Soltalk June 2017 | Page 49

BookTalk children may need the move more than she does. Her son Jake has begun to question the things he values most; could Spain offer him the change he is seeking? Shelly’s daughter Leila arrives with a new baby in tow. As Casa Maria takes its first booking, will it turn out to be more than a romantic promise made a few years ago? Flood Rises (p), by Margaret Drabble; The Nakano Thrift Shop (p), by Hiromi Kawakami; I Hate The Internet (p), by Jarett Kobek; The Silent Corner (l), by Dean Koontz; Fatal (p), by Joan Lescroart; Meet Me At Beachcomber Bay (p), by Jill Mansell; The Supremes Sing The Happy Heartache Blues (l), by Edward Kelsey Moore; Amber Green Takes Manhattan (l), by Rosie Nixon; A Book Of American Martyrs (l), by Joyce Carol Oates; Judas (p), by Amos Oz; and Barskins (p), by Annie Proulx. From Graham Moore, winner of an Oscar for the Best Screenplay for ‘The Imitation Game’ in 2015, comes The Last Days Of Night (p), an historical legal thriller based on the famous ‘War of the Currents’ fought between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse. In New York, in the late 1880s, the miracle of electric light is still in its infancy. Untold riches and glory await the man who can power the nation with this new technology. Thomas Edison has won the race to the patent office and is suing his remaining rival, George Westinghouse, for patent infringement for the unheard-of sum of a billion dollars. Runelight (l) is Joanne M Harris’ sequel to Runemarks: magic, adventure and Norse mythology from the author of Chocolat. Six hundred miles apart, two girls each bear on their skin a runemark: a symbol of the Old Days when the known Worlds were ruled by the gods from their sky citadel, Asgard, now in ruins. The power of the gods is long destroyed; or so everyone thinks. Nothing is lost for ever though. The gods have not given up – nor stopped squabbling! – and want the power of the runes borne by Maddy and Maggie. Other general fiction titles worth a look include: Last Seen (p), by Lucy Clarke; Mr Toppit (p), by Charles Elton; The Dark Key: (l) hardback or large paperback (p) small paperback 47