Scottish Daily Mail

Out now in paperback

- JANE SHILLING

FEATHER HOOD by Charlie Gilmour (W&N £8.99, 288 pp)

‘SOMETIMES,’ Charlie Gilmour writes of his future wife, Yana, ‘I feel a little like one of her found objects.’ The child of Ukrainian refugees, Yana is ‘incapable of encounteri­ng a broken object without wanting to make it better’.

During a drink- and drugfuelle­d breakdown in his 20s, Charlie served a fourmonth prison sentence after scaling the Cenotaph during a violent tuition fees protest in 2010. In his newfound stability with Yana, responsibi­lity finds him in the form of an abandoned magpie fledgling.

Nurturing the baby bird proves a route for Charlie to examine his ruinous relationsh­ip with his father, poet Heathcote Williams, who abandoned him and his mother, novelist Polly Samson, when Charlie was two years old.

Redemptive, beautifull­y written and often very funny, this is a moving study of the power of human (and magpie) love to repair even the most wounded heart.

HAMNET by Maggie O’Farrell (Tinder Press £8.99, 384 pp)

AMONG the scant historical details of Shakespear­e’s life is the fact that he was married at 18 to 26-yearold Anne Hathaway, with whom he had three children: Susanna and twins

Judith and Hamnet. Hamnet died of unknown causes aged 11, in 1596, and Hamlet was written around three years later.

Maggie O’Farrell’s haunting novel imagines Hamnet as he was during his brief life: a sturdy, curious, fairhaired lad. And it explores the aftershock­s of his death: the beloved boy swept from his family by the plague, leaving a void which his father fills with words, his mother with inconsolab­le grief.

Maggie O’Farrell’s awardwinni­ng novel is a haunting study of love, grief and the power of storytelli­ng.

REDHEAD BY THE SIDE OF THE ROAD by Anne Tyler (Vintage £8.99, 192 pp)

‘YOU have to wonder what goes through the mind of a man like Micah Mortimer. He lives alone; he keeps to himself; his routine is etched in stone.’

Anne Tyler’s novels celebrate the poetry of ordinary lives, but the hero of her most recent fiction is almost wilfully unremarkab­le. He runs a computer repair business, acts as the unofficial caretaker of his apartment block and has a pleasant teacher girlfriend, Cassie, to whom, in his 40s, he is reluctant to commit.

A couple of events combine to destabilis­e his regular routine: Cassie is given notice to leave her flat, and the troubled teenage son of Micah’s college girlfriend turns up looking for a place to stay.

Tyler’s affectiona­te and quietly observant novel reveals her deep empathy for the hidden struggles of everyday lives.

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