Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

What we're reading

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

If you like reading Jonathan Coe, who else do you really love?

64 replies

pruners · 11/03/2008 15:33

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
marina · 11/03/2008 15:38

William Boyd
Hilary Mantel (if not already tried her, I suggest you start with Eight Months on Ghazzah Street or An Experiment in Love (and NOT with Fludd)
Marge Piercy, especially Fly Away Home and Woman on the Edge of Time
Gerard Woodward's unforgettable trilogy Summer, I'll Go to Bed at Noon and A Curious Earth

pruners · 11/03/2008 15:41

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
ggglmpp · 11/03/2008 15:43

Sylvia Plath
second William Boyd
Paul Auster
mind gone blank - off to pick up kids from school

marina · 11/03/2008 15:47

Yes, with Hilary Mantel, although some of what she articulates is very much the dark side of one's psyche
William Boyd I love just because he is another man who writes convincingly from the female perspective
Gerard Woodward combines a very familiar setting - the wasteland of 70s suburbia - with a hallucinogenic weirdness you will either love or not. I find him scary, hilarious and desperately sad, but am so glad I came across him.
Marge Piercy's early stuff is fab, just an excellent read. You have such a shocking treat in store if you have never read Woman on the Edge of Time
But, as you and I both know, Jonathan is a hard act to follow

marina · 11/03/2008 15:47

Je m'en souviens bien gggl

girlfrommars · 11/03/2008 15:48

Stephen Fry?

orangina · 11/03/2008 15:49

Do they have to be english? Have you read all of the Kate Atkinson books?
Re: US writers, how about Wally Lamb, Barbara Kingslover, Johnathan Frantzen, Jeffrey Eugenides, Karl Hiassen....

pruners · 11/03/2008 15:50

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
marina · 11/03/2008 15:52

Yes, I thought it was a bit flimsy at first (and so did several reviewers) but it had me reeled in nicely by the end. Definitely novella-ish though...
Agree re Jeffrey Eugenides - Middlesex is a wonderful novel - and you have of course already read Donna Tartt's The Secret History?

pruners · 11/03/2008 15:54

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
pruners · 11/03/2008 15:55

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
marina · 11/03/2008 15:56

Oh, would that be Emotionally Weird, pruners - I hated it too, it put me off her for quite a long time

girlfrommars · 11/03/2008 15:59

Mario Vargos Llosa, "The Feast of the Goat"

Andrey Kurkov, "Death and the Penguin" and "Penguin Lost"

happystory · 11/03/2008 16:01

Can I butt in quietly? (I loved Middlesex BTW) What do I read by Jonathan Coe for starters?

orangina · 11/03/2008 16:01

I loved all her books (Kate Atkinson).... her 2 books post Emotionally wierd, very good. A bit more in the vein of Ian Banks (Have you read The Crow Road or Complicity? Both fab....)
Ian McEwan?
Who is that English bloke who wrote 3 novels, (perhaps semi autobiographical?) about coming from and living in a supremely disfunctional upper class family?
(racks brains)

pruners · 11/03/2008 16:02

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
orangina · 11/03/2008 16:03

Edward St Aubyn. Disturbing, but brilliantly written.

pruners · 11/03/2008 16:04

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
happystory · 11/03/2008 16:07

Thank you

orangina · 11/03/2008 16:16

ugh Atonement is the only McEwan book I just couldn't do. Try Saturday, or Enduring Love.

francagoestohollywood · 11/03/2008 16:16

I really second Jonathan Franzen's The corrections

I really liked The dwarves of death!!!!

Daniel Pennac

any novel by Georges Simenon

DaDaDa · 11/03/2008 16:21

Another vote for Paul Auster, especially Mr Vertigo. Murakami hits the same kind of notes about youth, music and friendship.

FlossieTCake · 11/03/2008 23:07

Which Jonathan Coe is your favourite, pruners? I'd recommend something quite different for someone who had particularly loved The Rotters Club and The Closed Circle than I would for someone who had loved, say, The House of Sleep.

Pleased to find some more Coe enthusiasts

Have you read any Barbara Trapido? Lighter reading than JC but some of the same elements. Quite funny. Pushes the idea of coincidence to its absolute limit though.

Hari Kunzru - Transmission for the slapstick/satire end of things.

Just finished a great book by last year's Booker winner Anne Enright - What Are You Like? Fabulously surreal.

I could go on...

pruners · 12/03/2008 07:28

Message withdrawn

OP posts:
marina · 12/03/2008 10:26

Whereas I love House of Sleep (and The Rotters Club) best
Have never tried any Barbara Trapido, thanks for the recommendation

Swipe left for the next trending thread