#6Degrees of Separation From Notes on a Scandal to The Mercies

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It’s the first Saturday of the month which means it’s time for 6 Degrees of Separation!

Here’s how it works: a book is chosen as a starting point by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best and linked to six other books to form a chain. Readers and bloggers are invited to join in by creating their own ‘chain’ leading from the selected book.

Kate says: Books can be linked in obvious ways – for example, books by the same authors, from the same era or genre, or books with similar themes or settings. Or, you may choose to link them in more personal or esoteric ways: books you read on the same holiday, books given to you by a particular friend, books that remind you of a particular time in your life, or books you read for an online challenge. Join in by posting your own six degrees chain on your blog and adding the link in the comments section of each month’s post.   You can also check out links to posts on Twitter using the hashtag #6Degrees.


This month’s starting book is Notes on a Scandal by Zoe Heller, a book I read many years ago before I started my blog. It involves the unsettling relationship that forms between Sheba, a young pottery teacher, and her colleague, Barbara, an elderly history teacher at the same school.

Young Women by Jessica Moor also involves a connection that forms between two women: Emily, whose life is in a rut, and Tamsin, an actress who lives a much more exciting lifestyle. As more is revealed about their pasts the situation becomes increasingly complicated.

A similar dynamic is at the heart of Greenwich Park by Katherine Faulkner. Helen, finally pregnant after years of tragedy, meets Rachel at her first antenatal class.  What starts out as an unlikely friendship formed entirely by chance turns into something more sinister as Rachel’s true motive – the uncovering of a secret – becomes apparent.

All the Broken Places by John Boyne also involves a secret, this one long-buried and involving horrific actions carried out by the Nazi regime during World War 2. Ninety-year-old Gretel has spent her life hiding her connection to those events, and her feelings of guilt and complicity.

The events leading up to World War 2 form the backdrop to People Like Us by Louise Fein. It is the story of Hetty Heinrich – the ‘perfect German child’ – whose father is an SS officer and brother is in the Luftwaffe. Gradually Hetty begins to question Nazi dogma, especially when she witnesses the violent events of ‘Kristallnacht’.

The opening chapter of The Women of the Castle by Jessica Shattuck takes place on exactly the same night. The book tells the story of three women, the wives of men involved in a failed plot to assassinate Hitler. With their husbands gone they must survive alone.

The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave features a small Norwegian community in which all the menfolk have been wiped out in a storm, leaving the women to fend for themselves.

My very female dominated chain has taken me from suburban classroom to 17th century Norway. Where did your chain take you?

Henley Literary Festival 2022 – Looking ahead & looking back

HenleyonThamesThis year’s Henley Literary Festival starts on Saturday 1st October and runs until Sunday 9th October, although there are several pop-up events after that. It’s my local literary festival so I’m looking forward to attending a number of events, either in person or via one of the live streams. (I can’t guarantee it will be as sunny as in this picture taken last year. To be fair, it tipped down with rain shortly after I took it.)

To discover more about all the events taking place or to purchase tickets, visit the Henley Literary Festival website.

One of the authors I’m looking forward to seeing in person is Alan Johnson, politician turned writer of memoirs, and now of crime fiction.  His latest book, One of Our Ministers is Missing, was published on 1st September and I’ll be bagging myself a – hopefully signed – copy next week.  In the meantime, I thought I’d revisit my review of Alan’s previous book, The Late Train to Gipsy Hill.


The Late Train to Gipsy HillAbout the Book

Gary Nelson has a routine for the commute to his rather dull job in the city. Each day, he watches as a woman on the train applies her make up in a ritual he now knows by heart. He’s never dared to strike up a conversation…but maybe one day.

Then one evening, on the late train to Gipsy Hill, the woman invites him to take the empty seat beside her. Fiddling with her mascara, she holds up her mirror and Gary reads the words ‘HELP ME’ scrawled in sticky black letters on the glass.

From that moment, Gary’s life is turned on its head. He finds himself on the run from the Russian mafia, the FSB and even the Metropolitan Police – all because of what this mysterious young woman may have witnessed. In the race to find out the truth, Gary discovers that there is a lot more to her than meets the eye . . .

Format: Hardback (352 pages)               Publisher: Wildfire Books
Publication date: 2nd September 2021 Genre: Thriller

Find The Late Train to Gipsy Hill on Goodreads

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My Review

I’m a great fan of Alan Johnson, both as a former politician and as an author of a fabulous series of memoirs – This Boy, Please, Mr Postman, and The Long and Winding Road. For those who don’t know or haven’t guessed from the titles, he’s a lifelong fan of The Beatles. When I heard him speak at Henley Literary Festival in 2018 about his then recently published book, In My Life: A Music Memoir, he mentioned that his next book was likely to be fiction, probably historical fiction. He obviously decided to switch genre because The Late Train to Gipsy Hill fulfils all the requirements of a crime thriller with its intricate plot, cast of shady characters and frequent action scenes.

The storyline couldn’t be more up-to-date either, set in a London in which football clubs are owned by rich Russians while their fellow countrymen use the buying and selling of property as a way of laundering dirty money. As the author notes, ‘Amongst the Russian criminal fraternity, London had become known as the world’s laundromat, washing billions of pounds of dirty cash every year‘.

Through a chivalrous act of kindness towards a damsel in distress, poor Gary, the book’s hero, finds himself plunged into a world in which Russian secret service agents, with or without the knowledge of the Russian President, may be carrying out killings in a particularly dangerous way (echoes of the real life murder of Alexander Litvinenko). At the same time, rival gangs of criminals engaged in prostitution, drug and people smuggling, fight for precedence.

If, like Gary, you’re in danger of becoming confused by the twists and turns of the plot – of which there are many – as well as the many Russian characters with difficult to pronounce names, the author thoughtfully provides periodic recaps of the events that have taken place. However, also like Gary, you’ll have to wait until the very end to get the whole picture.

The book contains convincing detail about the structure and operations of the intelligence services and the Metropolitan Police no doubt gleaned from the author’s time as Home Secretary. I just hope that some of what Gary discovers doesn’t hold true in real life. There’s also an impressive knowledge of the London Underground and bus network on display, and even a fleeting role for a vehicle linked to one of the author’s former occupations.

At the Henley Literary Festival event I mentioned earlier, Alan said one of the reasons he wanted to turn to fiction was because he relished the idea of being able to control plot and characters, something not possible in non-fiction. In The Late Train to Gipsy Hill he has certainly demonstrated the ability to craft an intricate plot. During his talk, Alan also paid tribute to the English teacher who first encouraged him to write so it was lovely to see the dedication to the same teacher at the beginning of the book.

I thoroughly enjoyed The Late Train to Gipsy Hill and thought it was an impressive debut.

In three words: Ingenious, convincing, assured

Try something similar: Killing State by Judith O’Reilly

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alan johnsonAbout the Author

Alan Johnson’s childhood memoir This Boy was published in 2013. It won the Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize, and the Orwell Prize, Britain’s top political writing award. His second volume of memoirs, Please, Mr Postman (2014) won the National Book Club award for Best Biography. The final book in his memoir trilogy, The Long And Winding Road (2016), won the Parliamentary Book Award for Best Memoir.

Alan was a Labour MP for 20 years before retiring ahead of the 2017 general election. He served in five cabinet positions in the Governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown including Education Secretary, Health Secretary and Home Secretary. He and his wife Carolyn live in East Yorkshire. (Photo/bio credit: Publisher author page)

Connect with Alan
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Top Ten Tuesday About A Boy Please Mr Postman The Long and Winding Road