LITERARY FICITON










SMALL THINGS LIKE THESE by Claire Keegan (Faber £10, 128 pp)

SMALL THINGS, LIKE THESE by Claire Keegan (Faber £10, 128 pp)

SMALL THINGS LIKE THESE

by Claire Keegan (Faber £10, 128 pp)

This distinctly unfestive Christmas tale confirms Keegan’s reputation as an exquisite literary miniaturist who makes a little go a long way.

It is set in a small Irish village in 1985 and follows Bill, a middle-aged timber trader in a pensive mood towards the end of the year.

Raised by a wealthy widow after the death of his mother, who became pregnant with him in her teens while working as the woman’s maid, he still doesn’t know who his father was.

With his own daughters starting to turn heads, he’s mulling over the murky history anew during a visit to his biggest client, a laundry run by nuns, where a discomfiting encounter further fuels his dawning sense of the perils of girlhood in Catholic Ireland.

Keegan uses atrocities from her locale, but she portrays the brutality that society can ignore in order to move on with its day.

TREACLE WALKER by Alan Garner (Fourth Estate £10, 160 pp)

TREACLE WALKER by Alan Garner (Fourth Estate £10, 160 pp)

TREACLE WALKER

by Alan Garner (Fourth Estate £10, 160 pp)

Garner, 87, is a heavyweight of children’s fiction, not to mention English literature full stop, with beloved titles drawn on the local myths of his native Cheshire.

Enjoy his short book by reading aloud and savoring its witty vocabulary.

It’s centred on Joseph, a solitary, comic-reading boy with a patch over one eye, who strikes up a friendship with a gruff-sounding rag and bone man, Treacle Walker, who somehow already knows his name.

A collector of bones and birds’ eggs, Joseph swaps him a pair of unwashed old pyjamas for a jar that mysteriously has his name engraved on the lid.

The relationship that results is unusually tender, built on fleeting interactions that, combined with a kind dream logic, tap into a pool of emotions around growing up.

Yet this inscrutable tale defies summary — it sits like a stone in your hand, to be felt as much as read.

THE LIFE OF THE MIND by Christine Smallwood (Europa Editions £12.99, 240 pp)

THE LIFE OF THE MIND by Christine Smallwood (Europa Editions £12.99, 240 pp)

THE LIFE OF THE MIND

by Christine Smallwood (Europa Editions £12.99, 240 pp)

We’ve lately seen a boom in a type of novel I’ve come to think of as the deferred coming-of-age tale, in which hyper-educated protagonists struggle in an oversaturated job market.

This super-smart U.S. debut — a good example of the genre — opens on a startling scene, as its heroine, Dorothy, a disaffected literary academic tenuously employed at a New York university, finds herself bleeding in a library toilet after a recent early miscarriage.

Smallwood’s title ends up a rich joke, given that the bulk of the book unfolds as a workplace satire skewering academia’s petty micro-tensions — but the bigger irony is that the story is equally concerned to get down and dirty with largely unaired facts of bodily life.

Sharp and funny, it’s told with the kind of deadpan drollery that has become a default mode in hip U.S. fiction, yet there’s a depth of emotion here that makes the novel more than just another eyeroll.

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