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.

Sunday, 24 May 2026

"Arrows in Flight" by Caroline Walsh (ed) (Scribner/Townhouse, 2002)

Commissioned stories from Ireland - sometimes entitled "Dislocation". In her Introduction, Walsh writes "There are a number of common themes ... - alienation, isolation, disaffection"; "Not surprisingly, the plight of men in what is seen by many as a post-feminist era is centre stage in these stories"

  • Barber-Surgeons (Aidan Mathews) - Bevan is the barber of Roper, a surgeon. They talk at their regular appointments (over several years) about James Bond, Catholicism, etc. Bevan prepares for their conversations. He has trouble trying to get personal details out of Roper, who sometimes disappoints him with his language and opinions. Bevan has to go into hospital. Roper visits. Bevan asks if he's ever married. Roper says he's married with 4 sons. He tells Bevan that barbers and surgeons were once part of the same brotherhood, which makes Bevan tearful. He shaves the barber and cuts his hair. On the way out he's told that Bevan's case is inoperable. At the end he tells the nurse "we were very close. We came within a hair's breadth of each other" [A moving portrait of a longterm friendship.]
  • These Important Messages (Blanaid McKinney) - Matt (who's 44, surprisingly) is a priest/teacher in Belfast. 4 months ago a 14 y.o. pupil killed himself. The boy had asked Matt about God. Now he's in London for 3 days with Laura, who he's known since childhood and has started a whirlwind romance with. She works in advertising. They have sex on the bus to her flat. The adverts overwhelm him, giving him a bad headache. They wander the streets on Sunday. He thinks she's secretly snorting coke. In a restaurant he starts to pray. She storms out. He walks the streets alone then sits watching an ice sculptor with a chainsaw make an angel. As it starts melting he walks away. Back at her flat he breaks up with her. She's heartbroken. He returns to work. He's asked to perform the service for the boy.
  • It is a Miracle (Eilis Ni Dhuibhne) - 3rd person PoV - Sara, Irish, an immigrant librarian, has lived with Thomas (a novelist who sells 5,000 books a year) for 10 years. He was divorced.They live by a lake. They have separate beds. Her friend Lisa, a divorced mother, tells her she's remarrying - she met a Turk while on holiday. 1st person PoV - Sara's at a conference when she's put on the same table as an Italian man who has a 20 y.o. daughter. He cries when thinking about his separated wife. It's a miracle, he says, that he's found such an understanding person to talk to. She goes with Lisa to a funfair before she leaves for Istanbul. PoV goes from 3rd person to 1st person when they're stuck on the rollercoaster, then back to 3rd person. She e-mails the man she had a meal with abroad, telling him to write. [I'm not convinced. I can't fill the gaps]
  • Playboy (Sean O'Reilly) - Ishka, 30, an ex mental patient, is clowning about on Dublin's Grafton Street, offering poetry. Anne-Marie is a nearby flowerseller. He's lost some poems a woman had given him, poems by her late husband. His mother has chucked him out. He goes to Caroline. He'd met her, nearly 40, a year before. She's big, unattractive, from Belfast. She's angry with him again - "Poetry's just a blow-up doll for you," she shouts. She chucks him out too. He pub-crawls, looking for the lost poems, takes E, gets into a night-club, meets Anne-Marie, who can see he's having a bad time. He entertains, performs from the tops of cars - people love him. A group of boys kick him to death. Anne-Marie's there at the end. [I like it.]
  • Night of the Quicken Trees (Claire Keegan) - Margaret moves into a cottage. She thinks she's post-menopausal. 9 years before. she lost her virginity to a priest who left the cottage to her - the baby died. She's superstitious. Stack, 49, a bald virgin, lives next door with Josephine, a goat. Margaret starts having periods again. During a powercut at Xmas he invites her in for a meal - eel. A fortune teller says she's going to have another child. She asks Stack for sex and knocks down the dividing wall. She gives birth to Michael and leaves on a boat with him.
  • Australia Day (Tom Humphries) - Peter Sheeds runs an Australian-themed bar, "The Boomerang". It's become trendy to people he doesn't much like - e.g. Timmy Boyle (48), head of the Junior Chamber of Commerce, who come in with Maud, once Peter's girlfriend. Peter's worried about some medical test results. A regular tells him it's only gallstones. [several good jokes]
  • Ponchos (Joseph O'Neill) - Self-absorbed William Mason has breakfast each workday in a New York eatery. There are some bar-room stories. He's been married to Elisa for 2 childless years. The pressure has affected his sexual performance. Events remind him of maxims. He has trouble in the infertility clinic. When he returns to have another try, he sees Elisa in the rain, wearing her tasselled poncho. She has an umbrella, rain dripping from it to make it look like the tasselled poncho. [Not very much in it]
  • Maps (John MacKenna) - After 10 years of visiting his father on Saturdays, the persona finds his father collapsed. He goes into hospital where he stays for years, stroke-damaged. The persona, in retrospect, thinks his mother had an affair. She left for a week. She returned, wanting to be loved, but his father changed, started drinking. She died when his father was 46. The persona had a few weeks notice but his parents had known for years. The persona (whose daughter died) tries to understand what happened - who knew what and when. His father thought his mother returned because she loved him - she'd given him crucial support before the persona was born. The persona thinks that nobody loved him.
  • A Nuclear Adam and Eve (Molly McCloskey) - first-person Jane met Nina when they were 10. They became close. Jane's do-gooder mother invited "sad cases" to Sunday parties. Nina had teenage problems - there was a campaign of graffiti about her - dates, lipstick colour, private nicknames - though she was never named. Jimmy saved her when the delayed effect of the graffiti hit her at university. When he (then Nina's fiancé) was in alcohol rehab, Jane offered to be part of his supportive social network. Perhaps they got too close. Jane moved to another continent [My favourite. I like the lyrical style, the analysis of feeling, the wealth of little details, the flash-forward hints, the way the sections aren't in time order. See my article]
  • Gracefully, Not Too Fast (Mary Morrissy) - Ruth was good at music when young. She had singing lessons with a blind man. Then she shared lessons with Bridget - prettier, with a better voice, but poor. When Ruth discovered that Bridget was illiterate she took advantage of it. Bridget stopped coming. Before long the teacher suggested that it wasn't worth Ruth coming. Years later she's giving budding literacy tutors an introductory talk. She gives them sheet music and asks them to sing it to show them the humiliation their pupils feel. [these 2 timelines are interleaved. I like the details about the blind man's family, and the classroom of people]
  • Grid Work (Keith Ridgway) - He's 7' 2" and hates flying though he needs to do lots of it. Advisors and PAs run his life. His life is full of deals, arrangements, rescheduling, traffic, avoiding head injuries.

No duds and some impressive pieces.

Saturday, 23 May 2026

"Cherry Blossom at Nightbreak" by Rishi Dastidar (Nine Arches Press, 2026)

Poems from Bad Lilies, The London Magazine, Magma, etc. Yves Klein, Wittgenstein, Warhol and Tolstoy are mentioned in titles. There are poems after pieces by Muriel Spark, Kevin Young, Vance Packer, Khadija Saye, A Tribe Called Quest and Michael Craig-Martin.

I thought I'd have trouble with this, and I was right. Many of the poems are beyond me.

  • "A man of theory on the Via Publica" includes "110. Who needs a doctor or a best friend/ when you can have a press officer?", which is the only worthwhile part of the 14 part, 1.5 page poem, but it's a sentence that could easily fit into a comic novel.
  • On p.27 the lines are ended with a slash and a linebreak.
  • In 'Grand Rapid Prodigal', the 3rd stanza ends with "baffle-" and the 4th stanza starts with "ment". I wondered about this and so I did some counting. The first 5 stanzas are 4-lined. I can't see a rhyme pattern. I counted beats and couldn't see a pattern. I counted syllables - 10/9/10/9, 12/9/9/10, 8/9/7/9, 8/7/8/9, 9/9/7/10 - and couldn't see a pattern. The lines (except for the last) are all nearly the same physical length - is that why "bafflement" is hyphenated? So that no line pokes out? But why bother with box shaped stanzas?
  • I'm puzzled by "Don't ask/ 'Where is my handshake?', try instead// buying a white single-stem rose/ for the gauche puppy you think// you'll never love - but you might" (p.69)
  • "Reverse ghazal daguerrotype" has 7 couplets all having the first line "But then - and you ... again"
  • "Flashback jukebox" has 9 couplets, each having the last word "jukebox".
  • "Homophonically" is light wordplay, not really worth a poem - "Bear in mind you/ are nearly always/ bare in my mind" is 3/8ths of it.

Other reviews

  • in Conversation with Sarah Howe (the idea of transience [] felt like a keynote sounding through the collection ... across all your books, you’ve been interested in history, in a variety of ways. And that’s true of this book, no less. There are numerous poems here that evoke and invoke poets of the past.)

Friday, 22 May 2026

"The Twist of a Knife" by Anthony Horowitz

An audio book.

The persona (Horowitz himself, sort of) wants to stop working with Hawthorne (ex-police) on books. He writes a play, "Mindgames", a comedy-thriller which gets to London after a succesful tour. The star, Tirian, is soon to appear in Tenet (he has a low opinion on the script and director). The first night is attended by the usual critics, including Harriet whose review, the first out, is vicious, suggesting among other things that Horovitz should stick to writing thrillers for kids because the audience is less discerning (Horovitz wrote the Alex Rider series). She also writes that it's neither comedy nor thriller though it tries to be both. Next day police knock at Horowitz's door and arrest him for murdering Harriet at 10am that morning. A knife (given to him by Akmed, the producer) with his fingerprints on it was the murder weapon. He's met the detectives Cara and Derek Mills before - he hoodwinked them and they want revenge. Hawthorne gets him released with the help of Kevin (a wheelchaired teenage hacker). Horowitz thinks that one of the cast framed him. He and Hawthorne interview the suspects. Harriet's daughter hated her and felt sorry for her hen-pecked father. Sky, an actress, has a rich father and is friends with Harriet's daughter. Akmed is going bust but Muriel still adores him. The director left his wife for an actress disfigured by a fire in one of his plays. Jordan, a native american, fears cultural appropriation. Harriet wrote a book, "Bad Boys", about Martin Longhurst (Akmed's accountant) - his 10 y.o. brother Stephen and a friend killed a teacher in a prank. His rich parents gave the teacher's widow money so their son could appear less guilty. It emerges that a theatre critic died years before, after writing a cutting review of a Horovitz play, "The handbag".

The police go to Horovitz's house to arrest him. His wife is there, and believes the police. Horowitz stays the night at Hawthorne's temporary flat, looking around while he's there to learn more about the man.

Hawthorne brings all the suspects together and in traditional fashion (so that Horowitz can make notes, Hawthorne says) explains what happened. Tirian killed Harriet because she was going to reveal that he was Stephen's accomplice. He tried to frame Jordan but messed up. Horowitz plans to make the tale into a novel. Hawthorne demands a big cut.

Does it successfully combine thriller and comedy? For me it does. I liked how writers are made fun of. Whenever Horowitz enters a house he checks to see if his books are on the shelves. A character has never forgotten how as a child he sent his favourite author a letter and never got an answer. Horowitz worries that he was the author in question. After reading the book I found that Horovitz wrote a play, "Mindgame", in 2001, etc.

Other reviews

Thursday, 21 May 2026

"Deep Cuts" by Holly Brickley

An audio book.

The 2000s in Berkeley, USA. Each chapter is headed by a song title, the song being played in the chapter or having a thematic significance. Percy (her first name's actually Eileen) is into indie music - she writes in a zine things like "I can't mush because my boobs are too big". She and Jo assess his songs and those of the Beatles, the Beach Boys, etc. His mother died young, his father started drinking and music's his therapy. Zoe's been his girlfriend for 5 years. He's been adopted by her family. Last year she told him she was gay. She tells Percy that she's cute and she can have him - she's already his music muse. Jo and Zoe become the first close friends she's made. When Jo and Zoe split, Zoe tries to chat up Percy who gently disappoints her. Percy tries to seduce Jo, who'd rather keep her as a music collaborator than a lover. Jo has to leave uni now that Zoe won't help him with his essays/exams. He starts a band called "Caroline" named after his mother and goes touring. Percy wants to lose her virginity before ending uni so she has sex with an ex in a car. It hurt. She starts mixing with prose writers, living with one of them, Raj. They don't have penetrative sex. Jo returns for a night and they have good sex. He admits that he'd slept with many groupies. When she angrily leaves him he finds solace in another girl.

Percy, by now 23, rushes to her parents, confesses to Raj (who dumps her), then decides she might as well complete the MFA writing course she's on. She confides in Zoe, writing long letters and getting practical advice, flat-sharing with her. On her blog she doesn't highlight the latest break-out indies, she uses songs to talk about herself, but she's running out of things to say.

She gets a job seeking Trendsetters. She gets Caroline's 2nd CD. She's thanked on it, but that's all. Jo gets the labelling corrected on the 2nd pressing so that she's a co-writers for some of the tracks. She goes to a concert of his and he asks if she's in the audience. His bassist, Luke Skinner, has left to start his own group. He asks her for help with producing. Jo is jealous.

She loses her job. She meets Jo by chance. He's odd-jobbing, doing the occasional tour. His most successful tracks are hers. They wonder if writing songs together is good for them. Zoe's moving out. They sleep together and think about buying a house.

Other reviews

  • Alexanger Larman (charming but slightly precious)
  • Kritika Narula
  • 1girl2manybooks (It did not feel to me, like Joe was in love with Percy. It felt like Joe was in love with the impact Percy’s knowledge of music and arranging could have on his songs, and therefore, make him well known)

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

"On the Calculation of Volume I" by Solvej Balle

An audio book.

The narrator, Tara, who deals in antiquarian books, relives Nov 18th over 200 times. She's aware that she doing so. Her husband has no memory of previous occurences. She informs him each day, giving proof (e.g. she keeps a count of the repetitions in a notebook; she anticipates events). The days aren't perfect repetitions. Together they try to discover the rules of this new type of existence. They stay up to watch what the clock and their mobile phones do. However, they fall asleep or forget at critical moments. They read about multiverses. She finds that she can perform actions whose effects persist to the next day whereas he can't - he's a ghost, she's a monster. She's aging, he isn't. She wonders what the triggering event was. She squats in a vacant house with a telescope. She takes her husband there.

She hopes that after a year of repetitions, time might resume. She tries to replicate the actions of a year before. At first she thinks she might have broken out of the loop.

I wanted (unfairly) some hard-SF speculation rather than the name-dropping of scientific terms. If she has proof to convince her husband why not convince a science lecturer? Perhaps they don't ask for scientific help because they don't want to be treated like guinea pigs. Perhaps they enjoy this new life.

Other reviews

  • stargazer-online (From a high level perspective, On the Calculation of Volume I has similarities to Orbital, last year’s Booker Prize winner. Both books utilise displacement in the space-time continuum to make the characters reflect on the human condition. ... Whilst both novellas integrate science and philosophy in the storyline, I found On the Calculation of Volume I more layered and abstract.)
  • jacquiwin (I couldn’t help but think of friends who are grappling with Long Covid or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, desperately searching for a way out of a seemingly endless loop – the frustration of having to explain their symptoms over and over again at each subsequent consultation; the glimmers of hope when a possible new treatment is tried, swiftly followed by disappointment when it fails to make a difference; and the sense of disconnection with the outside world, which continues to function normally. ... I struggled to stay engaged with the first volume of this series, partly due to the focus on its high-concept premise and philosophical musings at the expense of in-depth character development. ... I don’t feel I know Tara, even though I’ve spent the best part of 180 pp inside her head. I also found it, well, too repetitive, which is clearly a bit of a deal-breaker given the premise.)
  • Tar Vol (the bulk of the story consists in her recollections of the early days of the loop—her repeated examinations of the first day in (fruitless) hope of finding a trigger, her early experiments with her husband, and her slow descent into isolation and despair—before later shifting into shorter entries sticking more closely to the current iterations of the loop, meditating on her impact on the world and attempts to break out of the pattern. ... It doesn’t really do enough to be worth reading by those who don’t plan to press on, but neither does it provide enough to whet the appetite for an extended series. It’s a pleasant read for fans of meditative time loop stories)

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

"Wheel of the Stars" (Ver Poets, 2016)

A Ver Poets (St Albans) anthology celebrating their 50th anniversary, with several familiar names - Martyn Crucifix, John Greening, Lotte Kramer, Carole Satyamuri, etc. Rik Wilkinson's "Flying Bombs" and Tricia Thorburn's "You won't swim for Ireland" were among the pieces that caught my eye.

Monday, 18 May 2026

"Behind you is the sea" by Susan Muaddi Darraj

An audio book set in Baltimore.

I didn't realise until too late that the book is interconnected stories, which complicates things because I listened to the book. I should have made more notes. The sections are "Ride along", “Hashtag”, “Mr. Ammar Gets Drunk at a Wedding” , "Behind you is the sea", “Cleaning Lentils”, “Gyroscopes,” “Worry Beads”, “Escorting the Body” and one other (but not in that order).

Marcus is a policeman whose mother died 14 years before. He saves a battered wife with child from more abuse. His 36 y.o. girlfriend Michelle wants them to get married. When he hints that they should break up she accidentally shoots towards him, grazing him. At the end Marcus has to break the door down to find the dead body of his father who he'd not seen for years. He has to take the body to Israel. There he meets Rita who's been looking after the family house. She'd been a hunger striker, ostracised, and Marcus' father had helped her. Marcus teaches her how to use a gun and marries her so she can benefit from the death.

In between, Amal (sister of Marcus) is planning to marry a black music Masters student. Her father is against it. Rania is trying to get her son Eddy into a normal school. A school play is being organised, rewritten so that the anti-Arab parts ae removed - like Disney's Aladdin remake. A cleaner has sex with a client. A woman who'd been divorced by a man because she didn't bear a child with him gets pregnant when at 39 she sleeps with another man. A woman is pregnant thanks to Tori. Her father is going to die soon. She has a job at a restaurant owned by a man who came from the same village as her parents. She is at high school. Tori's 2 years older.

Other reviews

  • Charles Rammelkamp (Honor and shame are at the heart of their dramas. The nine chapters of the novel, each with a title of its own, read like the short stories that they are. Beginning with a birth and ending with a funeral, Susan Muaddi Darraj’s Behind You Is the Sea has a satisfying sense of completion by the end of the book, even as so many dramas remain unresolved)
  • Kate Gardner (There are big time jumps between each chapter as well, so that by the end of the book decades have passed. Some chapters only have a small cast, others feature dozens of people ... They’re all Christians – though multiple characters are assumed by other people to be Muslim.)
  • Molly McGinnis (It’s rare to find an author who can pull off such a feat, but Muaddi Darraj has assembled a cast whose members both create a clear sense of community and stand out for reasons all their own.)