Arts, Books

Book Club: Your Driver is Waiting

SYNOPSIS

Damani is a South Asian taxi driver for a ride-share app who lives in Toronto. Her father died six months ago and she barely sleeps as she picks up every job going, desperate to support her severely depressed mother.

The streets are alive with protests against injustice, but Damani feels like a background character in her own life. She struggles to make ends meet while feeling utterly broken emotionally.

But when she meets beautiful, brave and brilliant Jolene, Damani cannot deny the intense connection between them and finally feels like she’s come back to life.

However, despite Jolene’s passionately declared activism and bold claims about being an ally, Jolene is still a wealthy white woman who will never truly understand where Damani comes from. It’s superb on race, equality, privilege and grief. Funny, angry, and beautifully narrated; a compulsive page-turner.  

Your Driver is Waiting by Priya Guns is published by Atlantic, 320pp

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Arts, Books, History, Literature, Poetry

Book Club: Butler To The World

SYNOPSIS

SCATHINGLY, Oliver Bullough compares the UK to Wodehouse’s inscrutable butler, Jeeves.

Just as Jeeves tirelessly helped the “quarter-witted Bertie Wooster evade the consequences of [his] misbehaviour, Britain helps the world’s financial criminals and tax dodgers . . . enjoy the fruits of their crimes free of scrutiny”.

In January 2022, Lord Agnew of Oulton, the minister in charge of combating fraud, resigned, citing “arrogance, indolence and ignorance” within government.

Just a few weeks later, Russia’s invasion meant that political promises to deal with oligarchs were hastily remembered.

Yet, underfunded and demoralised law enforcement agencies face an unequal battle. Bullough’s highly readable account of the UK’s role in facilitating global financial wrongdoing is a call to action.

Butler To The World by Oliver Bullough is published by Profile, 304pp


Isabella Whitney,

the pioneering poet

Isabella Whitney is not a name that is well known, yet she many have been the UK’s first female professional poet. She published two books of poetry (in 1567 and 1573) and, from the way she described herself, it seems that she was single, poor and suffering from ill health. Some of this may have represented an attempt to inspire sympathy in her readers. However, judging by her writing, it appears that she knew what it was to be living on the margins, plagued by anxiety and insecurity.

Whitney wrote of London’s beauties and riches, but also of its “stynking streetes”, its “lothsome Lanes” and its many prisons, including those that incarcerated debtors. Her depiction of the capital showed a city humming with mercantile activity and crammed with expensive goods for sale. Yet her verses also sketched out the damage that the pursuit of wealth had done to society as a whole.

As a poet and writer, she took inspiration from her male counterparts – but she wrote as a woman, painfully aware of the difficulties that women in London might encounter. She warned readers against flattery and deceit, and against those who shed “crocodile tears”; in particular, she advised young women never to trust a man at first sight. On this subject she made it clear that she was writing from her own personal experience of duplicity, describing herself as one “who was deceived”.

Whitney may not have been a poet to rank among the greatest names of the Elizabethan age but her voice was distinctive, eloquent, ironic and powerfully evocative of a woman’s experience.

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Arts, Books

Book Club: Damascus Station

SYNOPSIS

THIS superb debut novel by David McCloskey, a former CIA Analyst, is one of the most striking fictional thriller stories since Mick Herron’s magnificent Slow Horses in 2010.

Not only does it ooze authenticity, with some rather exacting details of what it takes to recruit someone to spy against their country (a charge of Treason), it also includes a love story to pierce the heart.

This is not the dark, anguished world of Greene or Le Carré, this is a brilliant evocation of the perils and dangers espionage poses to a young man who is not afraid to show emotion. It is set against the civil war in Syria.

CIA officer Sam Joseph is sent to Paris in the hope of recruiting Mariam Haddad, an official in the Palace of President Assad, with access to many systems and secrets. When the two meet, they fall in love, which brings the treacherous world of espionage into sharp focus. Who is to be trusted and by whom?

Painstakingly detailed and narrated, yet told with exceptional literary flair, it identifies McCloskey as an exciting new voice in espionage. Readers of Damascus Station should relish every page, the story demands it.

– Damascus Station by David McCloskey is published by Swift, 432pp

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