Saturday, 20 September 2025

When writers go serial: The fiction newsletter Renaissance

From Dickens to Substack – The New Age of Serial Fiction

Somewhere between a Dickens cliffhanger and a Substack subscriber list, a curious thing is happening. Fiction is going serial again.

Once the domain of Victorian magazines and pulp weeklies, serialised storytelling is seeing a new wave of popularity, only this time, it’s landing directly in readers’ inboxes. From Substack to Beehiiv, Ghost to Revue, platforms once reserved for thinkpieces and hot takes are now hosting fictional universes, unfolding one email at a time.

Thursday, 18 September 2025

Unfinished business: the allure of the incomplete novel

Covers of The Castle, Sanditon, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and The Pale King arranged beside a black-and-white portrait of Sylvia Plath—each representing an iconic but incomplete novel that continues to intrigue readers.
There’s something magnetic about the unfinished novel. These are books that gesture towards a whole, yet never quite arrive. They end mid-thought, mid-sentence, or mid-dream. 

And rather than leaving us cold, they pull us in. Think of Kafka’s The Castle, Sylvia Plath’s Double Exposure, or David Foster Wallace’s The Pale King. Each offers a kind of literary excavation site. We don’t simply read, we speculate, sift, and imagine.

Saturday, 13 September 2025

Books that broke the internet: when novels go viral

Books that broke the internet
In the past, a book’s success was measured in reviews, literary awards, and maybe, if the stars aligned, a TV adaptation. 

Now, a novel might become a global sensation because someone sobbed over it on TikTok, annotated every page with pastel highlighters, or declared it "life-changing" in an Instagram caption. From Fourth Wing to The Song of Achilles, some books seem almost genetically engineered to break the internet.

Wednesday, 10 September 2025

What writers can learn from pop stars

From hook lines to persona, what can writers learn from pop stars? A reflection on rhythm, voice, and literary sparkle
It might sound a little unexpected to set Dua Lipa and Helen Garner on the same page, yet both demonstrate something fundamental: how to build a voice. 

Garner paints scenes with sharp observational detail, sunlight catching on chipped teacups, the quiet despair in a suburban living room. Lipa delivers lyric hooks that lodge themselves in your bloodstream. They're instant and irresistible. Both are storytellers.

Saturday, 6 September 2025

The annotated life: Why marginalia is back in style

An open book with handwritten notes, underlines, and sticky tabs lining the margins
Marginalia, you either love it or hate it. Once considered the mark of a disrespectful reader, someone scribbling on the pristine pages of novels, marginalia has returned with an unexpected flourish.

Instagram is full of annotated pages, complete with underlines, post-its, and impassioned scribbles. On TikTok, readers film themselves reacting in real time, pen in hand. Even published authors are weighing in, sharing how marginal notes shaped their early reading lives.

Friday, 5 September 2025

This ain’t no cowboy song: writing through grief with music

I wrote the lyrics to a country song as a way of working through grief, using AI tools for the music. It isn’t a cowboy song — but it is my story.
This is a bit left-field for this blog. Usually, I’m writing about books and fiction. But creativity doesn’t always stay neatly in its lane. Sometimes it spills out in unexpected ways.

A few months ago, I wrote a song. Not just a throwaway lyric or a fragment of melody, but a fully formed country ballad. It’s called “This Ain’t No Cowboy Song”.

Wednesday, 3 September 2025

Genre-blending that defies labels: From Romantasy to experimental fiction

In  Alt Text: A collage of five genre-blending book covers: The Atlas Six, The Serpent and the Wings of Night, We Computers, Babel, and A Touch of Jen. These novels fuse fantasy, romance, satire, speculative fiction, and experimental narrative to challenge literary conventions.
What do you call a novel that blends gothic romance, dark academia, political allegory, and a magic system based on linguistic theory? 

In 2025, the answer might be: a bestseller. Genre boundaries are increasingly porous, and today’s readers are embracing the hybrid. Welcome to the era of genre-blending fiction, where labels are looser, rules more elastic, and expectations deliciously disrupted.

Sunday, 31 August 2025

Why men read less than women — And how to change it

Women buy 80% of books and read more than men — but why? Explore the reading gap, initiatives to change it, and the benefits of men reading more.
It remains a sad truth universally acknowledged that women read more books than men.

Twenty years ago, Ian McEwan remarked that ‘when women stop reading, the novel will be dead’. I found myself thinking about that last week, sitting by the pool on holiday. 

The women — myself included — were all reading novels. The men, almost without exception, were staring at their phones. Doom scrolling. A small snapshot, perhaps, but one that reflects — and still reflects — a broader reality.

Friday, 29 August 2025

When cosy meets cathartic: the revival of WWII family sagas

Black-and-white photograph of Elizabeth Jane Howard, author of The Cazalet Chronicles, whose WWII family saga series is seeing a revival in 2025. Featured in a Tangled Prose article on comforting historical fiction.
There is something quietly astonishing about returning to a decades-old series and finding it not only still relevant, but newly resonant. That's precisely what is happening with the revival of Elizabeth Jane Howard’s Cazalet Chronicles. I have loved reading these.

It’s no wonder Hilary Mantel said these were the books she told everyone to read, and wondered why she wasn’t as widely read as Jane Austen. Mantel suggested, in a Guardian article, that part of the reason Howard was underrated and underread was because she was a messy modern woman and was judged for it. 

Wednesday, 27 August 2025

Beyond genre: experimental and alt-lit’s bold new directions

A moody desk scene with scattered manuscript pages, a glowing screen displaying a digital novel, and post-it notes covered in unconventional plot ideas. The setup suggests creative chaos and the disruption of traditional storytelling.
Genres are meant to be helpful. They signpost where to look on the shelves in bookshops and libraries, offering a comforting sense of what to expect. But what happens when a book won’t stay put? 

When its narrative is fragmented, its form elastic, and its voice deliberately hard to pin down?

Monday, 25 August 2025

Eco-fiction and cli-fi: why climate-centred narratives are more crucial than ever

A soft-toned flat lay of nature-themed books arranged with dried leaves, a reusable coffee cup, and a bookmark made of recycled paper. The atmosphere is introspective, inviting readers to think about climate and fiction together.
Not long ago, a story about climate disaster might have been shelved neatly in the realm of science fiction. Now, it reads like realism with a sense of urgency. 

As global temperatures climb and natural disasters become routine news, climate fiction, often shortened to "cli-fi", has shed its speculative skin and settled into something uncomfortably close to home.

Thursday, 21 August 2025

The quiet power of slow books

Stack of novels and a teacup on a windowsill, sunlight catching their edges — a quiet moment for thoughtful, slow-paced reading.
Some novels refuse to be hurried. They ask for patience, not because they’re difficult, but because they move differently. You don’t tear through them. You live in them.

I was thinking about this as I slowly make my way through Lonesome Dove, by Larry McMurtry. It’s that kind of book. There are, of course, plenty of others.

Tuesday, 19 August 2025

Why we keep coming back to the same books over and over

A vintage copy of a novel resting open on a well-worn chair, hinting at a beloved story returned to again and again.
There are books I’ve read two or three times, and picked up more times. Not out of duty, but from a pull I can’t quite explain. 

They’re not always my favourites in the traditional sense. But they know something about me, or I know something about them. That's the power of rereading. 

Saturday, 16 August 2025

Why the Literary western endures — and what’s driving Lonesome Dove’s TikTok resurgence

Why are readers falling for the Western again? From Lonesome Dove to Blood Meridian, we explore the genre’s enduring power and literary evolution.
There’s something quietly electric about Lonesome Dove’s return in the BookTok universe: the dust-swept epics and tender, layered characters suddenly feel urgent again. 

In a time when TikTok scrolls through bite‑sized narratives, this sprawling western reminds us that sometimes we long for horizons—not just on screen, but in story. 

Thursday, 14 August 2025

Reading for Joy: How to escape a reading slump and embrace comfort in 2025

Feeling stuck in a reading slump? This gentle reflection on comfort reads, literary guilt, and the quiet joy of reading for pleasure offers a soft way back to books in 2025.
It happens quietly. It has happened to me. The pile of unread books grows taller, the will to open one grows thinner, and suddenly reading—this thing we once loved—feels like homework. We tell ourselves we’ll get back to it.

When things slow down. When we’re more focused. When we finally feel smart enough for the Booker-longlisted doorstop. But maybe the way out of a slump isn’t through discipline or guilt. Perhaps it’s a return to softness. To stories that ask nothing of us except to enjoy them. In 2025, perhaps the kindest thing we can do is let reading be easy again.

Tuesday, 12 August 2025

How to write like Joan Didion

A guide to the joan didion sentence
What makes a Joan Didion sentence unmistakable? It’s not only the vocabulary or the rhythm. It’s the control. The precise needlepoint balance between distance and emotion, between clarity and chaos. Her prose doesn’t shout; it slices.

In her best work, Didion captures a moment so cleanly that the emotional aftermath lingers longer than the reading itself. Consider this line from The Year of Magical Thinking:

"Grief turns out to be a place none of us know until we reach it."

Experimental & Alt-Lit movements — When internet culture writes fiction

Digital graphic for “Experimental & Alt-Lit Movements: When Internet Culture Writes Fiction,” featuring bold black title text on an off-white background with scattered internet icons, emojis, and symbols.

If you’ve ever found yourself falling down a rabbit hole of Tumblr confessions, TikTok poetry, or a Reddit thread that reads like a novella, you’ll recognise the spirit of alt-lit.

This loose, slippery movement isn’t a genre so much as a sensibility, one that embraces the textures of online life and folds them directly into literature. It’s fiction with its hair mussed up, still smelling faintly of late-night scrolling.

Monday, 11 August 2025

Climate fiction and Neurodivergent narratives — The rise of conscious storytelling

Exploring 2025’s surge in climate fiction and authentic neurodivergent narratives, with examples that balance artistry, empathy, and urgent themes.Something’s shifting in the novels. The stories feel sharper somehow, as if they know they’re not just here to entertain. They’re here to nudge us. Sometimes to provoke us. Occasionally, to jolt us out of complacency.

Two trends stand out in this tide of literary urgency: the rise of climate fiction (or “cli-fi” if you like your genres neatly abbreviated) and a richer, more authentic representation of neurodivergent characters. These aren’t new themes in literature, but they are being handled with a depth and immediacy that feels uniquely 2025.

Thursday, 7 August 2025

Is fan fiction the new slush pile? What editors are really looking for

With publishers actively scouting Archive of Our Own and Wattpad, fan fiction is no longer the literary underdog. Here’s why fanfic is becoming publishing’s secret weapon—and what makes a story stand out.

There was a time when fan fiction lived in the shadows, tucked into forums, buried in tags, dismissed as derivative, and looked down upon. It wasn’t writing. It was adoration as typing. 

Not anymore. Now, it’s edging toward centre stage, commanding the attention of publishers, agents, and readers alike.

Wednesday, 6 August 2025

Joan Didion’s packing list and the illusion of preparedness

Joan Didion's packing list from the White Album
It’s the holiday season. You’re packing for your trip. There is no better time to revisit this: two skirts. Two jerseys. A bottle of bourbon. This is the famous packing list from The White Album. It is as precise as it is strange. It reads like a ritual, a personal inventory, a whisper of both glamour and dread.

It’s not really about the clothes. It’s about control. About readiness. About who she became when the suitcase clicked shut.