Whether transporting us to a certain time or place, helping build a sense of character, or forming the basis of the plot, music is an essential component of these engaging books – meaning they're not just must reads, they sound great, too.
‘Anyone’s Ghost is very much a book about how the soundtrack of one’s life influences, and is influenced by, love. The main characters are, for much of the book, very young people, and as a once-very young person, I felt it was important to capture that feeling of being defined by one’s taste.’
‘Gender presentation and performance – and the ways Paul’s ever-reshaping body allows him to challenge both – are central to Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl, the first novel by writer Andrea Lawlor. . . It’s not surprising, then, that music – which helps so many people find their identities, and which signposts communities – is also absolutely intrinsic to the book’s narrative and mis-en-scène.
Throughout the novel, artists from George Michael to Hole to Pansy Division are alluded to – sometimes casually, in the background; always there, setting the tone, telling us about the situation and the kind of people who are in it, and lending a massive amount of authenticity in terms of the time period, and the groups Paul inhabits.’