Literary reviews by Tim Love.
Warning: Rather than reviews, these are often notes in preparation for reviews that were never finished, or pleas for help with understanding pieces. See Litref Reviews - a rationale for details.

Monday, 24 November 2025

"This alone could save us" by Santino Prinzi (Ad Hoc, 2020)

123 pages of Flash from "And Other Poems", "Flash" (Chester), "Smokelong" etc.

The words in the titles give an idea of the variety - Snow, Mother Teresa, Landmines, Nonni, Utskjaering, etc. Stories are 2 lines to 4 pages long, set in various countries. There are loners, couples and extended families. There are wives regretting being married, gays of various ages who are in different stages of coming out. There's snow (the most common symbol), pets, fridges, old and young people. There are only a few "meta" pieces. "This Way Around" is nearly specular.

The first and final stories are connected -

  • When the moon distances itself - The moon "misses our sense of wonder" and distances itself from Earth. We beg it not to go, and promise to change. We sing to it. Others say it should be nuked.
  • No longer trust it - After a vote, just over half of the people vote to nuke the moon, to take back control of the tides. When it's blown up, fragments return to Earth, whence it came. In time, Earth will have a ring.

I like the first of these. The last is too close to a BrExit parable.

"Bonsai and Clyde" is fun. "Clyde is in love with his houseplant, Geraldine ... She refuses to have her picture taken because she doesn't want him flaunting her on Instagram like some trophy hashtag ... She says he only loves her because she hasn't died on him like the others ... I can't have flowers, she says ... When she was dying, his wife Geraldine had told him that he'd need to look after all the houseplants for her, that this would keep her memory alive"

Most of the pieces work for me. The few that don't I can imagine other people liking, though I think p.107-118 is a weak patch. On p.42 is "winch" supposed to be "wince"? On p.82 is "Bride" supposed to be "Bridie"?

Other reviews

Sunday, 23 November 2025

"Invisible Planets: Collected fiction" by Hannu Rajaniemi (Gollanz, 2016)

Stories from Interzone, etc. "The best and most original debut anthology since Angela Carter's Fireworks 40 years ago" (Wall Street Journal)

There's hard SF (walls are firewalls), fantasy (the city of Paris falls in love with a 40 y.o. Finnish farmer), micro/twitter pieces, and a text where some choices were made by readers wearing brainwave-reading headsets (I liked the result - "Snow White is dead"). "Skywalker of Earth" is almost a novella - a piece with HG Wells overtones.

I had trouble engaging with several of the stories. There are many fragments I could have quoted though. Here are a few -

  • "I was a quacker," I say slowly, "a quantum hacker. And when the Fish-source came out, I tinkered with it, just like pretty much every geek on the planet. And I got mine to compile: My own Friendly AI slave. Idiot-proof supergoal system, just designed to turn me from a sack of flesh into a Jack Kirby New God, not to harm anybody else. Or so it told me."
  • "The zeppelin shakes, pseudomatter armor sparkling. The dark sky around the Marquis is full of fire-breathing beetles. We rush past the human statues in the ballroom and into the laboratory. The cat does the dirty work, granting me a brief escape into virtual abstraction
  • Zywie is a silent planet ... nothing but the dried placenta of an ancient birth
  • Home is simply the clearest mirror to show the pattern that you seek

Other reviews

  • Daniel Carpenter (incoherent connections and lack of thought in overall structure make it an ultimately unexceptional and fairly bland read. ... in the titular story ... Rajaniemi’s prose comes across best with a poetic style that isn’t quite found anywhere ... However, before we get to that point, we have to trudge through several fairly mediocre stories about moon magicians, servers and dragons. Rajaniemi also has a tendency to throw in last minute twists that, although they make sense, feel like last minute adjustments to an unsatisfying tale.)
  • Gareth D. Jones ( ‘Skywalker Of Earth’ which weaves together high-concept physics with American paranoia and Golden Age Science Fiction imagery ...I think this is my favourite of the book. ... The fantasy/fable stories included in this volume were a surprise as well as a bit of a disappointment for me. Not that they were bad stories, but they’re not what I was looking for.)

Saturday, 22 November 2025

"Interesting facts about space" by Emily Austin

An audio book.

Enid, 26, a lesbian active in the online dating scene, works as an Info Architect for NASA. When she was little, her father went off with Gina. She has 2 half-sisters who she first met 2 years before at her father's funeral. One of them is about to have gender-reveal parties.

She's deaf in one ear. She's scared of bald men. She thinks her soul is a parasite/alien. She avoids intimate conversation with her mother, telling her instead facts about astronomy. The facts have symbolic interpretations. For example, a planet can sometimes survive its sun going supernova. When the star's white dwarf the planet closes in.

At school she had a boyfriend Ben who'd left Chelsea (who used to bully Enid) for her.

She's been seeing a woman whose wife Polly wants to chat with her. Polly says that the marriage isn't going well and wants to shower with Enid.

Her mother is depressed. She was comatose on the floor once. Enid phoned for an ambulance. She was called she phoned just in time.

Enid suspects a peeping Tom is around, bald. She's scared of sleeping alone in her flat - somebody's been in. She goes to a therapist who tells her to stop listening to true crime podcasts (but she and her lover enjoy discussing them). Was her father bald? Was she assaulted by a bald man? The therapist thinks she has PTSD.

Enid's program is buggy - when she searches for "Enid" she gets details about an exo-planet. A colleague goes out with one of her ex's. A new colleague arrives, George. Because he's bald she avoids contact with him. She learns that he's into true crime too.

She remembers that her school caught fire, that a schoolboy had died, his hair burnt away. Had she set the school alight? Her father thought so. Maybe that explains her baldness phobia? Her mother tells her that Chelsea had phoned her father to spread rumours - Enid was innocent. She discovers that it was Vin who'd come into her house to check how she was. She makes up with a girlfriend. At the end she solves the bug at work. Vin says "You're a star".

Other reviews

  • boosybooworm (the story's tone frequently felt oddly zany, and the pacing felt uneven to me. At times the novel was so absurd as to seem slapstick, so that the important issues underlying the story were potentially poignant but not actually (for me) so. The bald-man phobia and the stalker premise were each so over the top in their willfully delayed resolutions, I felt myself growing irritated.)

Friday, 21 November 2025

"the forensic records society" by Magnus Mills (Bloomsbury, 2017)

Some vinyl-nerds start meeting each Monday in the back room of a pub - the Forensic Record Society (FRS). They each bring 3 records that are carefully listened to and not commented on. Mike is obsessed with the length of tracks.

The first-person PoV narrator is unnamed. He's the sidekick of focaliser and old friend James. In the first 9 pages there's "Outside the window the sky was darkening", "The sight of it made me smile to myself", "Outside, the night sky", "Outside it was snowing", "It was purple in colour" - so many infelicities that it must be deliberate. There's also "he was clearly shocked by my words" which I shall use as a good use of adverbs - without "clearly", the phase would look like a PoV-switch.

Another meeting - "Confessional Record Society" (CRS) - starts on Tuesdays, where each record is accompanied by the owner's confession. A little bar is started in the back room, with Alice as the barmaid. Keith, a newcomer, turns up with LPs. Should this be allowed? The narrator thinks "It was plain that the society needed to adapt in order to survive". There are murmurs of complaint that "there's different rules for different people". Keith tells the narrator that he'd been excluded from the other meeting because he'd delivered the wrong type of confession.

Beer becomes a mode of communication - buying pints for others, etc. Alice is nice to everybody except the narrator. She tells him that he doesn't really like music.

James sends Mike to a CRS evening. It's busy, with many women. People go in one at a time. Philip runs it,, helped by 2 men called Andrew. Though James considers their own meeting a purer, higher form, he experiments with the format on the narrator.

A white-labelled demo record appears. Alice's voice? Women wearing "I confessed" T-shirts try to recruit them. James thinks they require a stream of new recruits to compensate for their weak beliefs. Barry hints that the narrator don't like music. But how can he know? Alice thinks that they're all emotionally retarded.

Keith confesses to playing a record that he'd taken home by accident. He's suspended for a fortnight. James stops people quoting from records as a way to get around the "no commenting" rule. The narrator worries that the society will die because of internal strife, or that it will collapse under its own rules, or be taken over by other societies. When Keith joins the CRS, James wants to ban him permanently. The CRS begins to charge £5 per session. The pub begins to charge the FRS for use of the room, so James has to introduce a membership fee.

Another group - The Perceptive Record Society - starts meeting at the pub. It's a splinter group. Rather than expelling the deserters, James hopes that the new group will lose steam. The narrator goes to one of their meeting as an envoy, playing an LP - "Also Sprach Zarathustra". The members are speechless, rather like at the FRS.

When the narrator goes to James' house, he's out, and barefoot Alice answers the door. Philip hires a big Public Hall. A meeting leads to mass hysteria. Philip soon is chased by the tax man and the group dissolves. Another group, the New Forensic Record Society starts at the pub. There's a new, friendlier barmaid, Sandy. The landlord buy a rare copy of Alice's demo and puts it in a glass cabinet behind the bar - a piece of history. The narrator thinks of writing up the FRS.

No chapter breaks. Many song titles are mentioned, with many opportunities for allusions and jokes. The Detectorists comes to mind, the world in miniature.

Other reviews

  • Toby Litt (As soon as you form any kind of “us”, Mills suggests, a “them” will form in response. In this, The Forensic Records Society is like Animal Farm but with blokes for pigs, and much better songs)
  • stuckinabook

Thursday, 20 November 2025

"Sleep is a beautiful colour (NFFD anthology 2017)" by Santino Prinzi and Meg Pokrass (eds) (NFFD, 2017)

There were nearly 600 submissions.

I think I understood the intention of nearly all the pieces. Most had an observation, phrase or idea that will stick with me. A few depended on a punchline which didn't do enough. My favourites were "Sleep is a beautiful colour" (Helen Rye), "Let Robot Lawnmower Work. Enjoy your life!" (Danielle McLaughlin), "Legs in the air, we think about spring" (Angela Readman), "The complete and incomplete works of Lydia Davis" (Ingrid Jendrzejewski), "Weather girl" (Robert Shapard) and "There's no such thing as a fish" (Jude Higgins). The 10 micros at the end were all worth a read.

Wednesday, 19 November 2025

"Root, Branch, Tree (NFFD anthology 2020)" by Sophie van Llewyn and Ingrid Jendrzejewski (eds) (NFFD, 2020)

My favourites were "Flock" (Nuala O'Connor), "This is how it starts" (Sara Hills), and "Rock Pools" (Jonathan Cardew). Only 4 titles were more than 10 words, and none of those were over 15 words. The micros this year puzzled me more than those in other NFFD anthologies.

Tuesday, 18 November 2025

"The Sea" by Hannah Hooton (ed) (Cambridge Writers, 2025)

22 stories on the theme of "The Sea" from the group's annual competition, with comments on all the pieces by the judge Anne Garvey. Winning writers were Siobhan Carew (1st), David Lynch (2nd), and Victoria Sellar (3rd) with commended stories by Angela Howard, Les Brookes, and Kathy English.

Available on Amazon as an e-book (£3.99) or paperback (£7.99) - https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1913410218/