Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Brunch

Prose and cons

Seeking solace in books, as the pandemic goes on and on…

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As regular readers of this column will already know, the one thing that has kept me going through the Covid 19 pandemic has been reading. I have sought refuge in old favourites, books that are so familiar that sinking into them again feels akin to getting a warm hug from an old friend. I have expanded my horizons by trying out new authors, who came recommende­d by fellow book lovers, with somewhat mixed results. I have tried to lose myself in the alternate universes of fictional works in an attempt to escape from a reality that is hard to live with. I have attempted to improve myself by reading worthy non-fiction tomes, using the vast stretches of me-time now available to me.

But whatever the genre, whoever the author, however good or bad the book, it is reading that has sustained me through this difficult time. In case that works for you as well, here is a short list of recommenda­tions based on what I have been reading these past few months.

by Sanaë Lemoine

The protagonis­t of this novel is 17-year-old Margot Louve, the love child of an unconventi­onal actress and the French culture minister. Her father has a wife and other children and has never publicly acknowledg­ed Margot, though he comes by to visit her often. Frustrated by this lack of public recognitio­n, Margot confides the secret of her parentage to a sympatheti­c journalist. And that small ripple in the pond of her life sets off ramificati­ons that Margot could never have imagined, creating a storm that nearly destroys everything in its path.

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WITH EACH CHAPTER

You can lose yourself in the alternate universes of fictional works in an attempt to escape from reality

Richard Osman by Harlan Coben by Craig Brown

The views expressed by the columnist are personal

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This is very much an English murder mystery in the style of Agatha Christie. But instead of being set in a bucolic English village or a stately home, it is set in a retirement community of those 65 and above. The Thursday Murder Club has four members who meet once a week to discuss old cases that the police have failed to solve. But then murder comes calling within their own circle, and they have a brand new case to focus on, if only they can inveigle their way into the official investigat­ion – which, of course, they do.

Fans of Coben will know Win – or, to use his full name, Windsor Horne Lockwood III – from the Myron Bolitar series. But here, the sidekick – if Win could ever be described as that – is the main protagonis­t. No, not so much the hero, as the anti-hero, whose flaws make him a more compelling character than a regular leading man could ever be. The book begins with the discovery of a body in a slightly creepy apartment in New York; a body that we soon discover has links with Win’s past. How far do those links go? Well, you will have to read to find out; I am posting no spoilers here.

Is there anything left to say about the Beatles? You would think not but Craig Brown, the celebrated British writer and humorist, manages to find new angles and tell parts of the story in anecdotes that may surprise even dedicated Beatles watchers. What was it like to be Ringo? Was Paul as shrewd as they say? Was George really so money minded? Was John an insensitiv­e jerk? What about Jimmy Nicol, the short-lived Fifth Beatle, who temporaril­y replaced Ringo, only to see his life fall apart? It’s a fun read mixing the familiar with the surprising.

“WHATEVERTH­EGENRE,WHOEVER THE AUTHOR, HOWEVER GOOD OR BAD THE BOOK, IT IS READING THAT HAS SUSTAINED ME THROUGH THIS DIFFICULT TIME”

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