July 27, 2024 · 3:58 pm
Doppelganger: A Trip into the Mirror World by Naomi Klein won the first Women’s Prize for Non Fiction last month. I read Klein’s first book No Logo several years ago, which I felt had already dated somewhat over a decade after its release. In contrast, the ideas explored in ‘Doppelganger’ are very much of the here and now, having been published just last year, but I think this book will remain relevant for a long time. What starts out as an amusing anecdote about being repeatedly mistaken for anti-vax right-wing conspiracy theorist Naomi Wolf becomes a deep dive in the world of post-truth politics and the ways in which doubles are reflected in the “mirror world” particularly online. This includes frequently discussed topics such as how people curate their online personas and how political divisions are fuelled by disinformation and misinformation, alongside digressions about autism, doubles in literature, climate change and antisemitism. This sounds like a jumbled mix of ideas, but Klein is astute and erudite and balances personal reflections with rigorous journalistic analysis.
The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley is a debut novel which has generated a lot of buzz this year. Set in the near future, it sees an unnamed British-Cambodian civil servant recruited by the government as a time travel agent or handler known as a “bridge” to Commander Graham Gore, who was a real-life Victorian naval officer aboard HMS Erebus. There are a lot of fun ideas here about how to acclimatise Gore and the other “expats” from different historical eras to cope with life in 21st century Britain, although the quirky genre-mashing ultimately does try to be too many things at once. I think I was more invested in the humorous consequences introduced earlier in the story, rather than the latter half which veers more towards dark thriller territory. It will be interesting to see how ‘The Ministry of Time’ is adapted for TV by the BBC and how those tonal shifts are handled. Many thanks to Hodder & Stoughton for sending me a review copy via NetGalley.
Filed under Books