A Lesson Before Dying, Ernest J. Gaines (Serpent's Tail, £6.99 in UK)

Five weeks at the top of the US paperback fiction charts, winner of the National Book Critics Circle award for fiction, "An Oprah…

Five weeks at the top of the US paperback fiction charts, winner of the National Book Critics Circle award for fiction, "An Oprah Bookclub Selection" emblazoned across its cover, A Lesson Before Dying has been compared to a blues song. But in truth, it's more like a slice of in-your-face country music - no twists, no turns, just heart-on-the-sleeve emotion all the way. Which doesn't make it a bad book - just arm yourself with a box of tissues, that's all, for the tale of the bond that develops between two young black men in a southern cane-cutting town, which is painful, shocking and terribly, terribly sad. One is sentenced to death for a murder he did not commit, the other, a teacher is forced by his family to visit the lad on death row. The simplicity of plot and characterisation give A Lesson Before Dying an almost cartoon-like feel, but it gets its socio-political points across with ease. A sentence such as "There was a Catholic church uptown for whites; a Catholic church back of town for coloured" now, more than ever, delivers a stinging punch.

Arminta Wallace

Arminta Wallace

Arminta Wallace is a former Irish Times journalist