Emma Garman, a Brighton-based writer and critic, has been a columnist for The Paris Review and a contributor to Literary Review, The Daily Beast, Lapham’s Quarterly, and History News Network. She has an MA in creative writing from the City College of New York and an MA in literature from Queen Mary University of London.
Garman's debut novel is The Kindness of Strangers.
Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Garman's reply:
Although I mostly read novels, at the moment I happen to be reading and immensely enjoying two nonfiction books.Visit Emma Garman's website.
Like a Cat Loves a Bird is a new biographical study of Muriel Spark by the literary scholar James Bailey. Spark, in my opinion, is one ofthe greatest novelists of all time (I’d say she influenced me, but such is her genius it sounds presumptuous!), and Bailey is such a perceptive, witty, and clever writer. If you think you don’t need to read another book on Spark, I promise that you do. Here’s Bailey on her habit of compiling lists of character traits:
To encounter one of these pages is like stumbling upon the dossier of a murky private investigator, or overhearing the musings of a mind reader. The protagonist of her second novel, Robinson, even spots a newspaper ad for: ‘MURIEL THE MARVEL with her X-ray eyes. Can read your very soul. Scores of satisfied clients.’ A self-congratulatory cameo this early on? The nerve.The second book I’m reading is old and sadly out-of-print. First published in 1973, Percy Hoskins’ The Sound of Murder describes a series ofnotorious murders and their investigations. Hoskins, who became a Fleet Street crime reporter at age 21, writes with a seasoned journalist’s knack for telling details and a novelist’s style and verve. His first case, in 1925, saw a young man hanged: a miscarriage of justice, he suggests. His final chapter is about a serial killer in mid-1960s London—“the Thameside Terror”—pursued by a 600-person murder squad. Suffice it to say that for writers of 20th century-set crime fiction, this book is a research goldmine.
The Page 69 Test: The Kindness of Strangers.
--Marshal Zeringue
































