For 2026 the aim remains to post a review at least every other Friday and to progress the Book-et List reading journey.

29 May 2026

The Forty Rules of Love – Elif Shafak

In 2008, in Northampton, Massachusetts, Ella Rubenstein, forty-year-old wife of David, has returned to work after a long lay off raising her three children. It is a part-time job, a reader for a literary agency, and the novel she has been sent to review is titled Sweet Blasphemy, by A Z Zahara.

She begins to read. It is set in thirteenth century Asia Minor, and concerns a young dervish called Shams of Tabriz and his quest to find a soulmate with whom he can share his belief that love transcends all religion.

Love is currently a sore topic for Ella. Her husband, who she thinks she loves, is a serial philanderer; and her eldest, though still young, daughter is threatening to wed her new boyfriend on the scanty basis of being in love.

The book toggles between Ella’s twenty-first century self-questioning and Shams’ thirteenth century pilgrimage of hope. The latter gets more airtime and paints a vivid picture of the time,  location, and lives led by a representative cast – warrior, zealot, drunk, student, beggar, harlot – that Shams encounters on his wanderings. When he meets Rumi, a respected poet and teacher, a connection is made and a fast friendship formed. This does not please some of Rumi’s family and followers. But Shams meets distrust, envy, enmity, and hatred with love. He has forty rules with which to disarm his persecutors, but will that be enough to save his skin?

Meanwhile, in 2008, Ella is entranced by the novel and is driven to contact the author. She is seduced by the concept of love trumps all and seeks a meeting with Zahara. How will that end?

The two parallel tales, love echoing down the centuries, command attention to the end. For me the forty rules intrude a little and were a bit preachy, but nevertheless this is an interesting read, expanding my knowledge to include dervishes, Sufism, and the real historical characters of Rumi and Shams of Tabriz.

22 May 2026

Adrian Mole: The Prostrate Years – Sue Townsend

It is 2007, Adrian Mole has turned forty and is living at The Old Pigsty in Mangold Parva, Leicestershire with his second wife, Daisy, and daughter, Gracie. His mother and father, Pauline and George, live next door. His son by his first marriage, Glenn, is fighting in Afghanistan.

Adrian’s low-paid employment is assisting in Mr Carlton-Hayes second-hand bookshop, but his quest for literary success continues. He is writing a play, “Plague!” for the local am-dram Mangold Players which requires a cast of sixty humans supported by several animals, mainly domestic.

Other familiar characters drop in: old schoolfriend Nigel (now blind and gay); sister, Rosie, who plans to go on Jeremy Kyle to test  her paternity; half-brother, Brett, on the scrounge since his latest speculation crashed and burned; and, of course, Adrian’s first love, Dr Pandora Braithwaite MP.

On top of reporting how these, and more, impinge on his daily life, Adrian develops prostate trouble, and shares with black humour the trials of his diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment.

The observational humour is as funny as ever as Sue Townsend juggles the storylines with skill and practised mastery. The diary format makes for an easy page-turning read, the temptation to push on one more day is hard to resist.

After a gap of twenty years since reading The Cappuccino Years, the characters fell easily back into place. Though read as part of my Book-et List, I discover the series is still incomplete having missed The Weapons of Mass Destruction! So, that is one checked off the list, and a new one put on.

15 May 2026

Sunday at the Pool in Kigali – Gil Courtemanch

Bernard Valcourt is a Canadian, Quebecois to be precise, who has landed up in the Rwandan capital, Kigali, ostensibly to set up a national TV station. One of the drivers for the project is the urgent need to inform the population how to protect themselves and others from the AIDS epidemic sweeping the country. But the Government do not want to broadcast bad news, publicise their failings, so the job has stalled.

So Valcourt spends his day writing articles for foreign journals, but worldwide interest is minimal, not only in AIDS but also the growing tension and violence between the Hutu and Tutsi people who share the country in a powder keg mix. The Tutsi have post-colonial position and wealth, but the Hutu outnumber them greatly. There is history between them, and history will out.

But on a Sunday in Kigali, sat around the pool at the once plush Mille-Collines hotel, the great and the good congregate in well-guarded luxury. Mainly white – UN officials, economic advisors, bankers, ex-pat Belgians, diplomats who have drawn the short straw – but also those natives who hold government posts or contracts.

However, even in this civilized company, tension bubbles as high-up Hutus abuse any Tutsi staff with impunity. Among the staff is Gentille, a Hutu by birth and identity card but a Tutsi by her crossbred attractive appearance. Valcourt, decades her senior, is smitten. Gentille reciprocates, but is it love or an exit strategy, wonders Valcourt.

What follows is a heady mix of romance and terrorism, tenderness and torture, where sex is a murder weapon and mutilation a political statement. Valcourt, protected by his skin and journalist pass sees it all unfold. The country is physically beautiful and beguiling, but hate, corruption, and history lead the people tear each other apart, and soon there are more rivers of blood than water.

Told with restraint and resigned fatalism, this is a story all too real that should be read, even if it needs a strong stomach.

08 May 2026

The New World – Winston S Churchill

This is the second volume of Churchill’s History of the English-Speaking Peoples, published in 1956. It covers the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries so spans the Tudor and Stewart dynasties including the Civil War and the interregnum of Oliver Cromwell.

The ‘New World’ discoveries of the East Indies and the Americas, including the colonisation of the eastern seaboard of what becomes the USA, get due attention, but the real new world is closer to home with the makeover of European politics. The consequences of the emergence of the Protestant religion and its adoption by Henry VIII echoes down the decades providing the big divide in England, Britain, and Europe. For Churchill, this is politics not religion, and he describes the power struggles with insight and candour.

He explains how the various divides in society (and we are talking peers, landowners, gentry, clergy, and increasingly the merchant classes) develop from Protestant and Catholic, Royalist and Parliamentary, into the party politics (Whigs and Tories) that we still inherit, in one form or another, today.

The prose is a touch verbose to modern eyes, but that is his style, and his voice (if you know it) comes through every sentence. It is a comprehensive work as regards how the country was ruled and/or governed but rarely digs deep into the lot of the common people.

But taken on its own terms of reference, it is an informative and interesting read.

01 May 2026

Deadline – Steph McGovern

Rose Steedman is live on air. It is her job, roving reporter for a top TV channel, today interviewing the Chancellor of the Exchequer at a secure location in the North of England. As ever, she is wired up to the studio but suddenly the voice in her ear is not that of the director. It is a stranger, who tells her, chillingly, he has her wife and son, and she must do exactly what he says to keep them from harm.

The narrative spins back a day to introduce the OB team – Jonesy on camera, Zoya producing, and Sandy the engineer – and show how they work together, how the broadcast should go. Then, as it works back to the present, it spins back again. This time to five years earlier. when, amongst other things: Rose had a stalker; Zoya had an issue with a radical cousin; and a hitherto unmentioned headteacher is trying to get a local school out of special measures.

It is events at the school that dominate the next hundred pages, so they must have a connection to the hi-jack, if only to provide a third possible motive (along with the stalker and the terrorist cousin). And it all comes out in a tense climax, though a lengthy epilogue is needed to clear thing up completely.

As to be expected from TV journalist Steph McGovern, the outside broadcast elements ooze authenticity and convey the excitement and tension involved in live reporting. The antics and dialogue of teenage boys is less comfortable, and the plot, while ingenious, relies rather heavily on coincidence and opportunism. The parcelling out of the narrative to ten different characters could be considered quickfire (good) or staccato (bad) but either way keeps the pages turning rapidly.

At the end of the day, it is just another indifferent celebrity novel-writing effort. Don’t give up the day job, Steph.

24 April 2026

The Shock of the Fall – Nathan Filer

This is Matt Holmes’ story, as far as it goes as he’s only eighteen or so, told in his own words, in his own way.

It is clear from the beginning that he has a mental health condition. Its nature, origin, development, and effects on him and those around him emerge as he narrates in a non-linear way, significant events of his last ten years.

The first of those, at age eight, happens when on holiday a coastal caravan park with his mother, father, and elder brother, Simon. Simon has Down’s Syndrome and by the end of the holiday is dead. Exactly how is not immediately revealed, but it is clear that Matt feels responsible. Is this the source of his problems? Or were they already present, dormant, biding their time to shine?

It goes on from there, jumping back and forth on Matt’s adolescent slide into erratic behaviour, isolation, dependency, therapy, care, and medication. All told from Matt’s point of view, sometimes calm and dispassionate, sometimes angrily and even violently.

The novel is a valiant attempt to put the reader in the shoes, or head, of a sufferer of mental illness. As Matt is self-aware, articulate, and creative in his writing, the account is eminently readable. And the hook of discovering how Simon died keeps interest alive to the end, along with the hope that Matt finds an inner peace.

17 April 2026

Troy – Stephen Fry

You think you know the story, maybe from Homer’s Iliad at school, or Brad Pitt’s exploits in the 2004 film. You think you know the main players – Helen, Achilles, Odysseus, Hector, Paris. But exactly who did what to whom and why?

Here, Stephen Fry takes you through “the greatest story ever told” with clarity and wit. In his hands (or words) the names are fleshed out into characters and events make as much sense as mythology allows.

The Greeks: Menelaus, the wronged husband who calls in the pledges of support when wife, Helen, is carried off to Troy; Agamemnon, his brother, king of kings, noble but rather dim; Odysseus, the trickster, charming, resourceful, but self-serving; Achilles, bold, big-headed, and invincible (apart from that unprotected heel). Then the Trojans: King Priam, aged and fretting over his city and his sons; Hector, the stately, upright, honourable warrior; Paris, the pampered, entitled waster, gifted Helen as a bribe by Aphrodite to sway his judgement of the beauty contest between her, Hera and Athena.

Let battle commence, ten years of it, on the plains of Ilium. On both sides, heroic deeds and heroic deaths; sulkings and fallings out; squabbles over tribute, booty, and concubines. A stalemate until Odysseus reveals his cunning plan – the old wooden horse trick – and despite Cassandra’s warnings, the Trojans fatally fail to beware Greeks bearing gifts.

It is a great read. Fry’s scholarship is worn lightly and though the sly asides are fun, he does not shy away from the brutalities that intrude. He gives the women their due, as far as possible given the sources, and exposes the failings of the mighty, be they men or gods.

Mythos, Heroes, Troy, all read, next stop Odyssey (via Pat Barker’s trilogy giving voice to the Women of Troy).