The Eternal Return of Clara Hart

The Eternal Return of Clara Hart by Louise Finch

Book of the Week: 13 April 2025

Cover by Holly Pereira

Spence wakes up on the first anniversary of his mum’s death in his car in the school car park. As he registers how awful he feels, a girl called Clara Hart bumps into his car with her own and they have an argument. He meets his friends, Anthony and Worm, in the cafeteria where Anthony yells ‘banter’ at girls and talks about the party he’s throwing while his parents are away. Spence goes to his A-level Philosophy class, has a monsyllabic conversation with his dad once he gets home, and makes his way to the party. During the evening, when everyone has drunk too much, he goes upstairs when he thinks he hearsĀ  Worm and Anthony behind the locked door of Anthony’s bedroom. When it’s opened, he catches a glimpse of a drunken Clara on Anthony’s bed, but he is quickly hustled away. Later, a distressed Clara stumbles downstairs, refuses a lift home and runs out into the road where she is knocked down and killed by a car.

The following day, Spence once again wakes up in the school car park and events repeat themselves, albeit with slight variations. He is stuck in a nightmarish time-loop where he tries desparately to alter the outcome and stop Clara Hart from dying.

This is not just a propulsive read with a cleverly constructed plot, but an exploration of issues such as consent, harassment, misogyny and grief. It is not an easy task to balance the repetiveness of a single day’s events with adding new twists, but Louise Finch succeeds admirably. The changes in viewpoint and the insights into characters keep us turning the pages and provoke a good deal of thought and hopefully discussion.

The book is suitable for older readers since the plot deals with sexual assault and uses some graphic language along with depictions of drug-taking and alcohol use.

The Demon-Haunted World (Book of the Week: Lockdown edition)

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The Demon-Haunted World by Carl Sagan

Book of the Week: 5 July 2020

The subtitle of this 1996 book by Carl Sagan is Science as a Candle in the Dark and it is an eloquent plea for a more general understanding of the scientific method and the application of critical thinking and scepticism to what we read and hear. Along the way, the reader learns about the work of various scientists such as James Clerk Maxwell and Edward Teller as well as beautifully-expressed details of Sagan’s own life.

The chapter entitled The Fine Art of Baloney Detection listing such guidelines as:

“Wherever possible there must be independent confirmation of the ‘facts’.

Encourage substantive debate on the evidence by knowledgeable proponents of all points of view.

Spin more than one hypothesis.

Always ask whether the hypothesis can be, at least in principle, falsified. Proposition that are untestable, unfalsifiable are not worth much.”

should be read by everybody, particularly those people given to pontificating on social media.

If you are unable to get to a bricks-and-mortar library, there are some alternative science books that can be borrowed free from Warwickshire Libraries