In brief: Nobody’s Looking at You; Cygnet; Where Shall We Run To? – reviews

Entertainingly spiky essays from Janet Malcolm, a promising fiction debut from Season Butler and a pungent wartime memoir from Alan Garner

Nobody’s Looking at You

Janet Malcolm
Text Publishing £12.99, 256pp

The latest collection of essays from the provocative grande dame of US journalism is spiky and prescient, predictable only in its near-constant ability to surprise: no matter how transparently Malcolm renders her nimble thought processes, each piece winds up somewhere unexpected. Who else could make a profile of Eileen Fisher, the designer whose studiedly muted clothes inspire a “cult of the interestingly plain”, read like a kind of missing person mystery? Other subjects range from MSNBC presenter Rachel Maddow’s storytelling ability to Tolstoy’s use of dream logic in Anna Karenina, and there’s plenty of savvy engagement with aspects of contemporary life as varied as email and sexual harassment.

Cygnet

Season Butler
Little, Brown £14.99, 256pp

The teen narrator of this potent debut novel is a castaway, abandoned with her grandmother on tiny Swan Island, a separatist retirement community off the coast of New Hampshire. Now her grandmother is dead and her welcome is wearing thin: dare she return on her own to the mainland? Themes of mortality and ecological catastrophe bulk out a slim plot, and while some scenes feel overblown, Butler nicely captures the likes of floorboards “dark and serious enough to be part of a musical instrument”. A strange, promising beginning.

Where Shall We Run To?

Alan Garner
HarperCollins £8.99, 208pp (paperback)

Gollop, mither and mardy-arse are just a few of the local words that flavour celebrated author Alan Garner’s pungent memoir of a wartime boyhood in the Cheshire landscape that’s shaped him. Strung together from vignettes, it flits like memory itself. Air-raid shelters smell of slugs, shrapnel is playground currency, summer nights are for sleeping with your feet dangling out of the window. During a bout of near-fatal illness, he teaches himself to read. It’s revelatory, but when he later wins a scholarship to a Manchester grammar school, a neighbour’s chippy response lets him know that his education will come at a cost. “I felt something go and not come back,” he writes.

To order Nobody’s Looking at You, Cygnet, or Where Shall We Run To?, go to guardianbookshop.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £15, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of £1.99

Contributor

Hephzibah Anderson

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Between Them: Remembering My Parents by Richard Ford – review
Two essays on the deaths of the author’s mother and father, written decades apart, are extraordinary studies of how we experience loss – and recall it

Tim Adams

14, May, 2017 @5:30 AM

Article image
Familiar Stranger by Stuart Hall review – self-portrait of the British left’s most significant intellect
Stuart Hall’s autobiographical essays trace the undiminishing tugs of Britain and Jamaica on 60 years of scholarship

Tim Adams

02, Apr, 2017 @5:29 AM

Article image
Nonfiction to look out for in 2018
Spies, suffragettes and Mary Shelley feature heavily in next year’s nonfiction lists – along with essays from the likes of Zadie Smith, Graham Swift and Amos Oz

Rachel Cooke

31, Dec, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
In brief: The Mountbattens; This Is Happiness; Churchill – reviews
A revelatory aristocratic life, a magical novel and a fine political biography

Alexander Larman

08, Sep, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
Ongoingness and 300 Arguments by Sarah Manguso – review
Haunted by one book she may never write, the American essayist has instead written two volumes of edited highlights

Kate Kellaway

05, Aug, 2018 @6:59 AM

Article image
In brief: States of Passion; Unnatural Causes; Devil’s Day – reviews
A story of passion in Syria’s golden age; a compassionate memoir by a leading pathologist; and a tension-filled gothic horror

Hannah Beckerman

16, Sep, 2018 @10:00 AM

Article image
In brief: Motherthing; Night Terrors; Looking for Trouble – review
A gripping, darkly humorous horror novel; the strange world of sleep; and the reissue of a dazzling wartime memoir

Hephzibah Anderson

23, Oct, 2022 @3:00 PM

Article image
In brief: All Among the Barley; This Really Isn’t About You; Histories – reviews
Melissa Harrison’s lyrical coming-of-age story, Jean Hannah Edelstein’s unflinching cancer memoir, and consultant oncologist Sam Guglani’s interlinking stories from a busy hospital ward

Hannah Beckerman

19, Aug, 2018 @8:00 AM

Article image
In brief: The Cure for Good Intentions; Widowland; The Moth and the Mountain – reviews
An eye-opening memoir of leaving journalism for medicine; a gripping counterfactual novel about 1950s Britain; and the moving story of a daring attempt to climb Everest

Alexander Larman

13, Jun, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
In Brief: On Chapel Sands; Nobody Will Tell You This But Me – reviews
A gripping memoir by Laura Cumming along with a touching tribute to a Brooklynite grandmother

Hephzibah Anderson

12, Apr, 2020 @10:00 AM