Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Boxer and the Goalkeeper

by Andy Martin
This is a book examining the lives of Sartre and Camus and their renowned friendship and falling out. Knowing very little about these two individuals I found the book very accessible and a good read. Having enjoyed the little Camus that I have read it was a useful book to put some of that writing in context. 8/10

The Lighthouse

by Alison Moore
This was a strange book that I found compelling for a reason that I cannot put my hands on. It follows the walking tour of Futh along the Rhine, following seperation from his wife and is full of flashbacks to his marriage and his childhood. Running alongside this is the story of Ester, the landlady in the hotel in which he stays on his first and last night. Quite how there lives are entwined provides some dark humour to the book. 7/10

Swimming Home

by Deborah Levy
This is a short novel about an English family-father a poet, mother a war correspondent and daughter a confused teenager-whose holiday in a French Villa near Nice with 2 friends of the wife is disrupted by finding a naked young woman in the swimming pool. She stays and the fallout is examined in this book. The writing was beautiful but the plot I found less gripping 6/10

Sweet Tooth

by Ian McEwan
This was as expected in that he plays with the reader a little by asserting his authorial right to choose an ending and letting us know that he is doing it. He also plays with the Booker prize -from which he was noticeably absent this year! However, the story is about an ex MI5 agent who messed up and was sacked. We know this because the narrator tells us in the first chapter that this is what she did. It is a mark of McEwan's powers of storytelling that, knowing this, he holds the tension throughout the novel. Some lovely reflections on 70's britain to boot. 9/10