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1. The Chronic(what?)cles of Amber - Roger Zelazny
2. A Voyage Around the Queen - Craig Brown
3. The Englightenment of the Greengage Tree - Shokoofeh Azah
4. Sex Power Money - Sara Pascoe
5. The Tailor of Panama - John le Carre
6. In at the Kill - Gerald Seymour
7. Because I don't know what you mean and what you don't - Josie Long
8. How to be a Liberal - Ian Dunt
9. Happy Old Me - Hunter Davies
10. Factfulless - Hans Rosling
11. Munichs - David Pearce
12. Mr Paradise - Elmore Leonard
A Swim in a Pond in the Rain - George Saunders. 7 Russian short stories, explained, broken down and built up again. Much more interesting than it might sound, it might make you read differently. Read the story, then have it broken down - it works really well on Kindle, too, with links to jump back and forth. For the first, he breaks it down page by page, often saying 'this could be annoying, right?!' So for the others, he takes different approaches. He's a great writer, this is a fascinating book. There are writing exercises in there, too, if you want to see where you'd edit to make a difference (though the main lesson here is - edit! Less is more!)
Safe Enough: And Other Stories - Lee Child. Short stories, not about Reacher. Pithy and action packed. With a bonus Reacher collaboration at the end. Solid.
A Short Gentleman - Jon Canter. A short (pompous) gentleman tells the story of his life, and how he came to be a criminal. Good story, and actually laugh-out-loud funny, which is rare.
Titanium Noir - Nick Harkaway. Le Carre's son shows he can write on his own, not just finishing dad's books. Noir detective thriller in a world of new technology and new humans. Great.
Free: Coming of Age at the End of History. Lee Ypi, academic (and also the subject of the Spectator's "I couldn't listen she was too lovely" disgrace) grew up in Albania as it went from 'socialism' to whatever comes next. Fascinating account of being a child who knows only one way until all of a sudden it is swept away. She doesn't get lost in the weeds, which makes it easy to skirt over the weirdness within, but it's all there - essentially, parents having to pretend they believe in the system otherwise their children might unwittingly drop them in it. The sacred coke cans are a highlight.
The Trials of Koli - M.R. Carey. Second part of a trilogy in a post-apocalyptic landscape where tech from the beforetimes is still around, but sparse and sacred. Fantastic.
The Fall of Koli - M.R. Carey. ...and so I moved straight onto the end, where there's more tech which makes it shift more from fantasy to sci-fi, which it does effortlessly. I loved the main character, and the world, and everything, really.