Thursday, January 16, 2025

'Here One Moment' by Liane Moriarty

16 January 2025

Over the last couple of years I have enjoyed discovering the novels of the Australian author, Liane Moriarty, including 'Apples May Fall' (reviewed here in September 2022), 'The Husband's Secret' (reviewed here in September 2023) and 'The Hypnotist's Love Story'. Her latest novel, 'Here One Moment', published in August of last year, is an easy and enjoyable read with interesting structure and a surprisingly life-affirming perspective on mortality. 'Here One Moment' brings together a diverse group of characters on a flight from Tasmania to Sydney. When a woman on the flight announces when and how each of the other passengers is going to die this shocking news is the catalyst for a series of short stories, each focusing on the individual reactions of the characters to their impending deaths. This feels like the start of a supernatural ghost story, but Liane Moriarty cleverly shifts the focus to the human experience, offering a charming and surprisingly optimistic take on a serious subject.

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

'Dr Strangelove' adapted by Armando Iannucci and Sean Foley

15 January 2025

Stanley Kubrick's classic bleak cold war satire 'Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb' came out in 1963, eighteen months after the Cuban Missile Crisis. It painted a chillingly believable scenario in which the carefully poised balance of the nuclear deterrent could be tipped into mutually assured destruction by the actions of one unhinged individual. On Saturday we were at the Noel Coward Theatre in London's West End to see the new stage adaptation of 'Dr Strangelove' by Armando Iannucci and Sean Foley. The film is famous for Peter Sellers' portrayal of multiple characters and the stage version features Steve Coogan playing four parts (the three played by Sellers but also Major Kong - memorably played by Slim Pickens in the film). It was fun to see the film recreated on stage and there were some great comic performances from the (almost  entirely male) cast, but as a two hour play it really needed a bit more plot. Steve Coogan is very funny in all four roles and it was great to see him on stage but apart from the enjoyable game of watching how he is going to manage to switch from one character to another in the same scene the show felt a bit slight. I did however enjoy the recreation of the famous scenes from the film through Hildegard Bechtler's magnificent set, particularly the US President's War Room with its 'big board'.

Wednesday, January 08, 2025

'The Dutch House' by Ann Patchett

8 January 2025

It's a very enjoyable feeling settling into a novel by Ann Patchett: you're never quite sure where she is going to take you,, but you know from the start that you're in safe hands. Having enjoyed four of her books over the past couple of years (including, most recently 'Tom Lake', reviewed here in October 2024) I have just finished reading her 2019 novel 'The Dutch House'. This is a clever family saga about a childhood in a beautiful but intimidating house, interrupted by the arrival of a new stepmother. It's beautifully written and carefully constructed through a first person narration that flits backwards and forwards in time to gradually fill in the family story.

Monday, January 06, 2025

'Twelfth Night' by William Shakespeare

6 January 2025

On Friday we were at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon to see 'Twelfth Night'. It was a very enjoyable show, directed by Prasanna Puwanaraja, featuring Samuel West as Malvolio. The set, by James Cotterill, included a huge pipe organ, the pipes standing in for the box tree. Gwyneth Keyworth was a determined and purposeful Viola, Freema Agyeman a strong Olivia and Demetri Goritsas as an American accented Sir Andrew Aguecheek demonstrated comically balletic movement worthy of the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz. Michael Grady-Hall's Feste was a clown with the voice of an angel and his Wind and the Rain concluded the play with a delicate poignancy.

'Oedipus' by Robert Icke (after Sophocles)

6 January 2025

Last Monday we were at Wyndham's Theatre in London's West end to see the excellent new version of 'Oedipus' written and directed by Robert Icke (after Sophocles). Mark Strong and Lesley Manville were outstanding as Oedipus and Jocasta and the modern setting - the family awaiting the result of an election that would put Oedipus in power - worked very effectively. His promise to quell rumours that he hadn't been born in the country by publishing his birth certificate (echoing the Obama birther controversy) was a clever way to make this the moment that his mother had to tell him the truth about his origins.

'Death and the Penguin' by Andrey Kurkov

6 January 2025

I remember reading about the Ukrainian author Andrey Kurkov's satirical black comic novel 'Death and the Penguin' many years ago but I've only just got around to reading it. Originally published in 1996 (with the English translation appearing in 2001) it's a quirky, bleak, political satire of life in post Soviet Ukraine. The protagonist, writer Viktor Zolotaryov, feels a bit like Winston Smith in '1984', living a bland existence, not entirely sure what is going on and in constant fear of the authorities. Invited to write obituaries for a newspaper, he becomes naively embroiled in a ring of corruption and murder. But, while stuck in a strange limbo, he randomly collects an array of friends, including some genuinely charming relationships which reminded me of Amor Towles' 'A Gentleman in Moscow' (reviewed here in September 2021). 'Death and the Penguin' is an odd tale, funnier for carefully rooting its oddest aspects in a meticulously accurate reality.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

'The Power Broker' by Robert Caro

18 December 2024

When we saw David Hare’s play ‘Straight Line Crazy’, about the legendary New York urban planner Robert Moses, a couple of years ago (reviewed here in April 2022) I suggested that the two main incidents dramatised in the play would have made brilliant episodes of the design podcast '99% Invisible’. So when I learned, in December 2023, that ‘99% Invisible’ was planning to spend the whole of 2024 running an extended ‘online book club’ to celebrate the 50th anniversary of ‘The Power Broker’ - Robert Caro's Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Robert Moses - I was immediately on board. ‘The Power Broker’ is a monumental 1,300-page work which masterfully chronicles how Moses, never elected to public office, became one of New York's most influential figures. He transformed the state through ambitious park and highway projects, while his ruthless approaches to securing and maintaining power developed a horrific web of corruption, prejudice and racism. ‘The Power Broker’ is brilliantly written and meticulously researched: Robert Caro conducted 522 interviews with those with firsthand experience of the relevant events - including Moses himself - and took seven years to write the book. I have been reading roughly 100 pages each month, in time to listen to each of the 12 monthly podcast episodes reflecting on the relevant chapters and featuring guests including Pete Buttigieg and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Incredibly Robert Caro, now aged 89, is still writing (trying to complete the fifth volume of his mammoth biography of Lyndon B Johnson) and it was fascinating to hear him interviewed on the podcast. As 2024 draws to a close, I feel a sense of accomplishment joining the select group who have read the whole of ‘The Power Broker’ and I'm struck by how its themes of power, urban planning, and social equity remain startlingly relevant today, 50 years after its publication. You can find more details about the 99% Invisible Breakdown of The Power Broker and listen to the podcasts at: https://99percentinvisible.org/club/

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Northampton Symphony Orchestra concert

17 December 2024

For the past 25 years the Northampton Symphony Orchestra’s annual Christmas Cracker concert has, for me, marked the start of the festive season. This Sunday afternoon family-friendly event is always huge fun and this year’s concert, at the Spinney Theatre in Northampton last Sunday, attracted a large, enthusiastic audience. Alongside a few Christmas carols and Leroy Anderson’s ‘Sleigh Ride’ we always include a narrated piece. This year’s choice, Iain Farrington’s ‘The Scary Fairy Saves Christmas’ was new to most of us but incredibly enjoyable. The words, by Craig Charles, written in rhyming couplets, are dark, mischievous, witty, occasionally controversial and very funny - assembling a cast of goblins, elves, witches and dwarves to create a bleakly comic version of ‘The Twelve Days of Christmas’. Our performance, narrated by William Thallon, went extremely well, with conductor John Gibbons co-ordinating the complicated joins between music and narration in this long piece very effectively. The rest of the programme included ‘A Christmas Dance’ - Frank Bridge’s lovely interweaving of the folk dance ‘Sir Roger de Coverley’ (which is mentioned in Charles Dickens' ‘A Christmas Carol’) with ‘Auld Lang Syne’. And, following our recent performance of  JS Bach’s 'Toccata and Fugue' arranged by Stokowski, on Sunday we played another piece from 'Fantasia', ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’ by Paul Dukas. This is a notoriously difficult piece (particularly as it is so well known) but I think our performance was very impressive, featuring brilliant performances by the bassoonists, Sian Bunker, Tim Hewitt, Heather Pretty and Frank Jordan. We always include some film music in the Christmas Cracker and this year we concluded the concert with selections from the ‘Harry Potter Children’s Suite’ by John Williams. This kept William Thallon busy as he both played the iconic celeste theme and read new verse introductions to each of the movements, written specially for the concert by Frank Jordan. The movements from the suite featured the different sections of the orchestra in turn (with excellent recorder playing by Graham Tear and Helen Taylor and dramatic violin solo by Richard Smith in ‘Diagon Alley’), before bringing us all together in ‘Harry’s Wondrous World’, introduced in Frank’s words:

So as the season casts its spell,
We wish you joy and hope as well.
May Christmas shine, bright and true,
With magic and wonder surrounding you.
Merry Magical Christmas!

The NSO Horns at Hogwarts


Friday, December 13, 2024

'The Proof of My Innocence' by Jonathan Coe

13 December 2024

Jonathan Coe is one of my favourite writers and I particularly enjoy his novels that set fictional events against the backdrop of recent British Politics - from the Thatcher Government of the 1980s (in 'What a Carve Up!') to New Labour (in 'The Closed Circle') to Cameron's Coalition Government (in 'Number 11’, reviewed here in January 2016) to Brexit (in 'Middle England', reviewed here in January 2019). His latest book, 'The Proof of My Innocence', which I have just finished reading (as an unabridged audio book, narrated by Sam Woolf, Alana Maria, Charlotte Worthing, Mark Stobbart and Roy McMillan) is set during Liz Truss's 49-day tenure as Prime Minister. While it does explore the Conservative Party's lurch to the right, 'The Proof of My Innocence' is also a murder mystery, with Coe parodying the current trend of 'cosy crime' novels (much like Kate Atkinson did in her recent Jackson Brodie novel 'Death at the Sign of the Rook', reviewed here in October 2024). But overall it's a novel about writing, where nothing is quite what it first seems (even the title has a double meaning). Much like David Lodge's 'Therapy' this is a novel where it pays to think about who is telling each section of the story. Like David Lodge, Jonathan Coe writes accessible, entertaining prose that is much cleverer than it first appears. 'The Proof of My Innocence' is not his funniest work but it is a very enjoyable and satisfying puzzle.

'Just Another Missing Person' by Gillian McAllister

13 December 2024

Gillian McAllister writes crime thrillers that are meticulously plotted and genuinely scary, with twists that repeatedly pull the ground out from underneath the reader. Having enjoyed her previous three books I have now finished her latest novel 'Just Another Missing Person'. This appears to be a fairly conventional tale of the police investigating the disappearance of a young woman, but it quickly becomes much more complicated. Each chapter is presented through the eyes of one of the main protagonists but we are never properly introduced to these narrators so we naturally make assumptions about their role in the story, misleading ourselves ahead of the inevitable plot twists. This is fiction you have to read squinting between your fingers at times but it is always gripping.