JULY 2019 • 123
READER’S DIGEST
misguided ways. Yet,
rather than condemning
their messy behaviour,
Moggach regards it with a
kindly and often amused
eye—understanding that,
as one character in The
Carer gradually comes to realise, pretty
much everybody is “just a normal,
faulty human being”.
The carer of the title is the cheerfully
brassy Mandy, who has been employed
to look after James, a cultured,
octogenarian ex-academic living in
the Cotswolds. Somewhat to the alarm
of his grown-up children, she soon
introduces him to the delights of such
things as shopping centres, daytime TV
and village gossip. But is she up to
something more sinister?
Halfway through, we get our
answer—in a terrific twist that I can’t
possibly reveal, but that adds an extra
layer of poignancy (and some great new
characters) to this sharp, witty,
characteristically generous and
gallopingly readable novel.
Can you guess the writer from these
clues (the fewer you need the better)?
- His surname is also the name of the only
official language, by law, in the UK. - An innocent hobby provided the title
of his far-from-innocent first novel. - That novel, set in Edinburgh,
became a Danny Boyle film starring
Ewan McGregor.
Paperbacks
The Man Who Didn’t Call
by Rosie Walsh (Pan, £7.99)
After a perfect week together, Sarah’s
new man fails to contact her as
promised. Was he just using her or
is there another, far darker reason?
(Clue: he wasn’t just using her.)
Hitler’s British Traitors
by Tim Tate (Icon, £10.99)
Eye-opening, thoroughly-researched
account of the Brits who worked for
a German victory in the war.
Aftershocks
by A N Wilson (Atlantic, £8.99)
An earthquake has effects that go well
beyond physical destruction in this
clever and moving novel.
And Thank You for Watching
by Mark Austin (Atlantic, £8.99)
The TV journalist and foreign
correspondent spills the beans on his
long career from Mandela’s release to
Trump’s White House.
A Shot in the Dark
by Lynne Truss (Raven, £8.99)
One of those rare comic crime
novels that actually succeeds in
being both funny and a properly
constructed mystery.
Answer on p126
Name the author