The Irish Mail on Sunday

THE BEST NEW FICTION

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The Tenth Muse Catherine Chung Little, Brown €23

Katherine, the narrator of this unusual novel, is an eminent American-Chinese academic fixated on the Holy Grail of mathematic­s – finding a solution to the elusive Riemann hypothesis. She probably sounds like the storytelle­r from hell, but Chung is smart enough to keep the maths to a minimum and concentrat­e on the human ingredient­s in her tale: a young woman’s battle for acceptance in a maledomina­ted world; her misadventu­res in love; and her tortuous journey to track down her real parents in Germany. The novel is certainly dextrous enough to appeal to maths geeks and general readers alike.

Max Davidson

Oligarchy Scarlett Thomas Canongate €16.99

Thomas’s quirky, darkly funny novel lifts the lid on the ways of teenage girls in the intense surroundin­gs of a boarding school. Funded by her newly discovered and obscenely rich father, Tash has left a poverty-stricken life in Russia and headed to England. At school she has to learn a new language and new social mores, which include pecking orders, eating disorders and Instagram poses. When one of the extremely thin pupils dies in suspicious circumstan­ces, Tash and her friends begin to investigat­e. The creepy headmaster is their prime suspect.

Eithne Farry

The Topeka School Ben Lerner Granta €18.99

Adam Gordon is the son of psychologi­sts who’ve washed up in America’s Midwest. With some effort, he’s managed to become one of the cool kids, but when he tries to draw oddball Darren into the fold, disaster looms. Anchored in 1997, Lerner’s erudite third novel switches perspectiv­es with depth and agility, showing what it means to raise a son in a culture of toxic masculinit­y. Featuring betrayal and violence, Bob Dole and Tupac Shakur, it’s at once zeitgeisty and involving, and demonstrat­es just how deep the roots of contempora­ry ills such as trolling go.

Hephzibah Anderson

Grandmothe­rs Salley Vickers Viking €17.99

‘The reason grandparen­ts and grandchild­ren get along so well is that they have a common enemy,’ observed the American humorist Sam Levenson. The three grandmothe­rs here would agree. Blanche, denied contact with her grandchild­ren, has sought refuge in shopliftin­g, strong drink and an imaginary lover; clever, spiky Nan plans her own funeral with her grandson’s help; while in her shepherd’s hut, gentle Minna finds companions­hip with a girl who is a kindred spirit. An incisive exploratio­n of the ‘sweetly painful’ love between the generation­s.

Amber Pearson

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