#BookReview The Heart’s Invisible Furies by John Boyne

About the Book

Cyril Avery is not a real Avery. At least, that’s what his parents make sure to remind him. Adopted as a baby, he feels more and more disconnected with the family that treats him more as a curious pet, rather than a beloved son.

So, as a young adult, Cyril decides to embark on a quest to find his place in the world. Sometimes misguided and often in the wrong place at the wrong time, life has dealt him a difficult hand but Cyril is resolute that he can change things, and find the courage to be himself.

And in doing so, his story will come across that of Catherine Goggin, a young, pregnant woman finding herself alone and isolated at only sixteen. There is a place in the world for both of them, and Cyril is determined to find it.

Format: ebook (575 pages) Publisher: Transworld
Publication date: 9th February 2017 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I was blown away by All the Broken Places, John Boyne’s follow-up to the bestselling, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. It immediately made me want to read more of his books, as part of my Backlist Burrow reading challenge, so I was pleased when The Echo Chamber, his 2022 novel, was chosen by the Waterstones Reading book club back in January. If I didn’t love it as much as All the Broken Places, it demonstrated his versatility as an author and still left me keen to read this book which has been languishing on my Kindle for some years. I’m aware many other readers rate The Heart’s Invisible Furies as one of their all-time favourites and I now know exactly why.

The story, which gives us peeks into the life of Cyril Avery at seven year intervals, at times made me laugh out loud and at others left me in tears. It’s peopled with wonderful characters, such as Cyril’s chainsmoking adoptive mother, Maude, whose worst fear is that her novels will prove popular. ‘A new one appeared every few years to positive reviews but miniscule sales, something that pleased her enormously, for she considered popularity in the bookshops to be vulgar.’ I also loved the book’s clever structure which sees a number of ‘near misses’ between Cyril and another character.

At nearly 600 pages, the book is epic in scale, chronicling world events over seven decades, but at the same time intimate in its depiction of Cyril’s life. We witness his solitary childhood and his growing realisation that he is attracted to men but that this must remain hidden. It’s a story of friendship and unrequited love, missed opportunities and wrong turnings, and the cruelty of random events. Not everything Cyril does is laudable; some things are positively cruel. His instinct often is to run away from a problem. On the other hand, he is capable of acts of great generosity.

The book is also a story of prejudice – by the Catholic Church, the legal system and society in general. This is most powerfully demonstrated in the sections set in the 1970s at the height of the AIDS epidemic. It’s chilling now to look back at how sufferers were stigmatised.

More than anything though, The Heart’s Invisible Furies is a story of the triumph of the human spirit over adversity. It’s one which, as the author notes, has a real resonance for him with many of the episodes echoing his own experiences as a young man growing up in Ireland when to be gay was illegal. I think it’s partly this that makes the novel so powerful. As he says, ‘The desire to fall in love and to share one’s life with someone is neither a homosexual nor a heterosexual conceit. It’s human’.

In three words: Sweeping, emotional, funny

Try something similar: The Romantic by William Boyd


About the Author

John Boyne is one of the most successful and critically acclaimed novelists of his generation. In a career spanning more than 30 years, he has published 15 novels for adults, 6 novels for younger readers, and a short story collection.

His most famous book, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, is a modern classic and, globally, the biggest selling novel by an Irish writer since records began. It was a New York Times No.1 Bestseller, and adapted for film, theatre, opera, and ballet, selling more than 11 million copies worldwide. It is used in schools on every continent to introduce young readers to their study of the Holocaust.

Among his many international bestsellers are The Heart’s Invisible Furies, A Ladder to the Sky, All the Broken Places, and My Brother’s Name is Jessicaa novel about a transgender teenager, which has won international awards for its compassionate treatment of an often contentious subject. His writing has appeared in The New York TimesThe ObserverThe Times Literary SupplementThe Irish Times, and in dozens of international newspapers and magazines.

He has won 4 Irish Book Awards, the Hennessy Literary ‘Hall of Fame’ Award, and many international literary prizes, including the Qué Leer Award for Novel of the Year in Spain and the Gustav Heinemann Peace Prize in Germany for his work on Holocaust Education. In 2015, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of East Anglia. His novels are published in 60 languages, making him the most globally translated Irish novelist of all time. In late 2022, John was shortlisted for the Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction for The Echo Chamber, and won Author of the Year for All the Broken Places at the Irish Book Awards.

In November 2023, John published the first of a four novella sequence, Water (Nov ’23), which will be followed by Earth (May ’24), Fire (Nov ’24), and Air (May ’25). Together, the sequence will be titled The Elements.

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#BookReview Things in Jars by Jess Kidd

About the Book

London, 1863. Bridie Devine, the finest female detective of her age, is taking on her toughest case yet. Reeling from her last job and with her reputation in tatters, a remarkable puzzle has come her way. Christabel Berwick has been kidnapped. But Christabel is no ordinary child. She is not supposed to exist.

As Bridie fights to recover the stolen child she enters a world of fanatical anatomists, crooked surgeons and mercenary showmen. Anomalies are in fashion, curiosities are the thing, and fortunes are won and lost in the name of entertainment. The public love a spectacle and Christabel may well prove the most remarkable spectacle London has ever seen.

Format: ebook (416 pages) Publisher: Canongate
Publication date: 4th April 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I really enjoyed Jess Kidd’s The Night Ship when I read it at the end of last year and, as a result, decided to add her to the list of authors for my BacklistBurrow reading project. Things in Jars has been languishing on my NetGalley shelf since 2019 so finally reading it has also helped with this year’s #NetGalleyNovember reading challenge. The other Jess Kidd novel I’m hoping to read is her debut, Himself, published in 2017.

Set in Victorian London, Things in Jars is a Gothic mystery that in its extensive cast of eccentric characters (including a seven-foot tall housemaid and a melancholic, tattoo-covered visitor from beyond the grave) is a kind of mash-up of a novel by Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins with the addition of a generous slug of magic realism. The book oozes atmosphere – and a lot else besides – in its expressive descriptions of bustling, noisome 1860s London.

‘Follow the fulsome fumes from the tanners and the reek from the brewery, butterscotch rotten, drifting across Seven Dials. Keep on past the mothballs at the cheap tailor’s and turn left at the singed silk of the maddened hatter. Just beyond you’ll detect the unwashed crotch of the overworked prostitute and the Christian sweat of the charwoman. On every inhale a shifting scale of onions and scalded milk, chrysanthemums and spiced apple, broiled meat and wet straw, and the sudden stench of the Thames as the wind changes direction and blows up the knotted backstreets.’

This is a period when curiosities, including in human form, are displayed as objects of entertainment or sold to collectors and anatomists. Christabel, the young girl hidden away in a wing of the country house of Sir Edmund Athelstan Berwick, is a child with ‘singular traits’, perhaps even supernatural powers, whose origins are not initially clear. Her unique appearance makes her a valuable and hence sought after ‘curiosity’. And is there any connection between Christabel and the unusual weather afflicting the capital? ‘London has never seen rain like it. And now, all over the city the streets run with water, this foul, grey-foamed downpour. As if God had emptied his wash-tub after boiling Satan’s inexpressibles in it.’

The book’s plot concerns Bridie Devine’s search for the people responsible for kidnapping Christabel. The reader knows who the culprits are way before Bridie but this knowledge didn’t reduce the engrossing nature of the story as far as I was concerned. I thought Bridie was a brilliant character: resourceful, intuitive and brave. Described as ‘not the flinching kind’, she’s a woman rumoured to wear a dagger strapped to her thigh and keep poisonous darts in her boot heels. We learn quite a bit about Bridie’s unconventional and rather unhappy childhood, and how she acquired the unique skills she now possesses.

I loved the witty banter between her and ex-boxer Ruby Doyle, a figure who seems vaguely familiar to Bridie although she can’t quite put her finger on where they’ve met before. Ruby’s barbed comments (that only Bridie can hear) about the individuals she interviews as part of her investigation, as well as potential admirers of Bridie, are hilarious.

A historical crime mystery wouldn’t be complete without some good old-fashioned villains and the author provides at least two who are rotten to the core (one almost literally), along with some fantastically named characters.

I thoroughly enjoyed Things in Jars for it’s eccentricity, imagination and melodrama. Given Bridie’s obvious aptitude for crime-solving and the strong secondary characters, I thought the book had the makings of the first in a historical mystery series but the author obviously felt differently.

I received a review copy courtesy of Canongate via NetGalley.

In three words: Intriguing, imaginative, atmospheric

Try something similarThe Fascination by Essie Fox


About the Author

Jess was brought up in London as part of a large family from County Mayo. After returning to college as a mature learner on a bursary Jess lectured and taught creative writing to all age groups. Her debut novel, Himself, was shortlisted for the Irish Book Awards 2016, Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award 2017 and longlisted for the John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger 2017. Her second novel, The Hoarder, was shortlisted for Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year 2019. Both books were selected for the BBC Radio 2 Book Club. Jess’s third novel, Things in Jars, was published to critical acclaim. Jess won the Costa Short Story Award in 2016 with ‘Dirty Little Fishes’ and has recently contributed short fiction to The Haunting Season, a collection of ghostly winter tales. Jess’s first book for children Everyday Magic is a teacher’s pick. Jess has lately been developing original TV and film projects alongside short fiction and her fifth novel. (Photo: Goodreads author page)

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