Daily Mail

WHAT BOOK..?

- KATE MOSSE Historical novelist

. ..are you reading now?

SINCE we’re all back in lockdown and I’m desperate for a bit of sunshine and escapism, I’m re-reading all Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple novels, starting with A Caribbean Mystery.

Jane Marple is one of the most subversive and brilliant of all female characters in literature and here, despite her age and declining health, she’s the one who solves the mystery that foxes all the younger men!

Set against a backdrop of lush gardens, golden sands and blue Caribbean seas, it’s a perfect January pick-me-up.

...would you take to a desert island?

T S ELIOT’S sequence of beautiful and epic poems, Four Quartets, has kept me company ever since I was a teenager.

Meditation­s on time, on landscape, on faith, on the human condition, on music, on the power of language, on the nature of memory — it is precisely the sort of writing to keep loneliness at bay.

. ..first gave you the reading bug?

THOUGH many of her views are very specific to her time, and don’t chime with modern ways of thinking, I still think Enid Blyton is one of the great chronicler­s of childhood, friendship and adventure.

I write historical adventure fiction and I’ve no doubt that this, in part, comes from falling in love with The Famous Five novels when I was a girl.

Curled up on a rainy afternoon, I imagined myself being brave enough to explore caves, swim across gullies, capture smugglers, find essential blueprints, expose evil scientists and track villains across the darkening moors.

I read and re-read the stories of a childhood spent free and out of doors, away from adult supervisio­n, lashings of ginger beer!

. ..left you cold?

KNOWING how hard it is even to finish a book, let alone write one that grips the reader from the first page to the last, I tend not to think too much about the books that don’t speak to me.

But, in the spirit of confession, I will admit that I have never fallen in love with Marcel Proust’s Remembranc­e Of Things Past.

I like novels where things actually happen and I admire a superbly turned plot, rather than endless reflection and a male protagonis­t. Give me a bit of swash-buckling, some feisty women heroes, jeopardy and a story that gallops along, and I’m happy.

The City Of Tears by Kate Mosse (Mantle £20) is published on January 19. Kate Mosse will also be interviewe­d by Jojo Moyes at an online event with FANe Production­s on January 20. For more informatio­n and tickets go to: fane.co.uk/kate-mosse.

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