Jasper Fforde, David Mitchell, Clare Chambers and Sabine Durrant: This week’s best new fiction 

From Jasper Fforde’s serious-minded comedy to Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell, Clare Chambers’ latest and a smart read by Sabine Durrant, this week’s best new fiction

Utopia Avenue

David Mitchell                                                                                               Sceptre £20

When Dean, late of the group Battleship Potemkin, teams up with Elf, Jasper and Griff to form a new band, another triumph of hope over experience looks inevitable. But for two giddy years, until tragedy strikes, Utopia Avenue really fly, enjoying cult status on both sides of the Atlantic. 

Mitchell’s vivid evocation of the 1960s music scene, when anything seemed possible, is one of his most satisfying works. The dialogue really sings and there are some great comic moments.

Max Davidson 

 

Finders, Keepers

Sabine Durrant                                                           Hodder & Stoughton £14.99

Many psychological thrillers deal in tired stereotypes. Durrant offers us rounded, believable people, like Verity Baxter, the bookish singleton who befriends her wealthy new neighbours, brittle Ailsa and controlling Tom. 

This is a story in which everyone has their own awful secrets and the progression to murder is so measured as to seem inevitable. A smart, compelling and thoroughly haunting read.

John Williams

 

Small Pleasures

Clare Chambers                                                                                           W&N £14.99

It’s 1957 and Jean Swinney, a spinster journalist in her late 30s, has just been assigned a bizarre feature that will thoroughly upturn her quiet, parsimonious life. Its focus is Gretchen Tilbury, a Swiss-born housewife who claims that her daughter is the result of a virgin birth. 

As Jean investigates, she finds herself swept up into the Tilburys’ deceptively harmonious orbit. An irresistible novel – wry, perceptive and quietly devastating.

Hephzibah Anderson

 

The Constant Rabbit

Jasper Fforde                                                                    Hodder & Stoughton £20

This serious-minded comedy is set in an alternate present where the ruling UK Anti-Rabbit Party, or Ukarp, persecutes a group of human-sized rabbits who sprang up in Britain in the 1960s. 

The narrator, Peter, confronts his own prejudice when a rabbit family moves into his village, causing outrage among locals. The real-world parallels are obvious, but as an allegory it risks flippancy.

Anthony Cummins 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk