STEVE JOHNSON recommends a beautiful album of songs that celebrate summer, from May Day onwards
RADICAL science fiction and fantasy flourished in the 1980s, a decade of economic insecurity, aggressive foreign policies and cant about “the enemy within.”
It was a period when Michael Moorcock’s Mother London drew on mythic and supernatural elements to reimagine the capital’s working-class history and reassert the values of collectivism and mutual aid, while Iain Banks’s The Bridge was a multifaceted, prophetic broadside against the self-serving philosophies of Thatcherism and Reaganomics.
In his SF collection Slow Birds, Ian Watson mapped the insecurities of the era through tales of ecological disaster, psychological control and impending nuclear annihilation. And there were powerful and idiosyncratic novels from dissident perspectives by Angela Carter (Nights at the Circus), M John Harrison (the Viriconium books) and Iain Sinclair (Downriver).
GORDON PARSONS is intrigued by a biography of the Marxist intellectual and author, made from the point of view of his son
JOSEPHINE BARBARO welcomes a diverse anthology of experiences by autistic women that amounts to a resounding chorus, demanding to be heard
KEN COCKBURN relishes the memoir of a translator, but wonders whether the autobiography underlying the impulse would make a better book
ANDY HEDGECOCK relishes an exuberant blend of emotion and analysis that captures the politics and contrarian nature of the French composer


