I finished several of these a while ago now, but it’s been a struggle to summon up the motivation to write about them, especially during the heat wave we’re currently experiencing in the southern half of England. You’ve heard a lot from me recently as I’ve been catching up on reviews, so I’ll try to keep these responses to one (long) paragraph each.

Frog and Other Essays by Anne Fadiman (2026)
This was one of my Most Anticipated titles of the year because I’ve loved Fadiman’s nonfiction, especially the bookish Ex Libris, which I’ve read twice. Her essays are warm and fluent, braiding memoir and observation in a natural way and drawing readers in whether they share her particular preoccupations or not. “Frog” is about her guilt for not being more attentive to her children’s surprisingly long-lived pet frog, Bunky; “South Polar Times” recounts her obsession with polar exploration and what she discovered in the archives of the magazine Shackleton produced in the 1910s. At the centre of the book is a triptych on modern technology (“My Old Printer”) and language use, especially as she’s experienced it as a Yale professor trying to adjust to pandemic-era teaching (“Screen Share”) and expanded gender possibilities (“All My Pronouns,” which is mostly about getting used to “they” as a singular pronoun for nonbinary individuals). What a relief that advancing age and pedantry didn’t see her joining the anti-woke camp. The final essay, “Yes to Everything,” was – I think – the afterword to her late student Marina Keegan’s The Opposite of Loneliness (2014). For me the highlight was “The Oakling and the Oak,” about Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s disappointing son (“A penumbra of impossible expectation began to settle around Hartley’s head”). There’s a tantalizing parallel here with her own sense of needing to live up to her literary father, Clifton Fadiman, that I wish she’d explored further. So: good stuff here, but only seven essays, all of which were originally published elsewhere. It feels like scraping the barrel. And why the laudatory foreword by someone I’ve never heard of (Sam Anderson)? I ordered this while in the States to get to a free-shipping limit and I’m glad I got the chance to read it, but it’s not a must. Do seek out “Frog” and “Oak,” though. (New purchase – Target.com) ![]()
Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver (2000)
In all her life Lusa had never seen such an oversexed, muggy summer. Just breathing was a torrid proposition.
Although I remembered this as being in Kingsolver’s top tier of novels, I recalled no details beyond a female ranger who lives in the woods, has an affair with a hunter, and studies coyotes (actually, I thought it was wolves – I was conflating Deanna’s surname, Wolfe, and Sarah Hall’s The Wolf Border, which has a similar setup). I’d forgotten that there are two other strands: Lusa, a Polish-Palestinian entomologist widowed young, inherits her husband’s family farm and tries to make a go of goat breeding despite others’ disapproval; and Garnett, a pious old man trying to resurrect the American chestnut after it was wiped out by blight, has an ongoing low-key feud with his organic orchard-keeping neighbour, Nannie. These threads rotate under the headings “Predators,” “Moth Love,” and “Old Chestnuts.” There are pleasing connections between the main characters, who are also thematically linked by ideological disagreements and the possibility of new life and romance when age or circumstances seemed to disqualify them. Kingsolver writes brilliantly about science, and although she gets a little preachy through Nannie, in a way that presages Unsheltered (“It’s glory, to be part of a bigger something. The glory of an evolving world”), her environmentalist messages are always right on. It’s depressing to note that, more than a quarter-century later, the issues she raises related to food production and pesticide use are worse rather than better. Like Margaret Atwood, she’s a literary prophet of our time. I’m nearly halfway through her upcoming novel, Partita, for a Shelf Awareness review and its protagonist, Livia, seems to be in the lineage of Deanna – an Appalachian girl who tries to exceed her origins. This was a big ol’ satisfying summer read. Whyever didn’t Kingsolver win the Women’s Prize for this one? (Little Free Library)
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Poolside reading at my nephew’s graduation party.
The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O’Farrell (2006)
Nothing is our own. We begin in the world as anagrams of our antecedents.
Another reread. I remembered the mental hospital element but think I may have otherwise had this confused with Sebastian Barry’s The Secret Scripture, which also features historical family secrets and a great big twist. This was our book club selection for June, and although I missed the meeting (which was also our summer social) while I was back visiting my family, I wanted to catch up by reading it again – especially after it earned a perfect score from the rest of the group! In the novel’s present day, vintage clothing store owner Iris is having an affair with a married man and learns that she has a ‘mad’ great-aunt who will soon be her responsibility when the hospital Esme has called home for 60 years closes. Why did Iris’s grandmother, Kitty, hide that she had a sister? With Kitty on a dementia ward, she can’t ask outright. Instead, narration alternates between the sisters’ growing-up years in India and Edinburgh – where flighty, rebellious Esme caught boys’ eyes while obedient Kitty didn’t – and Iris and Esme embarking on a tentative relationship. The use of the present tense for both, as well as the fragments of memory we gradually work out are Kitty’s, create a continuous narrative so gripping that I could easily have consumed it in one sitting had I not had other commitments. Grief, parenting, male privilege, family legacies, and a freedom of spirit that might today be branded neurodivergence are strong elements. It’s appalling how women have been punished for breaking the rules, but the other ensuing betrayals are just as shocking. This must have one of THE best surprise endings out there. I can’t believe I’d forgotten the details. After a couple of lacklustre early novels, O’Farrell’s career truly took off with this one. Now to reread her other gems. (Borrowed from a book club friend)
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Commencement by J. Courtney Sullivan (2009)
Smith had left its mark on her, so that the place would always feel like home
I’ve had a mixed experience with Sullivan’s novels, but this debut was a delight. Let’s start with the clever title: An American graduation ceremony is called “commencement,” so it marks both an ending and a beginning. For four friends who meet at Smith College, a women-only institution, in the late 1990s, their student experiences have effects that carry on into their ‘real’ lives afterwards. We watch how their relationships with each other, and with family members and partners, shift over the course of nearly a decade. Sally arrives on campus bereft from the death of her mother, but she doesn’t let her sadness corrode her ambition or her kind heart. Bree is engaged to a man when she comes up from Savannah but leaves in a committed relationship with a woman. April was raised by a single mother and has always been a strident feminist, but graduates with plans to go to extremes in drawing attention to the plight of sex workers. The framing story of the friends gathering for Sally’s wedding introduces us first to Celia, who is in some sense still living the student life in the small New York City apartment she brings one-night stands back to after drunken evenings. The wedding ends up in a huge fight between the four, and as the years pass they split off into pairs and trios of loyalty before a crisis brings them back together. It’s a little far-fetched how this all plays out, but I was invested enough in all four characters that I was happy to go along with it. Sullivan went to Smith (I also attended what was a women’s college at the time, Hood), so you have to wonder if anything was autobiographical for her. She weaves in various women’s issues, such as sexual assault and decisions about career and motherhood. I applaud Sullivan for mentioning support for trans men on campus, though her discussion does seem of its time and today I think the debate would be more around allowing trans women to attend. I chose this to read because my recent USA trip was for my nephew’s high school graduation. It’s perfect for Curtis Sittenfeld fans. (Secondhand purchase – 2nd & Charles) ![]()

Hi Rebecca
This time, an interesting selection of novels by great authors.
Thank you very much
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I think I need to re read Esme Lennox, I can’t remember the details at all and I would like to read the Kingsolver since I’ve read a couple of hers and enjoyed them, and I’d like to hear what she says about pesticides, since so many have been banned now!
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I’m glad to hear you say that, though I don’t suppose the industrialized farming situation in North America has gotten much better, and since Brexit the UK has gone backwards on environmental protection legislation. This one’s a top Kingsolver choice, along with The Poisonwood Bible.
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The Poisonwood Bible is an absolute favourite!Yes, I realised after I commented that I was talking about Europe I know very little about US farming. The pesticide question is indeed a question, since the UK also has bans on some that are allowed in the rest of Europe, and the rules seem to change every year!
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The Sullivan sounds up my street., particularly as I’ve enjoyed other books by her. Shame about the Fadiman, though.
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The Fadiman was good, it was just disappointing that I only got 6 new-to-me essays for a (reduced) new hardback price.
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I adore Prodigal Summer and am so glad you enjoyed it more on the reread.
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Others of her books will be due for a reread now. Probably Animal, Vegetable, Miracle and Unsheltered (I can’t believe the latter came out nearly 8 years ago!).
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I loved the O’Farrell, but my recollection of the Kingsolver was that it was a little on the preachy side. She gets that way sometimes. I think she is a better novelist when she tries to introduce the message more subtlely. It’s better placed in her nonfiction.
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This one’s not nearly as bad for that as Unsheltered, but there is a bit of it through Nannie’s dialogues with Garnett.
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That’s what I remember.
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Prodigal Summer is brilliant and I’m really keen to read Commencement! I have to disagree about O’Farrell though – I was disappointed by Esme Lennox (I still think she’s at her weakest when dealing with historical material) and loved After You’d Gone and The Distance Between Us (agree that My Lover’s Lover is pretty poor).
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After You’d Gone is great, but it was the two in between that I was thinking of, My Lover’s Lover and The Distance between Us (which struck me as practice for This Must Be the Place because of the order in which I read them). The Hand that First Held Mine has historically been my favourite O’Farrell, so I need to reread it and also get hold of her new one, which has a library queue a mile long.
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I’m a big Distance Between Us fan, but I also loved The Hand That First Held Mine – really moving.
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I loved the Kingsolver when I read it in April (definitely a case of right book, right time), and have been seeing Commencement around for years but never quiiiiite had the impulse to pick it up. You make it sound great, though, and the Sittenfeld comp is a big plus.
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Have you tried Sullivan before? Her Friends and Strangers was part of my 20 Books back in 2023. I haven’t loved much of her recent stuff but still have an early one to go back to.
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No, never! But she does keep popping up. Good to know this would be the one to start with.
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Well, after reading The Secret Scripture recently, The Vanishing Act sounds right up my alley! The twist in Secret Scripture was good but hard to believe.
Nice use of “whyever”, I hadto pause and think “is that a word” because I only ever heard it as “whyever not”!
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I need to read some more Barry, but I got bored of him sticking with the same characters or fictional world.
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I haven’t read any Kingsolver books but I do have Prodigal Summer, Flight Behavior, and Demon Copperhead all on my shelf. 🙂
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Well, what are you waiting for?! 😉
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KIngsolver “Like Margaret Atwood, she’s a literary prophet of our time”, yes!
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Esme Lennox remains my favourite O’Farrell novel. I still remember the power of the final page vividly.
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I always forget the endings of books, even when they’re as shocking as this one! At least it means I can reread happily.
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I’m desperate to read Partita! I’ve requested it on NetGalley so we’ll see how that goes … Sounds like it’s an intriguing (good?) one anyway. I’d love to do a year re-reading Kingsolver soon, though I’ve read Prodigal Summer a couple of times anyway.
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It’s very Ann Patchett (though with Appalachian sass) — strangely similar to Patchett’s new one, Whistler; and, with the music theme, also reminding me of Bel Canto.
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