The Herald - The Herald Magazine

Satirical caper hits the spot

- MALCOLM FORBES

FRENCH TOAST Peter Burnett

Thirsty Books, £9.99

Film critic Victor Eaves finds himself surplus to requiremen­ts after one of his reviews causes a scandal. Now he has more time to devote to his sideprojec­t, a long-overdue and still-untitled book on the French-Swiss film director Jean-Luc Godard. Then, suddenly, Victor is in demand again: the 90-yearold auteur is to be the guest of honour at the Edinburgh Film Festival and Victor is tasked with chaperonin­g him. He rises to the challenge. What’s more, when the man he considers immortal proves to be nothing of the sort, Victor spots an opportunit­y to get his career back on track. Burnett’s latest novel is both a scabrous satire and a rollicking caper, and comes stuffed with big ideas, memorable set pieces, clever in-jokes and caustic asides. Buried within the mayhem lurk shrewd insights into artistic judgment.

THE RED THREAD: TWENTY YEARS OF NYRB CLASSICS Edwin Frank

NYRB, £14.99 Over the last two decades, NYRB (New York Review of Books) Classics has published a wealth of literature, both fiction and nonfiction, from different eras and cultures. Besides championin­g the work of canonical greats, it has specialise­d in rescuing forgotten masterpiec­es from obscurity – digging up, dusting down, and giving a new lease of life to the likes of John Williams’ Stoner. This treasure trove of an anthology gathers together 25 pieces – stories, essays, poems – selected from more than 500 books from the NYRB Classics back catalogue. Famous faces (Euripides, Balzac, Tove Jansson) alternate with less well-known writers. Highlights include Eve Babitz’s sassy snapshot of New York; a choice cut from Michael Hofmann’s recent translatio­n of Alfred Döblin’s Berlin Alexanderp­latz; and an episode from Vasily Grossman’s An Armenian Sketchbook, published for the first time in English in 2013.

UNCOMMON KNOWLEDGE Tom Standage

Economist Books, £8.99 Following the success of Go Figure and Seriously Curious comes a third compilatio­n of fascinatin­g facts and explanatio­ns edited by Tom Standage, deputy editor of The Economist. Once again diverse categories are home to an eclectic mix of informatio­n. The “globally curious” section reveals why Finland is so happy and Australian­s are divided over kangaroos; the “sexual selection” chapter throws light on the rise of internet dating and persistenc­e of child marriages in Africa. Each bite-sized entry is easily digestible. Some findings are heartening, others sobering. One or two questions render

Standage’s title a misnomer: “What is Interpol?” surely constitute­s common rather than uncommon knowledge. However, most cover unfamiliar territory and prompt many surprises: carrots used to be white; most refugees do not live in camps; donkey skins are the new ivory. Edifying and entertaini­ng in equal measure.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom