Reading plans

The Year So Far: 2022 Reading Review

A bit late in the year maybe to be doing this but I saw Marina’s recent blog post and liked her format so much I thought I’d give it a go myself. As she says, it’s much easier than the Six in Six tag that has been doing the rounds recently.

Image of aliums in bloom with the text Mid Year Reading Review 2022 in white against orange background
Best Book You’ve Read so Far

The stand out read is the novella Small Things Like These by the Irish author Claire Keegan. It’s the book I’ve recommended most this year. Keegan’s story is set against the background of the  Magdalen laundries scandal in Ireland, when thousands of so-called “fallen” women and young girls were confined to institutions run by Roman Catholic church. Out of this Keegan weaves an unforgettable tale about one man’s courage when faced with evidence of how girls are treated in a nearby convent.

Keegan’s work has just won this year’s Orwell Prize for political fiction. 

A close runner up is a book that I think deserves far more visibility. An Exquisite Sense Of What Is Beautiful  by David Simons is a tale of an eminent British author who returns to Japan for the first time in more than 40 years. He’s in hiding from allegations by his ex wife but he’s also hoping to rekindle a youthful love affair that inspired his most famous work. Simons prose is a delight from start to finish.

New Release You Haven’t Read Yet but Want To

This is a hard one because there are always so many new books that catch my eye. Rising to the top however are new novels by three favourite authors: John Banville, Donal Ryan and Kate Atkinson.

The Singularities by John Banville is due out in October. The publishers describe it as a playful, multilayered novel of nostalgia, life and death, and quantum theory, which opens with the return of one of his most celebrated characters as he is released from prison.

Also due out in October is Shrines of Gaiety by Kate Atkinson which is set in the world of Soho nightclubs in 1929. What’s drawing me towards the book is the post war setting; portraying a world that is trying to move on from the horrors of war yet sees the scars of that conflict in their family and friends.

Due for release in August, is Donal Ryan’s The Queen Of Dirt Island, described thus by his publishers Penguin:

The Aylward women are mad about each other, but you wouldn’t always think it. You’d have to know them to know – in spite of what the neighbours might say about raised voices and dramatic scenes – that their house is a place of peace, filled with love, a refuge from the sadness and cruelty of the world.
Their story begins at an end and ends at a beginning. It’s a story of terrible betrayals and fierce loyalties, of isolation and togetherness, of transgression, forgiveness, desire, and love. About all the things family can be and all the things it sometimes isn’t. 

Biggest Disappointment

Maybe my expectations were set too high for I Capture The Castle by Dodie Smith. It’s appeared in so many “best books to read” type of lists I was expecting to read something remarkable. But this tale of the eccentric Mortmain family and their crumbling castle home proved tiresome.

Biggest Surprise

Sacred Country by Rose Tremain was a surprise because I’d almost given up on reading Tremain’s fiction. I didn’t care for my two previous encounters: Restoration and Music and Silence and gave up on a third, The Road Home (though to be fair it might work better in print than in audio.) So I wasn’t enthused when the book club chose this earlier in the year. But it proved to be a witty, poignant tale of the hidden desires of life’s outsiders. I enjoyed it so much I’ve now bought another Tremain: The Gustav Sonata.

Favourite New Author

Trezza Azzopardi, an author of Welsh-Maltese descent has been on my radar for a while but I only got around to reading her debut novel The Hiding Place last month. Shortlisted for the Booker prize it’s a bleak saga of the experience of a family of immigrants who settle in one of the poorest areas of Cardiff. She’s written three more novels since: Remember Me (2004) , Winterton Blue (2007)  and The Song House (2010) all of which I’m planning to read.

Book That Made You Cry

I can’t remember the last time I cried over a book (Black Beauty maybe??) but Heaven  by Mieko Kawakami did ignite some powerful emotions. It features a friendship born out of adversity and sustained through mutual support as they face repeated ordeals at the hands of school bullies.

Book That Made You Happy

The Fortnight in September by R C Sherriff is a touchingly nostalgic tale of a very ordinary British family who head off to the seaside for their annual holiday. They’ve been visiting the same resort for years, always staying in the same guest house and always visiting the same favourite places. Nothing momentous happens yet by by the end we sense that change is in the wind.

BookerTalk

What do you need to know about me? 1. I'm from Wales which is one of the countries in the UK and must never be confused with England. 2. My life has always revolved around the written and spoken word. I worked as a journalist for nine years then in international corporate communications 3. My tastes in books are eclectic. I love realism and hate science fiction and science fantasy. 4. I am trying to broaden my reading horizons geographically by reading more books in translation

21 thoughts on “The Year So Far: 2022 Reading Review

  • What a great round-up! Totally agree with you about Heaven – I don’t often cry over books either (I honestly can’t remember the last time), but that one definitely made me all twisty inside.

    Reply
    • When the book ended I had a very uneasy feeling about the future of the girl. She desperately needed counselling

      Reply
  • Looks like you’ve had an excellent first half of the year! Here’s hoping the books you’re looking forward to live up to your expectations…

    Reply
    • There were some stand out reads for sure but I’ve had a lot of books that were so-so and many I just gave up on after a few chapters.

      Reply
      • I’ve had quite a lot of abandonments too this year. Sometimes it’s hard to find the great books!

        Reply
        • A lot of my abandoned titles have been ones I never chose myself – they came with a book club subscription

        • Yes, a lot of mine have been unsolicited ones sent on spec by publishers. But I have abandoned one or two that I carefully selected myself, too.

  • An enjoyable read. I have the Keegan very high on my watch list but I know it’s going to appear en masse in our charity shops very soon and as I have all my books for July and August set aside already!

    Reply
    • I wouldn’t rely on our local charity shops for anything but the best sellers in crime and the Richard and Judy choices sadly

      Reply
      • Between the 10-ish “normal” ones and two Oxfam Bookses and living in a very middle-class lefty/liberal/arty area, it’s pretty reliable to be able to find at least the prize winners and much-talked-about books easily enough a few months after they’re out in paperback – it’s very handy!

        Reply
  • I really loved Small Things Like These, too. I wasn’t sure if I wanted to read it at first as I knew it would trigger memories of childhood visits to my mum’s side of the family in Ireland (my aunt lived close to a Laundry at the time), but it turned out be fine in the end. Keegan’s prose is gorgeous. There’s a purity (or simplicity) to it that works so well with the story.

    Lovely to see Heaven and A Fortnight in September in your list as well. Two very different books, both superb.

    Reply
    • Yes I can understand how your family’s experience could have made Keegan’s book challenging. I thought she handled the topic well – just enough info to give us some understanding but not dwelling on the topic

      Reply
  • Claire Keegan’s book sounds wonderful, I’ve put that on my list. And very happy to hear about a new Atkinson coming out! This seems like a perfect time to sum up the first half of the year, I was just thinking about that. I like the way you’ve framed this.

    Reply
    • I can’t claim credit for coming up for the framework – just happy to have borrowed the idea from someone else.

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  • Small Things was a perfect fit for the award. I loved Fortnight in September. I’ll be interested in your take on the Gustave Sonata.

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  • Absolutely with you on the Keegan. I have An Exquisite Sense of What is Beautiful on my list thanks to your review. Both the Atkinson and the Ryan are brilliant. Sky high expectations were fulfilled for me!

    Reply
    • Wish I could get to the Ryan and Atkinson soon but I have the small matter of 20booksofsummer to read first….

      Reply
  • I’m saving your novella rec for November!

    Reply

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