Holiday readings

Here are three suggestions for fun holiday reading — none of them new books, as it happens, but ones I’ve particularly enjoyed in the last few weeks. So, very warmly recommended if you haven’t yet read them:



Robert Harris An Officer and a Spy. I was, to be honest, pretty disappointed by Harris’s latest, Conclave, whose flat-footed plot twist I found so implausible as to even make me a bit annoyed I’d spent the time reading the book. A strange lapse of form. By contrast, this fictional recounting of the Dreyfus affair is both un-put-downableand and satisfying.
Sarah Dunant, In the Company of the Courtesan. Mrs Logic Matters has been recommending for ages that I try Dunant’s books set in Renaissance Italy: and she’s absolutely right. This is the first in the series, and my first, and just is a terrific read.
Tim Parks, Italian Ways. A serendipitous find in a charity shop, this is notionally about the vagaries of various railway journeys round Italy that Tim Parks took. There’s a lot of sharp though mostly affectionate observation from a long-time resident in Italy, written with a novelist’s way with words. As you rattle through the book, you learn some history, and (if you know the country at all) will nod with pleased recognition at Italian foibles. An unexpected delight.

Your suggested three holiday reads?

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Published on June 24, 2017 13:35
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