19 Hungry - Grace Dent
Excellent memoir from food writer Grace Dent cataloguing her life in food from her early growing up years through to her adult life as an esteemed food critic and writer. . Grace introduces herself, aged around 7 when her beloved father is preparing "sketty" his version of Spaghetti Bolognese a concoction of onion, mince and most importantly a tin of tomato condensed soup. Grace describes her upbringing with her close knit, working class family through the prism of beige convenience foods. The hungry of the title referring to wanting more from life rather than the Oliver Twist hunger of "can I have some more"
After being identified as a bright child at a junior school, Grace continues on to her comprehensive where nothing much is expected of its pupils. Grace is given the impetus to realise a career in writing could be a possibility when she manages to get a letter published in the NME. This is the time of Julie Burchill, a working class role model who cut her teeth writing for that publication. With that in mind Grace gets the requisite number of A levels to gain a place at Stirling University to study English. On graduation she hot foots it down to London to hopefully get her feet on the bottom rung of career that will take her into the world of publishing, only to find for a girl without money or connections many doors remain closed to her. Through luck and tenacity she manages to become a freelance writer for "Chat" magazine, not what she was hoping for as the articles she delivered were along the lines of "My hen weekend punch up" but later graduates on to better things eventually ending up as food critic for the Guardian and appearing on Master Chef. Her success is bitter sweet tinged with her beloved father's descent into dementia with more frequent trips home to Carlisle to support her family with his care. An excellent read full of humour and pathos really enjoyed it.
20 Brixton Hill - Lottie Moggach, I liked one of her previous books not so keen on this, day release prisoner about to come up for parole after a 7 year stretch meets glossy estate agent, they form a relationship, but neither are what they appear on the surface.
21 A Stranger City - Linda Grant. Have loved every one of her books, bar this one. Starts off with a female body pulled out of the Thames. A range of incidental characters in ensuing chapters, typifying the diversity of London's population and some of the difficulties encountered living there ,such as the impossibility of buying a property and the gentrification of certain areas. It came across as rather fractured with a gripe about Brexit at its core. I've read better state of the nation books on this subject particularly by Amanda Craig and Jonathan Coe. I think Linda Grant is a wonderful writer but I did find this one rather dreary.
22 Restless - William Boyd this is a tale of a young woman who discovers her mother was recruited as a spy during WW2, The narrative switching between the daughter in the '70s and her mother in the late 30s and throughout the war years. As with most of Boyd's books, which are hardly ever on the same theme, very good.
23 The Lost Child - Julie Myerson, Julie Myerson got a lot of stick when this book was released as it is partly, a from the heart depiction of her actual son's descent into drug addiction. Brutally honest and I think this book gives explicit examples from her and her husband's experiences of how their son goes from an agreeable, happy child to an impossible self destructive teenager who destroys family life. Consultations with psychiatrists occur in the book who reinforce the detrimental and irreparable effect skunk has on many a young person, worse than heroin allegedly. Taking medicinal marijuana out of the equation it's hard to know why anyone in their right mind should think skunk should legalised it's not like the stuff that was around in the sixties and this book emphasises that. I could feel Julie Myerson's palpable anxieties as a parent I remember those feelings when I knew at least one of my kids around the same age was smoking the stuff but whilst it didn't take hold the way it did with the Myersons' son it did make him an impossible person to deal with and that will be many a parents' experience which is why this book resonated so much.
24 Raven Black - Anne Cleeves The first Shetland/Jimmy Perez. Love her Shetland series, sometimes the plot, in this case teenage girl found murdered on a snow covered bank close to her home, is secondary to the landscape she evokes. I find myself continually Googling Shetland and Lerwick when I'm reading her books. Fascinated by this far flung outpost island at the northern most part of Britain steeped in Scottish Gaelic and Norse culture and mythology.
25 Wrong Place, Wrong Time - Gillian McAllister Massive best seller so I thought, it must be good when I grabbed this at the library recently and so many 5* reviews on Amazon. I'm obviously swimming against the tide in saying I just didn't like it, I can't put my finger on why, maybe it was the writing, the characterisations, the implausible time travelling element to the plot where the main character goes back in time to try and prevent the crime her son commits at the beginning of the book. Crime travel rarely appeals to me, so maybe that was it, but I just didn't like it and was very glad when I finished it.
Thank Goodness for Val McDermid just started "Place of Execution" by her yesterday, my first book for May, and like Ann Cleeves enjoy her writing.