Hazel Barkworth, Matthew Kneale, Rebecca Kauffman and Stuart Evers: This week’s best new fiction

From Hazel Barkworth’s bold debut to Pilgrims by Matthew Kneale, Rebecca Kauffman’s latest and an epic by Stuart Evers, this week’s best new fiction

Heatstroke

Hazel Barkworth                                                                                  Headline £16.99

Heatstroke has the premise of a thriller – a schoolgirl has been abducted – but treats the material with uncommon subtlety. 

It’s midsummer and English teacher Rachel knows how she’s supposed to act, what she’s supposed to say to the police, when her daughter’s best friend Lily goes missing. And she knows, too, what she mustn’t say, the secrets she has to keep hidden. This is a bold and beautifully written novel of desire and danger.

John Williams

 

Pilgrims

Matthew Kneale                                                                                     Atlantic £16.99

It is 1289 and a motley group of English pilgrims set out on the long journey to Rome. All medieval life is here: a guilty adulteress, a landlord who has punched an abbot, a converted Jew, a noblewoman desperate for a divorce and a simpleton who thinks his dead cat is suffering in purgatory. 

Kneale’s novel takes readers back to an age of religious superstition with such assurance that every word rings true.

Max Davidson

 

The House On Fripp Island

Rebecca Kauffman                                                                  Serpent’s Tail £12.99

Marital tensions, class anxieties and adolescent longing propel this atmospheric drama in which two families share a holiday home on an exclusive South Carolina island. 

Childhood friends Lisa and Poppy hope that their husbands and children will hit it off, but everyone seems to have something to hide. An overwrought ending mars an otherwise absorbing summer read.

Madeleine Feeny

 

The Blind Light

Stuart Evers                                                                                              Picador £18.99

On National Service in 1959, working-class Drummond Moore meets posh, confident Jim Carter. Their final training is for civil defence in the event of a nuclear war, and when Jim later offers Drummond the chance to manage a nuclear bunker on land he owns, Drummond leaps at the chance. 

Spanning 60 years, Evers’s epic novel is a litany of global and domestic terrors that will appeal to those with a taste for the dour and disconcerting.

Anthony Gardner