A Long Winter

Colm Toibin’s novella, A Long Winter, was first published in 2005 by a small press, then included in a collection, and has now been re-published in hardcover by Picador. Such maneuvers usually make me skeptical. A large publisher, waiting for new work from their famous author, fills the gap by putting out overpriced hardcovers of early or minor work. It is hardly a new ploy, but I need not have worried in this instance. Diehard fans of Toibin’s work, like me, will enjoy A Long Winter, though it never quite reaches the heights of his later novels.

The story is set in a small, isolated village high in the Spanish Pyrenees. This is a place of smallholdings and land owned and worked for generations by poor farmers. A place where everyone knows everyone else’s business and where both friendships and enmities run deep. Miquel lives here with his mother and father. His much loved brother, Jordi, has just left for military service. On a cold, snowy day, Miquel’s mother, after a bitter confrontation with her husband and son, leaves the small farmhouse and never returns.

A Long Winter is a poignant story about loss, loneliness, and love. What is best? To have known love and to endure the pain of losing someone, or to be alone and never experience such loss? Toibin is a brilliantly subtle observer of human behavior and conveys so much feeling with so few words. If he occasionally falls into the trap, as he does here, of trying to do a little too much, it hardly matters because the results are still so powerful and affecting.

Suspicion

Seicho Matsumoto (1909-1992) was one of Japan’s leading and most popular mystery writers. I first read one of his novels (Tokyo Express) about three years ago and remember enjoying it very much, so when I found myself recently at an airport with nothing to read and spotted Suspicion on the shelves I was eager to see what it would be like. It’s an easy read with a straightforward, simple plot focused on a woman facing trial for the murder of her wealthy husband. The reasons for suspecting her are circumstantial and, it should be said, rooted in prejudices about her background and gender. It takes one independent minded and tenacious lawyer to pick apart the case against her and try to save her from conviction and execution. First published more than forty years ago, Suspicion still resonates for modern readers.

Every One Still Here

Every One Still Here is the debut short story collection of an Irish writer called Liadan Ni Chuinn. I became aware of it while reading an interview with the novelist, Ali Smith, who recommended it highly. Smith is a brilliant writer, but our tastes in fiction are clearly very different because I finished the collection of six stories feeling disappointed by it and puzzled by her recommendation. There was something relentlessly grim about the stories and a uniformity of tone and emotional color in the collection as a whole that left me feeling disengaged. What can I say? Smith must have seen something I missed.

My Heart is This

Tracey Emin is one of those artists whose name is known to a wider public beyond those who follow contemporary art. The broader public recognition she enjoys is probably due to an artwork she first created in 1998, My Bed. That installation, plus her association with the Young British Artists (YBA) group that emerged in the late 1980s, has given her a degree of celebrity that few artists of her generation have achieved.

Her work has embraced many media including installations, photography, and video, but in recent years she has focused on painting. Martin Gayford’s most recent book, My Heart is This: Tracey Emin on Painting, captures a series of conversations with the artist about her painting and her influences. Gayford has become something of a “painter whisperer”, having written excellent, critically acclaimed books about Lucian Freud and David Hockney.

I haven’t yet made up my mind about Emin as a painter and Gayford’s book, interesting and insightful as it is, didn’t do much to convince me about the importance of her work. It did, however, do something it intended to do, make the reader go back to the paintings and look more closely and carefully. Emin would be happy about that.

Flesh

Flesh, which won the Booker Prize in 2025, tells the story of Istvan. Born in a small town in Hungary, Istvan moves, after a spell in a juvenile prison and some time serving in the Hungarian army, to London where he takes a dead end job as a security guard at a strip club. A moment of selflessness and courage changes the course of his life, taking him into the world of a wealthy businessman. That’s probably enough about the plot because I don’t want to spoil anyone’s enjoyment of an unusual and powerful novel.

The story is a simple enough one. What distinguishes Flesh is its remarkably spare and pared back prose. There is scarcely a wasted word and there is a cool precision to the writing that complements perfectly Istvan’s emotional detachment and the difficulty he has connecting with people and with difficult experiences. Istvan encounters tragedy, success, wealth, and intimacy, yet finds himself towards the end of his life close to the place it all started and without the transformations that he might have expected for all his experience. Flesh is a brilliant accomplishment and well deserves all the accolades it has received.

Greyhound

The cross-country American road trip has fascinated many great writers. Most of them have been men and most of them have completed the trip by car. Joanna Pocock, a Canadian-born writer, did it differently, traveling from Detroit to Los Angeles by Greyhound bus. She did it first in 2006, taking to the road in the wake of personal tragedies including the loss of her sister and several miscarriages. She repeated the road trip in 2023, making Greyhound in part a sustained reflection of how America has changed in the intervening years. It is a brilliant and fascinating book; grim reading for sure and shot though with sadness and despair for the state of the nation. It is also a compelling and depressing account of the environmental devastation underpinning so much of American “progress”.

Pocock has immersed herself in the literary canon and I enjoyed learning about writers I was previously unfamiliar with such as James Rorty.

“I encountered nothing in 15,000 miles of travel that disgusted and appalled me so much as this American addiction to make believe. Apparently, not even empty bellies can cure it. Of all the facts I dug up, none seemed so significant or so dangerous as the overwhelming fact of our lazy, irresponsible, adolescent inability to face the truth or tell it.”

Pocock has written a thoughtful account of modern-day America and a poignant elegy for a country that many feel has lost its way and betrayed its founding vision.

Life in Progress

Hans Ulrich Obrist is a celebrated curator and gallery director. He is currently Artistic Director of the Serpentine Galleries in London. His professional success, at least on the basis of this autobiography, seems to owe as much to determination, drive, hard work, and imagination as it does to any formal training in art history or curation. All very commendable, not least because I imagine the world in which he operates is very competitive.

His professional life has been an interesting one so far (he is only 57), filled with encounters with many of the world’s greatest artists. He has thought deeply about exhibition making and the role of curators in the artistic process. Life in Progress is the story of those experiences and thoughts. Unfortunately, Obrist is no writer. The prose here is flat and lifeless, and the effect of that is occasionally to render a life filled with achievement and insight as something bland and trite. Surely he could, like many others, have found a ghost writer or collaborator. It would have been a far better book if he had.

The Good Liar

A few years have passed since I last read one of Denise Mina’s novels. Her most recent book, The Good Liar, appeared on a number of those “Best Books of The Year” lists that newspapers like to put out every December, so I was pleased when it showed up, neatly wrapped, under the Christmas tree. I devoured it in a few sittings in that quiet spell between Christmas and New Year.

The dilemma at the heart of the book is a simple enough one. To what lengths would you go to avoid admitting you were wrong? Would the fear of shame or the loss of reputation be enough for you to stay silent even if that silence led to a terrible injustice? That’s essentially the conundrum faced by Claudia O’Sheil, the central character in The Good Liar. O’Sheil is a forensic scientist and an expert in blood spatter analysis, a technique that proves central to some gruesome killings among London’s elite.

Mina is a very accomplished storyteller and has achieved the commercial success to prove it. In The Good Liar she is in a comfortable groove and in complete control of the plot and characterization. It’s all carried off with confidence and poise, but I had a sense of the author coasting. There is nothing wrong with that, particularly when the end result is a novel as entertaining as this, but Mina is capable of more.

The Hallmarked Man

It’s that time again. The time when a 900-page novel from Robert Galbraith (aka J. K. Rowling) lands with an audible thud. A novel with a mind-twistingly convoluted plot and scores of characters and with an update on the “will they, won’t they” romance between London’s two best known private detectives, Cormoran and Robin. (Stop reading here if any of this requires explanation).

I suspect Rowling/Galbraith might have a slightly unhealthy interest in secret societies. Previous novels in the Strike series have featured dark dealings in a religious cult and in the more shadowy parts of the online gaming community. (She also seems fascinated by the English upper classes and the clubs where they congregate). For The Hallmarked Man we’re in the company of the Freemasons. A mutilated corpse is found in the vault of a London antiques dealer that specializes in the sale of masonic silverware. Strike’s newest client, a well known chef working in a fancy members’ club, is convinced the body is that of her missing partner. As he starts to investigate the identity of the victim, Strike discovers quickly that it’s not quite as clear as his client thinks and that powerful interests don’t want him interfering.

Loyal readers of the series will recognize all of this. Whether they will welcome it, I’m less sure. For my own part, I started to lose interest half way through and I am finding the meandering, slow advancing, and intricate plots a little bit tiresome. Perhaps someone with influence could have a quiet word with the author and suggest she picks up the pace a little. The Strike franchise, entertaining and successful as it is, might lose even some of its most dedicated followers if she doesn’t.

This House of Grief

I read “true crime” books very rarely. In fact, I can only think of a few. Capote’s In Cold Blood, of course, and one or two others. My aversion to the genre is simple enough to explain. Many such books, at least in my experience, are badly written and are motivated by a ghoulish and sometimes prurient interest in the misfortune and misery of others. They are, more often than not, the literary equivalent of slowing down to watch a car accident.

This House of Grief is something very different. It is mostly an account of the trial of Robert Farquharson who stood accused of the murder of his three sons on Father’s Day, 2005. The crime and the trial captivated Australian society at the time, but I was entirely unaware of them, and of the book (first published in 2014), until I started to get interested in its author, Helen Garner. Garner recently won the Baillie Gifford prize for her diaries, How to end a Story, and it was those that led me to look at her earlier work. On a visit to The Brick Lane Bookshop in London, This House of Grief was displayed prominently and I snapped it up. I am glad I did.

I think the book has become a classic for several reasons. As an account of the drama that can unfold in a courtroom, it is hard to imagine anything better. Garner has a very sharp eye for the peculiarities of human behavior and the trials gave her a great opportunity to train it on the lawyers, spectators, and witnesses. It is also a deeply disturbing report of the depths of wickedness into which a person might descend. It is a story that could have been recounted in a sensational and vulgar way, but in Garner’s hands it is all done with such humanity. This House of Grief is a truly brilliant and compassionate piece of reporting. Garner’s award winning diaries are now top of my Christmas reading wish list.