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.

Saturday, 11 July 2026

"The Rest of Our Lives" by Benjamin Markovits

An audio book. Booker shortlisted.

Tom (first-person) ditched a literature Ph.D. Now he's a 55 y.o. law lecturer married to beautiful Amy, a jewish ex-cutter from a rich family. He has an undiagnosed illness - dizzy spells, etc - and the college is letting him go. Her father died young. 12 years before, at a time when she wanted another baby but Tom wasn't sure, she had an affair with Zak, in a kind of self-harming way, and miscarried. Tom had decided then to leave her as soon as the kids were at university. Tom rates their marriage as C-. They have kids Michael and (6 years younger) Miriam. Michael knows about Amy's affair but Miriam may well not. Miriam and her mother tend to argue. Once Michael left home he didn't try hard to stay in touch with his parents.

He gives Miriam a lift to distant Carnegie-Mellon. On the way back he visits his brother, a room-mate ("Sam hasn't fully inhabited his life, as if he's still renting it"), an ex-lover, a friend who thinks that white american basketball players are being victimized, then his son. Out of the blue with 2 hours of the book to go there's "Sometimes sitting in the hospital chair I think about that afternoon.". He's impressed by the relationship his son's in. He sometimes blurts out that he's leaving Amy. People keep telling him he looks ill. Michael calls an ambulance when he passes out. In a rather slow section we learn about his hospital visit - scans, etc. He has a long talk on the phone with Amy. He tells her about the people he's met. He has a large tumor in his chest, which should respond to treatment. Amy drives him away from the hospital.

There are some sub-themes -

  • Acting - Various characters had tried acting. He and Miriam had watched all of "Friends" episodes seeing the characters become caricatures.
  • Basketball - lawsuits, but also he tells people he's writing a book about neighbourhood play areas. He sometimes plays with people he meets.

The narrator's calm tone doesn't change, even after the hospitalisation - no panic, no fear.

Other reviews

  • Marcel Theroux (it focuses on the difficult middle passage in the life of its protagonist, as he tries to figure out who he has been, what parts of himself he has surrendered, and who he might yet become. We learn as much from Tom’s encounters with other people as from what he tells us himself ... you sense how frustrating it would be to be in a relationship with him – a feeling that at any given time he’s holding a great deal back. While this might make him an annoying spouse, as a prose stylist, it makes him exemplary. This is a literary novel whose great literary qualities are understatement and self-effacement)
  • julias-books (This is a road trip novel where the central character goes on a journey of self-examination. This could be a cliche if it was not handled extremely well. And I’m afraid that, for me, it was not handled extremely well. I found the author’s writing style languorous and dull. The ending was abrupt and it felt like the author had just got rather bored with his story and decided to stop. The characters lacked spark.)
  • awriterreading (Tom has his own problems and isn’t telling us everything. There is a sort of blankness to his narration, an almost mannered refusal to let emotion in, or out ... The ending does redeem the novel, but it’s still distinctly understated.)

Friday, 10 July 2026

"one minute later" by Susan Lewis (HarperCollins, 2019)

Earlier chapters alternate between the present and a timeline starting in 1984 that catches up with the present.

The present - Jetsetting London lawyer Vivienne Shager, 27 today, has a half-brother Mark, 19, and step-father Gil. Gil and her mother separated a decade ago - Vivienne doesn't know why. Her relationship with her mother Gina (a successful 46 y.o. salon-owner) is complicated. When Vivienne was 5 she thought a male figurine that her mother kept hidden in her bedroom depicted her absent father. Vivienne is successful - "She was, by anyone's standards, a strikingly lovely young woman. With almond-shaped eyes, blue as a summer sky, and a full, sloppy mouth (her description), she was so entrancing that her friends swore she could hypnotize at a hundred paces" (p.7). While celebrating her birthday she has had a near-fatal heart attack and needs a heart transplant within a year. She moves to a downstairs room in her mother's house in Kesterley. She wants to know who her father is.

1984 - Londoners Shelley (teacher) and Jack (vet) inherit a run-down farm 15 miles inland from Kesterley. They move there with their little kids, including Hannah. They find figurines of a couple in a chest. Josh is born. Some relatives move to the farm. By 1989 their saving have gone. Neighbour Sir Humphrey Bleasdale and his twin sons are nasty. His wife Jemmie is ok. Bella Slager, friend of Jemmie, runs a tourist office. Her daughter is Gina! Jack falls down the stairs and dies. An accident? The male figurine disappears. By 1995 the farm has diversified, survived. There's a rumour that Jack was having an affair. Hannah, 15, disappears for 2 weeks. When she returns she has the idea of making part of the farm into a halfway house for 16 y.o. kids coming out of care. One of the Bleasdale boys is murdered - he was involved with shady financial dealings. 2 others are imprisoned.

The present - Vivienne meets Josh, a 30-something vet who asks her out despite her health - she wears a device that restarts her heart, which stops if she gets excited. "His eyes were remarkable, almost unsettling in their intensity, for he wasn't just looking at her, she realized, he seemed to be seeing or reading her" (p.238). She learns about the farm which now has 30 youths in residence. When she visits it she sees the figurine. Was Jack her father?

Gina says that in 1989 Charles Beasdale made her pregnant. He made her drive him to the farm where he scared Jack and stole the figurine as a trophy, giving it to Gina to make her complicit. Jack wasn't meant to die. So Vivienne's father caused the death of Josh's father. Stella's informed. Her now friend Jemmie had said that Charles was in New York (!) that night. Josh drives Vivienne to meet Charles. Josh punches him. When they get back they have sex for the first time - "the most potent and transcending sensation she'd ever known ... moving with him as they journeyed slowly, blissfuly all the way to the stars". She moves in with him. Gil moves back in with Gina - she'd hated herself too much before.

Vivienne follows the vlog of Jim Lynskey, a student who's in a situation like hers. She FaceTimes him. They talk about faith. He wants to start a donor campaign - Save9Lives. Vivienne's friends fund it. Vivienne becomes pregnant (!) - she has to change drugs and is taken off the transplant queue. They marry. She meets Lord and Lady Bleasdale - her grandparents (though they don't know that). A year after her first heart attack, Jack is born. She's hospitalised for a month, her heart stopping several times. They move to the farm. A donor heart becomes available, then the donor's family change their mind. She dies while having a pump put in. In the epilogue a month later we learn that she'd written a letter for each of Jack's birthdays up to 18.

A multi-generational family saga and an individual's fight for life come together. A few "Romance" passages don't work for me. The interview with Sarah was moving. In some other sections I felt manipulated, though with the stakes high throughout the (430+ page) book I guess that's inevitable. The farm's evolution interested me. Jim Lynskey was real - he died at 23. Half-brother Mark doesn't feature much. Some of the plot details (the figurines for example) seem a little contrived, I never quite understood the Gina/Gl separation, and I'm surprised that Vivienne and Josh risked her getting pregnant.

Other reviews

  • Sarah Collins (There were parts I was annoyed by. Shelley’s chapters at Deerwood farm felt a little bit too idyllic and cheesy in places and I was willing this novel to get to the point. This is a book that may feel slow in places, it may feel like there is a bit too much happening that feels forced together in the end, but it is worth a read)
  • tuckerthereader (Both the cover and the title scream thriller and this book is anything but that ... because this book is more of a literary/contemporary fiction than a mystery/thriller. ... I don’t like to read sad books that often but when I do I want them to be the good kind of sad and this book was exactly that.)
  • Susan Roberts

Thursday, 9 July 2026

"The tobacco shop" by Alvaro Campos (Casa Fernando Pessoa, 2023)

This is a 7 page poem written by Pessoa - I'm nothing./ I'll always be nothing./ I can't want to be something./ But I have in me all the dreams of the world...
Today I'm lucid, as if I were about to die ...
Today I'm torn between the loyalty I owe/ To the outward reality of the Tobacco Shop across the street/ And to the inward reality of my feeling that everything's a dream ...
I see the clothed living beings who pass each other./ I see the dogs that also exist,/ And all of this weighs on me like a sentence of exile ...
I put on the wrong costume/ And was immediately taken for someone I wasn't, and I said nothing and was lost./ When I went to take off the mask,/ It was stuck to my face./ When I got it off and saw myself in the mirror,/ I had already grown old ...
I light up a cigarette [] And in that cigarette I savor a freedom from all thought./ My eyes follow the smoke as if it were my own trail/ And I enjoy [] an awareness that metaphysics is a consequence of not feeling very well.// Then I lean back in the chair/ And keep smoking.

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

"The nursery" by Asia Mackay

An audio book.

Lex (Alexis) has a husband Will and 2 y.o. a daughter Gigi. Will doesn't know that for years she's been working for MI6 as a rat (a killer) with an HQ by platform 8 at Holburn tube station, London. The service has been infiltrated by snakes and is going into lockdown. A website, Tenebris (maybe UK-based), connects people with info to people who will pay for it. Lex's group use school jargon as codewords - characters from Pippa Pig etc. Toys are useful items to hide bugs in. Headless dolls might be nightmarish and boobytrapped. Are lone men spies, paedophiles or divorced fathers?

A Chinese minister is visiting for a few days and Lex's group needs to protect her. She meets Johnny at an airport - rockstar and ex-lover, and while there plants a listening bug. Will's worried that their relationship is struggling. She tells him about Johnny. He realises that a song of Johnny that he danced to is about Lex. She wonders why Will gets texts in the night. She's attracted to Frederick, a colleague whose child is at the same nursery as Gigi. Sometimes they discuss work while with the children, interleaving 2 discourses. When Gigi gets into trouble for fighting at school, Lex worries that her daughter might have inherited assassin genes. She contacts partners of colleagues, pretending it's for social reasons but actually trying to gather info about her colleagues. Lex is alone in the HQ when "ghosts" attack. She manages to disable/kill them. Robin, a colleague, is taken away.

The chinese minister attends a hunt at a Lord's hunt. A death threat is narrowly averted. She begins to suspect Frederick and panics when the nursery tells her that Frederick took Gigi home. All is ok. Later Frederick abandons his daughter. Lex collects her and calls his wife Camilla. She says Frederick has been asking strangely. The house is searched. Children's drawing were coded messages. Playdough was actually C4 explosive. The minister's last engagement is at Christie's. Frederick has put drugged Robin under the auction room, a bomb tied to him. She defuses the bomb and saves Robin. Frederick escapes. He'd had the idea for Tenebris, funded by 2 city boys. A nursery teacher was a go-between. Access to Tenebris is gained with invaluable data about people, wants and skills. Lex and Will patch their relationship up.

Enjoyable. I didn't realise until reading the reviews that this was the 2nd of a series. I liked the way that nursery life is braided with the spy world though the section about political correctness in fairy tales goes on too long.

Other reviews

Tuesday, 7 July 2026

"Foreign affairs" by Alison Lurie (Abacus, 1986)

Virginia Miner, 54, is flying to London for a 6 month stay. She visits most years. She's with an imaginary dog, Fido (which re-appears when she feels self-pity). She's never been pretty, though she's aged well. She'd been briefly married. She's an academic, specialising in children's literature and playground rhymes. She notes that "many of the great classic writers [of children's fiction] had an idyllic boyhood or girlhood that ended far too soon". In the current issue of The Atlantic she sees her discipline and recent book belittled by a prof. She talks to Chuck (married, early-retired) on the plane.

Fred Turner, 28, handsome, American, broke, a colleague of Virginia, is in London for 6 months. He's about to separate from his wife Ruth. Prof Virginia will later be voting on whether Fred will be kept on. They've barely talked. He has a meal with friends Joe and Debby, disallusioned americans with a baby. They hadn't expected his marriage to Ruth (a photographer - she'd exhibited photos of his - and other men's - body parts) to last. They're all doing research in the British Museum.

Weeks pass. Fred is dating Lady Rosemary, a pretty actress, 37, who Virginia knows. Virginia bumps into Chuck in Fortnum and Mason's.

Fred, weekending on a Victorian country house, feels he's walked into a Henry James novel. Rosemary complains that she's typecast - she'd rather play Lady Macbeth than be on TV doing light comedy. He notices English/US social differences. He feels uncomfortable about her paying for everything. Ruth sends a letter of apology to Fred

Chuck turns up at Virginia's late one night having discovered that his English ancestors were paupers (an ornament hermit), not lords. For that and other reasons he doesn't want to return to his wife. Virginia's angry at him for not counting his blessings. Later she agrees to go out with him. She, Chuck, Fred and Rosemary find themselves at the same party. Rosemary and Fred are good for each other, fixing defects that had stopped others being envious of them. But when he says that he'll have to return to the States for work, she chucks him out. Chuck reveals that he was rebelious at school, that the army saved him, that he doesn't like his wife, that he killed someone while driving drunk (not all his fault) and that he's going to help at a dig in Wiltshire where his ancestors lived. He tries to sleep with her. She slightly resists, but not for long.

Fred's friends say that he should find a woman matching his intelligence. They say that the best English people have been migrating for 300 years. Fred tracks Rosemary to an outdoor film-set. He watches her act, using gestures she used with him. She wants him to move in with her - she'll pay his expenses. But he wants to continue his career, at least for a while.

Virginia is happy. Her research has been done, she's proud of London. She knows that in literature people over 50 aren't central characters - they're comic, pathetic, disagreeable, fatuous tutors, set in their ways. She enjoyed sex with Chuck, but she moves in London circles that would disapprove of him and hence disapprove of her. When he invites her down to Wiltshire she agrees. She tries to get Rosemary to return to Fred. Rosemary says that Virginia looks 60.

Fred's about to leave England. His research has failed, and he has trouble contacting Ruth or Rosemary. He thinks that "their love affair has reenacted Anglo-American history. Rosemary may have loved him, but she has the colonial mentality; she would do anything for him but grant him independence. When he demanded that, it was war.". He goes to collect belongings from Rosemary's house. Only Mrs Harris, the maid, is there. Rosemary's been imitating her, inflenced by her reactionary opinions. Mrs Harris is drunk and tries to get him into bed. As he flees, he wonders if Mrs Harris ever existed - maybe Rosemary had dressed up as her. She's had episodes before.

Fred returns to the States and makes up with Ruth (who's the daughter of the prof who wrote the article in The Atlantic). As Virginia's about to leave for Wiltshire she hears that Chuck's died of a heart attack - his doctor had warned him. She realises that she loved him. Fido returns.

The book won a Pulitzer. The oppositions are clearly delineated - poor/rich; real/fake; old/young; UK/US; pretty/plain. Virginia, in a devalued academic discipline, looks down on Americans in general (especially tourists) and individually. She feels English. The Americans she knows who are in London aren't impressed by the food, the weather, the tourist sites, the English. Chuck is cowboy American, an irrigation engineer. Fred, who hasn't had to struggle for women or qualifications, suddenly finds himself in a world of English aristocracy, period dramas and minor celebs. I didn't like the Fido idea. The idea of Rosemary being Mrs Harris was interesting.

On p.106 - "the new octagonal fifty-pence piece" (actually it's seven-sided - deliberate error?)

Other reviews

  • Rachel Cooke
  • Karen Guardiana (In the end, the experience changes Vinnie for the better, but because she is who she is, she reneges back to her default and wallows in self-pity. Meanwhile, Fred realizes what a piece of shit he is, but because he is who he is, he comes back to his dear America renewed and as self-assured as ever. This parade of contrast runs thematically within the book, especially among the characters who are, by and large, caricatures of contradiction ... It just felt so contrived, too planned-all-along-just-to-make-a-point.)
  • Amanda Craig (Alison Lurie’s Foreign Affairs is one of the great works of comic fiction; it is also a profound meditation on being plain. ... The meticulous way that the plot of Foreign Affairs is worked out is a rare delight, replete with ironies and revelations. ... Lurie is, I believe, the novelist of her generation who will endure – far more so than her fellow Pulitzer Prize-winners, Updike, Roth and Bellow. Yes, the tone is (as Jane Austen said of her own Pride and Prejudice), light and bright and sparkling; but its subjects include age, loneliness, delusion and death.)
  • swiftlytiltingplanet (One of the novel’s themes is appearances vs reality, so of course, the fictional imagined postcard Britain is unfavourably compared to the reality of unattractive accommodations, the impossibly tiresome British Museum and the tinselness of the tourist circuit ... Both characters are judged on their appearances and neither of them really have a good grasp on how they appear to others.)
  • bookaroundthecorner (Her childhood ended when she became aware of [her lack of beauty]. She deducted that she’s too plain to be loved and has built walls around her to protect her from actually truly loving anyone. She expects to be dumped so she doesn’t let anyone the opportunity to do it and leaves first. Her life is full of soothing rituals supposed to bring her safety but her orderly life is artificial. She fills her life with activities but doesn’t really live it.)

Monday, 6 July 2026

"What we can know" by Ian McEwan

An audio book.

The narrator Tom is interested in a poem that Francis Blundy read (then gave) to his wife Vivian on her (54th?) birthday in 2014 - a sonnet sequence (corona) called "String", perhaps written after Francis had heard about quantum loop gravity. There was only one copy (on vellum) and it never became public. That was 108 years ago - a high-point for life-expectancy, etc. The world's population's down to 4 billion now. Britain is an archipelago. Francis was a climate change denier. Vivian had sacrificed her academic career for Francis - previously she's been married to Percy for whom she gave up her career when his early onset alzheimers got bad. Harry (Vivian's brother-in-law, husband of Rachel), another guest, was a poetry editor who didn't after all want to be Francis's biographer.

Tom lectures a course called "90-30". After those years (1990-2030) there was limited nuclear war and global flooding. The internet was preserved by Nigeria. Quantum computing broke all the old passwords, so old files are available for research. A Shakespeare-level writer, Fisk, starts writing. The narrator has decided to base his next book around that birthday party, where the poem (which might be as era-defining as Eliot's The Wasteland) provoked various reactions from the guests. He's looking through the physical and online archives, making educated guesses about missing facts and opinions, hoping to recreate the masterpiece. The poem had become a symbol of the power of love, mentioned by protest groups. He thinks of himself as writing about the ghost/shadow of a poem. He uses AI (rationed to the humanities, unlimited for scientists) to get ideas.

He and his wife Rose propose a new course about history. The students aren't interested. Rose has an affair and they break up. Tom learns how to cope, partly by reading about Vivian's problems. Then he gets a tip-off (a map reference) about where the poem might be. He bumps into Rose, who's dumped her lover. They go on an expedition, a treasure hunt. They find a buried package - a violin and a prose print-out

The rest of the book is Vivian's first-person narrative. After university she got pregnant, had the baby, but the baby died when 6 months old - her neglect on a drunken night. Her parents died - "So my father was not dead. He lived in my mind, walking my neuronal battlements in solemn march, like king Hamlet's ghost, not demanding revenge but projecting into my social world a misogynist's ... contempt". She married Percy who became senile. She was having an affair with Harry. Unknown to her Harry was having other affairs. After he split with her, he went to watch him interview Blundy, making sure he saw her leave with the famous poet. She starts sleeping with Blundy while Rachel looks after Percy. Blundy offers to kill Percy. He does. They marry. Then she has affairs with Chris and Harry again. Blundy apologises for spending up to 14 hours/day in his study. That's why he writes her the poem. She tells him that the poem shows how he misunderstands the natural world. Also she thinks there are too many clues about how Percy died. She writes an account - a confession about Percy's death - for posterity and (I think) destroys the poem. At the end of the book we discover that Tom and Rose publish the confession.

The description of the expedition drags. When Blundy shows Vivian his house for the first time, it drags.

Other reviews

  • Kevin Power (The book is composed of two islands of prose, linked only by the tenuous bridge of a brief note at the end. And it is about being islanded, in time, in space, in life.)
  • John P. Loonam (while food and wine, transportation and geopolitics have been utterly changed, the university system and the world of scholarly criticism have survived with minimal adjustments.)
  • Tom LeClair (the futuristic first half resembles a David Lodge novel about literary academics with an antiquarian bent. ... The second half of What We Can Know resembles, to keep comparisons British, just about any book by the ever-complaining Rachel Cusk.)

Sunday, 5 July 2026

"The Thursday Murder Club" by Richard Osman

An audio book.

Joyce, an ex-nurse, has been living in Cooper's Chase, an old people's community, for a year or so. She keeps a chatty diary/journal. It has dark moments. She doesn't like mentioning her late husband Gerry. She befriends Bernard, a widower who was married for 47 years to an Indian. Elizabeth asks her about knife wounds then invites her to join the Thursday club - a group of people (Ibrahim, a therapist; Ron, an ex-trade-unionist with celeb ex-boxer son Jason) who try to solve crimes. Each day John visits wife Penny (who used to be part of the club, but is now unconscious). Elizabeth keeps her husband Stephen's senility secret. They befriend community constable Donna, 26, who's moved from London for some reason.

Ian, (who built/owns the old people's residency) wants to replace his helper Tony with Bodgan. He's bought land (including a graveyard) to extend the residency. When Bogdan starts clearing the graveyard he finds bones and tells Elizabeth. Tony is bludgeoned to death. By his body is a photo of a table piled with money. Jason's in the photo. Chris, a detective, investigates the murder. The club get Donna onto his team. The club repeatedly out-manouevre Chess, Joyce adding chaos that Elizabeth (ex MI5?) exploits. Then Ian dies, injected with poison. Jason becomes a suspect for Tony's death. The priest who tried to protect the graveyard is the main suspect for Ian's death - he's actually a retired doctor.

Bernard kills himself - he's had enough. John mercy-kills Penny then kills himself. Bogdan and Stephen enjoy playing chess together. The people in the photograph and the photographer are found. The priest/doctor had got a nun pregnant. She was buried in the graveyard which is why he was campaigning to preserve the graveyard. Penny, an ex-police woman, had told John that she's killed a man who had abused his wife. John in turn had to kill to keep it secret. Bernard had lied to his offspring about having his wife's ashes spread at Benares. Joyce ensures that Bernard's ashes mingle with his wife's locally, at sea.

I like the humour and the incidental subject matter - there's discussion of Waitrose vs Lidl; the frequency of children's visits; TV series and how to record them; the all-powerful car-parking committee. There's lots of sadness.

Other reviews

  • reviewsfeed (The protagonists of this story are very different from each other and endearing in their antics)
  • novelnotions (almost everything about this book failed to capture my interest. For characters that are supposed to be quirky and unique, other than Elizabeth, none of the characters were fascinating at all. ... For a murder mystery novel, The Thursday Murder Club has nihil tension. It felt like reading a slice-of-life novel with a murder mystery masquerading as a plot. The mystery was not gripping. The villain is incredibly forgettable. The characterizations weren’t in-depth enough. And nothing about this short book felt compelling enough to me. I saw reviews that said this book was hilarious. I did not even smile once reading through it)
  • debbish ( it’s addictive. It’s cleverly-written, extremely funny and offers up some delightful characters. )
  • Sarah Collins (Joyce may be lovely and charming, but she’s also got a razor-sharp tongue, is incredibly observant and can give a mean critique. ... The Thursday Murder Club may be a cosy murder mystery but it’s also a story about aging and friendship. It’s funny and witty and at the same time written with compassion. ... Richard Osman provides a glimpse into the future and the challenges that come with growing old – isolation, grief, illness, losing your faculties – but he does it in a way that is light-hearted. )