Margaret, its broad appeal might seem surprising, not least because Margaret was hardly the most popular royal. But Lady Glenconner’s book has two things going for it: the first is that it is not what it seems; it is definitely not “a lavender sort of scented memoir”, as Glenconner put it when she appeared on The Graham Norton Show last November. And its other great strength is Glenconner herself.

“Are you really tired after your journey? Did you find a taxi when you got off the train?” she asks when I arrive at her home on the Norfolk coast. She has the accent of the Queen – “really” becomes “rill-eh”, “off” is “orff” – and is dressed like her too, in a blouse, cardigan, pleated knee length skirt, tights and loafers. It is easy to picture her striding around the world, making small talk with Imelda Marcos, which is what she used to do with Princess Margaret. I lean in to kiss her, but then ask if she’s refraining because of the coronavirus. Glenconner looks at me as if I’ve left my marbles on the train: “I’ve been through the second world war and lived with someone with Aids at the beginning [of the Aids crisis]. I’m not scared of a little virus, you know,” she says. She turns on her heel and marches down her long hallway, and I have to scoot to keep up with her.

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Inua Ellams: ‘The books I wish I’d written? Marvel’s Civil War series’ [20 Mar 2020|10:00am]

The poet and playwright on the Terry Pratchett book that changed his life, basketball and Oliver Twist

The book I am currently reading
The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste. Maaza and I bonded over jollof rice in a canteen at the Aké festival in Nigeria a few years ago and this book effortlessly demonstrates her brilliance.

The book that changed my life
Folks always expect me to mention one of the Nigerian greats, but it was Pyramids by Terry Pratchett.

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The best recent crime novels – review roundup [20 Mar 2020|11:58am]
The Recovery of Rose Gold by Stephanie Wrobel; Keeper by Jessica Moor; The Man on the Street by Trevor Wood; Black Rain Falling by Jacob Ross; Summer of Reckoning by Marion Brunet; and The Clutter Corpse by Simon Brett

American Stephanie Wrobel’s first novel, The Recovery of Rose Gold (Michael Joseph, £14.99), begins after the point where most Munchausen’s syndrome narratives end: with confirmation that the victim is not, in fact, ill, but has been systematically made so by a supposed carer. Patty Watts, who convinced everybody that her daughter Rose Gold was desperately sick by poisoning and starving the girl for the best part of two decades, has now completed her prison sentence. Rose Gold has agreed that her mother can live in the house she shares with her infant son, and Patty hopes for reconciliation. With mother and daughter taking turns to narrate, it soon becomes clear that where manipulation is concerned, the apple hasn’t fallen far from the tree. Pacey and vivid, this is a delicate, merciless probing of a topic as unsettling as it is intriguing, with no pat answers.

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'This is a scary time': coronavirus emergency fund set up for authors [20 Mar 2020|06:13pm]

Author Philip Pullman said the grants of up to £2,000 designed to meet urgent need ‘will be enormously reassuring’

Coronavirus and culture – a list of major cancellations
Coronavirus – latest updates
See all our coronavirus coverage

A £330,000 emergency fund for authors is being launched to support those facing “unmanageable” losses from the cancellation of events, book tours and school visits during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Society of Authors, which launched the emergency fund, said that many authors were set to be affected, with some already losing thousands of pounds a day as work is called off.

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