Sunday Times

Book Bites

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The Address Book ★★★★★ Deirdre Mask Profile Books R440

Mask delves into the history of how people organised themselves before addresses, and how our modern systems impact us today. She examines how a simple thing, such as the name of our street, impacts our identity, wealth, power, rights, education, class, and even who goes to war. She spans the world from India’s slums, to post-apartheid SA, to Iran (with its habit of naming streets after Irish revolution­aries), to the US and UK. The way our city is organised reveals if we learnt to first read a character-based language or one with an alphabet. Who gets an address divides the world into the haves and have nots — those who are prevented from legal employment, IDs and bank accounts. She also shows how the name of a street can be used by regimes, such as the Nazis, to spread propaganda. A fascinatin­g read. Tiah Beautement @ms_tiahmarie

The Shadow Friend ★★★ Alex North Penguin R310

Detective Amanda Beck is investigat­ing the slaying of a teenager by two other teenagers, with elements too gruesome to describe here (no spoilers). The “who” and “how” of the case are easily sewn up, but the “why” remains elusive. Meanwhile, English lecturer Paul Adams has returned to his home village to see his dying mother, 25 years after he left to escape memories of an almost identical murder. As Adams is confronted with unresolved elements of a past he’s tried hard to forget, the connection­s between murders then and now start to reveal themselves. North pays conscious homage to the ghost stories of Stephen King but takes his plot in another direction altogether. A wonderfull­y creepy thriller with some pleasingly unexpected twists. Sue de Groot @deGrootS1

The Gospel of the Eels ★★★★★ Patrik Svensson Picador R340

Swedish arts and culture journalist Svensson’s The Gospel of the Eels is an homage to the elusive European eel in as much as it is a tender and affecting natural science memoir. Svensson employs scientific facts, the arts, memory and imaginatio­n as he details the perennial quest to observe how European eels reproduce, interspers­ed with references to the cultural and folkloric significan­ce of eels. FYI: there’s far more to these viscous ray-finned fishes than their rep as slimy and repulsive aquatic-dwellers. Svensson paints them as enigmatic creatures who’ve enthralled and puzzled humanity for centuries, drawing on Aristotle and Freud’s studies of eels’ sexual organs, Günter Grass’s The Tin Drum, and Rachel Carson’s Under the Sea Wind – which blends science with anthropomo­rphism – to illustrate the vital role they play in both scientific communitie­s and humanity’s consciousn­ess. The chapters on his childhood memories of eel-fishing with his dad – a stoic, working-class road paver – are as evocative as they are poignant: “I can’t recall us talking about anything other than eels,” he writes, “I can’t remember us speaking at all.” An exceptiona­lly crafted, concise and deeply eellighten­ing book, this is one for the philosophy fans, science enthusiast­s, and memoirvota­ries alike.

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