The Mail on Sunday

THE BEST NEW FICTION

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The Sidekick Benjamin Markovits

Faber £18.99 At school in Texas, short, fat, Jewish Brian and tall, black, athletic Marcus share a passion for basketball. One becomes a sports writer, the other a top profession­al, and as their oddball friendship develops, the novel extends far beyond the basketball court to lap-dancing clubs, frat parties and prostate problems. Readers with no interest in sport should probably steer clear. Max Davidson

Fight Night Miriam Toews

Faber £14.99 This sparky novel may be framed as a letter from nineyear-old Swiv to her absent father, but at heart it’s a paean to the might of matriarchi­es. Swiv lives in Toronto with her pregnant mother, a moody actor named Mooshie, and her fearless grandmothe­r Elvira, whose idea of home-schooling includes Sudoku and How To Dig A Winter Grave. With the baby’s due date nearing and Elvira’s health failing, the trio is up against it, but as Elvira insists, ‘joy… is resistance’. It’s a bitterswee­t marvel. Hephzibah Anderson

What Time Is Love? Holly Williams

Orion £14.99 Williams’s engaging debut asks an eternal question: what if you meet the right person at the wrong time? The couple pondering this dilemma are Albert Peregrine Brinkforth of Farley Hall and Violet Lewis from Abergavenn­y. They first meet at the age of 20 in 1947, and in a neatly structured plot twist, again in 1967 and 1987, freshly embarking on a relationsh­ip that is challenged each time by politics, protests and the clash of their differing classes.

Eithne Farry

The Companion Lesley Thomson

Head of Zeus £18.99 Blacklock House in rural Sussex is a stately home, now divided into retirement flats. Its inhabitant­s are a wonderfull­y dodgy bunch and, when a series of murders takes place in the vicinity, there is no shortage of suspects. This is a thoroughly entertaini­ng and very contempora­ry take on the traditiona­l country-house mystery, switching from sinister to comic with practised ease, and sporting a very likable heroine in travelling fishmonger Freddy Power.

John Williams

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