
And Some Fell on Stony Ground: A Day in the Life of an RAF Bomber Pilot
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A unique glimpse of the deadliest profession of the Second World War. In June 1941, Flight Sergeant...

Late Essays: 2006 - 2017
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Stranger Shores, a collection of J.M. Coetzee's essays from 1986 to 1999 was followed by Inner...

Seven Hanged
Anthony Briggs and Leonid Andreyev
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'It was like walking along the knife-edge of the highest possible mountain range, seeing life on one...

The Model
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After Robert Aickman's death in 1981 the manuscript of The Model, a wintry rococo fable set in...

Olalla
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'Is it me you love, friend? or the race that made me?' A gothic novella about love, torment and...

Black Dog
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A special illustrated edition of Black Dog by bestselling storytelling legend, Neil Gaiman. This...

Breakfast with the Borgias
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'Hell is other people.' It is a chilling, page-turning Hammer novella by the Booker-Prize-winning...

ClareR (5991 KP) rated Open Water in Books
Mar 6, 2021
I have to admit, most of the references to music went over my head, but this didn’t bother me or lessen my enjoyment. In fact, it sent me in the direction of Spotify and caused raised eyebrows from the teenaged sons 🤷🏼♀️
Many thanks to Viking for providing me with a copy of this stunning book via NetGalley.
I would imagine this could be read in one sitting quite quickly (this was a book that The Pigeonhole serialised over five days), because the action is pretty relentless - much like social media, really! I think it holds a mirror up to society’s reliance on social media - usually minus the murder (I hope!) - and how we’re all deeply influenced by it.
There are some deeply unpleasant people in this, but that’s never a bad thing, in my own opinion. It’s an entertaining read, and worth your time!
Thanks to The Pigeonhole for serialising this, and to Kevin Landt for joining in the discussion!
