Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Mungo to Roger

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What does the year ahead have in store in the literary world? Allan Massie gives his thoughts on some of the new books worth keeping an eye out for in 2022.

Second novels are notoriousl­y difficult, all the more so when the author has had a glittering success with the first one. Douglas Stuart won the Booker with Shuggie Bain in 2020. Young Mungo ,the story of two boys growing up gay in a rough part of Glasgow, was written before Shuggie was longlisted for the Booker, and is therefore unaffected by that book’s success. It will surely attract a great deal of attention this spring, as will the new novels from Ali Smith (Companion Piece )and Louise Welsh (The Second Cut, a sequel, 20 years after, to The Cutting Room.)

Mercia’s Take by Daniel Wiles is a first novel already attracting attention, its publisher, Swift Press, having secured an endorsemen­t from Hilary Mantel, who calls this story of the Industrial Revolution an exploratio­n of “buried history”.

Some novelists need no such endorsemen­ts. There are new novels this year from the ever reliable and delightful Anne Tyler (French Braid), from Julian Barnes (Elizabeth Finch, which he describes as “a loving tribute to philosophy”) and in September from Robert Harris a book called Act of Oblivion, which tells of the hunt for the Regicides, men who had signed Charles

I’s death warrant and who had mostly fled England when the monarchy was restored in 1660.

There are always novelists who don’t have the success you think they deserve. One is Michael Arditti, another is Robert Edric. Both have books out this spring, Arditti a novel, Edric a memoir of growing up in Sheffield. Arditti’s novel, The Young Pretender, is not about the Prince, but about the Victorian boy actor who rose fast to fame and fell as swiftly. He had a great success in Douglas, the play that occasioned the triumphant cry “Whaur’s your Wullie Shakespear­e noo?” Still going of course, unlike the author of Douglas. Edric’s novels have been demanding. His memoir may encourage readers to seek them out.

Another memoir of childhood comes from Melvyn Bragg. Back in the Dark Days covers ground he has already explored in novels, making for an interestin­g comparison. Which is more truthful: memoir or fiction?

In April, 4th Estate will publish what may be one of the great European novels,

Grand Hotel Europa by the Dutch author Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer. It explores “a place where so much history resides that there is no place left for the future” – except perhaps as a theme park for curious tourists.

Neverthele­ss we still eagerly explore history. Rosemary Goring, author of two novels set in the early 16th century, now returns to non-fiction with

Homecoming, sub-title “The Scottish Years of Mary Queen of Scots”. There weren’t many of them, a few as a child before she was whisked off to France for safety and education, then seven dramatic ones as Queen Regnant. She spent longer as a captive in England that she did in Scotland. It will be interestin­g to see how Goring treats her as a political figure, rather than as a romantic one.

More remote but equally fascinatin­g history is explored by Gordon Noble and Nicholas Evans in Picts, sub-titled “Scourge of Rome, Rulers of the North”. To what extent they scourged Rome may be

doubtful, but then so much about the Picts remains open to speculatio­n.

One of the more immediatel­y important books to be published this new year is surely Oliver Bullough’s: Butler to the World. It offers – or promises to offer – the story of

“How Britain became the servant of tycoons, tax-dodgers, kleptocrat­s and criminals”. If Bullough gets it even half-right, then he will be doing us a service, since it is only by exposing and understand­ing the depth of this shameful corruption that any reform of our damaged polity is possible.

Geoff Dyer is a writer with the keenest of eyes and most enquiring of minds. His new book of essays is entitled The Last Days of Roger Federer and will be published in June, in time for what may be the legendary Swiss tennis star’s last Wimbledon. But it goes, you will not be surprised to hear, well beyond tennis, being a meditation on the last years and works of artists as well as sportspeop­le, possibly even politician­s too – though whether Dyer finds anything of interest in Donald Trump’s last years may be doubtful.

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