Great Circle, by Maggie Shipstead 

Strap in for an epic journey, following a female aviator (inspired by Amelia Earheart) who disappears while attempting to become the first person to fly a circle around the Earth, intersecting both poles.

The novel soars through a landscape rich with complex characters and intimate perspectives on historical events, spanning the turbulent years from the nineteen twenties to the modern day. The aviator, Marian Graves, is a single-minded force of nature, who refuses to allow the conventions of her time to restrict her. We accompany her through a childhood in rural Montana, dressing as a boy and smuggling alcohol during Prohibition, to her service as one of the first female pilots in England during the second world war, and finally, on her fateful journey over Antarctica.

At some point she would have found the edge of her own courage. There is nothing for it but to adjust, be humbled. So she is not exactly who she had thought. So what. She will be someone different.

The novel charts other stories too: that of Marian’s parents, her twin brother, Jamie, and their childhood friend, Celeb, as well as intermittently swerving into the present day where a Hollywood actress playing Marian in a movie about her life, pieces together clues about what might have become of her.

Marian remains the powerful engine of the book however, the perfect heroine for a novel grappling with the vertiginously widening scale of the twentieth century. With the backdrop of globe-trotting exploration, technological breakthroughs, and war, the restless hunger which drives Marian’s desire to fly (to keep moving, to escape), is equally fraught with a suicidal need to push boundaries and to toy with its own destruction. Perhaps this is why, for a story so full of life—its characters exploding with will and desire—the book is also a reconnaissance of loss; a confrontation with emptiness, death and disappearance; with the unchartable that lurks at the edges of what we know.

An exquisitely written and lovingly-rendered story, impressively researched and adroitly pitched for the concerns of a modern day audience, it is definitely worth the read. It was shortlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize, and the 2022 Women’s Prize for Fiction, and received glowing praise from critics. 

If you’ve already read it, let me know what you thought in the comments, and as always, don’t forget to sign up for future blog updates. 

Buy on kindle £4.99 

Paperback from Better World Books £4.26

Follow the author @MaggieShipstead

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Skyward Inn by Aliya Whiteley 

A strange, quiet book, where the speculative elements are painted so lightly, you won’t realise you’re reading sci fi until you’ve been sucked into a story about love, family and community in a forgotten West Country village.

Jem runs a small rural Inn, serving brew to a smattering of locals alongside her immigrant partner, Isely; a love affair that seems both intensely intimate and frustratingly unconsummated. The community where they live, forms part of The Protectorate, a partitioned area of the UK that separated itself from the outside world in protest over the invasion of Qita, Isley’s home planet. The battle for Qita ended before it begun, won by humanity without a shot fired, a fact explained away by the pacifist nature of Qita’s people.

Jem lives a carefully compact existence; innkeeper, resentful sister to the local councillor, and estranged mother to a wayward son, until outsiders arrive to penetrate the studied calm.

The guide laughed at him. ‘Somebody told me that [Where to babies come from?] was the most difficult question you can human. Is that true? I heard you squeeze them out of yourselves, and cut them free. They do not decide to come free themselves!’

The book holds its cards close to its chest and although I was sucked in from the beginning, it wasn’t until the final quarter that I really sat up and realised I was reading something important. Expertly woven into a story about intimacy and independence, selfhood and community, are deeper questions about how and why we reach for each other, and what we might be prepared to sacrifice not to feel alone.

The novel was a finalist for the 2021 BSFA Award for Best Novel and Arthur C. Clarke Award, as well as being named one of the five best science fiction novels of the year by the Financial Times. It has been monikered a ‘modern classic’, something which gets bandied around a lot, but that I think in this case is valid. This book is grappling with something timeless and vital, and doing it in a perfectly paced and plotted story that I believe will hold out against the test of time.

If you’ve read Skyward Inn, let me know what you thought in the comments, and as always, don’t forget to sign up for future blog updates. 

Buy on kindle £5.99 

Paperback from Awesome Books £6.05

Follow the author @AliyaWhiteley

Want more book recommendations? Follow me on twitter @SLangridgeUK for updates on what I’m reading.

Check me out on TikTok @theyrhymesometime