The Herald - The Herald Magazine

The way the wind blows

- ALASTAIR MABBOTT

HAD I KNOWN Barbara Ehrenreich

(Granta, £10.99)

Academic, activist, journalist: Barbara Ehrenreich has packed a lot into her 79 years, and this essay collection is the perfect introducti­on to her writings. Spanning four decades, it kicks off with arguably her greatest hit – Nickel and Dimed, recounting her exploratio­n of the low-wage economy – but these insightful pieces cover a wide range of subjects, including health, religion, science, class, employment, New Men, her own experience of breast cancer and her thoughts on

#MeToo. Raised by Democrat, atheist parents, Ehrenreich has always been fearless and forthright in her views, and every subject is informed by her awareness of social injustice, her concern for the poor and disenfranc­hised always close to the surface. Polemical and passionate, acerbic but introspect­ive, these essays are unsettling­ly prescient. Ehrenreich has always been able to see which way the wind is blowing, foreseeing much of the world we see today, so even the oldest feels relevant.

EVERYONE DIES FAMOUS IN A SMALL TOWN

Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock

(Faber, £7.99)

Hitchcock’s second Young Adult novel is composed of interlinke­d stories set in 1995 concerning nine teenagers spread across several states, from Alaska to Colorado. Sharing some characters and locations, these stories have varied themes, but they all lead back to two current events: a raging forest fire and the disappeara­nce of a young girl. It’s a book about small towns, and what it’s like for the young people who live in them. At that phase in their lives when experience­s are felt most intensely, and the need for validation is at its height, Hitchcock’s characters live in small communitie­s where everyone supposedly knows each other’s business but they’re struggling secretly with troubling, often traumatic problems. Each of these keenly observed vignettes sows the seeds of a resolution which ties them all together.

SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME

Ace Atkins

(No Exit, £9.99)

Atkins was chosen by Robert B Parker’s estate to continue Parker’s series about Boston-based private detective Spenser. To say that this instalment was inspired by the Jeffrey Epstein case would be an understate­ment. A character from a previous novel, Mattie Sullivan, is given a central role as Spenser’s protégé when she is approached by a 15-year-old girl who was lured to a private club and offered $500 to massage a rich and powerful older man. Spenser finds dozens more girls with similar tales to tell, pointing to the existence of an internatio­nal sex-traffickin­g ring. Pacey, engrossing, with a palpable sense of danger and flurries of action, even taking into account a plot ripped from the headlines, this long-running series

(48 books in, with this being Atkins’s ninth) seems to have an astonishin­g amount of life left in it.

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