January Releases: Greathead, Kauffman, Mills & Watts (#ReadIndies)

I feel out of practice writing reviews after the endless period of sluggish and slightly lackluster reading that was January. Here we are at the start of Kaggsy and Lizzy Siddal’s Reading Independent Publishers Month challenge and I’m happy to make this my first tie-in post as these four books all happen to be from independent publishers. The first two are American novels (that could arguably be called linked short story collections) very much in my wheelhouse for their focus on dysfunctional families and disappointing characters. I also have a group biography aiming to illuminate bisexuality, and a poetry collection about girlhood/womanhood and nature.

 

The Book of George by Kate Greathead

The marketing for this novel courts relatability: you probably know a Georgeyou might have dated one (women read the most litfic). Each chapter dates to a different period in George’s life, adolescence to late thirties. From the fact that 9/11 happened when he was a college freshman, I know he’s my exact contemporary, and I could indeed see bits of myself in this Everyman schmuck: indecisive, lazy, underachieving, privileged but never living up to his own or others’ expectations. Life keeps happening around him, but you wonder if he’ll ever make something happen for himself. Two gags are revealing: In college he is known for his impression of a clinically depressed penis going through airport security, and later he has 15 minutes of fame for appearing in a hidden-camera Super Bowl commercial. He’s been writing fiction for years – first a Stoner rip-off, then a Kerouac homage – but by the time he gets a short story collection together, it’s the height of #MeToo and he’s missed his moment to publish. Meanwhile, his cohort is doing great things, winning awards for documentaries (his pal Jeremiah) or becoming pro bono lawyers (his longsuffering girlfriend Jenny).

If you need to like a protagonist, expect frustration. Some of George’s behaviour is downright maddening, as when he obsessively plays his old Gameboy while his mother and Jenny pack up his childhood room. Tracing his relationships with his mother, his sister Cressida, and Jenny is rewarding. Sometimes they confront him over his shortcomings; other times they enable him. The novel is very funny, but it’s a biting, ironic humour, and there’s plenty of pathos as well. There are a few particular gut-punches, one relating to George’s father and others surrounding nice things he tries to do that backfire horribly. I thought of George as a rejoinder to all those ‘So-and-So Is Not Okay at All’ type of books featuring a face-planting woman on the cover. Greathead’s portrait is incisive but also loving. And yes, there is that hint of George, c’est moi recognition. His failings are all too common: the mildest of first-world tragedies but still enough to knock your confidence and make you question your purpose. For me this had something of the old-school charm of Jennifer Egan and Jonathan Safran Foer novels I read in the Naughties. I’ll seek out the author’s debut, Laura & Emma.

With thanks to Atlantic Books for the free copy for review. (Published in the USA by Henry Holt and Co. in 2024.)

 

I’ll Come to You by Rebecca Kauffman

Is 30 years long enough ago to count as historical fiction? In any case, this takes us through the whole of 1995, proceeding month by month and rotating through the close third-person perspectives of the members of one extended family as they navigate illnesses, break-ups and fraught parenting journeys. Corinne and Paul are trying to get pregnant; Paul’s mother, Ellen (again!), is still smarting from her husband leaving with no explanation; Corinne’s father, Bruce, has dementia but his wife, Janet, is doing her best to keep his cognitive deficiencies from the rest of the family. Son Rob is bitter about his ex-wife moving on so quickly, but both he and Ellen will have new romantic prospects before the end.

The family’s lies and secrets – also involving a Christmas run-in with Bruce’s shell-shocked brother decades ago – lead to everything coming to a head in a snowstorm. (As best I can tell, the 1995 setting was important mostly so there wouldn’t be cell phones during this crisis.) As with The Book of George, the episodic nature of the narrative means that particular moments are memorable but the whole maybe less so, and the interactions between characters stand out more than the people themselves. I’ll Come to You, named after a throwaway line in the text, is poorly served by both its cover and title, which give no sense of the contents. However, it’s a sweet, offbeat portrait of genuine, if generic, Americans; I was most reminded of J. Ryan Stradal’s work. Although I DNFed Kauffman’s The Gunners some years back, I’d be interested in trying her again with Chorus, which sounds like another linked story collection.

With thanks to Counterpoint (USA) for the advanced e-copy for review.

 

Uneven: Nine Lives that Redefined Bisexuality by Sam Mills

Back in 2022 I reviewed Julia Shaw’s Bi: The hidden culture, history and science of bisexuality, which took a social sciences approach. By contrast, this is a group biography of nine bisexuals – make that 10, as there are plenty of short memoir-ish passages from Mills, too. Oscar Wilde, Colette, Marlene Dietrich, Anaïs Nin, Susan Sontag: more or less familiar names, though not all of them are necessarily known for their sexuality. The chapters deliver standard potted biographies of the individuals’ work and relationships, probably containing little that couldn’t be found elsewhere in recent scholarship and not really living up to the revolutionary promise of the subtitle. However, it was worthwhile for Mills to recover Wilde as a bisexual rather than a closeted homosexual. A final trilogy of chapters comes more up to date with David Bowie, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Madonna. The closer to the present day, the more satisfying connections there are between figures. For instance, Madonna looked to both Dietrich and Bowie as role models and fashion icons, and she and Basquiat were lovers.

Mills and Shaw consider the same fundamental issues: bi erasure, with bisexuality the least understood and most easily overlooked element of LGBT and many passing as straight if in heterosexual marriages; and the stereotype of bis as hypersexual or promiscuous. Mills is keen to stress that bisexuals have very different trajectories and phases. Like Wilde, they might have a heterosexual era of happy marriage and parenthood followed by a homosexual spree. Or they might have simultaneous lovers of multiple genders. Some might never even act on strong same-sex desires. (Late last year I encountered a similar unity-in-diversity approach in Daniel Tamet’s Nine Minds, a group biography about autistic people.)

The 1890s to 1980s window allows for a record of changing mores yet means that the book seems rather dated. Were it written by an author of a later generation (Mills, who I knew for The Fragments of My Father, is around 50), the point of view and terminology would likely be quite different. Also, including a section on Bessie Smith within a chapter mostly on Colette felt tokenistic. (Though later considering Basquiat separately does add a BIPOC view.) Ultimately, though, my problem with Uneven was that I don’t want to know about behaviour – which is all that a biography can usually document – so much as the internal, soul stuff. Even from Mills, whose accounts of her long-term relationships and flings (including, yes, a threesome) can be titillating but not very enlightening, I didn’t get a sense of what it feels like. So neither the Shaw nor the Mills gave me precisely what I was looking for, which means that the perfect book on bisexuality either doesn’t exist or is out there but I haven’t found it yet. Any suggestions?

With thanks to Atlantic Books for the free copy for review.

 

The Face in the Well by Rebecca Watts

I’ve also read Watts’ The Met Office Advises Caution and Red Gloves; this is her third collection. The Suffolk and Cambridgeshire scenery of her early and adult lives weaves all through, sometimes as an idyll that blurs the lines between humans and nature (“Private No Access”) but other times provoking anxiety about common or gendered dangers, as in the title poem or “The Old Mill” (“What happened there, / down by the old mill, / they never tell. // Something about / a man and a girl / is the most you’ll hear.”). “Woman Seeks” is a tongue-in-cheek advert for the perfect man. Animals – a dolphin, a shark, rodents, a wandering albatross, a robin – recur, as do women poets, especially Emily Brontë, and Victorian death culture (“Victoriana” and “Baroque”). Adulthood brings routine whereas childhood stands out for minor miracles, such as a free soda from a vending machine.

The format and tone vary a lot, so the book is more of a grab bag than a cohesive statement. I noted slant rhymes and alliteration, always a favourite technique of mine. I especially liked “Entropy,” about finding a slice of cake in the freezer labeled by someone who is now dead (“Nothing ever // really dies: all the pieces of you / persist, riven and reconfigured / in infinite unknowable ways”) and “Personal Effects,” about the artefacts from her childhood that her mother guards under the bed (“twists of my hair, my teeth, / my bracelet from the hospital.”).

With thanks to Carcanet Press for the advanced e-copy for review.

 

Which of these appeal to you? What indie publishers have you been reading from recently?

20 responses

  1. A Life in Books's avatar

    I’d dismissed The Book of George, largely because of its marketing, but might give it a try after all. Hope your February is an improvement on January.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      You might give it a whirl; I know you like linked short stories as much as I do.

      Hoping to manage more books (and higher ratings) in February.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. kaggsysbookishramblings's avatar

    Four to launch the month – wonderful, thank you! And glad to see the Watts there as I read her first and loved it – didn’t know she’d put out any more!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I keep up with Carcanet releases via the e-mail newsletter and they are great about sending me e-copies to review.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Elle's avatar

    I like the idea of a Disaster Woman-esque novel with a male main character! Re. Kauffmann, I recall DNFing Chorus but can’t recall why, though suspect it was a combination of being bored by it and disliking the style. YMMV, though.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Interesting to hear that we’ve both DNFed different of her books. Let’s hope those were just wobbles…

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        Fingers crossed!

        Like

  4. Kate W's avatar

    I quite enjoyed George, although from memory enjoyed Greathead’s first book more (it was a long time ago that I read it). I did think the character of George was interesting in that it was a classic case of people around him being frustrated by his behaviour and getting more frustrated that he never changed… duh! And then the realisation that you the only person you can change is yourself.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I remember you were most fascinated by his relationship with his mother. I found him lovable despite how maddening he was.

      Like

  5. Laura's avatar

    I hesitated over The Book of George on Netgalley but didn’t request – but I think I might enjoy it! (I don’t know if this is a UK-US thing or just me, but I know literally nobody called George anywhere near my age. It’s a name I associate with elite men in my dad’s generation. The everyman name when I was in sixth form was Ben or Tom.)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      That’s an interesting point — I know a George in his 90s; others I know of (e.g., one of the princes’ sons) are young, part of that revival of old-man names like Alfred, Bert and Henry. So maybe she was going for nostalgic/old-fashioned. He does get confused for an older writer of the same name.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laura's avatar

        Yes, it’s definitely coming back among little ones!

        Like

  6. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    I’ll Come to You appeals the most to me; a Stradal comparison never hurts! And I do like family stories.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’m glad it appeals. It’s not a showing-off sort of book, more quiet and bittersweet. I found it rather charming.

      Like

  7. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    They all sound good to me actually. I really like that cake poem. I can relate to the sense of a slower, subdued January. Some years it’s been my busiest reading month (but there’s no pattern to that really) but this was not one of those years. At least not in terms of finishing books. I’ve been kicking butt at starting them though. /eyeroll Well, you know how that gets sometimes.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I know just what that’s like! Sometimes I have finished lots of the previous year’s hangers-on in early to mid-January, but this time it didn’t seem to happen.

      Like

  8. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Sorry about the random letter yesterday, WP had gone weird on me again! A good start to ReadIndies for you! I’ve just finished my first one, reviewing tomorrow – University of Manitoba Press, just to be super-obscure!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      No worries! Thanks to my few Paul Austers for Annabel’s readalong, I’m now up to 7 indie reviews for the month, with many more to come if I can get my act together. For The Moomins and the Great Flood, are you posting on Monday? I have a copy of the reissue so will try to coincide.

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Liz Dexter's avatar

    We’re doing it on Saturday but any time in the month is fine

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ok, it’ll probably be sometime next week for me.

      Liked by 1 person

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