February 10

Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Ross MacKay

In January 2021 I threw open the doors to my Decades Library. At that time there were no books in the Library but I knew I wanted to fill those empty shelves with the very best reads for the Library visitors to enjoy. But how to ensure the best books were represented?

Filling the shelves with amazing and unmissable books was not a task I could take on alone, I didn’t have the depth of reading knowledge that I knew would be needed. So I decided to ask for help.  Each week I am joined by a new guest (a guest curator) who adds new books to the library shelves and helps me ensure the selection of titles on offer is as good as it can be.

I have been joined by authors, bloggers and publishers – booklovers – and they each bring a fresh perspective on which books I should make available to Library visitors. But when I invite my guests to make their reading recommendations I set two rules which they need to follow (there’s gotta be rules):

1 – Select ANY Five Books
2 – You May Only Select One Book Per Decade from Five Consecutive Decades.

Easy? Have a go at making your own selections and see if you can nail down five books which were published over a fifty year publication span. The oldest book in the Decades Library was first published in the 1860’s – there have been many books released since then so coming up with five should not be too tricky!

But time to introduce Ross MacKay. Ross released his debut novel at the end of last year and is shortly due to appear at the Paisley Book Festival (more on this below). He had an extremely busy end of year at Cumbernauld’s Lantern Theatre as his adaptation of a classic story delighted audiences and he is officially one of the most supportive people I have met in all my years of blogging. He also picks great reading recommendations so this is where I had over to Ross….

 

Ross was the recipient of the William Soutar Award for Poetry 2020.

His debut novel, Will and The Whisp was published in 2022 to critical acclaim.

His plays have been performed across Scotland and his adaptation of Treasure Island premiered in Cumbernauld over the festive period.

Ross previously worked in theatre as the artistic director of Tortoise in a Nutshell. His productions toured across the world. His shows have received numerous prestigious awards including a Scotsman Fringe First for New Writing and a Critic’s Pick from The New York Times.

On the 19th Feb, Ross is appearing at Paisley Book Festival with his novel, Will and The Whisp. This unique theatrical event will bring Will and The Whisp to life. Ross will read some of the most dramatic moments of the book while accompanied by an immersive soundscape, especially composed for the event by award winning musician,  Jim Harbourne. Tickets can be bought here: https://paisleybookfest.com/programme/will-and-the-whisp/

 

DECADES

 

1970-   Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, John Le Carré

 

I had known of John or Carré’s books for a long time before I ever picked one up. They seemed quite bulky and serious and frankly a bit too Oxbridge for my tastes. But then I saw the film The Constant Gardener and was amazed to see it was based on a Le Carré novel. I first read it and then found Tinker Tailor.  And it is long and dusty and very Oxbridge – my presumptions weren’t wrong but my tastes had changed. I got lost in the world.  There is something sort of dangerously charming about a bunch of adults so institutionalised by their private education that they basically extend that worldview into the high stakes of espionage.

 

 

 

1980 – Foucault’s Pendulum, Umberto Eco

 

For me Umberto Eco is the absolute master. He is one of the few authors I re-read. I take months to read his work. I find it dense, layered and slippery. Just when I think I have it in my grasp I find the heart of the story has shifted while I wasn’t looking. Its like playing whack-a-mole with all the big ideas of the 20th century. And all the while he’s telling a story that is riveting too.

 

 

 

 

 

1990 – Northern Lights, Philip Pullman

 

Ahhh my heart. For a lot of children now my age, Harry Potter was the pinnacle. But for me it was Northern Lights. As a kid who loved bible stories and the idea of going to church (I know I was an odd one), I found Pullman much more exciting, dangerous and though-provoking than Rowling. I still do. And the ending to Northern Lights is still most vividly imaginative thing I’ve ever read.

 

 

 

 

2000 – Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel

 

Hilary Mantel does this thing where she sort of plumps someone with 21st century ideals into the past. Here she uses Thomas Cromwell as a sort of promethean figure bearing witness to and shaping British history. So what becomes compelling is how she uses this device to draw you ever closer to her subject. By the end of the trilogy I felt I knew the character inside out and yet was still perplexed by him.

I listened to this on audiobook and I vividly recall rewinding moments to hear them again.

 

 

 

2010-  The Lie Tree, Frances Hardringe

 

So, remember two decades ago when I was waxing lyrical about Pullman. This book is the closest I have come to feeling that again. It is a brilliant book. Imaginative and brilliantly feminist without ever feeling preachy. I have kept this book on my bookshelf but I know as soon as my son is old enough i’m going to move it to his. I can’t wait to read it to him.

 

 

 

 

I really love the mix of fantasy, espionage and history which Ross has brought to the Decades Library. I am all too often tempted by recommendations and this week it is The Lie Tree which will be added to my future reading lists – it sounds like a dark warning wrapped in a novel.

I shared the link to Ross’s panel at the forthcoming Paisley Book Festival, there’s a really interesting programme from 16th to 19th February so if you’re in the area you may want to check it out: https://paisleybookfest.com/

 

DECADES WILL RETURN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Category: Decades | Comments Off on Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Ross MacKay
November 5

Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Eamonn Griffin

Back in January I began my Decades challenge. I imagined the dilemma I would face if I was a librarian and was presented with a brand new library but there were absolutely no books on the shelves. Which books would I pick to add to my library if I wanted it to be representative of the very best books which had been published?

I realised I couldn’t possibly pick all the books so each week I have been inviting guests to join me and I have asked them to select the books they believe I should add to my Decades Library.

Why is it a Decades Library?  Well that’s because I ask my guests to follow two rules when they nominate books

1 – Select ANY five books

2 – You can only choose one book per decade from any five consecutive decades

 

This week it is my pleasure to welcome Eamonn Griffin to Grab This Book. Eamonn has picked five wonderful selections and I say this because he has chosen my favourite mix of titles. A couple which I immediately recognise (he has picked one of my favourites) and then some entirely unexpected books which sound utterly fascinating and he makes me want to read them.

Enough from me though – shall we get to these brilliant reading recommendations?  I will get the books added to the Library, you can  enjoy Eamonn’s choices and consider which five books you would choose.

 

Eamonn Griffin lives in North Wales. He writes stuff, sometimes for money. His most recent book is East of England (Unbound, 2019), a revenge noir set in 1980s Lincolnshire. Sequels featuring protagonist Dan Matlock have long been threatened, and may yet emerge.

Other books by Eamonn include The Prospect of this City (set at the outset of the Great Fire of London), Torc (a timeslip novel set both in contemporary and in Roman-era Wester Ross in Scotland), Juggernaut (a direct sequel to RL Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde) and Benches of Louth, a personal geography of the Lincolnshire market town in which he grew up.

Online, Eamonn’s ill-maintained website is Eamonn Griffin Writing. He’s on Twitter at @eamonngriffin. He keeps a running reading diary at 255bookreview and contributes capsule movie reviews to 255review (his are the ones tagged ‘Eamonn’). Occasionally, he blogs about his adopted home town at Benches of Llangollen.

The photo’s about five years old, but you’d be able to use it to make a positive ID.

 

DECADES

 

1960s: Elidor, by Alan Garner (Collins, 1965)

I could have chosen any of Garner’s grounded fantasies, as they’re uniformly excellent and properly weird. This is in part becuase they each meld folk traditions, ordinary lives, and relationships between place and person. While Red Shift is another favourite, I’ve gone for Elidor. This is because the fantastic elements are secured in an everyday context – a wet, drab 60s Manchester where the most fun the children at the centre of the drama can come up with is riding the lifts in John Lewis – and because at the same time there’s engagement with all manner of Celtic myth and legend while exploring the consequences of poor decision-making. This is a book I read loads of times growing up: I should really go back to it again.

 

 

 

1970s: Religion and the Decline of Magic, by Keith Thomas (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1971)

While its value as a history book has lessened over time because of advances in the field, new writings, and changed perspectives, Keith Thomas’s book is nevertheless a terrific entry point for anyone with an interest in the seventeenth century. The focus is on exploring how and why the British Isles shifted from faith to secularity in a century. That’s a bit of an over-simplification, but the ways in which Thomas brings together a huge array of sources into a single accessible narrative that’s impressive, stimulating, and clear are great. Also, the book’s loads of fun: it’s an immersion in religion, folk beliefs, hedge magic, and superstition while also illustrating ways in which the contexts of your life inform its nature and experience. If you’re interested in this sort of thing – and why wouldn’t you be? – then Michael Hunter’s 2020 The Decline of Magic: Britain in the Enlightenment is a very useful updating / revision / riposte to Thomas’s work.

 

 

1980s: The Name of the Rose, by Umberto Eco (Pan Books, 1984)

My favourite novel of all time to date. Simple as that. The Name of the Rose is the book equivalent of something like Scorsese’s GoodFellas: it does everything with brio and panache. Storywise, it’s straightforward: a monk and his apprentice are commissioned to investigate a series of murders in an abbey which both threaten an upcoming religious debate, and which also may be a portent of the end times. The book riffs on Sherlock Holmes, on medieval philosophy, on sign systems, on maze design, on the influence of Jorge Luis Borges, and on the importance of books, as well as on the folly of locking knowledge away. Ah, plus it’s a love story, a superb depiction of friendship, and a deathbed confession.

 

 

 

1990s: Nymphomation, by Jeff Noon (Doubleday, 1997)

Nymphomation acts as a prequel to Noon’s earlier novels Vurt, Pollen and Automated Alice, and is also a terrific National Lottery satire. Set in a near-future Manchester, the book not only sets up the universe in which the later books are set, but works brilliantly as a stand-alone novel. It does that thing that good SF can do so well: give you a new perspective on the present. It’s perhaps not easy to recall what a big thing the National Lottery was in the UK when it began in the mid-90s: Nymphomation gets right to the heart of that, while exploring the prboems inherent in any system designed to extract money from ordinary people for the benefit of those already-rich, while promising a better future as a distraction from the bleakness of the everyday.

 

 

 

2000s: Wolf Hall, by Hilary Mantel (Fourth Estate, 2009)

Mantel’s three-novel sequence charting the rise and fall of Henry VIII’s consiligere Thomas Cromwell is the great achievement of contemporary British fiction, historical or otherwise. It’s that good. If I’d had another decade to play with, I’d have picked the second book – Bring Up The Bodies – over this first novel (and I’d have popped Cormac McCarthy’s No Country For Old Men into this slot) but Wolf Hall is great in its own right, plus sets up themes and tensions that pay off over the next two books, so it more than earns its place here.

Mantel’s gift is in getting convincingly inside Cromwell, so we experience first-hand what it feels like to rise towards power, and to have to work in situations where you’re constantly being judged by your background. As a treatise on office politics it’s great, and as a detailed depiction of what court life might have been like for those serving a capricious king, it’s unparalleled. Wolf Hall deals with Cromwell’s finding favour and his working to secure the Boleyn marriage: Bring Up The Bodies addresses the collapse of that union, and Cromwell’s dedication to purging the Boleyn influence from court. Part three – The Mirror and the Light – details the crumbling of Cromwell’s place, and his struggling with the inevitability of the axe.

 

Anyway, these are my choices for the library. Another day, and each might well have been different!

 

 

DECADES WILL RETURN

Category: Decades | Comments Off on Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Eamonn Griffin