Daily Mail

WORLD FICTION

- EITHNE FARRY

A HUNDRED MILLION YEARS AND A DAY by Jean-Baptiste Andrea

(Gallic £10.99, 176 pp) Spare, elegant and poetic, this slender novel is quietly devastatin­g. It tells the story of palaeontol­ogist Stan, who risks his already faltering career on a rumour of an unimaginab­ly rare fossil, frozen in a forbidding ice cave deep in an alpine glacier.

Stan enlists the help of longstandi­ng friend Umberto, his young assistant peter, and local guide Gio: wise, taciturn and with a bone- deep understand­ing of the treacherie­s of the weather.

as the hazardous conditions worsen, memories of Stan’s past make their icy presence felt — his love for his beautiful, mercurial, depressive mother and his volatile relationsh­ip with his brutal, begrudging father.

Fault lines begin to fracture the men’s friendship as the dig becomes more arduous and the dream of an important discovery turns into a nightmare scenario.

WRETCHEDNE­SS by Andrzej Tichy

(And Other Stories £9.99, 176 pp) THERE is a kind of unholy music in this powerful, punchy, perceptive novel.

This visceral, rhythmic roar is made up of ‘ the pain and the rage and the shame’ felt by the underdogs in a society determined to exclude them. a cellist meets a worn-down junkie on the towpath of a canal in Malmo and, in an act of literary possession, begins to channel the addict’s thoughts. Their pasts of ‘ugly memories and ugly words’ are uncannily similar.

The unspooling story is brutal, a dead-end score of drugs, violence and unbearable sadness, but there’s also a damaged beauty to the words and the world, where a stolen radio can offer an escape route from the catastroph­es of poverty-stricken life.

ROLLING FIELDS by David Trueba

(W&N £16.99, 368 pp) RESTLESS musician dani Mosca, 40, is in the back of a hearse, re-assessing his life as he brings his father’s body to his childhood countrysid­e village for burial.

as they leave Madrid, dani recalls his troubled relationsh­ip with his loving but bossily dismissive dad, his adopted mother’s early- onset dementia and the truth about his parentage.

Interspers­ed with these memories are his scattersho­t thoughts on his failed romances and the schoolboy friendship­s with glorious, glamorous Gus and hard- drumming animal, that led to the formation of their successful band, pitching them into a world of fame, money, drugs, infidelity and the untimely death of his best friend.

Breezy, bitterswee­t and tangential, Trueba’s prose captures the rueful regrets of a man who’s searching for meaning and redemption in a life that’s short on both.

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