A Crime in the Neighborhood (1999)
A Crime in the Neighbourhood is set in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. Its events are narrated from retrospective distance by Marsha, who as a ten year old saw her life impacted by a trio of events in the early part of 1972: the departure of her father (who elopes with her aunt), the unfolding Watergate scandal (which preoccupies her mother) and most importantly, the rape and murder of a young boy in her local area.
Larry’s Party (1998)
Larry's Party covers just over twenty years in the life of Laurence "Larry" Weller, an initially "ordinary man" in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It begins in the mid-70s with him as a 26 year old assistant florist, and ends with him hosting the titular dinner party in 1997, his life having changed beyond recognition, but in some ways coming back to where the book began...
Fugitive Pieces (1997)
Fugitive Pieces is a novel in two sections, each focusing on a character's attempts to deal with trauma and loss relating to the Holocaust. Its first and longer section focuses on Jakob Beer, who as a 7-year old is the only person in his town to survive a round-up of Jews by invading Nazis. He is found by a Greek archaeologist, Athos Roussos, who take him into his care, moving him secretly to Zakynthos in Greece.
A Spell of Winter (1996)
A Spell of Winter is a gothic novel set in wealthy rural England in the years before World War I. It focuses on two siblings, Cathy and Rob, who live with their grandfather after their parents have departed in initially mysterious circumstances. They are brought up mainly by a servant, Kate, and taught by their hated governess Miss Gallagher, who appears to have an unhealthy fascination with Cathy.
Disgrace (1999)
Disgrace is told from the perspective of David Lurie, a divorced literature professor at a university in post-Apartheid Cape Town. The first half of the novel details Lurie’s life as an aging academic and Byron obsessive, satisfying himself with weekly visits to prostitutes. He loses everything following his pursuit and eventual rape of a young female student, and subsequent refusal to co-operate with an enquiry that seems designed to protect him.
Amsterdam (1998)
Amsterdam is a short novel focusing on two old and extremely posh friends: Vernon Halliday, newspaper editor of the tabloidy fabrication The Judge, and Clive Linley, who is a very very serious composer. They meet at the funeral of Molly Lane, and are among at least four of her former lovers at said event. We don’t learn an awful lot about Lane, beyond the fact that she entertained a lot of men, and died of an unspecified madness-inducing illness. Vernon and Clive make a pact to “help each other out” if they ever find themselves in a similar state of mental deterioration, which sets in motion a series of highly improbable events in the name of, I guess, “satire.”
The God of Small Things (1997)
The God of Small Things is the story of two non-identical twins, Rahel and Estha, in Ayemenem, a village in the Kerala region of India. The non-linear narrative flits between the build up to a tragic incident in their youth, involving a visit from England of their cousin Sophie, and their return to their village as adults in 1993.
Last Orders (1996)
Last Orders follows a motley crew of friends and near-relatives of the recently passed-away Jack Dodds, a Bermondsey butcher’s shop owner. They’re tasked by Jack’s widow Amy with scattering his ashes in Margate. Amy herself isn’t attending, for reasons that are explored in flashback as the novel unfolds, alongside the crew’s somewhat ramshackle journey out of London and through Kent, filled with arguments, detours, pubs, and reflections on life, death and relationships.
The Ghost Road (1995)
The Ghost Road is the final part of a trilogy, crucially one of which I haven’t read the first two parts (more on that later.) The Regeneration Trilogy is set predominantly during World War 1, and blends historical characters including war poets Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen and Robert Graves, with fictional characters including the central character Billy Prior, a working-class officer created to parallel and contrast with the poets.
How Late It Was, How Late (1994)
How Late it Was, How Late covers the aftermath of a “lost weekend” for 38-year-old ex-convict Sammy. It’s a stream-of-consciousness inner monologue in which we find Sammy learning to cope with sudden blindness, seemingly induced by a police beating. He remembers nothing of the previous two days’ drinking binge, and has seemingly been left by his partner Helen, following a fight which kicked off the weekend’s events.
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha (1993)
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha is a short novel told entirely in the voice of a 10-year old child in late 1960s Barrytown. Patrick is, to all intents and purposes, an ordinary child, and through his words (all dialogue and stream of consciousness interior monologue) we’re introduced to his friends, teachers, parents and close sibling, Sinbad / Francis. There’s relatively little structure to the novel, instead it’s a series of vignettes - almost short stories in themselves, typically showing a small insight into Patrick’s life as he learns more about himself and the world around him.
Sacred Hunger (1992)
Sacred Hunger is a 620-page epic centred around the a slave ship, the Liverpool Merchant, in the 1750 and 60s. The ship is owned by the Kemp family, with the younger Erasmus Kemp one of its principle players. His cousin, against whom Erasmus bears a childhood grudge, Matthew Paris, has recently been released from a prison sentence for spreading proto-Darwinist propaganda, a crime which also inadvertently led to the death of his wife Ruth. He elects to join the crew of the Merchant as ship’s doctor, as a form of penitence and attempt to escape from his former life, much to the chagrin of the vessels’ terrifying commander, Captain Thurso.
The English Patient (1992)
The English Patient tells the story of four very different individuals who find themselves living together in abandoned villa in Northern Italy in the final months of World War II. Hana, a young Canadian nurse, has stayed behind at the villa (previously used as an improvised hospital) to care for the badly burned titular “English Patient,” who is also suffering from amnesia.
The Famished Road (1991)
The Famished Road is the first part of a trilogy (with Songs of Enchantment (1993) and Infinite Riches (1998)) following a “spirit-child” (or abiku) living in Africa (most likely Nigeria) named Azaro (a shortening of Lazarus.) The long, dream-like and poetic novel explores Azaro’s connection to a world of magical and often grotesque spirits, ingrained in the traditions of his culture, as well as his relationship with his parents, struggling in poverty in a rat-infested room in a compound controlled by an unpleasant landlord.
Possession (1990)
Possession: A Romance (to give it’s full original title) is all sorts of things at once. It’s a detective story, it’s at least two love stories, it’s an incredibly literary and self-referential piece of metafiction, it’s a compendium of (masterful) imitations of various forms of Victorian writing, the list goes on… Ultimately, the heart of the story centres around the discovery of some letters by a modern-day academic, Roland Michell. These letters are the first “clue” in a trail that uncovers a previously undocumented romance between two fictional Victorian poets.