Amman Brar on Mr. Sidhu's Post Office — One of BBC News's 12 Books of 2026 cover art

Amman Brar on Mr. Sidhu's Post Office — One of BBC News's 12 Books of 2026

Amman Brar on Mr. Sidhu's Post Office — One of BBC News's 12 Books of 2026

Listen for free

View show details

Philippa opens with a much-requested update on the Barcelona Kindle story — specifically, the one detail everyone wanted to know: did the Kindle survive? (It did. The case did not.) Then it's three book reviews and a wonderful conversation with debut novelist Amman Brar about Mr. Sidhu's Post Office — one of BBC News's 12 books to read in 2026.

📚 Three Book Reviews

The Burning Tide – William Shaw (out 16th July)

The second Eden Driscoll mystery sees the ex-Met detective pulled into a case involving a stranger who claims someone is trying to kill him — only to vanish before Eden can ask more questions. Beautifully written, with Shaw's signature warmth in portraying adult-child relationships.

The Tailor – Tim Sullivan

A bespoke tailor is found murdered on the Bristol to London train. DS George Cross deduces immediately it's an execution, not a robbery — and finds himself in personal danger for the first time. Tim Sullivan joins Philippa next Monday to discuss it in full.

Eyes on You – Adele Parks (out next month)

A woman whose father murdered his secret lover when she was 15 meets a man with his own dark past — and what feels like love may be something far more dangerous. Philippa opened it intending to file it away and couldn't put it down. Adele Parks joins the podcast soon.

🎙️ Amman Brar on Mr. Sidhu's Post Office

Mr. Sidhu is a widower in his 60s, quietly devoted to his post office, his two willful grown-up children, and his coworker Rose — with whom he's unexpectedly falling in love. When money starts going missing from the till, his carefully built life begins to unravel.

Written as a tribute to Aman's father, who ran a post office in Richmond for decades, the book also quietly acknowledges the devastating Post Office Horizon scandal and its human cost.

Amman and Philippa discuss:

  • Growing up around his father's post office in the '80s and '90s, and wanting to capture a world that's slowly disappearing
  • Writing the book as a way of spending time with his father after he passed away eight years ago — and why finishing it felt like letting him go all over again
  • His background in theatre (Royal Court, Soho Theatre, Tamasha) and how writing a novel is completely different — more solitary, less terrifying than opening night
  • The original working title: Dave and Rose (which made him laugh, which is why he chose it)
  • Why his dream writing location is the South of France — and why his black Labrador is his best untangling tool
  • His nightmare: the quiet carriage, one man on his phone, and the moment Aman became that guy
  • What he's reading: Pachinko by Min Jin Lee and This Is Where the Serpent Lives by Daniel Murtagh
  • The second book: another family drama, this time about his own generation

Biscuit answer: French Normandy butter and almond biscuits, dunked in coffee — with rosé on the side if Philippa's paying.

💬 Get in touch

Quick Book Reviews Facebook Group | Instagram | quickbookreviews@outlook.com

Quick Book Reviews: author interviews and book reviews with no spoilers.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet