OK, I’m sold, I’m adding Glorious Exploits to my TBR list!
This is a very late reply, @inaptonym, but many thanks for the recommendation of Dear Dickhead by Virginie Despentes. I feel a bit obsessed with her at the moment. Her books are provocative but the ones I’ve read so far have really stayed with me.
@elspethmcgillicudddy I’ve read Thomas More’s Utopia and found it hard going. I say that as someone who loves the 16th century (if I had to choose one favourite century of the past for literature, the 16the would win hands down. Montaigne, Rabelais, Louise Labé, Marguerite de Navarre). The book is interesting and important due to More forging the concept of utopia, but his ideal society certainly isn’t one I’d want to live in. It has slavery and everything!
Incidentally, I hardly ever see live theatre (to my shame), but I saw A Man for All Seasons this month, about Thomas More. The set and costumes were impeccable, but the show somehow lacked oomph overall. It was just too straight. Martin Shaw was starring and he is 80… somehow I think he’s just too old to make the role truly charismatic, even though I admire him for the effort! The play was a reminder though of how controversial a figure More is. In the play, More is a Great Hero and Thomas Cromwell is a villain. After reading Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall trilogy, I have another model of More and Cromwell in my head, with the hero/villain roles reversed. I’m sure the reality lies somewhere in the middle. More was both a great humanist who made sure that his daughters received a wonderful education, AND a religious bigot who could be absolutely ruthless to his enemies.
@PepeLePew I am so so envious that you saw the medieval women exhibition at the British Library! I’m gutted I missed it. I meant to go to London to see it before it ended. Woe. I will just have to look at the online stuff. I read Marion Turner’s Wife of Bath last year and really enjoyed it.
@RomanMum n thanks for the review of Thunderstone: another addition to my TBR list. I used to live in Jericho in Oxford and am quite fascinated by the culture along the canal.
@DuPainDuVinDuFromage, I’ve read Babel and Yellowface and while I liked them much more than you did, I agree that Kuang is anything but subtle. I was just thinking the other day about how when there were French and Latin sentences in Babel, the translations were WRONG. In multiple instances. Which I know makes me sound like a pedant, but I’m still surprised that someone as academically well-connected as Kuang couldn’t have found some linguists to proofread her work (when it came to languages she didn’t know herself). Harrumph.
Finally, I agree with @bibliomania that Six handles its material sensitively and well. I went a couple of years ago with low expectations and thought it was great. My DS (year 7 at the time?) also enjoyed it. It’s true that it’s woefully short. However, it was originally written by a couple of uni students, and it has that freshness and energy that perhaps only the young can bring.