Brian Martin

A small world: Shibboleth, by Thomas Peermohamed Lambert, reviewed

21 June 2025 9:00 am

A satire on Oxford university life points up ideological tensions, the pettiness of college politics and the patronising ways of the young and privileged

Learning difficulties: The University of Bliss, by Julian Stannard, reviewed

7 December 2024 9:00 am

The bureaucrats have taken over, treating both academics and students as administrative nuisances in a searing satire on university life

A death foretold: The Voyage Home, by Pat Barker, reviewed

17 August 2024 9:00 am

Cassandra prophesies Agamemnon’s death as punishment for his crimes in Troy. But she knows that she too must share his fate -- since ‘you can’t cherry-pick prophecy’

Fools rush in: Mania, by Lionel Shriver, reviewed

18 May 2024 9:00 am

In an alternative universe where the Mental Parity Movement holds sway, the ignorant and unqualified are deemed ‘just as good as anyone else’ – with predictable results

Bribery and betrayal

14 October 2023 9:00 am

The philosopher and statesman Francis Bacon is portrayed as a Vicar of Bray figure, all too ready to change allegiances in one of the most volatile periods of English history

A talent to abuse

8 July 2023 9:00 am

The nonagenarian’s critical faculties are as sharp as ever in these imaginary letters addressed to Kingsley Amis, Jonathan Miller, Doris Lessing and many others

A sadder and a wiser man

10 September 2022 9:00 am

‘Spare thou them, O God, which confess their faults.’ A.N. Wilson seems, on the surface, to have taken to heart…

Nazi on the run

27 August 2022 9:00 am

Who would have thought that someone would write a novel about Josef Mengele, the Auschwitz doctor and infamous experimenter on…

Modest expectations

18 June 2022 9:00 am

A Little Hope, Ethan Joella’s debut novel, is about the lives of a dozen or so ordinary people who live…

A visit from Neanderthals

7 May 2022 9:00 am

This is the kind of novel that will be discussed jubilantly in the book clubs of places like Lib Dem…

Culture clash

11 December 2021 9:00 am

Apart from what the title tells us, these stories are about a fundamental difference in cultures. Huma Qureshi writes like…

A will and a way

26 June 2021 9:00 am

Lendal Press has found a brilliant novelist in Matt Cook: funny, shrewd, satirical, disturbingly and entertainingly analytical in his psychology…

The cowboy and the cop

23 January 2021 9:00 am

Detective Inspector Jim Stringer is back. This is a York novel, or rather a Yorkshire crime novel. The LNER railway…

The mask of deception

10 October 2020 9:00 am

Talbot Kydd, film producer; Anny Viklund, American actress; Elfrida Wing, novelist; these make the trio of the title. Private lives…

The perfect stranger

2 May 2020 9:00 am

This novella is suited to our fevered times. Scheduled to coincide with the Swindon spring festival of literature, now cancelled,…

A burning passion

24 January 2020 10:00 pm

Poor Cassy. The Miss Austen of this novel’s title is Cassandra, Jane’s elder sister. She was to have married Thomas…

Deborah Moggach. Credit: Getty Images

Angel or demon? The Carer, by Deborah Moggach, reviewed

27 July 2019 9:00 am

You might think The Carer rather an unpromising title, but Deborah Moggach’s book delivers a wickedly witty entertainment. Towards the…

London after the Great Fire: The King’s Evil, by Andrew Taylor, reviewed

11 May 2019 9:00 am

The scene is London in 1667, the city recovering from the Great Fire the year before, with 80,000 people homeless…

One of the world’s great love stories

9 March 2019 9:00 am

‘I still think he was a bastard.’ This is the opinion that Julia, daughter of the novelist Arthur, has about…

Chains and planes: Turbulence, by David Szalay, reviewed

8 December 2018 9:00 am

In the opening pages of Turbulence, a woman in her seventies, who is visiting her sick son in Notting Hill,…

(Image: Getty)

A paean to lesbian love: Aftershocks, by A.N. Wilson, reviewed

8 September 2018 9:00 am

The polymath writer A.N.Wilson returns to the novel in Aftershocks, working on the template of the 2011 earthquake which devastated…

Eat your heart out, Holden Caulfield

7 July 2018 9:00 am

Tim Winton’s novel about a journey of teenage male self-discovery is raw, brutal and merciless. You need to be familiar…

Down’s syndrome and dystopia in Jesse Bull’s Census

7 April 2018 9:00 am

Census is a curious, clever novel. It depicts a dystopia with a father and his Down’s syndrome son journeying from…

Drugs and drag queens in New York’s vanished clubland

25 November 2017 9:00 am

In 2014 Michael Alig, impresario, party promoter and drug provider, was released on parole after 17 years in prison for…

A clash of creeds

12 August 2017 9:00 am

This is a very modern novel. Terrorist atrocity sits side by side with the familiar and the mundane. Where better…