Megan Crawford, professor of education and director of Plymouth University鈥檚 Institute of Education, is reading Ian Rankin鈥檚 Saints of the Shadow Bible (Orion, 2014). 鈥淢aybe it鈥檚 because I have just become head of department, but I particularly enjoyed this book with its plotline of old friendships and discovering where your loyalties lie. Not, of course, that I am expecting to emulate DS Rebus as a role model. Rankin has brought back Rebus very effectively, I think, and I enjoyed every minute of the read.鈥

Sir David Eastwood, vice-chancellor, University of Birmingham, is reading David Peace鈥檚 Red or Dead (Faber, 2013). 鈥淕ood biographies of football managers are rare; novels about them rarer still. Peace here offers us a hybrid: novel as biography. More affectionate than his earlier book The Damned United, this improvisation on the life of Bill Shankly is an experiment that largely succeeds. He even finds ways of making team sheets sound lyrical, although the repetition can seem redundant. What lingers is the sadness of success, where a man鈥檚 identification with club and fans robbed him of the inner life and hinterland that ultimately make contentment possible.鈥

Mary Ha, academic administrator, London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, is reading Agatha Christie鈥檚 Death on the Nile (Heron, 1976). 鈥淗aving watched the films countless times since I was a child, reading the book was not a disappointment. Images of the film versions kept flashing through my mind but it wasn鈥檛 a distraction. Written quite clearly and with the feel of 鈥榤ake every scene count鈥, here Christie鈥檚 Poirot is as much of a tour de force on paper as he has seemed on screen.鈥

June Purvis, professor of women鈥檚 and gender history, University of Portsmouth, is reading The Times Great Women鈥檚 Lives: A Celebration in Obituaries, edited by Sue Corbett (History Press, 2013). 鈥淎 wonderful read about courageous women of the past, which tells us much about how a particular form of national biography evolved and changed over time. Apparently, 鈥榞ood looks鈥 are often important in the greatness of women, at least to obituary writers. And being on the Left politically, struggling for change, helps to achieve greatness. A book to dip into and savour.鈥

Peter J. Smith, reader in Renaissance literature, Nottingham Trent University, is reading Graham Joyce鈥檚 Simple Goalkeeping Made Spectacular (Mainstream Publishing, 2009). 鈥淐ajoled out of retirement in his early fifties to keep goal for England, Joyce finds himself at the (Writers鈥) World Cup facing Italy. By turns he is autobiographer, pundit and gobshite. The prose is as deft and athletic as the English team is outclassed and knackered. His intemperate raillery is brilliantly facetious: since the 1990s, 鈥榢eepers started to appear in shitty psychedelic sweaters that looked like they鈥檇 been designed by a depressed LSD casualty funded by an arts council grant鈥. Withering, hilarious stuff.鈥
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