Previous reading recommendations
Reviews British Women Writers 1910-60s: the 'middlebrows' Recent Recommended Reading
Academic/Non-Fiction

Susanne Klausen, Race, Maternity and the Politics of Birth Control in South Africa (2004), which I don't know why I haven't mentioned before, is a splendid work providing a detailed and nuanced account of the development of birth control provision in South Africa. While meticulously located in space and time, this story is clearly situated within the wider international movement for reproductive control, on which it provides an invaluable new perspective. The analysis of the complex interaction of the various forces and interest groups involved with the issue in South Africa is superb.

Sybille Bedford, Quicksands: A Memoir (2005). Includes enough for readers who haven't already read her early memoirs or autobiographically based novels, but not so much that it was to yawn 'been here before'. There is still quite a bit more one would like to know about her, though - it's very much episodic vignettes.

Diana Wallace, Sisters and Rivals in British Women's Fiction, 1914-39 (2000). Excellent, particularly the close analysis of Brittain and Holtby striking off one another in their fiction, though sticking to this narrow period left out some really interesting possibilities - such as a more detailed account of West's configuration of sororal relationships in The Fountain Overflows and sequels, and the relationships between women in The Birds Fall Down. But full of exciting thoughts and ideas.

Decca: The Letters of Jessica Mitford (edited by Peter Y Sussmann, 2006). Wonderful, rivetting, amusing, and moving reading of a long and fascinating life.

Hanne Blank, Virgin: The Untouched History (forthcoming, 2007). Was fortunate enough to be sent an advance copy of this. Not only is it impeccably scholarly, the writing has real zing - it's a very engaging read. It's an absolute paradigm of how to handle vast amounts of information spanning centuries and a highly diverse range of sources. And it is just so full of fascinating facts and thoughts about the cultural phenomenon of virginity in its various manifestations, and the vast penumbra of meaning that has been raised on the basis of an elusive physical state. Raises all sorts of intriguing further questions. Highly recommended.

Diana Wallace, The Women's Historical Novel: British Women Writers, 1900-2000 (2004). Very well worth the reading, even if I didn't agree with all of her arguments. I am all for books about women writing any genre which are not merely about the very serious and worthy examples but also about the fun playful and escapist ones as well. So here we get Georgette Heyer as well as Sylvia Townsend Warner. And Wallace is very good on how the apparently frivolous historical novel is a way to examine current notions of gender, not just femininity (some interesting discussions of the cross-dressing motif) but also different manifestations of masculinity. I'm not entirely convinced by the way Wallace has organised the material, but this is a cake that it's very, very difficult to cut so that each slice has cherries in it and is the same size, and I'm not sure how one could do it without incurring criticism from some readers. The chapters are both chronological and thematic, meaning that individual writers get discussed in detail in one chapter but only fleetingly mentioned in others. There's a lot of juicy stuff in here, and I strongly recommend the book, in spite of these minor quibbles.

Christopher Hilliard, To Exercise Our Talents: The Democratization of Writing in Britain (2006). An excellent study of how the traditionally non-literary-culture classes engaged with being creative writers. It's not just about the self-consciously 'proletarian literature' movement of the 1930s, though it has some solid work on that - and on the tendency of editors and mentors to want these writers to keep writing dispatches from areas of society not normally found in the novel/short story, rather than extend their range. It's also about writers' circles and the plethora of self-help mags and organisations aimed at helping people not just become writers but, if not make a living by it, at least get paid - so aiming at magazines with fiction, articles, etc. Hilliard works with a range of materials: publishers' records, private papers, records of local writers' circles, autobiographies, and a wide range of periodical publications.

Robertson Davies, Discoveries: Letters 1938-1975 (2002) and For Your Eye Alone: Letters 1976-1995 (1999). Two volumes of what is (one gathers) a relatively small selection from Davies's correspondence, made by his biographer, Judith Skelton Grant. They have the characteristic addictive quality of Davies's writing even when one's disagreeing with what he's actually saying. Lots of stuff about the authorial process, the annoyingness of critics who read stuff into novels, use narrow frameworks of interpretation, or assume that everything is autobiographical, the theatre, universities, education, and administration of same, social change, being Canadian, Jung, and life in general.

Julie Phillips, James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon (2006). Highly recommended. An outstanding biography. All sorts of fascinating stuff there about how a woman who did not conform to prevalent models shaped on 'feminine mystique' type notions tried to understand and negotiate her own individual position, as well as the whole 'making of a writer' aspect. Fuller review here.

Katherine Watson, Poisoned Lives: English Poisoners and Their Victims (2004). This is a really excellent study of poisoning in English society throughout the nineteenth century, and shows that the famous cases were nearly all completely atypical of the standard poisoning case. Lots of admirable stuff about the constellation of factors leading to poisonings, the impact of changes in the law, the rise of scientific toxicology, the influence of economic crisis years on statistics of poisoning cases, etc.

Kate Fisher, Birth Control, Sex, and Marriage in Britain 1918-1960 (2006). I've been waiting for this for a long time (having read various versions of Fisher's work over the years). The microcosmic counterpart to Hera Cook's magisterial The Long Sexual Revolution (2004): based on oral history work and looking at the complex process of the interactions between gender dynamics within marriage and family limitation.

Rachel Manija Brown, All the fishes come home to roost (2005). A wonderfully vivid evocation of her childhood in an Indian ashram. Harrowing in parts, but also testimony to the power of books and of story.

Farah Mendlesohn, Diana Wynne Jones: Children's Literature and the Fantastic Tradition (2005). Wonderful. Review here.

Sheenagh Pugh, The Democratic Genre: Fan Fiction in a Literary Context (2005). Perhaps the most satisfactory work I've read so far on fanfic, if only because it's not looking for the Single Unitary Theory of why people write fanfic, and not assuming that there is something Really Strange about people who do. It's a good read in itself and has a lot of interesting and thought-provoking things to say.

Kathryn Hughes, The Short Life and Long Times of Mrs Beeton (2005). There's a feeling with this book of being in safe hands, with someone who knows not just about all there is to know about her central subjects but is also thoroughly trustworthy about all the contemporary historical factors that were key elements in their lives. I have a strong prejudice in favour of biography-as-a-window-into-social-history anyway, and this is a prime example. Social mobility in the early Victorian era! Suburban development! The evolution of the woman's magazine! The history of cookery books! Etc! All of which are worked into the ongoing narrative so that you can see their relevance, rather than being info-dumped into the text in indigestible lumps. And so admirably readable.

Matt Houlbrook, Queer London: Perils and Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957 (2005). This is an excellent book, subtle and sophisticated in making various theoretical and historiographical arguments, yet full of a real sense of what 'queer' lives were like in London during the period in question. The significant class differences, the changes over time, the variations by area... documented from various personal accounts and also a huge amount of material that ended up in police files, court proceedings, etc. (Now reviewed)

Sheila Fletcher, Victorian Girls: Lord Lyttelton's Daughters (2001): this is a lovely group biography of the family of a Victorian aristocrat who was politically active (mainly in educational reform) but not, for his class, very well off. It's almost a real-life Charlotte Yonge novel - though in a rather higher social stratum than she normally depicted. Perhaps I might have liked a bit more more about the life they lived beyond the family, but they were a closely-knit bunch, and as several of them were prolific diarists and letter-writers, there's clearly a huge amount of material to be rendered into readable coherence.

Hannah Arendt, Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of a Jewess (1957). Arendt isn't quite writing the biography I would like to read, because she was a philosopher, not a social historian. But I did enjoy it, enjoy and appreciate the book that Arendt did write. It's very very good, and I've marked quite a number of places to return to and consider. Heidi Thomann Tewarson, Rahel Levin Varnhagen: the life and work of a German Jewish intellectual (1998). Perhaps doesn't match up to the Arendt version simply considered as a piece of writing, but it makes Varnhagen's life and career and the broader context of the day ever so much clearer. Now I really, really want a study of the wider circles of women she moved in, who were themselves marginal because they were actresses, or adultresses, or simply women who didn't fit the conventional scheme of things

Pamela Hirsch, Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon: feminist, artist and rebel (1998). Bodichon is a fascinating if rather neglected figure. I found the biography a bit confusing in places - dodging about chronologically, which it would, I suppose, be difficult not to do when discussing Bodichon's various activities. But otherwise, a very good read.

Penelope Fitzgerald, A House of Air (2005): collected non-fictional writings: reviews, introductions, essays, memoirs, etc. Marvellous: I really must tackle her novels: I loved this, I loved her joint biography of her father and uncles (The Knox Brothers) and her biography of Charlotte Mew.

Deborah Devonshire (Debo Mitford as was), Counting My Chickens: And Other Home Thoughts (2001). A very yummy read. Mostly columns from a huge range of publications she has written for, with a brio and verve that recall her better-known sisters.

Ghada Karmi, In Search of Fatima: A Palestinian Story (2002). A complex and moving memoir of exile and deracination. No easy answers, no simple formulas. Beautifully and vividly written.

Doris Lessing, Time Bites: Views and Reviews (2005). All sorts of fascinating stuff here, along with some rather thin makeweight snippets, and the occasional maddening thing. E.g. I'm not sure I go along with Lessing's assumption that once there was a kind of community-of-educated-readers who had all read the same things and had common ground. But there's lots and lots that I loved, about history, about the need for stories, about oppression, about cults, about biography... etc.

Azar Nafisi, Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books (2003). I had an odd experience with this much and justly praised book. About halfway through I stopped, and put it down and went away and read other things for a week or so and wasn't sure I wanted to pick it up again. But I did, and was rivetted as I had not previously been.

Carl Rollyson, To Be A Woman: the Life of Jill Craigie (2005). This was gripping. Craigie comes over as a selfmade woman rejecting her family and her past, moving in intellectual and bohemian circles, getting involved in documentary film when it was very much a boy's game (and having problems in sustaining a career in it for that reason), becoming a historian of the suffrage movement and (probably) saving vast amounts of archival material and memorabilia that would otherwise have vanished, even if she never completed her own huge study of the subject, and marrying Michael Foot. Very much about that generation of women who were stuck in the trough between feminist waves and yet were in some sense feminist, who were transitional figures between the two waves - and Craigie, though she didn't write her book, did rekindle interest in and knowledge of the suffrage movement through radio programmes, plays, articles in the press, etc. Also interesting on politics and power, and women in relation to those. I was sent this for review, and very pleased I was.

William Dalrymple, The White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-century India (2002). While Dalrymple's habit of foreshadowing future events was a bit annoying, this is a densely and lovingly researched study of the period before the Raj as we think we know it, the India of the C18th and early C19th when there was more assimilation and cultural syncretism going on on all sides than was to become the case with the hardening of Imperial attitudes, the rise of Evangelical morality, etc.

Amanda Vickery, The Gentleman's Daughter: Women's Lives in Georgian England (1998), which I have only just managed to get round to reading, and recommend very highly. Full of all sorts of insights not just into its ostensible subject but also fascinating thoughts about history and gender, the public and the private, what women's work actually consists of, class, money, marriage, etc etc etc.

L Timmel Duchamp, The Grand Conversation: Essays (2004) Excellent subtle, sophisticated and thought-provoking essays on feminism and sf.

Just as one wonders whether perhaps there is little new to be said about the Victorians, Seth Koven's Slumming: Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London (2004)gives us a wonderful piece of social/cultural history, looking at the complex agendas of various Victorian journalists, philanthropists, and social reformers to experience the slums, and explores the fuzzy boundary that was often at stake between concern, voyeurism and sensationalism. Reviewed at rather greater length in the Times Higher Educational Supplement, 18 Feb 2005.

A more narrowly focused study than the Woollacott book mentioned below, Sylvia Martin's Passionate Friends: Mary Fullerton, Mabel Singleton and Miles Franklin (2001) is an intriguing study of three early twentieth century Australian women writers and activists and their complex interrelationships.

Norma Clarke, Dr Johnson's Women. More very readable recuperation of women in the C18th literary scene.

Owen Davies, Cunning-Folk: Popular Magic in English History (2003). Davies doesn't perhaps have quite Hutton's 'wow!' factor but he's working very much in the same field of exploding assumptions about folk-magic and healing and the people who did this, through meticulous research and exemplary scholarship. Interesting about class and gender and how far they believed it themselves and how far they were scamming their clients.

Norma Clarke, The Rise and Fall of the Woman of Letters (2004) An absolutely excellent book on women as writers in the eighteenth century, the different strategies they pursued, the very various places they started and ended up, the role of social status, the increasing emphasis placed on respectability and sexual virtue as the century drew on; organised as several thematic essays focusing on specific women in particular positions, rather than a straight chronological approach. And engages with V Woolf's contention that there was no female writer worth considering between Aphra Behn and Fanny Burney.

Ronald Hutton's Witches, Druids and King Arthur (2003) Brilliant (if, as with any volume of collected essays and articles, some items are stronger than others). The essay 'The Making of Myth' should be obligatory reading.

Rani Sircar, Dancing Round the Maypole: Growing out of British India, (2003). A lovely book, full of fascinating details of, insights into, and reflections on, a lost culture. There's a whole chapter on 'Anglo-Indian' cookery, as well as plenty of other mentions of food and foodways in the complex culture/s she grew up in. Unfortunately, so far, to the best of my knowledge, it's only been published in India, but available via www.bookfinder.com.

Martha Vicinus, Intimate Friends: Women Who Loved Women, 1778-1928 (2004). A beautifully historically sensitive study of 'erotic friendships between women'. It gets away from the whole 'did they/didn't they' question to look at wider issues of passion, devotion and desire. While Vicinus does essay some categorisation by types of relationship dynamic (husband-wife, mother-daughter, female rake, etc) these aren't closed categories, and in several cases she demonstrates different relationship patterns in the life of a single individual at particular stages. She includes some married women who had important relationships with other women, and doesn't shy away from mentioning significant connections some of her subjects had with men, as friends or partners. Her subjects were all pretty much of the Anglo-American elite (and I think, given the interaction between some of the circles she discusses, mutual influences, etc, it's legitimate to include the two national backgrounds): but documentation is after all an issue for this kind of complex study. I wish, however, it hadn't stopped dead at Radclyffe Hall (this happens far too often). But on the whole it was a joy to read and very thought-stimulating.

Michael P. Farrell, Collaborative Circles: Friendship Dynamics and Creative Work (2001). Intriguing study, grounded in historical examples, of what makes a successful collaborative circle, the role of collaboration in creative production, differences arising from gender, and so forth.

Angela Woollacott, To Try Her Fortune in London: Australian Women, Colonialism, and Modernity (2001). A fascinating and thoughtful piece of social history, with all sorts of reflections on colonial and national identity, women travelling, women's clubs and support networks, whiteness, class, classlessness, etc. And lots on a huge assortment of individual Australian women.

Jerry White, Campbell Bunk: The Worst Street in North London between the Wars (1986, reissued 2003). A fascinating thick slice of social history: using a range of sources: oral history, newspaper reports, social and economic surveys, records of local government, police and court records, White reconstructs a particular slum at a particular point in history. Rich individual histories are located within the changes in the London housing market, the local employment situation, the impact of wars, etc. His analysis of issues of masculinity and interpersonal violence in this community is masterly.

Philippa Levine, Prostitution, Race, and Politics: Policing Venereal Disease in the British Empire. I stand in awe. Brilliant, and very dense, combining a solid basis of serious archival research with a sophisticated awareness of the kinds of theoretical approach productive for analysing the material discovered.

Alex Owen, A Place of Enchantment: British Occultism and the Culture of the Modern.It's very good: very much about subjectivity, interiority, the making of modern identity, the relationship between the irrational and the discourse of science. Possibly I would have liked a little more on social context.

Grahame Robb, Strangers: Homosexual Love in the Nineteenth Century. This was better than I feared it might be: it's a highly readable synthesis of a lot of work that has been done, and its coverage is geographically broad. Perhaps a tad too sanguine about the downside of the situation (blackmail, etc, quite apart from the law itself), especially for the less socially privileged.

Lois Banner's Intertwined Lives: Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, and Their Circle (2003), well written, it's sensitive to the period, Banner doesn't speculate wildly but does hypothesise interpretations and possibilities and how much the evidence will bear. A fascinating story of friendship and free love.

Michael T. Saler's The Avant-Garde in Interwar London: Medieval Modernism and the London Underground (1999), which was excellent in spite of the rather misleading title: it's about a particular strand within the avant-garde of the day which combined aesthetic modernism with ethical ideals about community and bringing art and good design to the people, i.e. a continuation by other means of the kinds of ideas the pre-Great War Arts and Crafts movement was about.

Chandak Sengoopta, Imprint of the Raj: how fingerprinting was born in colonial India (2003). This is a good readable short book about the far from straightforward development of fingerprinting as a criminological technique. Apart from all the stories of the individuals involved, the important role of the Indigo Riots, and so forth, what made me smile about this book was that fingerprinting per se was useless without a sophisticated system of information retrieval (also developed in India), which reminded me of the complexity of the India Office Records registration systems when I worked there.

Hera Cook, The Long Sexual Revolution: English Women, Sex, and Contraception 1800-1975 (2004). Rave, rave, rave. This is a wonderful book which elegantly weaves together a vast range of information from different scholarly fields. I don't think there was a single place in it where I went 'huh?' or 'ye-es: - but...', let alone that all too frequent response 'Yer what??!'. Longer review to come in due course.

Susan Williams, The People's King: The Betrayal and Abdication of the First Modern Monarch (2003). A 'thick' account of the Abdication Crisis: fuller review to come.

Between Friends: The Correspondence of Hannah Arendt and Mary McCarthy 1949-1975 (1995, edited by Carol Brightman): a wonderful window into a friendship between two women

Georgina Ferry, Dorothy Hodgkin: A Life. The fascinating story of a remarkable women scientist and her milieu, both in science and in humanitarianism and progressive politics.

Pat Conroy, My Losing Season (2002). Never thought I would read a book about basket-ball. But it does vividly convey what it is like to participate in a particular sport as well as analyse that persistent theme of Conroy's fiction, what it means to be a man

The late Carolyn Heilbrun's The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty (1998), and Women's Lives: The View from the Threshold (1999), both thought-provoking.

Amy Bloom, Normal: Transsexual CEOs, Crossdressing Cops and Hermaphrodites with Attitude (2003). A sensitive study of three groups on the sexual/gender margins.

Kate Millet, Mother Millet (2001).

Mary Laven, Virgins of Venice: Enclosed Lives and Broken Vows in the Renaissance Convent (2002). An engaging study, combining remarkable details of the lives of individuals with sensitive analysis of the meaning of the enclosure and enforced celibacy of women and their relationships with the world beyond convent walls.

David Laskin, Partisans: Marriage, Politics, and Betrayal Among the New York Intellectuals (2000): a rivetting account of the lives and loves and marriages of a group of New York intellectuals, associated with the Partisan Review in the 1930s, and over the course of next several decades. Particularly evocative about the women of the group, exceptional female intellectuals at a time when feminism was not an option.

Dennis Altman, Global Sex (2001): perceptive, critical, subtle, immensely well-informed and very lucid about this extremely complex subject. Excellent and thought-provoking.

Jonathan Rose, The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes (2001). Covers an enormous amount of ground and raises a lot of fascinating questions. Strongly agree with Rose's point that what one reader gets out of a particular book at a specific moment in history and at a particular phase of their own life is not necessarily what the academic critic reads into it. He recuperates a huge area of 'hidden history' in the working class struggle for learning and engagement with 'high' cultural forms. Perhaps his obvious fondness for his subjects makes him somewhat hostile to other groups, but this study can be highly recommended.

Kali Israel, Names and Stories: Emilia Dilke and Victorian Culture (1999). A wonderful study of a fascinating woman, a theoretically sophisticated analysis based in deep archival research and understanding of the wider social dynamics of the period. An unusual way to 'do biography' but one which pays off in this case, partly perhaps because Emilia Pattison/Dilke and the other players in her story/ies have been so much written about already, ever since their lifetimes. Marriage, sex, scandal, Victorian feminism: this book has so much I'm surprised it hasn't had wider notice.

Leila Rupp, A Desired Past: a short history of same-sex relations in America (1999): a very useful overview of the shifts in the conceptualisation of same-sex desire and homoerotic identities in the United States. Emphasis on the historically constructed nature of possibilities and identities

Yvonne Kapp, Time Will Tell: A Memoir (2003), a wonderful piece of autobiography which covers a number of my areas of interest: British bohemia, women in communism/on the left, women and sexual identity/orientation in the early C20th, saving archives against the odds, the joys of biographical research: in the context of an amazing and fascinating life.

Wendy Doniger, The Bedtrick: Tales of Sex & Masquerade (2000): a dense and multidimensional study of this widespread narrative trope.Also read the companion volume, Splitting the Difference: Gender and Myth in Ancient Greece and India (1999).

Something of a chagrining admission: I have only just read Gail Bederman's Manliness and Civilisation (1995) (on my to-read list for a long time) which I recommend very highly: a wonderful, illuminating, thought-provoking study. However, it was worth waiting until I had my own copy so I could note for future reference particularly good points and passages.

Rebecca West, Survivors in Mexico (2003). Vintage West (unlike The Sentinel, ) and very welcome, even if it does come to an abrupt and unresolved stop (but could she ever have repeated the magnificent conclusion of Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1942)?). All praise to Bernard Schweizer for his painstaking job of constructing this out of unfinished drafts and revisions.

Jill Gardiner, From the Closet to the Screen: Women at the Gateways Club, 1945-85 (2003). An extremely readable slice of hidden social history; lesbian subculture in London, focussing on the Chelsea club which figured in the film, The Killing of Sister George (1968).

Better to Have Loved: the life of Judith Merril (2002). Something of a fix-up of autobiographical essays by Merril (probably best known as writer of science fiction and anthologist) with additional material culled from her correspondence by her granddaughter, but a compelling account of this figure from the forgotten generation of feminism.

Maria DiBattista, Fast-Talking Dames (2001). A wonderful book about that brief moment in Hollywood when screwball comedy rewarded women characters for being smart and witty. Makes one want to rush out and see the movies she describes.

The Journals of Mary Butts edited by Natalie Blondel (2002). Fascinating reading of the thoughts and reactions of an intriguing individual, during a period of considerable interest to me, 1916-1937. All sorts of unexpected connections. Also recommended, Blondel's biography of her, Mary Butts: Scenes from the Life (1998).

Alison Lurie, Boys and Girls Forever (2003). In the absence of a new Lurie novel, much as I would like one, I'm quite happy to make do with these wonderful essays on children's literature and its authors. (And on a similar topic, recommend Francis Spufford's The Child that Books Built: a life in reading (2002)

Bernard Schweizer, Rebecca West: Heroism, Rebellion and the Female Epic, (2002). A rivetting study of one of my all-time favourite authors, which gives due weight to the enduring quality of West's feminism, by someone who has painstakingly reconstructed her late, unpublished, book on Mexico, scheduled to appear shortly.

Caroline Zilboorg, The Masks of Mary Renault (2001). While taking a biographical approach, uses the insights of queer theory in a subtle and convincing way to explore this complex woman and her writing.

Judith Flanders, A Circle of Sisters: Alice Kipling, Georgiana Burne-Jones, Agnes Poynter and Louisa Baldwin (2001) A group biography which is both fascinating social history and almost a post-Victorian Victorian novel.

Elizabeth Wilson, Bohemians: The Glamorous Outcasts (2002). More wide-ranging in time and space than Nicholson's book (see below) and more theoreticallly informed. But still very readable. Extremely good on women and bohemia, and also addresses questions of politics and spirituality. My only regret is this book was not even longer.

Penelope Fitzgerald, The Knox Brothers (1977 - just republished). A delightful and compelling group biography of the author's father and brothers (and a certain amount about the rest of the family). Not only were they all, in some degree, eccentric, the forms of their eccentricity differed widely. The reader learns a good deal about naval cryptography in the First World War and the worlds of interwar Anglo-Catholic communities and Catholic converts, as well as the politics of Punch, which Fitzgerald's father wrote for and eventually edited. (My only complaint is that I would have liked a little more speculation about the emotional/sexual tendencies of this fascinating crew, and that G. B. Stern, a great friend of Fr Ronald Knox, and her writing about him - he was clearly a powerful influence in her own conversion - do not figure).

Angus McLaren, Sexual Blackmail: A Modern History (2002). The latest from the author of Prescription for Murder: The Victorian Serial Killings of Dr Neil Cream (1993), The Trials of Masculinity: Policing Sexual Boundaries, 1870-1930 (1997), and numerous others. Enough said.

Virginia Nicholson, Among the Bohemians: Experiments in Living 1900-1939 (2002).A very enjoyable read about this hard to pin down but definitely significant socially grouping/mindset. Although some of the contextual material could be better, and it would have been nice to have had some attention paid to political affiliations and activities(e.g. what could possibly have been the attraction of Fascism to certain bohemians? and the intriguing way Naomi Mitchison split herself into 2 sister-characters, a politician's wife and a bohemian artist, in We Have Been Warned (1935)), still worth reading.

Lisa Z Sigel, Governing Pleasures: pornography and social change in England, 1815-1914. This is a wonderful study which pays close attention to the questions of the production, distribution and consumption of pornography, as well as what constituted 'pornography' in nineteenth and early twentieth century England. One of a number of studies which are demonstrating how specifically constructed within particular periods in time definitions and representations of the 'obscene' are. See also, for example, Linda Williams' classic work Hard Core: power, pleasure, and the "frenzy of the visible" (1989, expanded edition, 1999).

I can't imagine why I didn't put this one in earlier: A Susan Williams, Ladies of Influence (2000, paperback 2001). A wonderful study of seven women in interwar Britain who enjoyed the privileges and the influence available to the political and social elite (to which they belonged either by birth or by marriage). And they were all very different in their aims and impact, ranging from the Tory hostess Lady Londonderry who developed a tender friendship with Labour leader Ramsay Macdonald, to the radical anti-racist and patron of the arts Nancy Cunard. Extremely readable.

Rather off my usual track, as I am not terribly well-up in the history of early modern science, but this probably makes me the intended reader for John Henry's Knowledge is Power: How Magic, the Government and an Apocalyptic Vision inspired Francis Bacon to create Modern Science (2002). This is a short and very readable account of the rather murky origins of the 'Scientific Revolution' and a fascinating, if not entirely likeable, character.

Joy Dixon, Divine Feminine: Theosophy and Feminism in England (2001). A wonderful, dense, and enlightening book, not only for its helpful account of the internal politics of the Theosophical Society and its offshoots, but by demonstrating how important this alternative spiritual system was in late C19th and early C20th Britain. She makes a strong case that far from being (as it is often perceived) a haunt of right-wingers and even fascist sympathisers, at least in the earlier (Besant) years it had a strong appeal to socialists, feminists and 'progressives' and that there were in fact various forms of social action emerging from it. Also suggests that the ideas associated with theosophy had a broad appeal well beyond those formally affiliated.

Lucy Bland, Banishing the Beast: Feminism, Sex and Morality. This classic work is now back in print from Tauris Parke, London, 2002. Review (of original 1995 Penguin edition, with slightly different title, but nothing else changed).

Jane Jordan, Josephine Butler, John Murray, 2001. At last a modern biography of this hugely important nineteenth century woman. As with any biography, sometimes there are things and aspects one would like more of, but this is a remarkable picture of a complex woman and her family.

June Hannam and Karen Hunt, Socialist Women: Britain, 1880s-1920s, Routledge, 2002. An excellent and important study which gets beyond the previous marginalisation of these women in both histories of labour and socialism and histories of feminism and the suffrage movement. Subtle and nuanced, it avoids the simplistic telling of the already well-known stories of a relatively few women within this group, while using the stories and experiences of individual women involved in socialism to illuminate the problems experienced. Makes it clear that putting women into the history of socialism is not a question of adding a chapter on 'women' or dropping a few names, but of thinking more closely about the gendering of politics and the sex-role assumptions even of political groups which consciously set out to recruit both men and women and to promote an egalitarian agenda.

Dianne Purkiss, Troublesome Things: A History of Fairies and Fairy Stories, Penguin 2001. An extraordinary and compelling read. Must look out for more of her work.

Sarah Bakewell, The Smart: the Story of Margaret Caroline Rudd and the Unfortunate Perreau Brothers, Chatto, 2001: a study of a notorious web of sexuality and conspiracy in C18th London by a former colleague of mine at the Wellcome Library which has been very well received by reviewers.

Elizabeth Reis (ed), American Sexual Histories, Blackwell, 2000. A useful anthology of primary and secondary source material from the colonial period to the present.

Alison Oram and Annmarie Turnbull, The Lesbian History Sourcebook: Love and sex between women in Britain from 1780 to 1970, Routledge, 2001. Covers an immense range of material from medical treatises, legal proceedings, oral history, and fiction. A massive task of selection - there is a lot more material out there, but this moves what's generally available well on from the usual suspects.

Lara Marks, Sexual Chemistry: The Story of the Contraceptive Pill , Yale University Press, 2001. A solidly and extensively researched book which demonstrates the truly international (rather than simply North American) story of the Pill. Also reinstates female agency, from the significant roles of Katherine McCormick and Margaret Sanger in its early developmental stages to the women who demanded it. Another example of her ability (cf Metropolitan Maternity, which is apparently, shock, horror, out of print already) to collate a range of information in an enlightening fashion.

Owen Davies, Witchcraft, Magic and Culture 1736-1951, Manchester University Press (1999). A fascinating study from the Witchcraft Statute of 1736 (which removed the penalties for being a witch and penalised 'pretenses to such arts and powers', to its repeal in 1951 (and concurrent modification of the Vagrancy Law as applied to fortune-tellers). A useful complement to Hutton's Triumph of the Moon.

Laura Doan, Fashioning Sapphism: The origins of a modern English lesbian culture, Columbia University Press, 2001. A splendidly nuanced study of a range of issues around perceptions of female-female relationships and self-presentations in the early decades of the twentieth century, and their relations to wider questions of modernity and modernism. Redeems sexology and the sexologists from the unfair stigma they have often received and demonstrates the creative and dynamic ways women could work with their ideas to fashion identities. Explores the intricacies of the reception of Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness and its prosecution, to undermine the assumptions of a monolithic homophobic reaction.

Heather Creaton, Victorian Diaries, Mitchell Beazley, 2001. 'A collection of ordinary diary entries from a cross section of classes and lifestyles showing the essentials of the Victorians' daily reality: their family concerns, medical conditions and education. Included in the book are entries from an actor, a schoolboy, a Countess and an engraver.' From the author of the equally recommended Sources for the History of London, 1939-45, British Records Association, 1998.

Peter Gordon and David Doughan, Dictionary of British Women's Organisations, 1825-1960, Frank Cass Woburn Publishing, 2001. Covers a vast range of the diverse ways in which women have come together for a variety of purposes, philanthropic, social, sporting, political... and more. One of those reference books it's hard to stop browsing in.

Katharine Cockin, Women and Theatre in the Age of Suffrage: The Pioneer Players, Palgrave, 2001. 'An interdisciplinary approach to women's involvement in theatre during the British women's suffrage movement.... tests the claim that the Pioneer Players was a women's theatre and investigates... the Pioneer Players' relationship to the women's suffrage movement, to feminism and to women's writing.'

Chandak Sengoopta, Otto Weininger, University of Chicago Press, 2000. Don't know why I didn't mention this earlier. Weininger, who committed suicide aged 23 after publishing the enormously influential Sex and Character in 1903, is an often neglected figure in studies of ideas around sex and gender at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth century, yet at the time his ideas were probably more widely discussed than those of Freud. A solidly contextualised study of this controversial figure.

Ellen Jordan, The Women's Movement and Women's Employment in Nineteenth Century Britain, Routledge (Routledge Research in Gender and History), 2000. A great study of the entry of middle class women into forms of employment other than teaching (usually as a governess) or needlework during the Victorian era. Jordan demonstrates that it was not (as often argued) a case of the demands of the economy inevitably sucking women out of the domestic sphere and into clerical posts, the Post Office, newly professionalised teaching and nursing, medicine, librarianship, and a range of other 'professions for women'. In fact it was the result of pressure and campaigning by the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women which brought about an ideological change and encouraged employers in a variety of sectors to take a chance on employing 'ladies'. Jordan's terrific articles on women pharmacists and the lady-clerks at the Prudential Insurance Co were a foretaste of this extensively researched and theoretically sophisticated monograph.

Roger Davidson, Dangerous Liaisons: A Social History of Venereal Disease in Twentieth-Century Scotland, Rodopi, 2000. Highly recommended. A meticulous study of disease in its social context, and of interest generally (i.e. not just to Scottish or medical historians). Illuminates wider questions about attitudes towards disease and deviance and on VD control in C20th Britain.

Paula Bartley, Prostitution: Prevention and Reform in Britain, 1860-1914 , Routledge, 1999. Gets away from the usual concentration on the Contagious Diseases Acts to consider the broader strategies taken against the 'Great Social Evil'.

Shani D'Cruze, Crimes of Outrage: Sex, violence and Victorian working women, UCL Press, 1998. A richly researched and excitingly theorised study.

Patrica Hollis, Jennie Lee: A Life, Oxford University Press, 1997. Deeply researched and well-written biography of a woman committed to socialism but by no means a feminist - does not gloss over the contradictions and the complexities of a woman who had a notable political career, in fact, several, both independent and being wife to Nye Bevan.

Ronald Hutton, The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft, Oxford University Press, 1999. A wide-ranging, dense, rich, extremely scholarly account of the complex and tangled roots of Wicca. An engrossing read.

Louise A. Jackson, Child Sexual Abuse in Victorian England , Routledge, 2000. A sensitive and historically nuanced account of a complex and difficult subject.

Cheryl Law, Suffrage and Power, IB Tauris, 1998: strongly and convincingly contests the thesis that feminism withered after the grant of the limited suffrage in 1918, showing that not only was the campaign to extend the vote to all women over 21 kept up, the energies which had gone into the suffrage movement were directed to a myriad different causes of benefit to women.

John Lucas, The Radical Twenties: Writing, Politics and Culture, Five Leaves Publications, 1997. Though Lucas sometimes relies rather uncritically on Graves and Hodges, The Long Weekend (which, though good on the ambience of the time, is decidedly cavalier with checkable facts such as dates) this is a very attractive re-reading of the 1920s, putting back the radical trends. A valuable reminder of the serious commitment to causes of figures such as Nancy Cunard, whose literary avatars tend to appear as depoliticised sirens.

Sue Morgan, A Passion for Purity, University of Bristol, Department of Theology & Religious Studies, 1999. A wonderfully subtle study of late Victorian social purity reformer Ellice Hopkins.

Bonnie Kime Scott, Refiguring Modernism: The Women of 1928 and Refiguring Modernism : Postmodern Feminist Readings of Woolf, West, and Barnes, Indian University Press, 1995. Dense and exciting re-insertion of women into the narratives of modernism. As a long-time Rebecca West fan I particularly liked her placing of West (and lesser-known figures of her circle) within this story.

Marion Shaw, The Clear Stream: A life of Winifred Holtby, Virago, 1999, rescues this important figure from her role as supporting character to Vera Brittain. While the thematic, rather than chronological, arrangement perhaps fails to convey the way that the strands of Holtby's life must have been interwoven and constantly impinging upon one another in her day to day existence, this is a valuable study.

Selected Letters of Rebecca West Bonnie Kime Scott (Editor): apart from some quibble with the footnoting (occasionally these seem to annotate unnecessarily, or else don't explain things one would like elucidated) my only complaint about this is that it is not much longer!

***

Fiction (mostly)

Elizabeth Bear, Carnival (2006). Rivetting, compelling, and unpredictable. Great worldbuilding, characters and tension of situation. Relationships that centre on unresolved emotional issues and conflicting agendas. It might held to have a feel for some of the genre motifs it's riffing off, but that's not really necessary to enjoy it.

Karen Traviss, Matriarch (2006). Highly recommended, but as it is mid-series would not suggest starting here. But it just keeps the action and tension and the unexpected coming. Her Star Wars: Legacy of the Force: Bloodlines (2006), even though it is working within what I suspect are fairly stringently drawn lines of character and longer plot arcs, was still a surprisingly good read, the characters were not cardboard, and the sliding of one character towards the Dark Side was plausible and not all about 'whee! I'm villainous and evil, me!'

Catherynne Valente, The Orphan's Tales: In the Night Garden (2006). Wow, this is one that demands more than one reading, it's dense, allusive internally and extra-textually, exquisitely written, folding and unfolding from story to story.

L Timmel Duchamp, Tsunami (2007) (Book 3 of the Marq'ssan Cycle). I wasn't sure how or where this could go on after the shocking yet inevitable ending of Renegade, but it just picked me up and compelled me from the outset. Outcomes remain unpredictable.

P C Hodgell, To Ride a Rathorn (2006). Another one which is not the place to start, but keeps up the fascination of this series.

Lemony Snicket, The End (2006). An ending to the series which actually worked, neither completely at odds with what had gone before, nor unbearably bleak.

Caroline Stevermer and Patricia Wrede, The Mislaid Magician (2006). Magic and railways, what's not to like? Along with the further development of the characters from the earlier books.

Edward St Aubyn, On the Edge (1998). Scintillatingly brilliant, a novel about people in the 'Human Potential Movement'. Most fictional works which have ventured into this area have gone either for some blend of satire and farce, or for the sinister creepy cult angle. St Aubyn strikes the difficult balance between vivid awareness of the absurdities, and a recognition that there are, at least for some individuals, surprising moments of illumination and transcendance, and that the various gurus and anti-gurus can combine genuine insights with utter nonsense. His A Clue to the Exit (2000) was also streets ahead of most contemporary writing, but not quite in the same class as On the Edge or the trilogy Some Hope (see below).

Kage Baker, The Machine's Child (2006) Left hanging over a cliff again at the end, wondering how on earth she is going to wind up all the threads in the grand finale. Panting for more.

Delia Sherman, Changeling (2006). There may be common themes, but Sherman is not a writer who is writing the same book over and over again. Changeling seems entirely different from Through a Brazen Mirror (1988) or The Porcelain Dove (1993). This is an intriguing meta-take on fairy-tale motifs set in present-day New York.

Diana Wynne Jones, The Pinhoe Egg (2006). Utterly delightful, and although there is probably no such thing as a bad Wynne Jones, among the stronger works - it has much more going for it than Conrad's Fate (2005), set in the same universe (the Chrestomanci series).

Sherwood Smith, Inda (2006). This was a smashing read, I long for the next episode. Subtlety and diplomacy and not just hacking one's way through the opposition are depicted as good (and difficult) things, female characters are shown as strong and having agency without having to 'drag up', plus admirable complexity of the characters and their responses to the general demands of the culture and the situations in which they find themselves.

Jo Walton, Farthing (2006). A very well-worked out combination of a traditional English countryhouse murder mystery and an alternate-history in which the Nazis didn't win, but a peace was successfully negotiated with the UK so that Hitler could turn his attention undivided to the Soviet Union. The period tone and feel are very well done indeed, as are the voices of the two narrative strands. There are certain hints that there are other differences in this particular version of British and European history than just the peace settlement and the persistence of US isolationist policies: but these are far from intrusive.

Margaret Drabble, The Sea Lady (2006). A curious and complex book and I'm pretty sure that the first reading has missed things. It returns to one of Drabble's recurrent themes, in which a character feels stuck in a dead-end from which they have been, in some sense, shaken loose by the end of the novel.

Edward St Aubyn, Some Hope (omnibus edition of the 'Patrick Melrose trilogy', Never Mind 1992, Bad News 1994, Some Hope 1998). This was stunning. St Aubyn deals with some supremely nasty characters - Patrick's father is the nastiest, not just in terms of the other noxious characters in these particular novels, but one of the nastiest pieces of work in fiction - and unpleasant situations, and nonetheless has glimmers of decency and kindness and possibilities of some kind of redemption. The three novels each take short concentrated spans of time in Patrick Melrose's life, into which other characters' lives and viewpoints are interwoven. Characters come and go and recur, sometimes very unexpectedly. Some are stuck in the same posture, and others manage to change. Brilliant.

Jacqueline Carey, Kushiel's Scion (2006). More luscious self-indulgence.

Sarah Monette, The Virtu (2006). I liked this rather more than Melusine - partly because there were not the extended periods of Felix being out of his mind. Longing for next installment.

Ellen Kushner, The Privilege of the Sword (2006). This was wonderful, and I need to go back and reread Swordspoint and The Fall of the Kings to pick up all the connections.

L Timmel Duchamp, Renegade: Book Two of the Marq'ssan Cycle (2006). Intense, rivetting, shocking. I am relieved to see that next book is out in a few months, I'm not sure I can wait another whole year.

Elizabeth Bear, Blood and Iron (2006). Another intense gripping read, full of complex strands and relationships and difficult choices. Stunning depiction of the two realms.

Sylvia Townsend Warner, Summer Will Show (1936). Very, very good. Intense friendship between women! Revolution of 1848! Communism! etc. The period detail feels spot-on without being heavy. Though would an efficient manager of her own affairs and estate like Sophia really not know if her husband was legally able to cut off her access to her own money and property?

Ursula Le Guin, Voices(2006) liked this rather better than Gifts (2005) to which it is a sequel: Le Guin seems to be working on a delicate border between the archetypal and the stereotyped, but on the whole, keeping the balance at the right point.

Sheila Kaye-Smith, Joanna Godden (1921): suppressing one's Cold Comfort Farm-induced qualms about intense novels of life in rural Sussex. Not bad, actually. Story of a woman who inherits her father's farm on Romney Marsh and sets out to farm it herself (rather than either marrying someone who will take this on or hiring a man to manage it). Less about 'timeless rurality' than I'd imagined, much more located in a specific time as well as place. Susan Spray (1931) was erhaps a bit more sukebindy, but still a good read, and again, not about timeless rhythms of rural life, very much about a period when even in remote agricultural hamlets life was changing.

May Sinclair, The Rector of Wyck(1925). That strange thing, a compelling read about good people and disappointed lives. I was surprisingly gripped by this story of the young woman who is a non-believer and then falls in love with and marries a clergyman, and their lives together in a small rural parish. Must read more Sinclair.

Lettice Cooper, The New House (1936, recently republished by Persephone Press). A delightful but far from lightweight book, set in the mid-1930s in a Northern provincial city. Takes one day in the life of a family, when the mother (and unmarried daughter-at-home) move out of the old family home into a smaller house. It's a lovely study in generations (in particular generations of women in the same family) and in the relationships/similarities/differences between different family members: the mother, her maiden-aunt sister, the two daughters and their married brother (and his wife and much-loved infant daughter). Also recommended National Provincial (1938), a panoramic study of a city similar to, if not, Leeds in the late 1930s at a time of economic and political upheaval and uncertainty.

Megan Whalen Turner, The Thief (1996), The Queen of Attolia (2001), The King of Attolia (2006). A series of 3 excellent, compelling, fantasies, marketed as YA but with a good deal of sophistication, subtlety and complexity. Highly recommended, though saying too much about plot details is difficult without spoilers.

Kate O'Brien, As Music and Splendour (1958): the story of two young girls, Rose and Clare, who are sent from Ireland to a convent in Paris to study singing, in the late 1880s or so, and then bundled off to Rome to more advanced studies. They both become opera divas, although Clare is more interested in singing non-operatic, church, music: but they are intended for opera, where the money to pay back their patrons in Ireland, the convent in Paris, etc, comes from. It's very good, and seems convincing, about the music world, especially the operatic world, of Italy at that period. It also has, and I think this is remarkable for 1958 and a woman of 61 writing: female friendship - Rose and Clare are and remain friends, not hairpulling screeching rivals; a non-pathologised lesbian relationship - while this is not altogether happy, it's shown as something that is good for Clare; Rose cool-mindedly choosing her first lover, even if she gets carried away into emotional depths she doesn't want with the second. Sophisticated and mature relationships between various of the other characters. Maybe not the Greatest Novel Ever Written, but it is a very worthwhile and engaging read. Also recommended by O'Brien, The Ante-Room (1934), set around the same period in an upper middle class Irish family household over a few days, with the mother dying of cancer.

Joolz Denby, Borrowed Light (2006): her usual compelling narrative voice, plot tension, etc, in the context of a Cornish seaside village of various potentially mutually antagonistic groups.

Andrew Taylor, The American Boy: compelling in a rather different register to the Lydmouth mysteries, though I suspect I may have missed some of the Poe allusions.

Justine Larbalestier, Magic or Madness (2005). Enjoyed this. I liked the solidity of the different settings, and I really liked the ambiguity at the end. It could have been one of those simple 'reversal of everything protag initially believed' plot twists, but this was setting up something much more ambivalent in its effect. Looking forward to the sequel. Magic Lessons (2006) keeps up the tension and the ambiguity about people's motives and intentions, adds yet more questions into the mix, and leaves the reader longing for the next volume.

Naomi Novik, Temeraire (2005). Awwwww, bless! This is a book I want to pick up and cuddle, it's delightful. As were sequels Throne of Jade (2006) and Black Powder War (2006)

Gwyneth Jones, Life (2004). This was very good, very plausibly worked out, very well-written, lots of interesting ideas and questions, the characters were well-drawn and had depth and complexity. Yet somehow I prefer the continuing sequence of which the latest installment is Band of Gypsys.

Penelope Fitzgerald, The Bookshop (1978) and Offshore (1979) and Human Voices (1980). Fitzgerald is now definitely on my 'get hold of everything she's written and read it' list. These three short novels are wonderful - economical and precise. I like the sense that she's focussing on marginal lives.

Karen Joy Fowler, Sister Noon (2001): I found this much more interesting and original than The Jane Austen Book Club, which I thought rather slight. The magic-realist note works, I think, rather effectively for a very specific historical and geographical location in which numerous different worlds were colliding.

Karen Traviss, The World Before (2005): definitely keeping up the standard and the tension and showing characters changing and developing in response to circumstance.

Alison Lurie, Truth and Consequences (2005). I have been panting for this ever since I heard it was in the offing, because I am a longtime Lurie fan. I loved it, I experienced a pang when I realised I was over halfway through and the end could not be far off. I am also strongly tempted to go back and reread The Last Resort (1998) and The Truth about Lorin Jones (1988).

Tanith Lee writing as Esther Garber, Thirty Four (2004). Metafictional games, lesbian eroticism, Lee's style... what's not to like?

Sarah Monette, Melusine (2005). This was a book that demanded a second reading, following a mad gallop through just to find out what happened. It was a wonderful read and I'm longing for the sequel. Things I particularly liked: the naming, wonderfully strange and evocative. The light touch with world-building and the non-standard world that was built. The fact that although the central characters are male, there's a sense of women having agency, being individuals, and generally present in the society as depicted.

Sara Paretsky, Fire Sale (2005). Think I prefer this to the previous one, though generally she seems well back on form. I liked in this one the fact that she meets another woman who manages to make her feel like Ms SafetyFirst-Riskaverse, and the fact that there were fundamentalist Christian characters who weren't baddies and were three-dimensional.

Barbara Hambly, Circle of the Moon (2005). Okay, not the new Sun Wolf and Starhawk that I wish she'd write, but is there such thing as a bad Hambly? (okay, there have been a few massively depressing books, but the only really unreadable one I've come across was a co-authored thing in some kind of franchised series).

Andrew Taylor, Call the Dying (2004). The latest volume in the Lydmouth sequence, which I can't believe I haven't mentioned before. Wonderful feeling for the chilly dreary repression of the early 50s in provincial England, and the predicaments of the well-drawn characters. Complex mysteries going on under the complacent surface of small-town life.

Marie Jakober, Only Call Us Faithful (2002). This was wonderful. The American Civil War is a subject I tend to avoid in literature, but this story of a Southern Union sympathiser and secret agent was terrific. It's marginally fantasy - use of revenants reflecting on the events of the book, especially the obliteration of certain things from historical memory and the creation of myths. Jakober touches on the issue of people rewriting history to imply that the impersonal forces of progress would have achieved things that were, in fact, due to human struggles (in this case the abolition of slavery). An excellent work.

Naomi Kritzer, Freedom's Apprentice (2005): sequel to Freedom's Gate (2004), and I thought rather better - that was a rather stock (if well-done) 'learning better' narrative and this was about what happens after a character sees the light. Fulfilling the promise of her earlier duology, Fires of the Faithful (2002) and Turning the Storm (2003)

Elizabeth Bear, Scardown (2005) The much-anticipated sequel to Hammered and similarly edge of the seat fast-moving sf; and similarly cliff-hanging ending. Looking forward to the next volume.

Alanya to Alanya (Marq'ssan Cycle, Book 1) by L. Timmel Duchamp (2005), has the tension and pace of a good thriller, plus a well-worked-out extrapolated future - the outcome of gradual cumulative changes that seem quite plausible. One of the strengths of the book is the way that information is only gradually revealed during the course of the story, that there are no expository dumps but the build-up of people's assumptions and reactions and carefully dropped clues and foreshadowing until the advent of revelations that make absolute sense of things that have seemed bothering. There's also a sense that Duchamp has much more in reserve: for example, there are certainly things the reader has not yet discovered about the Marq'ssan by the end of Alanya to Alanya. Without that feeling that one sometimes gets that information is being withheld just to create mystery. Also to be recommended, her collection of shorter pieces, Love's Body: Dancing in Time (2004)

Two volumes of short stories by Ethel Colburn Mayne, Things that no-one tells (1910) and The Inner Circle (1925). Interesting - very much dealing with marginality and liminality and things that don't happen or can't easily be articulated, transient moments of insight or connection or misunderstanding.

Barbara Hambly, Dead Water (2004). If this is, as widely rumoured, the last of the Benjamin January series, it is a fitting culmination, which makes one want to go back and re-read from the beginning in the light of the arc suggested by the decision January makes here: that they were episodes in a personal journey. It's an extraordinarily satisfactory ending without at all compromising the reality of the historical situation or what has gone before.

Lorna Freeman, Covenants: A Borderlands Novel (2004). Looks like bog-standard generic fantasy, but worth reading. It has brio, it has humour, it has interesting interactions between individualised characters. I look forward to seeing more by her.

Marcia Muller, The Dangerous Hour (2004): a new Sharon McCone, and very good - I prefer these to her standalones.

Joolz Denby, Billie Morgan (2004). A tremendous followup to her two earlier novels. Salt and bitter and good. Compelling narrative voice, vivid characters, complex and realistic relationships, grittily real setting.

Candas Jane Dorsey, A Paradigm of Earth (2003). Much more linear and less obviously strange than Black Wine (1997), but still a sense of mystery and the unknowable remains. I liked the complexity of the characters' interactions.

Kage Baker, The Graveyard Game (2004). Perhaps suffice it to say that having finished this I immediately ordered a copy of the next volume. The suspense is building. However, it's building slowly, and what I found with this and the Dorsey was a tremendous enjoyment of reading them and involvement in what was going on, a desire to keep reading, which was not about slam-bang action and what happens next. Her The Anvil of the World (2003) (not part of this sequence) was also worth reading: interesting subversion of some bog-standard fantasy tropes.

Sara Maitland, On Becoming a Fairy Godmother (2003). Her latest volume of short stories, which I appear to have missed until just recently. As usual, there's a resonant use of fairytale and mythic tropes and rewritings of familiar narratives. One or two of these seem familiar (a version of the Jael/Deborah story featured, as I recall, in her first novel Daughter of Jerusalem). Very much to the fore, however, is a new concern with questions of ageing in women's lives, and becoming the older generation.

Two Tanith Lees: Mortal Suns (2004). It was only after finishing that I thought that I might have preferred the story after the story actually told, the process by which the narrator became the visionary and poetess who tells the tale of her earlier life. But that's a quibble. What was there was pretty good. And Metallic Love (2005). Sequel to The Silver Metal Lover (1985), which I must re-read (in fact I feel that at some point I may go on a Tanith Lee re-reading binge...) Rather a non-ending, perhaps.

Diana Wynne-Jones, Conrad's Fate (2005). I'm not sure I like the Chrestomanci sequence as much as some of her other work, but I'm not sure there's such a thing as a bad Wynne-Jones, just some that are better than others.

Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Balance of Trade (2004): set in the Liaden Universe of their other books, but at an earlier period and with different characters. Very enjoyable.

Barbara Hambly, Days of the Dead (2003) more Benjamin January, this time away from New Orleans to early C19th Mexico. Another gripping read. John Maddox Roberts, The River God's Revenge (2004), another enjoyable mystery in the SPQR series, and he makes defective public works the effective centre of the plot, a nice unusual twist.

Two excellent new science-fiction authors: Karen Traviss, with City of Pearl (2004) and Crossing the Line (2004) - strong characters, intriguing setting, powerful plotting, subtle shadings and complexities, and currently cliff-hanging ending waiting for next volume. Elizabeth Bear, Hammered (2004), also gives strong female characters and dynamic plotting in a cyber-punkish near future: again, leaves one eagerly anticipating next volume.

Susan Stinson, Venus of Chalk (2004) a quietly compelling and delightful work.

Running out of Dawn Powells to read, but the short stories in Sunday Monday and Always (1999), if not providing the the pleasures of her novels, have the kick of a dry martini, and similarly, probably work most satisfactorily if you don't take too many at a time.

Gillian Bradshaw, Render unto Caesar (2003): although it doesn't quite come up to her The Beacon at Alexandria, this is still pretty good, with a hero who uses his brain to out-think and out-flank the opposition, rather than directly attacking it. Good complex subsidiary characters as well.

Rosemary Kirstein,The Language of Power (2004), and, as I don't seem to have mentioned it before, the preceding volume in the same series, The Lost Steersman (2003), the long-awaited continuation of the story begun in The Steerswoman (1989) and The Outskirter's Secret, recently republished in an omnibus edition as The Steerswoman's Road

Caroline Stevermer and Patricia C. Wrede, The Grand Tour (2004). At last, a sequel to Sorcery and Cecilia (now out in a new edition): not perhaps quite up to that, but still very, very, good.

Jo Walton, The Prize in the Game. Set in the same world as The King's Peace and The King's Name, very different, but just as good.

Finally finished Miklos Banffy's Transylvanian Trilogy, 'The Writing on the Wall': They Were Counted, They were Divided, They were found Wanting. The translation is workmanlike and readable, but one doesn't really get much sense of the original in the language. Nonetheless, it's a fascinating panorama of Hungary at the time, with a wide canvas, a critical attitude towards the inbred nature of national politics, vivid characters. Worth reading.

Patrick O'Brian, the Aubrey/Maturin novels, in one lengthy addicted gulp.

Jo Walton, Tooth and Claw (2003): a novel of manners about dragons. Remarkable.

Was very impressed indeed by Kij Johnson's stunning Fudoki (2003). I found The Fox Woman (2000), with which it shares a setting (Heian Japan), mythology and some characters, enjoyable, but Fudoki is on an entirely different level. It's not only another 'older woman, beyond the conventional romance plot, new direction' novel, but also about the function and process of narrative, among other things. Beautifully written evocation of an unfamiliar society and mythos.

A number of new works by old favourites. The latest Lois McMaster Bujold, Paladin of Souls (2003), set in the same universe and with characters from The Curse of Chalion, but I think it is superior. One of a number of 'older woman, beyond the conventional romance plot, new direction' novels, in both litfic and genrefic that I've been reading recently. A new direction for Robin McKinley, Sunshine (2003), a vampire novel with a difference, set in a world only subtly different from our own, rather than the revisionist fairy-tale/fantasy worlds of her young adult works. Diane Duane's 'Young Wizards' sequence kept up the standard with Wizard's Holiday (2003). Sara Paretsky, Blacklist (2003): not perhaps quite as compelling as Total Recall, but still pretty good, though I wish she could have found some way of showing the effects of post-9/11 anti-terrorist fears without directly invoking a suspected terrorist. What is presumably, alas, the final Kate Fansler mystery by Amanda Cross, The Edge of Doom (2002). For also read by the late Carolyn Heilbrun, under her own name, see above. Doris Lessing, The Grandmothers (2003), four novellas - a lot of familiar themes and situations, but nonetheless worth reading in their own right. A. S. Byatt, Little Black Book of Stories: five stories with notes of grue and the fantastical.

A relatively new author for me (I read some of her YA books a long time ago I think), Madeleine L'Engle's The Small Rain (1941) and A Severed Wasp (1982) tell the story of the same woman, a gifted pianist, at different ends of her life. The first deals with her girlhood to the point where she accepts her musician's vocation, and the second with her as an elderly woman coming to terms with her memories and finding new directions and meaning in her life. And also makes reparation for the character's (and perhaps the author's?) youthful intolerance.

Re-read (and not sure why these didn't go in before) Jo Walton's The King's Peace (2000) and The King's Name (2001), a tour-de-force of imagining an alternative Arthurian story in a different analogue world.

Last but one (I think) of unread novels by G B Stern, Twos and Threes (1916): includes a number of themes which resurface in her later works. A bit unfocussed, and I was disappointed that the female friendship strand of the plot more or less disappeared, but I'm glad to have read it.

Dawn Powell, The Story of a Country Boy. Impressive, a kind of transitional work between the Ohio and the New York novels: small-town farm boy becomes a businessman in the big city. Find it very hard, however, to imagine how anyone in the 1930s thought that this could be effectively filmed: only by losing all the strengths of Powell's character analysis and authorial comments.

A cluster of good things recently: Barbara Hambly's latest instalment in the Benjamin January series, Wet Grave (2002), which ends on a positively cheerful note - something actively good happens for the central characters, rather than just surviving the harsh life of free coloureds in early C19th New Orleans. And, Dragonstar, which, again, moves on from the bleakness of Knight of the Demon Queen to conclude the sequence. A new Jane Haddam, Conspiracy Theory (2003). The latest in the Thursday Next saga, The Well of Lost Plots (2003) from Jasper Fforde (and more to come...). Not fiction, Suzy McKee Charnas's My Father's Ghost: The Return of My Old Man and Other Second Chances (2002), a touching and honest memoir with all the almost tactile strength of style also found in her novels. After many years of searching, an early novel of G B Stern's, Debatable Ground (aka Children of No Man's Land) (1919), which explores issues which would appear in her later work of transitional national and generational identities.

S J Rozan, Winter and Night (2002). I don't know why I forget, in between Rozan's novels, what a good writer she is and how compelling this series of thrillers is.

Much rejoicing as Antonia Forest's long out-of-print, and only very occasionally advertised secondhand at enormous prices, Falconer's Lure, has been republished as a reasonably priced trade paperback, with a new introduction by Forest about her Marlowe (and other) novels. This was something I had long been wanting to get hold of to read for the first time for about 25 years, and completes my Forest collection.

From the Journals of MFK Fisher (1999): interesting read of her immediate, spontaneous, less-considered, reflections on her life, though she was not a dedicated journal keeper. I was, however, rather annoyed to discover that this volume includes the essays published as Last House: Reflections, Dreams, and Observations 1943-1991 (1995), which I already owned as a separate volume.

One more Dawn Powell down (very few left to go, unfortunately, and those include the ones that don't seem to have enjoyed a reprint), The Happy Island: another acerbic study of New York life.

I've also been enjoying several of the works being republished by Persephone: though some of their volumes are (at best) near-misses as far as I'm concerned the number of hits remains remarkable.

Rebecca West, The Sentinel; An Incomplete Early Novel (edited by Kathryn Laing, 2002). See above on my passion for R West.This apprentice work is never, I think, going to be a favourite in the class of The Fountain Overflows (and the protagonist is fairly maddening), but there are distinctive West-ian thoughts and touches throughout.

I am getting less and less ready to devote my time to big thick fantasy novels/trilogies/endless series. If I manage to finish Vol 1 I bog down in Vol 2. However, I make an exception for Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel's Dart (2001) and Kushiel's Chosen (2002). Not perhaps to everyone's taste (decadent, sensuous, perverse...), but well-written, compellingly plotted, and with an intriguing protagonist/narrator who is, shall we say, quite the antithesis of the mighty-thewed sword-wielding warrior. And who is, perhaps, also a riff on the anguished tortured hero - instead of getting tied up and brutalised by enemies, as seems to happen to so many, pleasurably engages in consensual SM. Also, the first-person narration, even on the wide canvas and with the complex social and mythic structures Carey sets up, maintains a continuity and onward movement that gets lost in certain other, multi-character many-stranded fantasy epics. The latest volume, Kushiel's Avatar (2003) keeps up the standard, and again, defies conventional plot expectations.

Also in the fantasy field. A new Diana Wynne Jones, The Merlin Conspiracy, (2003) always a cause for rejoicing. Ellen Kushner and Delia Sherman, The Fall of the Kings (2002): the long-awaited sequel to Swordspoint, by two writers who I wish would produce more, more frequently. Not perhaps quite reaching the high level of Swordspoint (1987) (possibly because it cannot strike the note of something new and unusual in the same way) but still very welcome, though I wish those realistic delvings of the archivally-minded historian had not met that rather outworn cliche, The Long-Lost Book of Power. Sharon Lee and Steve Miller's The Tomorrow Log is not part of the Liaden sequence, but has many of the same charms.

Quite a flurry of recent publications by Ursula Le Guin, in both the Earthsea and the Hainish universes: Tales from Earthsea (2002), The Other Wind (2002). The Birthday of the World (2002)

Always welcomed, a new Laurie King mystery, especially if it's a Mary Russell. Justice Hall (2002) picks up strands from O Jerusalem (2001).

Some things I think I need to re-read, possibly more than once, to decide what I think of them, e.g. Carol Shields' Unless (2002). I won't say I was actually disappointed with A S Byatt's A Whistling Woman (2001): like Babel Tower, it went off in directions that seemed unexpected. But why should one expect books to do the predictable? (ditto Margaret Drabble's The Seven Sisters (2002)). Something that, as a member of the Victoria listserv, which was involved in the research process, I more or less had to read was Michel Faber's The Crimson Petal and the White (2002): impressive and compelling (and for me, the controversial ending worked). Vividly conveys to the point of sensory overload the tactile and olfactory qualities of Victorian life, and also the sense of a society (and individuals) in the process of change (rather than stuck in a static 'past'). Long yes, but not padded: takes a justifiable and successful risk with this. I have also managed to complete (except for one volume of short stories and a children's book) my collection of the works of Stella Gibbons, with Enbury Heath (1935) (possibly the most autobiographical work of this reticent writer) and her last published novel The Woods in Winter (1970); also my E M Delafield collection (except, I think, for the anonymously published 'Victorian' novel The Bazalgettes (1936)), with Humbug (1921), definitely not the cosiness some people expect from the author of the Provincial Lady books. And should also mention, as I don't seem to have done so already, Barbara Hambly's Sisters of the Raven (2002), as usual in a whole other class to most generic fantasy.

Barbara Hambly, Sold Down the River. Yet another in this excellent series set in early C19th New Orleans, with a 'free coloured' (and educated) central figure.

Caroline Stevermer, When the King Comes Home. My only complaint about Stevermer is that she writes much too slowly and has therefore published much too little.

Some recent rereads. Nancy Hale, The Prodigal Women (1942). An ideal journey book for a fast reader - it's long. The intertwined stories of 3 contrasted women in interwar America, a Boston native and two transplanted Southern sisters, and the male artist who is entangled with them. I first came across this in Florence King's With Charity Toward None, and while the book turned out not to be entirely as she described it, her enthusiasm led me to it and I'm very grateful. The omnibus edition (which doesn't seem to be currently available) of Dawn Powell's Angels on Toast, The Wicked Pavilion and The Golden Spur is another good for long journeys volume - an orgy of Powellian incisive wit. Also enjoyed yet again Simon Raven's The Roses of Picardie and September Castle: falling between the 'Alms for Oblivion' sequence and 'The Firstborn of Egypt', they pick up characters from the former and anticipate events in the latter. Possibly the best introduction to Raven. Another good place to start is Doctors Wear Scarlet, a very different kind of vampire story. Compelling. A justification for the perhaps old-fashioned indirect narration technique.

And I finally succumbed to getting the full set of the Kate Allen mysteries, some of which I had read and some of which I hadn't: both the Alison Kaine sequence, Tell Me What You Like, Give My Secrets Back, Takes One to Know One, Just a Little Lie, and the stand-alone (sort of - also set in the Denver lesbian community and some character cross-overs), I Knew You Would Call.

New Tony Fennelly! Don't Blame the Snake, Top Publications, 2001. Margo Fortier rather than Matthew Sinclair, but no such thing as a bad Fennelly.

Unremittingly grim, but with immense linguistic vigour and superb characterisation, two novels by Joolz Denby, Stone Baby, HarperCollins, 2001, and Corazon fall on some kind of boundary between the noir thriller and pure horror - except that the horror is at what humans can do to others and themselves.

Light entertaining fiction is one of the most demanding of all genres I sometimes think - it's very difficult to get right. Teresa Edgerton in The Queen's Necklace, Eos, 2001, certainly succeeds. A wonderful blend of fantasy and Regency romance. Enjoyable but not silly.

Still working my way through Dawn Powell, and catching up on her mid-western (as opposed to New York) novels: The Bride's House, Come Back to Sorrento, Dance Night, and also the New York novel, A Time to Be Born, set in the febrile period just before America entered World War II. Also read and recommended in this connection, Tim Page's biography of Powell - Page is pretty well singlehandedly responsible for the revival of interest in her and the republication of her novels in the elegent Steerforth Press editions. He has also edited her Selected Letters, which I've finally finished.

And I continue to make my way through the non-Cold Comfort Farm novels of Cold Comfort Farm novels of Stella Gibbons, the works of G. B. Stern, and have had exceptional luck in adding to my Charlotte Yonge collection over the past few months.

Discussed in the spring of 2001 on the litalk-l list, Willa Cather's The Song of the Lark was a great read and very thought-provoking. How many novels are there about the odyssey of a female artist?

Sequels (e.g. Gail Godwin's Evensong) or additions to series (e.g. Lois McMaster Bujold's A Civil Campaign, Sara Paretsky's Hard Time) perhaps work better if one is up to speed with the predecessors. I was engrossed by Elizabeth Arthur, Antarctic Navigation (1994) - in spite of a few notes of whimsy or magical realism about which I had some qualms, this long and dense novel was a worthy successor to, indeed improved upon, Arthur's other novel about women (and men) facing up to the extremes of the natural world, Beyond the Mountain. Otherwise quite a lot of re-reading, from Naomi Mitchison's We Have Been Warned (finally obtained via the good offices of bookfinder.com), to working my way through Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time and Simon Raven's Alms for Oblivion novel-sequences, and the non-Cold Comfort Farm novels of Stella Gibbons, as well as slowly catching up with the extensive output of G. B. Stern.

I'd recommend Sarah Schulman's Shimmer, Avon 1999, an intricately wrought tripartite narrative of the McCarthy era in New York exquisitely attuned to the interplay of gender, class, race, and sexual orientation - a daring and successful departure by Schulman. Her StageStruck: Theater, AIDS and the Marketing of Gay America, about the plagiarism of her novel People in Trouble to form the story of the hit musical Rent uses this as a take-off for a consideration of wider issues and is well-worth reading.
And I have greatly enjoyed the new A S Byatt, The Biographer's Tale, even though it is not the much awaited next volume in the sequence The Virgin in the Garden, Still Life, and Babel Tower. It is possible that it may disappoint some of those who enjoyed Possession: it covers some of the same territory without the rather more traditional narrative framework. But a rivetting read nonetheless.
Re-read, and was again impressed by, two books by Doris Lessing: the quest-narrative Mara and Dann, and the second volume of her autobiography, Walking in the Shade.
Jane Smiley, Horse Heaven: absorbing, enchanting, Smiley well back on form: along the lines of Moo rather than those of her previous 'horsey' book, Barn Blind.
More on the genre side: Pamela Dean, Juniper, Gentian and Rosemary. This is less obviously fantasy at first than some of Dean's other works: as with Tam Lin she builds up small dislocations and hints of unease with enormous subtlety: the book certainly gains from a second and subsequent readings. Her prose is a delight.
Two new Barbara Hambly novels (her recent works seem to be striking a rather darker note): on the fantasy side Knight of the Demon Queen, a sequel to Dragonshadow, and a historical mystery set in early nineteenth century New Orleans, Graveyard Dust, which follows on from A Free Man of Color and Fever Season, featuring the free African-American doctor and musician, Benjamin January in a densely realised historical and geographical context. I don't usually care much for historical mysteries, but Hambly's are among those I make an exception for.

Oh, joy - at last a new Sarah Caudwell, The Sibyl in her Grave (a whole new and idosyncratic take on the 'classic English village crime story'), but, alas, presumably, since Caudwell died earlier this year, the last we can expect to see of Professor Hilary Tamar and chums. The earlier three novels all appear to be currently available Thus was Adonis Murdered, The Shortest Way to Hades, and The Sirens Sang of Murder.

Discovery - or rediscovery - of 2000 was Dawn Powell. I devoured her Diaries and am working my way through the novels: so far My Home is Far Away, Turn, Magic Wheel, and The Locusts Have No King. Saving up for rereading the omnibus edition (which doesn't seem to be currently available) of Angels on Toast, The Wicked Pavilion and The Golden Spur. I'm trying to restrain myself from using her brilliant and incisive lines as Quotation of the Week every week.

I was very impressed by Robert Irwin's Satan Wants Me, which takes the concept of unreliable narrator to new levels.

After what seemed far too long, a new Jane Haddam Gregor Demarkian mystery, Skeleton Key - and it looks as though the Patience McKenna novels published as Orania Papazoglou are finally being republished (though, smugly, I already have copies of all these).

Ursula Le Guin, The Telling. I really enjoyed this. It's deceptively simple, but not simplistic. Doris Lessing, The Sweetest Dream. In spite of her gratuitous description of various manifestations of female parasitism as the result of feminism (rather than using feminism as their latest chameleon disguise), this was a tremendous and involving read. Sara Paretsky's Total Recall sees her, and VI Warshawski, way back on form in an intricately and intelligently plotted tale involving recovered memory, Holocaust reparations, and long-held secrets.

Barbara Hambly, Die Upon a Kiss: the latest Benjamin January mystery. Besides the usual rich portrayal of early C19th New Orleans from the perspective of January ('free coloured' musician with medical training), brings in a lot of wonderful details about opera at the time. Jasper fforde, The Eyre Affair and Lost in a Good Book. Indescribable. If the actual plot (massive conspiracy, evil organisations, time-travelling etc) is not exactly new stuff, the details (an alternative England with dodos as pets, migrating mammoths, not to mention the Prose Portal...) and the tone make these irresistable. Other delightful light reading (as I've said before, the writing of good light reading is a rare and precious gift), more works in the Liaden Universe by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller (now having the volumes published by Meisha Merlin after that far too long hiatus of a decade after Carpe Diem): most recent, I Dare, which more or less winds up the sequence (so probably not the best place to start) started by Agent of Change, now reprinted along with Conflict of Honours and Carpe Diem in the omnibus Partners in Necessity. And somehow I seem to have omitted mentioning Jane Haddam's True Believers. Haddam has joined my select buy when it comes out in hardback list, so I can also recommend her latest, Somebody Else's Music which is, among other things, an acute study of the long-term effects of school bullying on victim and perpetrators.

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