What We're Reading

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Neil

Adventures in Human Being, by Gavin Francis (Profile/Wellcome 2015)

Gavin Francis is a GP and writer, and in this book he takes the reader on a journey through the human body, from head to toe. There are fascinating stories about the brain, the eye, the internal organs, wrist, hands, genitals, feet and others. They are written from a clinicians perspective, with reflections on the way the body has been imagined, and new directions in medical discovery. It's described as 'both a user's guide to the body and a celebration of its marvels', which is a very apt description. It's also well written, and beautifully packaged.

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Neil

Freeman's: Arrival (Text 2015)

The first issue of a new biannual anthology by the former editor of Granta John Freeman. It's like Granta in that it features fiction, essays, poetry and photography, around a different theme for each issue; in this case the concept of arrival. There are new stories by Murakami, Louise Erdrich, Dave Eggers, Etgar Keret and others. As always in these kind of anthologies, the quality is variable, what is of interest to any individual reader will vary also.

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Neil

M Train, by Patti Smith (Bloomsbury, 2015)

The follow up to her award winning Just Kids, mostly about her friendship and relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe, M Train is a kind of literary pastiche of her whole life, a fragmented series of incidents and stories, most of which carry the echo of her grief at the death some years before of her husband and muse Fred "Sonic" Smith. It's a beautifully reflective book, illustrated with her enigmatic photographs; not chronological or conventional, bit probably more profound as a result. A powerful, moving work.

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Neil

Satin Island, by Tom McCarthy (Jonathan Cape 2015)

Tom McCarthy has been shortlisted for the Man Booker Price twice, once for C, the second time this year, for this novel.
The narrated, known only as U., a 'corporate anthropologist' for the Company, apparently an elite consultancy based in London, who have just won a contract on the Koob-Sassen Project, apparently a giant, epoch-defining project. I use these 'apparently's deliberately, as we never really find out what the Project is, or what kind of consultancy the Company do.

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Neil

Slade House, by David Mitchell (Sceptre, 2015)

At 230-odd pages, a much shorter novel than The Bone Clocks or Cloud Atlas, Slade House is set within the same universe as The Bone Clocks, but is not a sequel. It's more of a companion piece. You wouldn't have to read both, but I would recommend that you do.

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Neil

Heartland, by John McKay (Luath Press, 2004)

A very atmospheric, low key thriller set in the Outer Hebrides, Heartland follows a classic plot - a man who couldn't wait to leave the islands as a youth returns there to rebuild himself following the end of his marriage and the loss of his job. He attempts to reconnect with his past by reconstructing an old family home, but what he finds there forces him to question everything he believes in. The plot sounds like a cliche, but the novel transcends that, through its well portrayed characters, sense of place and thoughtfulness.