Monday, 31 March 2025

We Are Not Anonymous – Stephen Oram - Blog Tour

 


Many dystopian tales are high tech, stylised, futuristic fantasy fables that entertain us without making us unduly uncomfortable - think Hunger Games, Maze Runner, Divergent. Bureaucratic, autocratic, technocratic. They entertain us without hurting us or alarming us unduly. 

But every once in a while, one comes along that hits home with a chilling sense of prescience. Often, they depict a near future with enough familiarity for the reader to relate. 

We Are Not Anonymous is one of those once-in-a-whilers.

 

The story spans two decades in a three country England still struggling with climate change. Beth is a ‘caster’. Naomi is a rebel opposing the regimes via Resist and Regain an organisation that makes Just Stop Oil look like kindergarten. 

 

Dystopia embraces the us versus them, good versus bad, dark versus light concepts, Anonymous is no different. Here it is the tech elite Narcissists who are the bad guys headed by Kia who experiments on children and wants complete control. Beth and Naomi want to oust Kia. But activism comes at a price. 

 

This book is heavy on mnemonics and my advice is to get them sorted in your head right at the beginning of the book – OS, BP, ANN, UBI, the L’s and, of course, AI. 

 

The creation of an alternate regime and society is at the heart of dystopian fiction. But it must be plausible. Terminologies must be relatable without extensive explanations. The reader needs to learn and understand though the narrative itself. It’s a skill for the writer and not always achieved. It is here. Trust me, you’ll be thinking about globules as if you’d had one your entire life. 

 

In some ways a story like this offers future consequences for the actions of today. The book looks at how our reliance on technology and our devices underpins everything we do. Recognisable areas of our country permanently flooded. Individuals seek to control and dictate. Surveillance and observation are everywhere. Is this a chilling blueprint for our future?  However, you cannot merely seek to preach and warn, even if you do it under the guise of fiction, without some broader dimensions. Stephen Oram has done that with a rip-roaring tale of subterfuge and skullduggery, some of it taking place on the seven seas like a pirate escapade. High octane adventure nestles alongside some domestic and family dynamics, considerations of friendships and parenthood. And the nature of activism. 

 

It is an immaculately plotted story. It has to be for there is so much going on, at times it made my head spin! But the story remains highly pertinent, this line for example.

 

We will resist this onslaught of unfettered belief in the flawlessness and omniscience of artificial intelligence. It’s species suicide. We will resist.’ 


With current events unfolding in this world of ours today a novel like this cannot fail to make us think about what might be ahead. 

 

My thanks to Isabelle Kenyon of Fly on the Wall Press for an advance copy of this book and a place on the blog tour. 


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Saturday, 15 March 2025

Graffiti Girls – Elissa Soave

 


I remember reading Ms. Soave’s first novel Ginger and Me , and believing it to be something of a coming of age story. 

(I wrote about the book on this blog - https://bookphace.blogspot.com/2023/04/ginger-and-me-elissa-soave.html)

 

Graffiti Girls looks at a completely different female demographic – women in their forties looking back at their lives and wondering if they are past their sell by dates! Very different from the previous book. There’s an element of the feminist novel here but it’s also about friendships and how different women react in given situations. I found it a keen observation of the misogyny in our society. 

 

I should say that I don’t actually approve of graffiti! There are ways to get your points across, I think, particularly nowadays, but ultimately some poor sod has got to clean the graffiti off! That takes resources and manpower and detracts from the intent of the graffiti artist, I believe. I have no arguments, though, with what these four women are saying in their graffiti.

 

The four women, Amy, Carole, Elenore and Susan are friends since schooldays. They have a tight supportive friendship despite their very different characters. I liked the format of the book where each woman had a section devoted to her and the reader leant more abut her as an individual. And there were chapters that were general to all the women. They are all likeable characters, so the reader is invested in their stories and their motivations.

 

The book has an easy flowing narrative with much appeal to those of us who are older and can identify with some of the situations described in the book.  

 

Ultimately, it is an uplifting read that has a point to make but not in a preachy, hard or angry way  (even though Amy is pretty feisty!) 

 

My thanks to HQ Stories for my gifted copy. 

 

Saturday, 8 March 2025

An Orchid in My Belly Button – Katy Wimhurst

 


The short story is an underrated genre. Character, plot, setting and suspense all combine succinctly to a satisfactory conclusion. It used to be far more prevalent amongst writers of substance. Think of Rudyard Kipling, Edgar Allan Poe, Daphne Du Maurier, Franz Kafka, Raymond Carver…… I could go on.  But now it seems that many short story authors fall below the radar. I long for the day when we see the longlist for the Booker Short Story Prize 20whatever……. But I guess in our money dominated times it is an economic issue that inhibits the major publishers from embracing the short story collections. 

 

I’m an eclectic reader, maybe that helps, but I love short stories. I love the skill that a short story writer displays with their ability to create a concise narrative without compromising literary integrity. So, I jumped at the chance to read this absorbing collection from Katy Wimhurst. For a start I adored the title!! Who couldn’t resist a book entitled An Orchid in my Belly Button?!

 

I laughed, I cried, I marvelled. The stories are diverse. Some juxtapose what we might see as the norm; snow falling inside rather than outside, predator rabbits and a Buddhist wolf. Another takes the capability of an everyday item to an extreme - a vacuum cleaner that can suck up literally anything! 

 

There are tales of magic, dystopia, shapeshifting, dreamlike tales, bizarre imaginings. There are fables for our contemporary times; materialism that causes a boat to sink, a stroppy mermaid aghast at the plastic pollution.

Accounts of flora and fauna growing on the human body. There is something euphoric about an imagination running so freely. 

 

I think my favourite story was Bootleg Chocolate. It was certainly the one that made me laugh the most. At times it was almost Kafkaesque, with a helping of Lewis Carroll. It’s a short story but it defies a precis, it’s so offbeat with such creative episodes within the story, very clever.

 

But as well as making me laugh I was also touched by the empathy and understanding of the natural world - The Ghosts of Crabs where little Luke can communicate with the ghosts. So many of Katy Wimhurst’s characters are in tune with the rhythms of nature and possess a reverence for living things that is almost spiritual. 

 

It may only be March, but this has been one of my favourite books so far this year. I loved it. 

 

Thank you to the author for gifting me a copy.