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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Hephzibah Anderson

In brief: Games and Rituals; Friendaholic; The Women Who Saved the English Countryside – reviews

‘Deadpan delivery’: Katherine Heiny at home in Maryland, America
‘Deadpan delivery’: Katherine Heiny at home in Maryland, America. Photograph: Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/The Guardian

Games and Rituals

Katherine Heiny
Fourth Estate, £16.99, pp240

For any reader yet to encounter Katherine Heiny, this sparky new story collection provides a joyous introduction. Its title encompasses her protagonists’ antics in pursuit of – or flight from – love. They’re a somewhat jaded bunch with awkward pasts they never seem able to break free of. Nor can they stop yearning. And so a driving examiner only partially succeeds in remaining realistic about her workplace crush; a receptionist wears a taffeta bridesmaid dress to the office; a New York journalist, stranded by snow in her loathed Michigan hometown, finds sozzled closure in an airport bar. The deadpan delivery, the bittersweet wisdom, the sublime farce – it’s all here.


Friendaholic: Confessions of a Friendship Addict

Elizabeth Day
Fourth Estate, £16.99, pp416

Meet Elizabeth Day, recovering “friendaholic”. While she was no queen bee at school, Day became an indiscriminate collector of pals in adulthood, reaching her 40s before questioning the urge. This unabashedly personal book charts her attempts to “course-correct” by analysing the meaning of friendship. She’s helped by five of her closest confidants, including journalist Sathnam Sanghera and broadcaster Clemency Burton-Hill, with first-person takes from the likes of a neurodivergent Iraqi woman and the sixtysomething chairman of a Norfolk “men’s shed”. It’s a generous, companionable guide to a part of life every bit as crucial – and as fraught – as romance or family.

The Women Who Saved the English Countryside

Matthew Kelly
Yale University Press, £10.99, pp400 (paperback)

The public moralist, the philanthropist, the technocrat and the activist: this is how historian Matthew Kelly characterises the women at the centre of his intriguing group biography. The philanthropist is Beatrix Potter but the others – Octavia Hill, Pauline Dower and Sylvia Sayer – are far less well known. Over a 150-year period, they independently fought to establish the regulatory tools still used to preserve England’s green spaces. Kelly proves a fastidious chronicler of their campaigning and if his prose is sometimes overly academic, it draws vitality from his subjects’ conviction that in alienating ourselves from nature, we curb our own happiness.

• To order Games and Rituals, Friendaholic or The Women Who Saved the English Countryside go to guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

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