Scottish Daily Mail

New books to bring us sunshine!

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including scriptwrit­ers for Netflix series The Crown — believe the r e l a t i onship c ool e d when Elizabeth opposed Margaret ’s marriage to divorced Group Captain Peter Townsend. Has r oyal biographer Andrew Morton got to the bottom of the sibling rivalry in this book? Or is it just more gossip?

MONICA JONES, PHILIP LARKIN AND ME by John Sutherland

(Orion, April) ‘IT sEEMs to me that what we have is a kind of homosexual relationsh­ip, disguised ... Don’t you think yourself there’s something fishy about it?’ so wrote poet Philip Larkin to his longterm girlfriend, Monica.

A brilliant academic with flamboyant dress sense, she c ould be witheringl­y disdainful of the students she taught at Leicester university and was con - stantly disappoint­ed by Larkin’s lack of interest in sex with her, repeated infideliti­es and failure to commit to their relationsh­ip. Like Larkin, she was racist and drank heavily. He credited her with making m his work ‘literate’. sutherland examines ex her complexiti­es with thoughtful th nuance.

BARBAROSSA BA by Stewart Binns

(Headline, April) B BAFTA-winning stewart Binns had ac access to never -before-seen soviet m material to deliver this new perspecti tive on the battle for the Eastern Front during W orld War II when 6 m million Nazi troops marched on M Moscow, with a merciless scorchedea earth tactic that saw millions of s soviet citizens massacred.

F From the German invasion of the s soviet Union in June 1941, to the br brutal soviet revenge wreaked du during the Fall of Berlin in April 1945, B Binns tells the moving personal st stories of those on the Eastern E European side.

THE KENNEDY CURSE by James Patterson

(Century, April) BEsTsELLIN­G writer James Patterson says if he wrote a novel outline featuring all the drama of the real Kennedys, his publishers would say: ‘This is silly. All of this couldn ’t possibly happen to one family.’

His pacy book asks why the charismati­c members of ‘ America’s Royal Family’ have been so uniquely blighted by assassinat­ions, addic - tions, accidents and sex scandals. He argues that the real ‘curse’ was the pressure Joe Kennedy snr put on all his children to continuall­y ‘strive for something bigger , better … takerisks’. Arresting details include the fact that JFK would phone Judy Garland and ask her to sing somewhere Over The Rainbow to him.

MAKING IT by Jay Blades (Bluebird, May)

FIvE years ago the star of hit primetime Tv show The Repair shop ‘left the family home, gave the house to my ex-wife and just drove. I didn’t know where I was going’. But after meeting his new partner he began t o r efl ect on t he difficulti­es in his early life which may have caused this crisis. In a frank memoir, the 50-year-old furniture restorer looks back on the violent racism he endured at secondary school in Hackney , being brutalised by police as a teen and the womanising father he first met when he was 21. ‘If something’s broken,’ says Blades, ‘you can always find a way to put it back together.’

JOE’S FAMILY FOOD by Joe Wicks

(Bluebird, May) THE nation’s favourite PE teacher serves up 100 family-friendly recipes in a book aimed at busy parents struggling to find healthy options the kids will enjoy.

Having realised many of his own childhood ‘ behavioura­l issues’ were down to poor nutrition: ‘eating loads of sweets and crisps’, these days he encourages families to enjoy the odd chocolate brownie, while finding fun in the best fruit and vegetables.

Highlights i nclude his peanut butter popcorn, Mexican chicken burgers with sweetcorn salsa and frying-pan pizzas with ‘tiny trees’, otherwise known as broccoli, and fennel sausages.

SUNSHINE & LAUGHTER: THE STORY OF MORECAMBE & WISE by Louis Barfe (Head of Zeus, July)

sTARTING out in 1941 as a song - and-dance comedic team (with Eric playing the more bumbling comic role and Ernie the affable straight man), Morecambe and Wise went on to become ‘the most illustriou­s, and the best- l oved, double - act that Britain has ever produced’.

At the peak of their popularity in the 1970s, 28million Brits tuned in to wat c h t h e i r c a p e r s , whi l e catchphras­es such as ‘What do you think of it so far?’ became part of daily banter . The secret to their success was their genuine affection for each other . They continued to make each other l augh until Morecambe’s death in 1984.

THE MASTER: FEDERER by Christophe­r Clarey (John Murray, August)

THE New Y ork Times’ tennis correspond­ent delivers the definitive biography of one of the world’s greatest sportsmen.

With unique access to the swiss star’s inner circle (including his coach and the wife he first kissed when he was 18 and she was 21), Clarey explores how F ederer t r a nsf or med hi mself f r om a racket- chucking temperamen­tal teenager into one of tennis’ most graceful players.

‘I can ’t just be ice,’ he says, ‘it becomes horribly boring.

‘I need the fire, the excitement, the passion, the whole rollercoas­ter.’

And at 39, with most of his contempora­ries long retired, he’s still ranked fifth in the world.

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 ?? Pictures: SCOPEFEATU­RES.COM/THE LIFE PICTURE/COLLECTION/EVERETT COLLECTION/GETTY/ALAMY/REUTERS ?? Entertainm­ent (clockwise from top): Joe Wicks, President Kennedy and family, and Roger Federer
Pictures: SCOPEFEATU­RES.COM/THE LIFE PICTURE/COLLECTION/EVERETT COLLECTION/GETTY/ALAMY/REUTERS Entertainm­ent (clockwise from top): Joe Wicks, President Kennedy and family, and Roger Federer
 ??  ?? Double acts: Morecambe & Wise. Left: Margaret and Elizabeth; Far left: Abbie Cornish as Fanny Brawne and Ben Whishaw as John Keats
Double acts: Morecambe & Wise. Left: Margaret and Elizabeth; Far left: Abbie Cornish as Fanny Brawne and Ben Whishaw as John Keats

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