Scottish Daily Mail

SO WHICH BOOKS WILL HAVE SANTA HOOKED THIS CHRISTMAS?

Our critics select the pick of the year’s novels

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LITERARY FICTION ANTHONY CUMMINS WHO THEY WAS by Gabriel Krauze (Fourth Estate £14.99)

I’ve had more conversati­ons about this novel than any other this year. Drawn on the author’s troubling past as a university student running with London gangs, it’s thrillingl­y visceral and endlessly rich. Longlisted f or this year’s Booker, it should have been shortliste­d.

MONOGAMY by Sue Miller (Bloomsbury £16.99)

THIS U. s. writer isn’t as well known here as she should be — if you like Anne Tyler or elizabeth strout, check out this wise, witty page-turner about the wife of a secretly philanderi­ng bookseller who suddenly drops dead after ditching his latest mistress.

REPRODUCTI­ON by Ian Williams (Dialogue Books £16.99)

I HAD a ball with this extremely funny Canadian debut about the decades-long fallout from an illadvised hook-up between a young Caribbean student and an older white businessma­n, each grieving the loss of a parent. Pure pleasure, line after pitch-perfect line.

AUGUST by Callan Wink (Granta £14.99)

THIS outdoorsy coming- of-age debut, written by a fly fishing guide from Montana, has been on my mind ever since I devoured it this summer. Beautifull­y understate­d, it charts the growing pains of a farmer’s son in post-9/11 America.

STEPHANIE CROSS SHUGGIE BAIN by Douglas Stuart (Picador £14.99)

A WORTHY Booker prize winner, this 1980s, Glasgow- set novel belongs not to the titular character, but his mother: the porcelain-dentured, mink coat- wearing alcoholic Agnes. Be warned, her rollercoas­ter addiction makes for harrowing reading. But she’s a toweringly magnificen­t creation.

THE FIRST WOMAN by Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi

(Oneworld £16.99) KIrABo, the heroine of this rangy, Ugandan-set novel, was the character I most enjoyed spending time with this year. we first meet her aged 12 in 1975, desperate to find her absent mother — who has her own dramatic t ale. Makumbi braids Ugandan feminism, history and folklore into an utterly absorbing story.

WHAT’S LEFT OF ME IS YOURS by Stephanie Scott

(W&N £14.99) THIS ticks every Christmas mustread box: totally transporti­ng, with oodles of haunting atmosphere and an original, page- turning plot. set in Japan, it’s the story of trainee lawyer sumiko and her quest to understand the murder of her mother; it’s also a riveting insight into the world of Japanese profession­al marriage ‘breaker-uppers’.

DJINN PATROL ON THE PURPLE LINE by Deepa Anappara (Chatto £14.99)

when children start to go missing from an Indian shanty town, nineyear- old Jai and his pals turn amateur sleuths. But what begins as a game turns deadly serious. Former journalist Anappara brings her setting’s smog- choked lanes and teeming bazaar brilliantl­y to life in a terrific debut.

CLAIRE ALLFREE A THEATRE FOR DREAMERS by Polly Samson (Bloomsbury £14.99)

SAMSON’s sun-saturated novel set on the Greek island of hydra might be just the escapism you need right now. Leonard Cohen, his lover Marianne Ihlen and a bunch of other boozy creatives lived on hydra in the 1960s and samson captures the darkness, emerging fractures and the beauty of their lives in a sharply feminist novel.

LOVE by Roddy Doyle (Cape £18.99)

Two men, old school friends, meet for a drink or seven one night in a Dublin pub, and talk. Love, regret, fatherhood, friendship, mortality: it’s all covered in a tangled and mesmeric novel that consists entirely of conversati­on which is all about the things that don’t need to be spoken and the things that can’t be said.

THE LYING LIFE OF ADULTS by Elena Ferrante (Europa Editions £20)

FERRANTE once again gets under the skin of a 12-year-old girl on the cusp of adulthood in 1990s naples.

Little in her family is what it seems, while naples is a city teeming with seemingly irresolvab­le contradict­ions. This doesn’t have the finesse of the My Brilliant Friend quartet but few probe the seething mess of female adolescenc­e so forensical­ly as Ferrante.

SISTERS by Daisy Johnson (Cape £14.99)

Two sisters, almost unnaturall­y close, are holed up with their mother in a dilapidate­d suffolk coastal cottage. something awful happened at school and their mother has taken to her bed, so the girls become feral. Told from the perspectiv­e of the younger sister, this is a haunting, emotionall­y acute novel with a terrific twist.

CONTEMPORA­RY SARA LAWRENCE GHOSTS by Dolly Alderton (Fig Tree £14.99)

WORK is going well for food writer nina Dean but her love life is nonexisten­t. she signs up to a dating app with no expectatio­ns but meets marvellous Max on date one and it’ s not long before they’re a couple. when he disappears she can’t fathom what’s happened. Brilliant.

ONE YEAR OF UGLY by Caroline Mackenzie (Borough Press £12.99)

THIS dark comedy stars the Palacio family who fled the socialist regime in venezuela for a happier existence in Trinidad.

when a beloved aunt dies it transpires she was in debt to a crime master called Ugly. Chaos ensues when he forces the family to work for him. Fabulous.

CONTACTS by Mark Watson (HarperColl­ins £14.99)

SACKED by his best f riend, dumped by his girlfriend, estranged f rom his sister and grieving his dad, protagonis­t James is

heading to Edinburgh on the sleeper train. So unhappy he doesn’t want to live any more, he sends a text to all his contacts saying goodbye. A compelling emotional rollercoas­ter.

QUEEN BEE by Jane Fallon (Penguin £8.99)

AFTER Laura’s marriage breaks down she rents an annexe from an extraordin­arily wealthy couple who live in an exclusive gated community. All that glitters is not gold and Laura is soon ostracised by the queen bee of this glitzy gang. they eventually form an unlikely alliance. fascinatin­g.

DEBUTS FANNY BLAKE BIG GIRL, SMALL TOWN by Michelle Gallen (John Murray £14.99)

MAJELLA O’NEILL is autistic, has bags of attitude and works in the Aghybogey chippie in ireland. Being in her company is nothing less than a treat as she details her world in her distinctiv­e voice — hilarious, mundane and touching in turns.

THE DISCOMFORT OF EVENING by Marieke Lucas Rijneveld (Faber £12.99)

WINNER of the 2020 Booker internatio­nal Prize, this is a powerful and disturbing novel about a Dutch farming family overtaken by grief after the death of the oldest son. told by ten-yearold jas, we watch the family unravel as each struggles to cope.

KEEPING MUM by James Gould-Bourn (Trapeze £14.99)

i COULDN’T resist this delightful feelgood novel about a man trying to reconnect with his young son who hasn’t spoken since his mother’s death. A bear costume provides an unexpected answer but of course nothing’s that straightfo­rward . . .

THE MARGOT AFFAIR by Sanaë Lemoine (Sceptre £16.99)

MARGOT is the secret 17-yearold daughter of a married politician and his actress mistress. Her decision to reveal her father’s true identity to a journalist has serious repercussi­ons. With well-realised characters and beautifull­y descriptiv­e, this is an astute and gripping portrayal of complex family relationsh­ips.

HISTORICAL EITHNE FARRY THE MIRROR & THE LIGHT by Hilary Mantel (4th Estate £25)

THE final instalment of Mantel’s life of charismati­c thomas cromwell is magnificen­t. Packed to the gills with intrigue, plot and counterplo­t, this richly detailed, epic sweep of a novel tells the story of cromwell’s downfall at the hands of capricious King Henry Viii, who rules over a country that is sullen with suspicion and secrets. A masterpiec­e.

HAMNET by Maggie O’Farrell (Tinder Press £20)

WINNER of the Women’s Prize for fiction, this outstandin­g study of love and loss explores the death of Shakespear­e’s son Hamnet from the perspectiv­e of his wife, Agnes. gifted with second sight, adept at herbal cures, but unable to save her son, Hamnet’s death unmoors her from everything she knows and loves in this lyrical study of grief.

MISS BENSON’S BEETLE by Rachel Joyce (Doubleday £16.99)

it’S England, 1950, and prim teacher Margery Benson is on a mission to discover a mysterious golden beetle in faraway New caledonia. Accompanie­d by the irrepressi­ble Enid Pretty, they embark on a grand adventure, which is as much about second chances and emotional courage as it i s about trekking through dangerous terrain.

ACTRESS by Anne Enright (Cape £16.99)

KATHERINE O’DELL i s the starry heart of Enright’s elegant novel. it follows Katherine’s career trajectory, f rom her youthful heyday in Hollywood to depression in Dublin, as seen through the eyes of her daughter. it brilliantl­y explores the corrosive nature of celebrity, while taking a candid l ook at the complexiti­es of maternal affection.

PSYCHO THRILLERS CHRISTENA APPLEYARD FINDERS, KEEPERS by Sabine Durrant (Hodder, £14.99)

A SMART, young woman and her family take pity on the lonely lady next door with explosive ramificati­ons. Neighbourl­y relationsh­ips quietly descend into a toxic psychologi­cal battle that only one of them will win. Perfect domestic noir.

INVISIBLE GIRL by Lisa Jewell (Century £14.99)

THIS is a brilliant mash-up of contempora­ry themes from the dangers of therapy to the rise of organised groups of incels — men who have serious problems relating to women. Seventeen-year-old Saffyre is the focal point of a tale packed with psychologi­cal insight and menace.

DEAD TO HER by Sarah Pinborough (HarperColl­ins £12.99)

GLAMOUR, money, powerful men and two beautiful trophy wives, one black and young, one white and older, are hiding big secrets that could destroy themselves or each other. Set in the American Deep South, this book has Netflix series written all over it.

THE OTHER PASSENGER by Louise Candlish (S&S, £14.99)

THE relationsh­ip of two ambitious young couples with wobbly moral boundaries is challenged when one of the men suddenly goes missing. candlish expertly explores the underlying tensions and jealousies that often motivate these friendship­s. Nobody writes so incisively about couples.

SCI FI AND FANTASY JAMIE BUXTON THE TROUBLE WITH PEACE by Joe Abercrombi­e (Gollancz £20)

IN PART 2 of this grippingly brutal series, the dandyish King Orso is both finding his feet and losing his grip while rivals do their darnedest to bring him down. fabulously written, nail-bitingly plotted, it lays bare the best and worst of human nature.

THE UNSPOKEN NAME by A. K. Larkwood

(Tor £16.99) JUST a perfect fantasy debut, crammed with everything we love: cruel gods, icy priest-cults, transdimen­sional warship chases and a gorgeous priestess assassin, complete with tusks and a spot of dysmorphia. Suffice to say, csor we battles through and wins the day, and we’re with her all the way.

THE SUNKEN LAND BEGINS TO RISE by M. John Harrison (Gollancz £20)

DREAMY and sharp, murky and clear, this is a psycho-geographic, paranoid tour de force.

its quiet hero is be set by emotional, watery mysteries, while sensing the emergence of new semi-aquatic Britain, just lurking beneath the surface of the familiar world.

THE BOOK OF KOLI by M.R. Carey (Orbit £6.99)

A VOYAGE of survival and selfdiscov­ery in a post-apocalypti­c Britain. Exiled from his village with a bit of chatty, hi- tech hardware, Koli has to battle inner demons, giant rats and very bad people.

funny and frightenin­g, you’ll cheer Koli on all the way.

CLASSIC CRIME BARRY TURNER MIDWINTER MURDER by Agatha Christie (HARPERCOLL­INS £14.99)

THE hardest challenge in crime fiction is to produce a convincing short story. Agatha christie had the talent in abundance.

With tight plotting and sharply defined characters, she never fails. this collection of fireside mysteries comes in a handsome presentati­on edition.

HOWDUNIT Edited by Martin Edwards

(HARPERCOLL­INS £25) if you have wondered how a crime novel comes to be written, or thought of writing one yourself, this is where you start.

tapping into the experience of past and present members of t he Detection club, Martin Edwards has put together an instructiv­e and entertaini­ng collection of essays.

A DEATH AT THE HOTEL MONDRIAN by Anja de Jager (Constable £8.99)

AFTER a chance meeting with a troubled stranger, Lotte Meerman of the Amsterdam police reopens a 30-year-old murder case.

finding the truth proves easier than facing up to it for both Lotte and the families involved. this is the best police procedural of the year.

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