Huddersfield Daily Examiner

BOOKSHELF 12 Brilliant holiday reads

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THE heaviest tome on our list comes 20 years after Arundhati Roy’s debut novel, The God Of Small Things.

The Ministry Of Utmost Happiness mines her research on India’s troubled political system, delicately braiding together strands of the brutal and toxic Kashmir conflict, with the difficulti­es faced by a community of hijra (transgende­r people, now recognised as the ‘third gender’ in Indian law) and the fate of a baby abandoned on a rubbish-strewn street.

Roy’s use of language is beautiful and inventive – she demands your mind and your time, and the rewards are huge. WHEN a newborn baby dies after a routine hospital procedure, there is no doubt who will be held responsibl­e, the black nurse who has been banned from looking after him by his white supremacis­t father.

What follows is a tense courtroom drama after nurse Ruth Jefferson is charged with his murder and her fate lies in the hands of white public defender Kennedy McQuarrie.

Picoult is an accomplish­ed storytelle­r and this is a thought provoking book about prejudice and power. years. She has the same routine; home, the Archers and pasta and salad for tea. On a Friday evening, she buys a pizza and two bottles of vodka to see her through the weekend. Eleanor, who’s 31, was in care through much of her childhood and has hazy flashbacks to a traumatic event.

When scruffy new office IT guy Raymond and Eleanor see an elderly man take a tumble, it draws the two of them together into a tentative friendship that will eventually help Eleanor break free from her lonely existence and learn how to live.

She’s a joy to read as a character. THE follow-up to the huge-seller The Girl On The Train is set in a village in Northumber­land, where Jules Abbott returns home following the death of her estranged sister, Nel.

Was it suicide or foul play? The plot quickly thickens, as the stretch of water where she’s found has a long history as the scene of a series of tragic female deaths.

Nel herself was artistical­ly obsessed with this place, known locally as The Drowning Pool, and the book similarly seeks to draw us in to its darkly compelling depths. Hawkins is very good at describing characters experienci­ng extreme emotions, and there are passages and scenes that are gripping. LAURA and her son Daniel have always been close, but he’s been away at university. When he returns home after graduating, she relishes spending time with him.

In a matter of days though, Daniel meets Cherry, a bright, ambitious estate agent who has always wanted more for herself.

Laura invites Cherry over for a family meal, but rather than forging a friendship, the two women get off to a less than auspicious start.

Michelle Frances’ skill lies in taking a relationsh­ip familiar to many, and creating two characters who transform it into something much more malignant, keeping the reader on a knife-edge throughout. THIS best-seller is so gripping you might forget to sip your poolside mojito, you will be so busy turning its pages.

When Laura and her boyfriend Kit witness a brutal rape, their testimony helps to put the culprit behind bars. The victim seems grateful but years go by and things take a sinister turn –15 years later the couple are living in fear under assumed identities.

Told in the words of Kit and Laura in alternatin­g chapters, this is an exploratio­n of the lengths to which people will go to conceal a lie. Kelly keeps you twisting and turning all the way and you will love it. WATERSTONE­S’ Book of 2016, Sarah Perry’s novel is now out in paperback making it much easier to take on holiday. The beautifull­y written book is set in 19th-century England and tells the story of Cora Seaborne, a widow freed from a controllin­g unhappy marriage who retreats to the Essex countrysid­e with her son, RUTH FITZMAURIC­E and her husband Simon were happily married and expecting their third child when he was diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease in 2008. Given only three years to live, he is still alive nearly a decade later, but can now only communicat­e with his eyes.

Fitzmauric­e struggles – with Simon’s decline and the pressure of looking after their five children. But in the midst of all this, she finds her ‘tribe’ – the Tragic Wives’ Swimming Club, a group of friends who regularly brave the Irish Sea to gain a fleeting moment of exhilarati­on, normality and freedom.

Fitzmauric­e’s book is poetic, devastatin­g, life-affirming and funny. ADA CALHOUN’S new book of essays is no place for soul mates and generic declaratio­ns of togetherne­ss. Instead, there’s resentment for missing flights, breaking bathroom taps and finding other people attractive.

If this sounds cynical, it’s not meant to be; Calhoun is supportive of love and those who seek it out. Her sweetest moments are those where she zones in on the minutiae of her marriage and being a parent.

Calhoun reserves her final essay for the one speech she would give newlyweds.

Hopeful, sensible and grounded in reality, it serves as guidance to those in long-term relationsh­ips and those embarking on them. IF you’re missing McEnroe’s iconic voice in his Wimbledon commentari­es, dip into his second autobiogra­phy. His first, 2003’s Serious, charted his childhood and early days of tennis – which progressed to seven Grand Slam singles titles, the ‘Superbrat’ reputation and a tumultuous eightyear marriage to actress Tatum O’Neal, marred by her addiction battles, his hot temper and a prolonged custody battle for their three children.

Now, the follow-up deals with his struggles to reinvent himself as a father, art collector, musician and broadcaste­r, his relationsh­ip with second wife Patty Smyth, and his efforts to be the best father he could to his six children.

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