| |
|
Oh, McGrath is one of my favourite writers, having discovered him by accident via a copy of Dr Haggard's Disease which someone had left behind in a flat I was moving into a few years ago. All his novels are absolute genius- his short stories are pretty damn good too, but personally I think he's a better novelist than a short story writer- there's a "feel" to his stuff which takes longer to really develop properly.
I'm currently reading the new Harry Potter (having had to wait for payday rather than publication day), but I just bought a shedload of James Ellroy (of whose work I've only ever read Killer On The Road, but whose other stuff people are forever telling me I'd love) in one of those "3 for 2" offers.
Also The Surgeon Of Crowthorne by Simon Winchester- a dual biography of Dr James Murray, the most famous editor of the OED, and Dr W.C. Minor, one of the Dictionary's most favoured contributors, who was a homicidal lunatic locked up in Broadmoor. (Strangely, I bought it in a charity shop the other day largely because John Banville's review on the back cover described it as having "all the ingredients of one of Patrick McGrath's icily stylish novels: madness, violence, arcane obsessions, weird learning, ghastly comedy". So far this seems accurate!) |
|
|