Daily Mail

WHATBOOK..?

- SARAH MOSS Author

...are you reading now?

I WAS delighted to receive a proof of Miriam Toews’s new novel, Fight Night. I love her work, which is always clever, funny, moving and beautifull­y written. Fight Night is about a little girl, her pregnant mother and elderly grandmothe­r coping with poverty, insecurity and major life events. I’ve been reading Claire Keegan’s backlist after enjoying her new novel, Small Things Like These, which is about a coal merchant in a small town in Ireland at Christmas in the 1980s who encounters the convent-run institutio­n for unfortunat­e women that the rest of the community is ignoring. It’s written with love and understand­ing as well as sorrow, and now I’m admiring her short stories. I loved Sarah Hall’s Burntcoat, which is dark and beautiful.

...would you take to a desert island?

AS I take two books for the bus ride into town, I’m not going to a desert island with only one. I’ll have Amitav Ghosh’s Sea Of Poppies trilogy, which is reassuring­ly long and gloriously widerangin­g and would keep my troubles in proportion; any of Kathleen Jamie’s essay collection­s, to remind me how to keep looking at the world with precision, curiosity and joy; and How To Eat by Nigella Lawson (pictured) for comfort when I’m lonely and homesick.

...first gave you the reading bug?

SWALLOWS And Amazons by Arthur Ransome. I was an outdoor child — though not always by choice — and I knew and loved the landscapes where the series is set. I re-read them with my children and they are classics with strong, likeable, flawed characters, a family dynamic that’s in some ways more interestin­g to me as an adult (John has some serious issues with the patriarchy) and a satisfying interest in fruit cake and pork pies. I fell into Victorian fiction very early, because there was a lot of it in the house and I’ve always been a fast and voracious reader, but I’m not sure it did me any good as a teenager — all those clever girls learning to control every impulse and desire to be rewarded by marriage at a disturbing­ly young age.

...left you cold?

COLDNESS can be good! There are many books I admire for their craft or innovation but wouldn’t read in the bath: Karl Ove Knausgaard, later Marilynne Robinson, W.G. Sebald. That said, there’s a nostalgic tendency in a lot of contempora­ry British nature writing that I find very tedious.

■ The Fell by Sarah Moss is published by Picador next week at £14.99.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom