Book Review – The Café with No Name by Robert Seethaler, translated by Katy Derbyshire @canongatebooks

About the Book

Front cover of The Cafe with No Name by Robert Seethaler

It is 1966, and Robert Simon has just fulfilled his dream by taking over a café on the corner of a bustling Vienna market. He recruits a barmaid, Mila, and soon the customers flock in.

Factory workers, market traders, elderly ladies, a wrestler, a painter, an unemployed seamstress in search of a job, each bring their stories and their plans for the future.

As Robert listens and Mila refills their glasses, romances bloom, friendships are made and fortunes change. And change is coming to the city around them, to the little café, and to Robert’s dream.

Format: Hardcover (224 pages) Publisher: Canongate
Publication date: 13th February 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Set in 1960s Vienna, The Café with No Name is the deceptively simple story of mild-mannered Robert Simon. He rents a room from an elderly widow with whom he often shares breakfast, providing each with quiet companionship. He harbours an ambition to open a café and one day comes across a property on the edge of the local market. It’s a bit rundown but he’s not afraid of hard work and sets to work refurbishing it. Unable to decide on a name for the cafe, it remains without one.

Customers start to come to the café. They drink a coffee, a beer or a glass of wine – possibly more than one – and eat the cafe’s simple food offering of bread and dripping. At the suggestion of the widow he adds hot punch to the menu – with great success – and thanks to his friend, the butcher across the street, he acquires a barmaid, Mila.

Some customers of the café sit alone, some strike up conversations with other customers, others join friends for a game of cards. There are regular patrons, including traders from the market. Others are simply passers-by. The café is the scene of assignations, quarrels and gossip. It’s a place to unburden yourself or just to sit in quiet reflection. It’s everything Robert hoped the café would be. ‘[He] couldn’t help smiling at the thought of all the lost souls who came together in his café every day.’

Gradually we learn more about the lives of some of the café’s customers. There are moments of joy and sadness, of hope and despair. I found certain scenes intensely moving but I also enjoyed the touches of humour, chiefly provided by two female customers whose gossipy conversation the author allows us to eavesdrop on periodically.

Change is in the air as Vienna continues to rebuild after the war. And for Robert and the café, as in life, it’s time to move on. The Café with No Name explores the lives of ordinary people with an engagingly deft and compassionate touch.

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of Canongate via NetGalley.

In three words: Tender, insightful, emotional
Try something similar: These Dividing Walls by Fran Cooper


About the Author

Author Robert Seethaler

Robert Seethaler was born in Vienna in 1966 and is the author of several novels including A Whole Life, which was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize, and The Tobacconist, which was a number one German bestseller. Originally published in 2023, Seethaler’s novel The Café with No Name was an instant number one bestseller, spending 44 weeks on the bestseller list. His works have been translated into over 40 languages. (Photo: Goodreads)

About the Translator

Katy Derbyshire is a Berlin-based translator. She has translated works by Christa Wolf, Inka Parei and Clemens Meyer, most notably Meyer’s novel Bricks and Mortar, which won the Straelener Prize for Translation. Meyer and Derbyshire have twice been longlisted for the International Booker Prize.

Book Review – The Endeavour of Elsie Mackay by Flora Johnston @AllisonandBusby

About the Book

Front cover of The Endeavour of Elsie Mackay by Flora Johnsotn featuring woman in flying gear

1927. Flight fever is running rampant and daring flyers are all anyone can talk about. And now the Honourable Miss Elsie Mackay, glamorous former film star and regular name in gossip columns, has a new ambition – to be the first woman to fly the Atlantic.

Stella Campbell was once at the heart of world events, working at the Paris Peace Conference she helped forge peace across Europe. Now a decade on, post-war hopes are frayed and marriage and motherhood have worn away Stella’s sense of self until she’s not sure what remains.

In recent years, Stella’s sister Corran has been wrapped up in her books and academic career, determinedly single, or so it seems. But when carefully guarded secrets start to emerge, will she be able to step beyond the constraints of her sex?

Three women, a fearless aviatrix, a jaded wife and a secretive academic strain to reach for their dreams on the cusp of an uncertain future.

Format: Hardcover (352 pages) Publisher: Allison & Busby
Publication date: 23rd January 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I didn’t realise until I started reading the book that The Endeavour of Elsie Mackay, as well as being a fictionalised account of the exploits of a real life pioneering female aviator, continues the stories of many of the characters who feature in the author’s previous book, The Paris Peacemakers. That wasn’t a problem for me because I loved The Paris Peacemakers. In fact it was an unexpected bonus to be able to find out what had happened to them in the years between the two books. There are brief recaps of events in The Paris Peacemakers that would enable you to enjoy The Endeavour of Elsie Mackay even if you haven’t read the earlier book.

Although Elsie’s ‘endeavour’ (the nature of which we know from the start) is not the only focus of the book, it is the most compelling. Elsie is a wonderfully flamboyant character. She’s a regular guest at glamorous parties dressed in the latest fashions, and rubbing shoulders with the rich and famous. But she’s also a woman who relishes time at her family’s Scottish home, Glenapp Castle, enjoying the countryside or picknicking on the beach. But she’s frustrated at the unwillingness of her father, Lord Inchcape, to let her become more involved in his business, the P&O shipping line. Although she is allowed to use her talent for interior design, she longs to have the responsibilties she feels she would have had if she had been a son rather than a daughter.

Although we know what Elsie’s dream is from the start, the interest comes from seeing how she goes about overcoming the considerable obstacles that stand in the way of her achieving it . She does this with a mixture of charm, the occasional deception and sheer persistence. And she’s not averse to using her father’s influence on occasions. But achieving her dream isn’t just about becoming the first woman to fly the Atlantic, she also believes it will prove civil aviation is the way of the future. Above all flying gives her a sense of freedom, a sense of meaning even, that she can’t find anywhere else.

Although the First World War is over, its impact is still apparent whether that’s the physical or mental scars people bear, the empty chairs at a table or the struggle to return to normal life. In fact, frustration with where you have ended up is something many of the characters share.

Stella, having played an important role in the Paris Peace Conference, finds herself living with her husband Rob and their two children in a small Glasgow tenement along with her widowed mother, Alison. It’s cramped – there’s not enough space for a separate bedroom for herself and Rob – and the daily grind of household chores and caring for her children has left her feeling unfulfilled. ‘It feels as if marriage and children have consumed everything else I ever was. I’m not sure what’s left.’ And she’s frustrated that Rob won’t try to attract more affluent patients so they can purchase a larger house.

Stella’s brother Alex and his wife Luisa long for a baby but, frustatingly, so far Luisa has failed to conceive. Stella’s sister Corran is in a relationship that must remain secret and whose discovery would bring disaster. She also harbours an ambition to be a novelist. Although haunted by his war experiences, Rob misses the comradeship of army life and finds little satisfaction in his current role as a doctor dealing with everyday ailments. He wants to make a difference and is searching for a way to do this.

The author has a way of really drawing you into the lives of the characters. Expect the story to take you on an emotional rollercoaster from the joy of a heartwarming second chance romance, the happiness of an unexpected reunion and the possibility of a new way of life to the ever-present reminder of unbearable loss and a tragedy that gripped a nation.

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of Allison & Busby via NetGalley.

In three words: Dramatic, emotional, compelling
Try something similar: The Infinite Air by Fiona Kidman


About the Author

Author Flora Johnston

Flora Johnston worked for over twenty years in museums and heritage interpretation, including at the National Museums of Scotland, which has greatly influenced the historical fiction she now writes. The Paris Peacemakers delved into the lives of characters picking up the pieces in the aftermath of the First World War, and their stories continue in The Endeavour of Elsie Mackay. She lives in Edinburgh.

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