Books I reviewed in May (and some I didn’t)

I know, I know, we’re past halfway into June, but fuck it, I’ve been busy, right? Anyway, May was a cracking month, with loads of fantastic books read and reviewed. I reviewed for the Indy on Sunday, Scotland on Sunday, Scotsman, Big Issue and The List. Here the fuck they are:

Ewan Morrison, Tales From The Mall (Cargo) – Fantastic 21st century book about the secret lives of shopping malls, mixing fiction, modern folk tales, stats, history, sociology and much more. He’s a smart bastard is Ewan.
Jackie Kay, Reality, Reality (Picador) – New story collection from the always entertaining Jackie Kay, but I didn’t think this was up with her best, though.
Claudia Hammond, Time Warped (Canongate) – All about our changeable perception of time – a fine piece of pop science.
Laurent Binet, HHhH (Harvill Secker) – Very ambitious and impressive debut French novel, a literary thriller, a meta-novel and a bunch of other shit besides.
Megan Abbott, Dare Me (Picador) – Oh, I love Megan Abbott. This is her best yet, a fantastic noir thriller set in the heady world of American high school cheerleading.
Philip Ball, Curiosity (The Bodley Head) – A history of scientific method and thinking. Too much history, not enough science.
Nick Harkaway, The Blind Giant (John Murray) – Harkaway is better known for his fiction, but this non-fiction looking at how we adapt to the digital age is perceptive, smart and self-deprecating.
Jean Sprackland, Strands (Jonathan Cape) – Oh, I loved this, nature writing at its best. Thoughts and discoveries on a beach, spread over a year. Written with a poet’s eye for detail.
Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl (Weidenfeld & Nicolson) – Possibly my book of the year – a fantastic psychological literary thriller about a missing wife. Nerve-shredding doesn’t even begin to cover it.
Alan Warner, The Deadman’s Pedal (Jonathan Cape) – Getting a bit boring, all these great books – but this was another. A beautiful elegy to a time and place – specifically the changes in the west of Scotland in the early 1970s. This dude can write.

Interestingly, or not, the split this month is 5-5 between male and female writers, and 5-5 between fiction and non-fiction. Depending how you count Ewan’s book.

All of which meant I never had the time to read:

Tom Wright, What Dies in Summer (Canongate)
Jenni Fagan, The Panopticon(William Heinemann)
James Fearnley, Here Comes Everybody (Faber)
David Belbin, What You Don’t Know (Tindal Street)
James Sallis, Driven (No Exit)

Jesus wept, that’s annoying. I haven’t even had time to read Sallis! Shit, I need to find time.

Dx

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

I’m on the radio in a wee bit, apparently

Fiction Uncovered have a pop-up radio station thingy happening the next few days. You can listen in here, or at 87.9 FM if you’re in central London. Looks like there’s an interview avec moi at 11am this morning, followed by some clown Ian McEwan then Stella Duffy and a whole bunch of other great writers. [Please note, Ian McEwan is not an actual clown as far as I know.]

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , | Leave a comment

The Coolest Thing Ever To Come Out Of Belgium

Friday tune – ‘Instant Street’ by Deus. The coolest thing ever to come out of Belgium. Fast forward to 3mins 40 secs to hear the best riff of all time. Enjoy!

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Breaking into Crime Writing, Today

Aye so, quick shout out for an event I’m doing this evening in Waterstones Argyle Street, Glasgow, at 7pm. Details are here. It’s about ‘Breaking into Crime Writing’, apparently, and is part of Waterstone’s week-long Crime in the City thingy. Sadly, Helen FitzGerald can’t make the event, but I’m assured they have a suitable replacement. Hopefully catch you there, amigos!

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Friday tune: Holy Fuck, ‘Lovely Allen’

Four humans in a room creating a little piece of magic, that’s the stuff:

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

HIT & RUN is out today! Again!

Aye so, the new edition of my (ahem) AMAZON #1 BESTSELLING novel Hit & Run is out today! Again! I know, I know, it seems like only a few minutes ago that it was out before. In fact, it was three months. Faber have pulled the paperback publication forward cos of this Fiction Uncovered thing. Anyhoo, it’s out! Go buy it! In a shop! Or here! Wherever! Spread the word!

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , | 2 Comments

New covers for Tombstoning and The Ossians ebooks

Faber have signed up the ebook rights to my first two books, Tombstoning and The Ossians. They’re going to publish them this summer and they’re gonna be dirt cheap. Faber have done new covers for them. Here they are below. No massive change from originals I guess, but I like ’em. Any thoughts?

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Fiction Uncovered, Smokeheads optioned and other stuff

OK so, fair bit of news of late, here’s a cheeky wee round up:

Fiction Uncovered
Delighted that Hit & Run has been chosen as one of eight titles on Fiction Uncovered’s Best of British list for this year! Check out their website here, which has all the details. It’s basically a summer-long campaign trying to bring these novels to a wider readership, so cheers to that! Had a great time at the launch last week in The Union Club in Soho, swapping drunken chitter chatter with the London literati, and catching up with old friends like fellow chosen author Dan Rhodes. All good. We all got presented with special one-off leather-bound versions of our books, which are rather gorgeous. There are pics of the party and those special editions here.

One of the judges, Literary Editor of the Independent on Sunday Katy Guest, has written a rather lovely feature on the scheme here, which even includes a quote from me. Swearing. Which is nice.

The Indy on Sun is also running a competition to win all eight titles. Check it out here.

And there is a rave review of Hit & Run over on the Fiction Uncovered website.

Smokeheads Film News
The rights to my third novel Smokeheads have just been optioned, and the project has been chosen as one of seven to receive funding from Creative Scotland as part of their new Accelerator scheme. Read about it here. The project is being put together by producer/writer Alan McKenna and producer Carole Sheridan, who have a wealth of experience between them and both really seem to get the book, so it’s a very promising start all round.

It’s probably worth pointing out that both Hit & Run and Smokeheads are still available in Kindle format for a measly £2.05. Check it here.

While I’m here, here’s a profile of me on the Cision UK website, which is a kind of media-industry thang.

And there’s more exciting news coming soon regarding my first two novels, and Hit & Run, and some other stuff and that. But that’s enough for now, surely.

Cheers,
Dx

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Nicotine, valium, vicodin, marijuana…

Friday tune is Queens of the Stone Age’s ‘Feel Good Hit of the Summer’. Nicotine, valium, vicodin, marijuana, ecstasy and alcohol. Cocaine.’ I imagine that’s what Crimefest is like at the moment, where all my crime writer buddies are at. Oh yeah, that’ll be what it’s like. No doubt. Enjoy! Dx

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , | 2 Comments

I feel love

Friday tune is a no-brainer this week. Donna Summer’s ‘I Feel Love’. How amazing and fresh does this still sound, 35 years after it was released? RIP.

Posted in doug johnstone | Tagged , | 1 Comment