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Books to be published in 2022: a pick of what’s coming up

A look at just a few of the new titles for 2022 that might nonetheless lend a rosy glow to the horizon

Many of us have felt a more pressing need to find our own corner of heaven over the past two years, and some have found theirs between the covers of books.

Despite the fragility of the wider economy, £1.1 billion has been spent on 128 million books in the UK since mid-March, when the market analysts Nielsen resumed their data reporting. That figure is up 9% from the same period in 2019.

The juggernaut that is Richard Osman’s Thursday Murder Club books has led this drive forward, with both novels dominating the bestseller lists. Meanwhile, 30 of the top 50 bestselling books of 2021 were written by women.

These green shoots of optimism are of course set against a backdrop of continued uncertainty. But with hope in our hearts, let’s look at just some of the new titles for 2022 that might nonetheless give the horizon a rosy glow.

Short presentational grey line

Familiar fiction

Marian Keyes – Again, Rachel

Marian Keyes
Marian Keyes has written her first sequel.    Image source: Getty Images

On and off the page, Marian Keyes’s beguiling affability and fearless honesty about the crappy side of life have won her an army of worldwide fans. Her 15 titles include Sushi for Beginners, Anybody Out There, Grown Ups and her most successful, 1998’s Rachel’s Holiday.

In Keyes’s first sequel, Rachel, the party girl who partied her way into rehab, is back – and sorted. Life is good. But circumstances and emotions are never that simple, and as ghosts from her past begin to resurface, Rachel battles to hold her nerve.

Published on 17 February

Douglas Stuart – Young Mungo

Douglas Stuart
Douglas Stuart’s debut novel won the Booker Prize.     Image source: Clive Smith

Just how do you follow a major award-winning debut? If you’ve got grit, you get straight back in the saddle, which is precisely what the Booker Prize-bagging Shuggie Bain author, Douglas Stuart, has done.

Like his debut, Young Mungo is set in Glasgow, where Stuart grew up, and takes on an unflinchingly tough, and deeply human, storyline. Set against the backdrop of 1980s working-class life, it follows two young men who live in constant fear of revealing they are in love with each other.

The threat of violence lurks around every corner. Can they survive? Better still, can they escape?

Published on 14 April

Jennifer Egan – The Candy House

This is the long-gestating sibling novel to Jennifer Egan’s 2011 Pulitzer Prize-winning A Visit from the Goon Squad, which unfolded via 13 interrelated stories and saw Egan time-shifting and genre-bending.

Now it’s 2010 and the brilliant tech entrepreneur Bix Bouton develops Own Your Unconscious, a means of accessing every memory you’ve ever had, and sharing them in exchange for the memories of others.

Again, Egan spins out the consequences of Bouton’s invention through the linked narratives of multiple characters whose paths intersect over several decades.

Published on 28 April

Candice Carty-Williams – People Person

Candice Carty-Williams
Candice Carty-Williams is the author of the hit novel “Queenie”.     Image source: Getty Images

In 2019, Candice Carty-Williams’s debut novel, Queenie, the story of a troubled young Jamaican woman, became a word-of-mouth hit. It won Book of the Year at the British Book Awards, where one of the judges, Stig Abell, described it as “an important meditation on friendship, love and race”.

Now Carty-Williams has applied her deftness of touch to the story of Dimple Pennington, an up-and-coming lifestyle influencer whose own humdrum existence is far from inspiring. Then, a dramatic event brings her four estranged half-siblings crashing back into her life, along with their absent father.

Carty-Williams asks: What is the true meaning of family, especially when your dad loves his Jeep more than his kids?

Published on 28 May

Jessie Burton – House of Fortune

Jessie Burton has written three bestselling novels for adults, including The Muse and The Confession. But it was her historical thriller The Miniaturist, Burton’s 2014 debut, that truly smashed the ceiling. The BBC also adapted it for TV.

It told of Nella, a young bride in 17th-century Amsterdam whose miniature replica of her own house begins to mirror real life. This is the sequel, set 18 years later.

The Brandt family are facing financial ruin. An invite to a lavish ball brings Nella hope of finding a way out. The ball does set things spinning, but when Nella feels a strange prickling sensation on the back of her neck, she wonders if the miniaturist has returned.

Published on 7 July

Monica Ali – Love Marriage

Monica Ali
Monica Ali is back after a ten-year wait.     Image source: Yolande de Vries

After a hiatus of ten years, Monica Ali makes her return. She has written four novels but it was her first, Brick Lane (after the London neighbourhood at the heart of the city’s Bangladeshi community), that made her name. It was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and made into a 2007 film.

Love Marriage again draws on Ali’s Bangladeshi and English heritage. The story explores the challenges that may arise when different cultures try to come together.

Two young doctors, Yasmin Ghorami and Joe Sangster, are engaged. But as both families get to know each other, Yasmin is forced to question what a “love marriage” – as opposed to the arranged marriages still the norm in her south Asian culture – truly means. Plans are already in the pipeline for a TV adaptation.

Published on 3 February

Other novels from popular authors on the way include: Beth O’Leary – The No Show (28 April); Wilbur Smith – Storm Tide (14 April) and The New Kingdom (2 September); Mick Herron – Bad Actors (12 May); Sarah Vaughan – Reputation (3 March); Will Dean – First Born (14 April); Gregg Hurwitz – Dark Horse (17 February); and Lynda La Plante – Vanished (31 March).

Fiction debuts

Amen Alonge – A Good Day to Die

Amen Alonge
Amen Alonge delves into gangland crime in his debut novel.     Image source: Quercus

A trainee solicitor, Amen Alonge is launching his writing career with an action-packed contemporary gangland thriller set in London. It takes place primarily in one day and revolves around the character known only as Pretty Boy.

He has returned to the city after a ten-year absence with just one thing on his mind: revenge. He’s out to make the person responsible for his exile from the London underworld pay. But the hunter becomes the hunted, and Pretty Boy finds himself fighting for survival.

Published on 17 February

Claire Kohda – Woman, Eating

Here’s one for Gothic horror fans – a modern-day vampire thriller that also covers race, social isolation, unrequited love and parental loyalty.

The musician and book critic Claire Kohda’s debut introduces us to Lydia, who is living a miserable existence. Squatting in London, separated from her vampire mother, she is desperate to eat the delicious food she sees everywhere but can’t. Her only sustenance has to be blood.

Yet Lydia is no Dracula. She is half human. But pigs’ blood is not a readily available commodity. We watch as Lydia battles not only her vampire hunger but also to find her place in the world.

Published on 24 March

James Cahill – Tiepolo Blue

James Cahill
James Cahill’s novel is a satire set in the art world of the 1990s.     Image source: Darren Wheeler

Cahill, an academic, offers a 1990s story that focuses on the Cambridge art historian Professor Don Lamb, whose brilliance belies a deep inexperience of life and love.

Out of nowhere, he is forced to leave the university and ends up working in a London museum. There he befriends Ben, a young artist who introduces him to the anarchic British art scene and Soho nightlife.

It opens his eyes to a liberating new existence. But his epiphany is also a moment of self-reckoning, as his oldest friendship – and his own unexamined past – are revealed in a devastating new light. His life begins to unravel, leading to a dramatic fall from grace.

Published on 9 June

Charmaine Wilkerson – Black Cake

Caribbean American Charmaine Wilkerson’s novel was inspired by her late mother’s legendary rum cake. And the complex 60-year family history behind such a delicacy is the axis upon which her story spins. It tells of estranged siblings who reunite for the funeral of their mother.

She has left them a puzzling inheritance: a voice recording in which everything the siblings believed about their family is upended. And then, there’s a traditional Caribbean black cake made from a family recipe with a legacy that just might heal the wounds of the past.

Published on 3 February

Amy McCulloch – Breathless

Amy McCulloch
Amy McCulloch has written a mountaintop thriller.     Image source: Quercus

Amy McCulloch’s experience as an expert mountaineer inspired her “top of the world” crime thriller, her debut novel for adults. It tells of Cecily Wong, a struggling journalist who is invited to interview the famed mountaineer Charles McVeigh, on condition she joins his team on one of the Himalayas’ toughest peaks.

But on the mountain, it is clear something is wrong. It begins small – a theft, an accidental fall. And then a note. Someone on the mountain has murder in mind and what better place than amidst such desolation and remoteness?

Published on 17 February

Dolly Parton and James Patterson – Run Rose Run

Dolly Parton and James Patterson
Dolly Parton launches herself into the book world in collaboration with James Patterson.     Image source: Courtesy of Dolly Parton

This one is a bit of curveball. Individually, neither the global music star Parton nor bestselling thriller author Patterson is straight out of the oven. But as a writing double act they are. And this is Parton’s first foray into the world of novels.

The result is a story no doubt inspired by Parton’s background. It tells of a rising singing star, with songs about her difficult past – a past she needs to escape. Nashville is calling but even if she finds fame, the danger behind her might find her too.

Published on 7 March (and there will also be a Parton album with the same title).

Other fiction debuts include: Claire Alexander – Meredith, Alone (9 June); Ryan O’Connor – The Voids (10 March); Reverend Richard Coles – Murder Before Evensong (9 June); Dolen Perkins-Valdez – Take My Hand (12 May); Jo Browning Wroe – A Terrible Kindness (20 January).

Non-fiction

Sara Davies – We Can All Make It

Sara Davies
Sara Davies shares her secrets for success

The Dragons’ Den star Sara Davies shares her story of what it took to become one of Britain’s biggest business names with her company Crafter’s Companion, now worth £30 million. She recalls how she started by running an enterprise from her university bedroom, followed by years of hard graft, doing whatever it took to achieve her dreams.

But this is not some dry “how to be as great as me” manual. Along the way, Davies lets us into her personal life and presents a warm and witty personality with no fire-breathing to be seen.

Published on 28 April

Michael Schur – How to Be Perfect

Michael Schur, creator of the hit comedy shows The Good Place, Parks and Recreation and Brooklyn 99, and writer of the US version of The Office, brings us a tongue-in-cheek book about what being a good person really means.

It’s not always easy to know what is good or bad in a world of complicated choices and bad advice, Schur says.

He tries to bring clarity by answering important questions, such as, “Should I punch my friend in the face for no reason?” Or, “Should I push one person off a bridge to save the lives of five others?” Sticky issues indeed.

Published on 25 January

Abi Morgan – This Is Not a Pity Memoir

Abi Morgan is one of the most sought-after play and screen writers, whose credits include The Iron Lady, Suffragette, Sex Traffic, The Hour, Brick Lane and Shame. But behind the success, lies a fight for survival.

This is her moving story of her husband’s struggles with illness – illness that led to him being rushed to hospital and put into a coma. It is also her account of her own battle against cancer and what trauma has taught her about the important things in life.

Published on 12 May

Adam Kay – title to be confirmed

Adam Kay
Adam Kay wrote the bestselling “This Is Going to Hurt”

The comedian and former doctor Adam Kay, the UK’s bestselling non-fiction author, brings us his follow-up to his hit This Is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor, which is being adapted into a comedy drama by the BBC, starring Ben Whishaw as Kay.

That book was both laugh-out-loud funny and sad as Kay gave the lowdown on what it is like to be holding it together while serving on the NHS front line. His still untitled sequel follows in the same vein with anecdotes that recount both hilarious and heart-breaking stories from in and out of hospital.

Published in September

Lucy Easthope – When the Dust Settles 

Professor Lucy Easthope is the UK’s leading authority on recovering from disaster. She is the one the authorities call when destruction and chaos strike. Her job is to plan for when things go wrong and respond with action and insight when they do.

It ha seen her called to the scene of every major disaster of the past two decades, including 9/11, the 7/7 bombings, the Indian Ocean tsunami and the COVID-19 pandemic.

In this candid memoir she introduces us to victims and their families, but also takes us into the government briefing rooms and bunkers, where confusion can reign supreme.

Published on 30 March

Other non-fiction titles include: Adam Rutherford – Control (3 February); Minnie Driver – Managing Expectations (12 May); Raven Smith – Men (28 April); Bob Odenkirk – Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama (1 March); Edward EnninfulA Visible Man (6 September).

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