Derby Telegraph

Exciting reads to teasure in the quiet days ahead

Escape lockdown like HANNAH STEPHENSON with some of the terrific debut novels already creating a buzz

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ITCHING to get your hands on some novels from fresh talent? This year’s new authors are covering a cornucopia of subjects ranging from chilling crime (snapped up in lucrative auctions) to love stories set to be adapted for screen.

Here are just some of the new names that should bring joy during lockdown and beyond. But keep an eye on publishing dates, which could be prone to change...

THRILLS AND CHILLS

FAKE ACCOUNTS

by Lauren Oyler, 4th Estate (February 4) ONLINE fakery is certainly a zeitgeist topic and this terrific debut sees a young woman who suspects her boyfriend of cheating go through his phone.

In doing so, she discovers he has a secret online identity as a conspiracy theorist.

It provides much food for thought about how to maintain a sense of self in a world of online fraudsters.

PEOPLE LIKE HER

by Ellery Lloyd, Mantel (available now) HUSBAND-andwife writing team Collette Lyons and Paul Vlitos collaborat­ed for this taut, tight thriller under the pen name Ellery Lloyd.

Told from three viewpoints – an Instagram influencer mum, her cynical former novelist husband and an anonymous follower with a terrible grudge – it’s a great contempora­ry subject, examining Instagram culture and the consequenc­es of sharing too much of yourself on social media. Plus, it’s the first in a two-book deal won in a five-way auction.

GIRL A by Abigail Dean, HarperColl­ins (January 21)

WATCH out for HarperColl­ins’ lead debut this year, acquired in a fierce auction – Girl A is a story of survival and hope as a set of siblings deal with the aftermath of growing up in their ‘house of horrors’ at the hands of their father, a religious fanatic.

TV rights have been snapped up by Sony with the Chernobyl director attached, book rights have been sold in 26 territorie­s and early endorsemen­ts have flooded in from Chris

Whitaker, Louise O’Neill, Jessie Burton, Jeffery Deaver and more.

BEFORE YOU KNEW MY NAME

by Jacqueline Bublitz,

Sphere (May 13)

THIS lead fiction debut is less a whodunnit, more a who was the victim and what did she leave behind?

It features two main female voices

– Alice and Ruby

– one is a murder victim and the other, the person who finds her body.

Alice is sure Ruby is the key to solving the mystery of her life – and death. And Ruby – struggling to forget what she saw – finds herself unable to let Alice go. Not until she is given the ending she deserves.

RACE AND IDENTITY WE ARE ALL BIRDS OF UGANDA

by Hafsa Zayyan, #Merky

Books (January 21)

IN a story spanning generation­s, that moves between Uganda and London over a difficult, unsettled century, this debut sees Sameer, a successful lawyer, return to his family home because of an unexpected tragedy, where he begins to unravel his family history.

The author, who is an internatio­nal dispute resolution lawyer, bases the story on her own, moving between present day London and 1960s Uganda, exploring racial tensions, generation­al divides and what it means to belong.

HOW THE ONE-ARMED SISTER SWEEPS HER HOUSE

by Cherie Jones, Tinder

(January 21)

BOOKER prizewinne­r Bernardine

Evaristo has described this as ‘a hard-hitting and unflinchin­g novel from a bold new writer who tackles head-on the brutal extremes of patriarcha­l abuse’.

Cherie Jones, a black female lawyer from Barbados, sets this story in 1984 Barbados, when a heavily pregnant woman finds her husband fleeing the scene of a bungled burglary where a white man has been shot dead in front of his wife.

The novel is a powerful exploratio­n of women surviving male violence with resourcefu­lness and courage.

KING OF RABBITS

by Karla Neblett, William Heinemann (March 25) THIS coming-of-age story explores the magic and confusion of childhood, following Kai, part of a mixed race family living on a rural council estate, and how he perceives the world.

Despite his difficult background – his three sisters have different fathers and his mother is being encouraged into crack addiction by his crooked dad – Kai’s top priority is to become the fastest runner in school, like Linford Christie.

King of Rabbits covers class, race and how society so often fails young working class men.

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 ??  ?? Thrills and spills to keep you on the edge of your seat or love and romance to warm the heart – it’s all there in the latest novels
Thrills and spills to keep you on the edge of your seat or love and romance to warm the heart – it’s all there in the latest novels

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