I read between forty to fifty books during 2022. I have managed to whittle the ones I enjoyed the most to the following four:
Compartment No 6
by Rosa Liksom (Author), Lola Rogers
A young woman burning with curiosity to visit the petrographs of far east Siberia at the Ukok plateau on the Russian-Mongolian border near Kazakhstan, sets off by train from Moscow via Helsinki. Liksom tells of a deeply introspective weeks’ long journey by train from Moscow to Ulan Baator in Mongolia. The characters - who are strangers who meet on the train - are described as ‘the man’ and ‘the girl’, and in in the third person narrative, but through the narrative of the man conversing passionately about his life in the Soviet Union, whilst she listens, rarely speaking. There is a roughness about the man and a hint of violence and even danger. However, there is a rich narrative of the girl’s inner life, of what she has left behind in Moscow, and through the eyes of an outsider, as a Finn.
Some parts are almost a travelogue as they pass through old Soviet towns, near-deserted settlements and kolkhozes (collective farms) - through and past the Ural mountains - and other parts a spiritual exploration of Soviet and post-Soviet history and the natural scenery, as the train passes through a vast Siberian landscape from west to east. The changing of the days, the stars, the sky, the people. The poetic style of writing reminded me of Jack Kerouac. Having reached Ulan Baator, the girl manages to find some willing Uyghur guides to take her to see the petroglyphs. It is an uplifting moment. Does she meet up with the man again? You will have to read the book.
I had to look up some references, such as the man’s liking for smetana (a slightly sour cream rather like crème fraiche) and felt I had gained a richer knowledge of that mysterious part of the world.
A View Of The Harbour:
by Elizabeth Taylor
I love Elizabeth Taylor novels. She writes with such intense acuity and perspicacity. Her insights into human nature are second to none. Her observational skills makes one gasp. Yet she writes with subtle humour to marvellous comedic effect, with the lightest of touch.
A View of the Harbour is set in an English seaside town, set in the days of lighting by gas lamp, suspenders and corsets. Tory, a fashion-conscious divorcee and flibbertigibbet, is conducting an affair with Robert, the GP husband of her old schoolfriend Beth, a novelist, who lives next door.
The tale unfolds gently with the banalities of small town life. But stick with it, as Taylor draws the reader in to a whole community, at turns, funny, sad, dark, light and before you know it, you can't put the book down until it reaches its epiphany, which is expected, yet unexpected, as we realise Tory is not quite the lightweight floozy we thought.
As usual with Taylor, there is more to the characters than meet the eye. Her wicked wit and subtle mockery of some of them, makes one suspect she is writing about real people from life who once crossed her, and the gentle send up of them, her writer's revenge.
Zennor in Darkness
by Helen Dunmore
Absolute classic! Dunmore is much missed. One of the best writers of our time. Set in St Ives, Cornwall, this tells the story of Clare Coyne and her widowed gentleman father, Francis. Clare has three female cousins and a fourth, John William, with whom she is very close, having all of them grown up together. Set in WWI in 1918, war and conscription is the landscape.
Enter one D.H. Lawrence and his pariah German wife, Frieda, fleeing the spies and tormentors, to a remote Cornish cottage, and there we have the perfect tale of Clare, John William and DH Lawrence (‘Lorenzo’ to wife Frieda.)
Dunmore writes vividly and incredibly poetically. A few brushstrokes, beautiful similes and metaphors and the reader is right there in turn of the century Cornwall in a compelling portrait of love, secrets and ultimate betrayal.
Solitary: Unbroken by Four Decades in Solitary Confinement. My Story of Transformation and Hope
by Albert Woodfox
This is a searing indictment of the US prison system and its particularly unfair and unequal treatment towards African-Americans. Albert Woodfox spent some forty-four years locked up, mostly in solitary, in the notorious ‘Angola’ prison, where he eventually teamed up with Herman Wallace and Robert Hillary King, via a burgeoning Black Panther movement, to become known by civil rights campaigners as ‘The Angola Three’. This led to reform of the treatment of such prisoners.
Albert Woodfox came into my view when he died recently. I read an obituary in a newspaper, compelling me to find out more.
I could barely put the book down. However, it was so horrific and desperately sad, I could only read two chapters at a time. However, I did have to read to the end!
Fantastic writing and hopefully, a catalyst to change in the US justice system.
Every so often, an unlikely book comes along that triggers one's imagination. this is one that happened for me in 2022.