For 2025 the aim remains to post a review at least every other Friday and to progress the Book-et List reading journey.

26 September 2014

The Perfect Murder – Peter James

This is one of the Quick Read series where well known authors produce short fast-paced novellas to engage readers new to reading or just to them. I fall into the latter category and picked this as a first taste of Peter James.

Victor and Joan Smiley have been married for twenty years, and it is clear that despite keeping up appearances they have both had enough and want rid of their spouse. Just leaving or divorcing doesn’t seem an option, maybe smacking of failure, so instead each secretly plans to kill the other.

Who will strike first and how will it pan out?

Finding out is entertaining enough and Peter James keeps the twists and turns going right to the end.


It is light reading, as intended, but good fun and it has put his full size detective fiction on my radar. 

20 September 2014

Stonemouth – Iain Banks

Stewart Gilmour returns to Stonemouth on the North East coast of Scotland five years older, a bit wiser, but only a little less terrified than when he fled the town a week ahead of his scheduled, but aborted, wedding day.

The reason for his hasty departure and exile becomes clear as he edges his way back into town. The gang boss he offended has apparently been persuaded, reluctantly, to allow him back for the weekend to attend a funeral; but that does not mean he will be made welcome, especially by his ex-fiancĂ©e’s troop of brothers who revel in their reputation for intimidation and violence.

As Stewart picks up the threads of his former social scene, it prompts remembrances of times past that cumulatively flesh out and reveal his current predicament. The back story and the tension filled funeral weekend move forward seamlessly to a fitting climax.


Here Banks is back where I prefer him, in Crow Road territory, mixing romance, mystery, violence, humour and I suspect a bit of his own personal philosophy, to great effect. We will get no more, as he died last year, but this penultimate novel is one to savour.

06 September 2014

Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel

Set in the turbulent reign of Henry VIII this lengthy tome (600+ pages) follows the rise and rise of Thomas Cromwell from humble origins to the right hand of the King.

A talent for everything he puts his mind to – fighting, languages, trade, banking and the law – makes him a useful man to have around. As Cardinal Wolsey’s fixer he comes to the notice of the Court and his political astuteness enables him to survive his patron’s downfall and demise, ruined by an inability to get the King his divorce from Queen Katherine.

That task eventually falls to Cromwell, and a way is found to pave the way for Anne Boleyn to marry Henry, become his queen and give him a (disappointingly female) child. Cromwell’s sure tread between the King, his two queens, his nobles, other European powers, the Pope’s clergy and Lutheran reformers is deft but deadly, as those who oppose his schemes end up, after due legal process, impoverished, broken or just plain dead.

But it’s by no means all high politics, Cromwell’s private life and personal motivations form much of the story; and the ability to separate these from business may be the key to his success.

The style is distinctive, unusual in its relentless delivery of Cromwell’s thoughts, words and actions; but there are gaps, lacunae, for the reader to infer events and motives. Wits also need to be sharp to unpick the often ambiguous use of the personal pronoun; ‘he’ is usually, but not always, Cromwell even in a sentence that starts by featuring someone else. And of course being medieval everyone has at least two names, one personal (generally Thomas or Mary) and one titular (Duke of this or Lady that).

Another poser is the title of the book; Cromwell never gets to Wolf Hall (home of the Seymours) though he is on his way there as the book ends, so the follow-up ‘Bring up the Bodies’ now becomes a must read.


None of the above detracts from, and some may add to, the excellence of the Man Booker prize winning novel. It is compulsive reading throughout and highly recommended.

29 August 2014

The Universe versus Alex Woods – Gavin Extence

Alex Woods is ten years old when he has his first brush with the universe, in the form of a meteorite that crashes through the roof. There are immediate and longer term consequences that lead indirectly to his involvement in the vandalisation of Mr Peterson’s back garden.

The reclusive Isaac Peterson is not impressed, and neither is Alex’s mother who insists her son makes reparations. Thus begins an unlikely friendship between the two loners across several generations.

As things are settling down for Alex the universe (or fate) strikes back with some devastating health news for his friend. How he (now a teenager) comes to terms with the potential effects provides the meat of the novel.

It is a bitter sweet tale, heart-warming and shot through with enough black humour to steer clear of mawkishness. Instead it is genuinely moving with a lump in the throat and a tear on the cheek climax.

Gavin Extence writes it well, combining some coming-of-age anxiety and humour with Kurt Vonnegut philosophy while addressing a sensitive subject with intelligence and respect.


23 August 2014

Out of the Ashes – Tim Albone

Read as part of the sport reading journey

Taj Malik Alam and his family left Afghanistan in 1995 to live, with tens of thousands of their country folk, in a refugee camp near Peshawar in neighbouring Pakistan. Two years later, as an impressionable twelve year-old boy he was infected with a love of cricket as the 1997 Cricket World Cup came to India & Pakistan, with England playing Sri Lanka at Peshawar itself.

Refugee camp cricket was a bit different, played on dirt tracks amid the detritus of the camp, using tennis balls wrapped in gaffer tape and bats that were often just bits of spare wood.

When in 2001, in the aftermath of 9/11, the Americans drove the Taliban into the hinterland, Taj returned to Kabul with an ambitious mission – to bring cricket into his homeland, use it a force for cohesion within the divided land, and create a national team that could help integration with the wider world, projecting a positive image of the war-torn country. And not least, being Afghan, to win everything in sight!

It’s a tall order; few in Afghanistan have even heard of the sport and those that have mistrust it as a foreign, or even worse Pakistani, aberration. Nevertheless through sheer persistence, cheek and daring Taj begs, borrows or cons land, equipment and cash out of government and the wider cricket world, and recruits sufficient players with natural ability, increasing skill but minimal experience, to embark on a remarkable journey.

The target is the Cricket World Cup, the fifty over competition in which the test match playing nations are joined by a few minnows who have to fight their way through qualifying rounds. For the Afghans, new boys initially ranked 90th in the world, this would mean winning through four tournaments against well established, better resourced countries from all around the world.

As big a challenge as the cricket is the culture shock awaiting the internationally isolated Afghans in the varied and sometimes glamorous locations – Jersey, Tanzania, Argentina, South Africa and Dubai – where the lifestyle is often at odds with their background of poverty and strict Muslim law.

Tim Albone chronicles the adventure through the matches, management disputes and political intrigue with a calm and assured style - this story needs no hyperbole, and the Afghan players are excitable enough. His open access to the squad provides the inside track on extraordinary events.


I’ve followed cricket off and on since boyhood but this book opened up previously unknown strata of the international game with tiny nations or tiny minorities of huge nations competing to claw their way up the hierarchy to have a day in the world spotlight and a shot at the big boys. It’s refreshing and inspiring.

15 August 2014

The Postman Always Rings Twice – James M Cain

Frank Chambers is a drifter, but when he bums a meal at Nick Papadakis’ diner and filling station in the Californian sticks he accepts the offer to stay around and work his keep.

Instrumental in his decision is a glimpse of the Greek’s attractive young wife, Cora, and it’s not long before the two of them are thick as thieves. But it’s not robbery they have in mind.

To say more would be a spoiler as passionate, violent and duplicitous events unfold towards an uncertain end; all narrated by Frank in no-nonsense fashion as suits his character and the 1930’s period.


It’s a short and punchy novella from a writer of pedigree, every bit as good as the classic film it inspired.

08 August 2014

Racing Through the Dark – David Millar

Read as part of the sport reading journey

David Millar was near the very top of the professional cycling pantheon when he was exposed as a user of performance enhancing drugs in 2004. Nothing unique there, but this Millar’s tale contains no lame apologies, excuses, or shifting of the blame. Instead it is a searing indictment of the sport at the time and no-holds-barred confession of his place within it, wrapped in the personal story of his rise, fall and redemption.

We learn of his early years and the emergence of his prodigious talent leading to an ambition to turn pro. Given a chance he proves his worth and is soon witnessing the secret rituals of ‘recovery’, ‘preparation’, and other dark arts, which he abhors and refuses to countenance.

But his resistance is worn down through the pressures of performance and the responsibilities of team leadership, and when he succumbs, briefly, the performances improve marginally but his enjoyment and self-respect plummet. His resolve to quit the doping and race clean again comes too late and he’s busted, sacked, and suspended from the sport, missing out on the Athens Olympics and spiralling into self-loathing, depression, debt and dependency on a few long-suffering friends.

His rehabilitation is centred on re-entering the sport as an evangelist for clean racing, making him less than popular with some but earning the respect of others. For him it now becomes more about taking part than winning, but the old talent and determination are still there, and will out.

The book has many strengths apart from the doping exposĂ©; giving an insight into the mentality of the sporting success, the physicality and excitement of road racing, the glory of winning, and when you can’t win, the importance even when losing of gaining the respect of your opponents and more crucially of yourself.


As an avid Tour de France follower (normally on TV but this year roadside on the Cote de Grinton Moor) I found nothing here to undermine my admiration of the riders and enjoyment of the spectacle. It was only a shame David Millar was omitted from the 2014 line up in this, his retirement year.