By Martin Chilton
Summer holidays are a good time to try out new novels, and among the recommended fiction out this month is Connor Hutchinson鈥檚 sharp debut, Dead Lucky (Corsair), which is set in Openshaw, Manchester. In it, Hutchinson tells the story of an embalmer at a funeral home who is drawn into the addictive world of gambling to pay his debts.
The reliably accomplished John Niven鈥檚 latest novel is The Fathers (Canongate), a witty account of parenthood and masculinity, while Alexander Starritt鈥檚 enjoyable Drayton and Mackenzie (Swift) is a tale of two old acquaintances who reunite by chance to form an unusual alliance.
If you are looking for a twisty crime thriller, try Gregory Galloway鈥檚 All We Trust (Melville House), a gripping story about hardware store-owning brothers who launder money. Their family squabble quickly escalates into a war between crime cartels.
Meanwhile, it seems an apt time to contemplate the plea for sanity contained in Takashi Nagai鈥檚 The Bells of Nagasaki (Vintage Classics). This slim memoir was written just before his death from leukaemia in 1951. The Japanese physician was there at the moment the atomic bomb was dropped from an American B-29. He describes the flash as looking 鈥渓ike a huge lantern wrapped in cotton鈥. Although it鈥檚 wretched to read a witness account of the 鈥渨orld of the dead鈥 caused by the nuclear fallout, the book is essentially an urgent call for the bell of peace to sound. And that鈥檚 something we all need in the demented, dangerous landscape of 2025.
My choices for the novel, memoir and non-fiction book of the month are reviewed in full below:
A 鈥渧ulture鈥 journalist is one who chooses to spend their lives 鈥渋n the world鈥檚 most f***ed-up places鈥, making a living from death and disaster. Sara Bryne, a 鈥渟tringer鈥 (freelance reporter) for a British broadsheet newspaper, has decided that Gaza in 2012 is a land of opportunity for an ambitious young journalist. 鈥淭his war is there for the taking,鈥 she boasts. The compelling protagonist of Phoebe Greenwood鈥檚 debut novel is, unfortunately, a dysfunctional, walking chaos zone.
Greenwood, who covered the Middle East in the early Noughties for The Telegraph and The Guardian, gives a visceral account of being a war reporter, as she neatly skewers rude news editors, sexually anarchic photographers, and all the minor oddball journalists (including a blogger in a maroon beret) attracted to Gaza鈥檚 鈥渕ind-bending dimension of misery鈥. Vulture lays bare how the cynical modern war news industry fails the people whose tragedies fuel it. As we see today, war remains a booming business for the media.
Greenwood seems to be even-handed about the culpability of Hamas and the Israelis in the ongoing conflict. When a ceasefire was announced in late 2012, there was still some last-minute bombing. A fictional (perhaps) Israeli general tells Sara that it is 鈥渢heir last chance to mow the lawn鈥 鈥 a callous remark that seems to sum up how the horror of daily life in Gaza is normalised.
The novel contains spiky flashback scenes to explain Sara鈥檚 background 鈥 and wry verbal sparring with her mother. There is a witty line about Dulwich being 鈥渢he most aggressively mediocre of London鈥檚 suburbs鈥.
As Sara鈥檚 life spirals out of control 鈥 not helped by hallucinations and the toxic effects of (gulp) ulcerated genital herpes sores 鈥 she makes a dangerous choice that brings on tragedy for others. Vulture is a dark satire with real claws.
鈥榁ulture鈥 by Phoebe Greenwood is published by Europa Editions on 3 July, 拢16.99
One of the chapters in Mandy Haggith鈥檚 The Lost Elms is titled 鈥淒eath: Elms in the Arts鈥. Haggith, a writer who is also described as a 鈥渇orest activist鈥, states that poems about elms are often poems of grief. Among the novelists who also come into this section are Eugene O鈥橬eill, EM Forster, and Tana French.
Gloomy old Thomas Hardy is in there, too, for The Woodlanders. Hardy鈥檚 character John South is convinced the elm outside his house will be the end of him: 鈥淭here he stands, threatening my life every minute that the wind do blow. He鈥檒l come down upon us, and squat us dead.鈥 In fact, it is the elm tree itself in danger of being 鈥渟quatted dead鈥, a result of the Dutch elm disease that has wiped out millions of trees across the world.
Haggith鈥檚 captivating book is full of personal reflections and anecdotes. It is engagingly written and has important things to say about globalisation, the threat of climate change and the value of biosecurity.
The elm, it seems, offers hopeful lessons for how we can save other species.
鈥楾he Lost Elms: A Love Letter to Our Vanished Trees 鈥 and the Fight to Save Them鈥 by Mandy Haggith is published by Wildfire on 3 July, 拢22
Although poet and playwright Amanda Quaid does not mention in her memoir that she hails from a famous family 鈥 her father is actor Randy Quaid, her uncle Dennis Quaid 鈥 there is an oblique reference to her heritage within the witty poem 鈥淢ystery Pain鈥. In it, she recounts a visit to a male proctologist, stating drolly: 鈥淲ith his finger in me, told me how much he loved my dad in Independence Day and also I didn鈥檛 have a rectal tumor.鈥
Very unusually, No Obvious Distress is a memoir in verse. The poems are funny, moving, wise and constantly surprising, as in 鈥淭he Curse鈥, where a random stranger on a flight tells her, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e nice, but you鈥檙e unlucky.鈥 These scary words of foreshadowing come just before her diagnosis for mesenchymal chondrosarcoma 鈥 a rare and aggressive malignant tumour that originates in bone or soft tissue. Happily, No Obvious Distress concludes with the poems dealing with the diagnosis that her cancer may be gone following 鈥渢he scorch of radiation鈥.
Quaid deploys a range of poetry styles 鈥 there is even a nifty limerick 鈥 and makes clever 鈥減oems鈥 from her redacted medical chart notes. I especially enjoyed the heart-rending 鈥淭elling My Mother鈥 and the deftly tragicomic 鈥淭he Oncologist Sexologist鈥. Anyone who has ever undergone a brain scan will recognise the scary beauty in Quaid鈥檚 three-line 鈥淗aiku鈥:
鈥淚n the MRI
I know how the woodpecker
must sound to the tree鈥
鈥楴o Obvious Distress鈥 by Amanda Quaid is published by JM Originals on 24 July, 拢14.99