WHATBOOK..?
...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.