The serialization of The Lemur - written by none other than Benjamin Black/John Banville - commences in the Sunday Magazine with Chapter 1: Glass Houses. (Thanks, Scott.)
The researcher was a very tall, very thin young man with a head too small for his frame and an Adam’s apple the size of a golf ball. He wore rimless spectacles, the lenses of which were almost invisible, the shine of the glass giving an extra luster to his large, round, slightly bulging black eyes. A spur of blond hair sprouted from his chin, and his brow, high and domed, was pitted with acne scars. His hands were slender and pearly pale, with long, tapering fingers — a girl’s hands, or at least the hands a girl should have. Even though he was sitting down, the crotch of his baggy jeans sagged halfway to his knees. His none-too-clean T-shirt bore the legend “Life Sucks and Then You Die.” He looked about 17 but must be, John Glass guessed, in his late 20s, at least. With that long neck and little head and those big, shiny eyes, he bore a strong resemblance to one of the more exotic rodents, though for the moment Glass could not think which one.
If you haven't tried the Black books yet, Christine Falls has just been released in paperback by Picador, giving you plenty of time to catch up for the release of The Silver Swan. (Picador will also release The Lemur in its entirety later this year.)

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