Paperbacks

This week's paperbacks reviewed

This week's paperbacks reviewed

The Blair Years: Extracts from The Alastair Campbell Diaries
Edited by Alastair Campbell and
Richard Stott
Arrow, £9.99
Tony Blair's former media guru provides a day-to-day account of New Labour's early years in office. Northern Ireland was a major preoccupation and Campbell charts his boss's mood-swings over the peace process. His account of Bertie Ahern's role in the Good Friday talks differs considerably from the unionist version and shows the outgoing Taoiseach in a more favourable light. There is a hilarious account of a visit to Dublin with Mo Mowlam when they had to share a hotel bathroom. Campbell does not suffer fools gladly and found his work stressful but liked being at the heart of the action - there are fascinating accounts of heart-to-heart conversations with Bill Clinton and Sir Alex Ferguson in this regard. The language is raw and the pace of events frantic. His use of acronyms makes for confusion at times. His personal bias shows but that's what spin-doctors are like. Highly recommended, but with the odd grain of salt. Deaglán de Bréadún

Tomorrow
Graham Swift
Picador, £7.99
Paula is a middle-aged mother of two teenage children, facing into a long night as she contemplates how the mysterious events of "tomorrow" will change her life and the lives of her family members. Graham Swift is a master of ordinary voices and Paula's is tender and almost embarrassingly honest as she reconstructs the past as part of her preparation for the unnamed event to come. For her twin son and daughter, Nick and Kate, she describes meeting their father, the couple's hurtle into love and the complex family backgrounds that shaped them as individuals and then with their coupling came to shape the lives of their own children in turn. Tomorrow is a book about parenthood, with subtle ruminations on biology, inheritance and the nature of family, but the page-turning device set in motion on the first page loses momentum as the repetitions of its significance begin to grate. When it finally comes, the revelation on which Paula's tomorrow depends appears to have been so overplayed that it detracts from any sympathies elicited for those involved. Fiona McCann

The Last Empress
Anchee Min
Bloomsbury, £7.99
Historical opinion about Dowager Empress Tzu Hsi divides into two camps. The traditional view is of a despotic manipulator, who may even have had a hand in the death of her Emperor son; the revisionist strand offers a more positive alternative - a brave, charismatic woman desperate to preserve an empire in tailspin. Anchee Min's fictionalised biography adopts the more sympathetic perspective, beginning the story where her previous bestseller, Empress Orchid, left off: after the death of Tzu Hsi's husband, when her crucial period as acting regent began. As well as an Empress, Tzu Hsi was a mother, and she lived to see both the young Emperors she raised predecease her. For all her power, she had to remain cloistered in the Forbidden City: a minefield of shifting alliances and systematic assassinations, and all under the stranglehold of the West. A vivid tale of power games, intrigue, and tragic loss. Claire Anderson-Wheeler

READ MORE

To Heal the Broken Hearted: The Life of Saint Charles of Mount Argus
By Paul Francis Spencer CP
Ovada. €13.95
Was Fr Charles of Mount Argus a man of God or a religious maniac? You might find some clues here, but you'll have to look elsewhere for the answer. This is for devotees, for whom the question was answered by Pope John Paul II in 2007, when he canonised Charles. Spencer's prime source is the remarkable diarist Fr Salvian Nardocci, who was a contemporary of Fr Charles for 20 years, and often his sternest critic. His diary entries give a unique insight into religious life at the time and a glimpse at the inner struggles of Charles. Always regarded as a holy man by his Passionate confreres, Charles's celebrity as a healer grew after he moved to Ireland from his native Holland. And the devotion, so quickly gained, is still maintained for this devoutly solemn man. Martin Noonan

Burning Bright
Tracy Chevalier
Harper, £7.99
Tracy Chevalier has here revived the structure of her acclaimed Girl with a Pearl Earring, approaching a major historical figure from the perspective of a minor fictional character. Where a maidservant once introduced us to 17th-century Delft and the world of Vermeer, here we meet William Blake through two newly-arrived country bumpkins and a mischievous city kid. As they skitter down the back alleys of Georgian London, we follow an innocence to experience story emboldened by a serious amount of historical research. Blake, with his free love and unpopular politics makes for an entertaining subject, and the story is light and pacy, but Blake's relationship with the children through whose eyes we see him is underdeveloped. True to Chevalier's winning style, this is a well-researched portrait of late-Georgian London life for new arrivals, of the process of publishing Blake's poetry and, incongruously, of circus life. There is plenty here to intrigue fans of her historical fiction, but this doesn't burn quite as brightly as her previous novels. Nora Mahony