Feet up, mince pie... and a great book
Our critics select the best of the year’s novels to slip under the tree
(Cape €26.59, 464 pp) THIS beautifully observed heart-wringer is narrated by a fifty-something chef whose dream of opening her own restaurant runs aground when her philandering husband gets early dementia. The Booker prize judges didn’t agree — it wasn’t even on their longlist — but for me there was no better novel published in 2022.
TRESPASSES by Louise Kennedy
(Bloomsbury €15.99, 320 pp) SET in 1970s Belfast, this engrossing Irish debut turns on the deadly fallout from a cross-class romance between an overworked young Catholic schoolteacher and a married Protestant barrister twice her age. Kennedy’s storytelling is marvellously direct yet doesn’t simplify her nuanced portrait of the period’s political and emotional tumult.
OLGA DIES DREAMING by Xochitl Gonzalez (Fleet €19, 384 pp)
I HAD a blast with this big-hearted comedy about a New York wedding planner secretly swindling her ritzy clients. Among the laughs, there’s high drama involving the heroine’s brother (a closeted congressman) and their runaway mother, who abandoned them as children to lead a guerrilla movement in Puerto Rico.
STEPHANIE CROSS TRESPASSES by Louise Kennedy (Bloomsbury €15.99, 320pp)
SOMETIMES you don’t need to reinvent the wheel. This is an unashamedly conventional realist novel, but such an exceptional one that it’s bound to rekindle even the most cynical reader’s appreciation of the form. It’s Belfast in the 1970s, and a young teacher falls for an older married man. What happens next may not be surprising, but it is spellbindingly, heartbreakingly unforgettable.
NIGHTCRAWLING by Leila Mottley
(Bloomsbury €16.80, 288 pp) PUBLISHED when former Californian youth poet laureate Mottley was just 19, this debut fully deserved its Booker longlist nod.
At the centre is Kiara, a young black woman who stands up to sickening police corruption.
Based on a true story, it is uncompromising yet exhilaratingly charged by Mottley’s deep feeling and stylistic flair.
FREE LOVE by Tessa Hadley (Cape €20.99, 336pp)
LONG hailed as one of the foremost short story writers, Tessa Hadley’s novels continue to get better and better — and this is her finest, most pleasurable yet.
Set in 1967, it sees suburban housewife Phyllis swept up by the tide of change and falling for a much younger man. Sparkling, funny, plotty, wise and with an ending that will move you to tears, it’s near enough the perfect present in book form.
CLAIRE ALLFREE THE EXHIBITIONIST by Charlotte Mendelson (Mantle €23.79, 336 pp)
MENDELSON made a triumphant bid for the virtues of the much-maligned ‘Hampstead novel’ with this fiercely uncompromising marital black comedy about a middle-class female artist struggling to emerge from the shadows of her egotistically toxic, self-deluded husband. Almost every whip-smart line draws blood.
THE DISAPPEARANCE OF JOSEF MENGELE by Olivier Guez (Verso €14.99, 224 pp)
THE long hunt to track down the Nazi doctor Joseph Mengele is told — riskily — from Mengele’s point of view in this perfectly executed piece of docu-fiction, which reveals the pitifully ordinary man behind the monster without once humanising him. Not quite Christmas Day reading, perhaps, but an all-too-resonant novel as 2022 draws to a close.
ACT OF OBLIVION by Robert Harris
(Hutchinson €14.99, 480 pp) ROBERT HARRIS spins the known facts of the two on-therun Puritan regicides William Goffe and his father-in-law Edward Whalley into fictional gold, as the two duck and dive across New England following their role in the execution of Charles I.
It’s a book about England’s bitter 17th-century civil war of ideas, of course, but in its depiction of ideological intolerance and fundamentalism there are shades, too, of our divided nation today.
HISTORICAL EITHNE FARRY THE WHALEBONE THEATRE by Joanna Quinn (Fig Tree €15.99, 560 pp)
JOANNA QUINN’S debut is elegantly written and totally immersive. Helmed by fierce, imaginative Cristabel, it follows the fate and fortunes of the three Seagrave siblings as they stage a theatrical production in their crumbling Dorset manor, and cope with the darkness of World War II and the long shadow it casts over their ramshackle, but golden, childhoods.
STONE BLIND by Natalie Haynes (Mantle €16.79, 384 pp)
‘WHAT makes a monster?’ is the central question in Natalie Haynes’s wry, spry feminist take on the Medusa myth.
With a cast of pernickety immortals, intemperate, rapacious gods and jealous, unreasonable goddesses, it also brilliantly gives voice to put-upon mortals, abused nymphs and long-suffering wives in a nifty reframing of Greek mythology.
THE NIGHT SHIP by Jess Kidd (Canongate €15.99, 384 pp)
JESS KIDD’S magical fourth novel is anchored in harsh emotional realities.
At its heart are two lost children — Mayken, who’s on board the doomed Dutch ship,
the Batavia, shipwrecked in 1629, and awkward, anxious
Gil, who’s trying to navigate life in Australia in 1989. Perfectly pitched, there’s a wonderful immediacy to their entirely beguiling stories.
TRUST by Hernan Diaz
(Picador €21, 416 pp) HERNAN DIAZ’S Bookerlonglisted Trust is a tricksy, tantalising delight. With four interconnected narratives and a wealth of unreliable narrators including a Wall Street financier, his elusive wife and a sleuth ghost writer, it’s a mysterious tale of capitalism and economic catastrophe, marriage and mythmaking, and a playful look at subterfuge and storytelling.
CONTEMPORARY SARA LAWRENCE THE FAMILY RETREAT
by Bev Thomas (Faber €14.99, 320 pp) WRITTEN by a clinical psychologist, this emotionally intelligent thriller about domestic violence hooked me straight in.
London GP Jess is spending the summer in a rented cottage by the sea and finds herself obsessed with the family next door. Jess jumps in to help but misses some huge red flags. Gripping.
WHERE THE LIGHT GETS IN
by Zoe Coyle (Ultimo €12.59, 352 pp) A HEART-BREAKING debut inspired by the author’s mother’s decision to end her life. Protagonist Delphi flies home to Australia when her terminally ill mother requests help to die. Back in the UK, she connects with the father she doesn’t speak to. It made me weep, but it’s worth it. Stunning.
CAT LADY by Dawn O’Porter
(HarperCollins €13.99, 352 pp) MIA loves her cat, Pigeon, more than her husband, stepson and career. Frosty and spiky, Mia finds it hard to build or sustain relationships. Lonely because she has no friends, Mia joins a support group for people grieving dead pets — even though Pigeon is very much alive. Counter-intuitive and clever.
THIS IS US by Helen McGinn (Boldwood €11.99, 262 pp)
STELLA thinks her relationship with husband Simon is pretty perfect. When he disappears with barely any warning, leaving her alone with their three young children and successful family business, Stella realises there are things she doesn’t know about the man she’s married to. Full of wisdom and wonderful on the importance of friendship.
PSYCHO THRILLERS CHRISTENA APPLEYARD THE IT GIRL by Ruth Ware
(S&S €12.99, 432 pp) ONCE again Ruth Ware pulls off a gripping read packed with disturbing insights.
Hannah Jones is a middle-class girl whose head was turned by the smart set and her new friend, April Coutts-Cliveden, when she got into Oxford University. Ten years on she is forced to face the true
facts about the murder of that glamorous friend.
THE PRISONER by BA Paris
(Hodder €16.79, 368 pp) THIS has the best opening scene of any thriller this year. The wife of a super-rich man who, before she married into privilege, was an orphan and homeless, is being held ransom. Paris invites the reader to decide who the real victims in this story are. Thoughtful and surprising writing.
ARE YOU AWAKE? by Claire McGowan
(Thomas & Mercer €12.59, 351pp) A SLEEP-DEPRIVED young mother hooks up with her neighbour, a war photographer suffering from PTSD. They both believe a violent crime has been committed in a neighbour’s house. Their battle with the police and their personal demons is a moving, eloquent exposition of suffering in silence while yearning to be heard.
THE LINDBERGH NANNY by Mariah Fredericks
(Headline €16.79, 320 pp) WHEN the son of US celebrity pilot Charles Lindbergh was kidnapped and murdered in 1932, Betty Gow, the Scottish nanny, was the last person to see the child alive — and became a prime suspect. A brilliant take on a piece of recent history.
POPULAR WENDY HOLDEN THE BOOK OF THE MOST PRECIOUS SUBSTANCE
by Sara Gran
(Faber €15.95, 336 pp) I LOVED this sexy moral fable with a down-on-her-luck book dealer on the hunt for a powerful witchcraft manual.
The international trail leads from a tech billionaire’s bunker to a dominatrix’s chateau. What is the precious substance? Power? Money? Sex? Or something even more dangerous?
THE WILL by Rebecca Reid
(Penguin €13.99, 352 pp) THIS twisty, stylish tale of contemporary posh types has the Mordaunts assembling at the family stately home. Granny Cecily has just died and tradition dictates that Roxborough is left not to the next in line, but to whoever the previous owner thinks best. But who is best, given that they all have guilty secrets?
SEPARATION FOR BEGINNERS by Joe Portman
(Welbeck €14, 400 pp) THIS funny slice of man-lit has divorced Pete sharing his cramped basement with his daughter and her slobby boyfriend. When said daughter moves, he’s appalled to be left with the slob. But Niall has hidden depths, not to mention superior cooking skills. Sharp and heartwarming.
DARLING by India Knight
(Fig Tree €20.99, 288 pp) A CLEVER contemporary take on Nancy Mitford’s The Pursuit Of Love. The Radletts are relocated to Norfolk, Linda is a posh model and Uncle Matthew a former rock star. Merlin, Aunt Sadie, Davey, The Bolter and Fanny are all present, correct and updated. Like the original, it’s a love letter to boho, aristo Englishness.