The Scottish Mail on Sunday

THE BEST NEW FICTION

- John Williams

The Women Of Troy

Pat Barker Hamish Hamilton £18.99

Barker continues her sequence of novels that relive how women on the losing side experience­d the Trojan War. Imprisoned and enslaved, they still taste small victories. Again and again, though, The Women Of Troy shows just how far back the roots of certain modern crimes stretch, using our understand­ing of genocide, of rape as a weapon, and even Harvey Weinstein to engage us in this unending tale.

Tom Payne

Loved And Missed Susie Boyt Virago £16.99

Here is a minor masterpiec­e, an unsparing account of a schoolteac­her who decides that her drug-addict daughter’s baby should live with her. Exquisitel­y written, Boyt’s seventh novel manages to make a fairly ordinary tale seem riveting. Piercingly insightful and skilfully plotted, it has so much to say about mothers and daughters, and about how love and work can truly be a bulwark against self-destructio­n.

Alex Peake-Tomkinson

Intimacies

Katie Kitamura Jonathan Cape £14.99

An unnamed narrator leaves

New York for a job as a translator at the Internatio­nal

Court of Justice, where she’s asked to translate for a former president accused of war crimes, and becomes enmeshed in the dramas of friends and lovers. While some readers may find it overly mysterious, this smart, cool take on the atomised nature of modern life has already snagged a spot on Barack Obama’s summer reading list.

Hephzibah Anderson

A Slow Fire Burning Paula Hawkins Doubleday £20

Hawkins’s latest harks back to peakperiod Barbara Vine with its beautifull­y drawn characters and its offbeat London setting. A young man is murdered on a barge in Dalston and the subsequent investigat­ion lays bare the tragic dysfunctio­n of his family. The bleak plot is offset by Hawkins’s affection for her cast of contempora­ry misfits. This is a subtle, haunting thriller with many twists.

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