Saturday, October 25, 2008

A Woman in Berlin: Zeitgeist?

I was interested to read this article in The Daily Mail and a similar one in The Daily Telegraph about a new German film which seems to cover the historical events Restitution focuses on: the wholescale rape of German women by the Red Army.

It's good to see that this appalling crime is receiving some attention.

I'm always anxious when I talk about this in relation to Restitution that it makes the book look terribly gloomy. Dark things do happen in the novel, but the end is upbeat, with the reunion of families and the tying up of loose ends.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Debutante's Ball

Today I'm very pleased to be guest-blogging over at the Debutante's Ball. Do pop over and say hello.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Oxford Times article on me and Restitution

The Oxford Times has written this article about Restitution, following an interview I did with Helen Peacock.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Mary Cavanagh's A Man Like Any Other: The Priest's Tale


Mary Cavanagh is another Oxfordshire author I have come to know over the last year since we met at Mostly Books in Abingdon. I discovered her writing when Mark gave me her first novel, The Crowded Bed, which was a delight.

Her second novel, A Man Like Any Other, came out last month and I've just finished reading it. Mary has excelled herself; it's a fine book. Some of the themes present in The Crowded Bed such as the tangled knots of family relationships and the psychological prisons we construct for ourselves and others are also to be found in A Man Like Any Other.

Here's the synopsis: Father Ewan McEwan is the chaplain of Waldringhythe, a Cistercian Abbey on the Suffolk coast. Despite his binding vows as a Roman Catholic priest he has, for most of his adult life, secretly enjoyed a passionate and devoted affair with Marina Proudfoot. When Marina dies, his profound grief forces Father McEwan to follow his own unique instruction; 'To know yourself is to understand yourself, and memory is the only key'. Thus, he tells his life story, from the mystery of his early childhood, his moral dilemmas as a young adult, his world fame as the subject of a controversial, iconic photograph, and his present as a sinning priest.

Edited to add: Mary Cavanagh will be at Mostly Books in Abingdon on Wednesday 8th October,at 7.30pm.

Find this book on Amazon.