Member Reviews

The Night Alphabet is a novel of interwoven stories, as a woman tells the stories of her tattoos to two tattoo shop workers. It is 2233 and in Hackney, a woman covered in strange tattoos walks into a tattoo shop, asking for them all to be connected together using ink and blood. As the tattoo takes shape, she tells the stories of these tattoos, each one a doorway to a 'remembering', another life that she fell into and lived in some way. Coal mining, gay bars, murderers, sex work, and more, the stories chart violence against women and different existences, all whilst our protagonist, Jones, reveals more about her history between the tattoos.

Unsurprisingly for a poet like Taylor, the writing really brings this book together, with each story feeling very different and yet still lyrical, never too repetitive. It keeps returning to the tattoo shop like waves on the sea and this gives the book a nice rhythm and pacing too. Some of the stories are more gripping than others, and some explore more nuance than others. One that stood out particularly was the one in which the narrator becomes an incel man who kills women, which has quite a different feel to a lot of the other stories about women being the main character and fighting for things, and it hinted towards interesting questions about perspective as well as forms of female revenge. The titular story also stands out as it is dark and powerful, giving a new form of voice to a group of women. Some of the more obviously dystopian stories were too similar to other 'what if something happened to all people with XX or XY chromosomes' stories for me, and the short length of the individual parts meant there wasn't much nuance to them.

Overall, I enjoyed the writing of The Night Alphabet and the clever way it wove together the stories into a novel, but I didn't feel like all of the stories were as interesting and nuanced as others, and I would've liked to spend more time in the messiness of perspective that Jones talks about at points, and what it means to understand too many sides to any story.

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Very nicely executed. It's just an amazing book, and I can't wait for it to be released and for people to gushe about it like they should if they read it carefully. The length is really misleading! I was irritated to realise that I hadn't given it the proper amount of time to savour. This requires numerous rereads. Without a doubt, the story is simply amazing, with a stunning structure and a novel style. This is something that everyone ought to read. It's not only a very lovely piece of literature, but it's also quite relevant and significant.

You need 'The Night Alphabet' if you're looking for something really unique, with stunningly gorgeous writing (that you want to print out and frame!). I marked more pages to come back to than I have in all the other books combined.

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Published 15 February 2024. This novel by poet Joelle Taylor blindsided me totally - I wasn't expecting something that was so affecting and as for the writing, the poetry in the use of language and the images, it is so visual and clear - stunning. We are in 2233 and a woman walks into a Hackney tattoo parlour. She is covered in tattoos but wants one final inking, she wants to link, to connect all of the images with an ink mixed with blood. As the two women in the parlour start their work, they ask Jones about the tattoos and she tells them the stories behind them. And this is when we learn that Jones is not just a woman covered in body art, she is different. Each tattoo is a reminder of what she refers to as rememberings, when she falls into different lives. Some are in the past - we go 19th century mines, some are dystopian - the chilling Quiet Men. We have stories of sex workers, trafficking, murder, revenge, and even a plan to genetically modify baby girls. Each story had an impact. Beware there is violence against women here, but there is also strong and resourceful women. I thought this was so inventive and as for the way that the lives of the women in the parlour are woven into Jones - you'll just have to read it yourself.

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Incredibly well done. Simply a fantastic novel, I am so excited for it to be published and to later see others rave about it as they should if they read it well. The length is so deceptive! Finished it so quickly, it annoyed me knowing that I didn't savour it as it deserves to be. This calls for many re-reads. Structurally beautiful, stylistically fresh, and the narrative is just spectacular, needless to say. Everyone should read this. Apart from being an extremely beautiful piece of writing, it's also so timely and important. I wish Taylor is already working on another one at the moment, as greedy as this may sound... Sorry, not sorry, but a massive, massive thank you.

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If you fancy something highly original, with exquisitely beautiful writing (that you want to print out and frame!), then you need 'The Night Alphabet'. I highlighted more passages to revisit than I have in all the rest of my books put together. Joelle Taylor's award-winning poet status sings from every page. 'The Night Alphabet' is a collection of short stories that read like a novel. The book is inventive, compelling and deeply, deeply affecting. Each story I read was my favourite. Every one of them took my breath away. I don't want to give anything away about the content, but I would urge you to read it and share it with your womenfolk. It's quite bizarre, identifying your Book of the Year two months before the year has even started, yet here we are. And having read 'The Night Alphabet', this feels strangely fitting. This is a book to revisit, time and again. If it doesn't win all the awards next year, I'll eat a MAGA hat.

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