Saturday, December 26, 2015

Round up 2015

Have read a number of series books this year, starting with the MadAddam trilogy and starting the Tariq Ali Islam quintet(covered 3 books). Also read Irene from the Pierre Lemaitre crime trilogy, and reread Money from the Rougon Macquart series. Add to this some Harry Bosch and Maigret and I guess you conclude it was the year of the series.
However, my book of the year comes down to one of three from no series.
A Year of Marvellous Ways by Sarah Winman, a rereading of Great Expectations by Dickens and The Great Swindle by Pierre Lemaitre. If I had to pick one it would probably be Sarah Winman by a whisker, for the way it captures magic in the real.
It would be wrong to end this post without a mention of A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara. How this did not win the Booker escapes me. It was the hardest read this year but a book I could not keep away from despite having to put it down for a day or two en route.

Thursday, December 17, 2015

The Rise of Islamic State

by Patrick Cockburn
A useful introduction to the stories behind the headlines in the current Syrian mess.
If you didn't think British bombing was misguided before reading this you may be persuaded otherwise reading this book. 8/10

The Great Swindle

by Pierre Lemaitre
There are numerous swindles going on in this book set against the backdrop of the first world war-the greatest swindle of all. I really enjoyed this book. The first chapter is fantastic, leaving you wondering what the book is about and where it will go. After that it is a case of follow the swindles.
This is such a contrast to his detective works but still great writing One of the best reads this year. 9/10

Great Expectations

by Charles Dickens
What Larks! What can I say, one of my all time favourites and the book that kicked off my love of Dickens. Pip is still as annoying, Estella is still annoying but the characters are all wonderful and the book is a joy to read. 9/10

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

The Concrete Blonde

by Michael Connelly
The third Harry Bosch novel this year. It was ok and gave us a bit more insight into Harry's character. It was a good relaxing read. 6/10

Playing the Whore

by Melissa Gira Grant
A book about sex work by a sex worker.
An interesting book and an interesting take on this area of society. It suffers from continually claiming that nobody outside the sex workers field could write with any valid opinion about the industry. I cannot agree with that but I did like a refreshing look at the issues. 5/10

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Satin Island

by Tom McCarthy
Very different from the previous book, this short novel has minimal plot, minimal character development and yet somehow is very engaging. In parts it is very funny -how funny can a corporate anthropologist be I hear you say- and in others very thought provoking. It definitely grew on me the more I read. 7/10

A Spool of Blue Thread

by Anne Tyler
Anne Tyler has been accused of only ever writing about family life. As this is the first book I have read by her I cannot comment on that, but if it is true then she does it very well. This is the story of the Whitshanks scattered over several decades and I found it really engaging. Character development is excellent and the story is kept alive somehow with very little happening that wouldn't happen in many families. Good stuff!7/10

Capital in the 21st Century

by Thomas Piketty
This book I have been reading for the past year nearly and have used audio, paper and kindle at various times to complete it. Having said that it is a very engaging read and highlights the need for some form of intervention if we are to avoid the disparity in wealth from increasing at an accelerating rate. The translation by Arthur Goldhammer is excellet. 9/10

Sweet Caress

by William Boyd
subtitled The Many Lives of Amory Clay this is narrated by a women photographer who lives for a large part of the twentieth century. It tells the story of her life and was at its most engaging when she was photographing things. The parts in the Scottish highlands were a diversion. A good read for a long weekend.8/10

The Looking-Glass Sisters

by Gohril Gabrielsen
This book by a Norwegian author makes any nordic noir you have read look like Anne of Green Gables. This is grim fare and although the writing is great in places it is a thoroughly depressing read. Described as a tragic love story it may be better described as a tragic hate story laced with bitterness and resentment. Could not get into this at all 3/10

Friday, September 25, 2015

Lamentation

by CJ Sansom
This is the last in a series of Tudor crime mysteries featuring lawyer Matthew Shardlake. It is a very easy writing style that carries you along through all 600 pages to a surprising conclusion. The historical detail is good and yet it is not a taxing read. 8/10

The Moor's Account

by Laila Lalami
The story of a Spanish expedition to conquer Florida told from the standpoint of a slave who was never consulted by history. This fictional account starts in Barbary before the narrator is a slave and follows his path through good times to bad times to slavery and his final inclusion on an ill fated trip to Florida and a march across the south to Mexico.
I found it slow moving to begin with but I became more and more engaged and ending up enjoying the story. 7/10

Thursday, August 27, 2015

A Little Life

by Hanya Yanagihara
Where to begin. This is a long novel at 720 pages. It follows the lives of 4 students who meet at college in their late teens and remain friends through the rest of their lives.
However, it soon becomes evident that the story is really about the elusive Jude who has been severely abused as a child and has been left disabled physically, and mentally scarred as a result.
The story of his life is told in a series of flashbacks that are very detailed and harrowing to read. At one point I had to put the book down for three days and gather my courage to pick it up again.
On many levels this book should not work.
1. It is set in a non determined time frame. It covers five decades and yet they all feel like the present.
2. There is very little contextualisation given. No real life figures or events to allow us to tie the story down.
3. Is it possible that somebody as damaged as Jude could rise to the top of a top flight law firm in New York. If the answer is no then much of the violence depicted becomes gratuitous doesn't it.
4. Could four college friends all rise to very top of their field (art, architecture, acting and law) and still be friends.
5. Would an orthopaedic surgeon take on the case of somebody metodically cutting themselves without referring them to other health professionals.

However, even allowing for the points above this is a gripping novel that raises all sorts of debate and drives you on to the end in a compelling fashion. 9/10

Monday, August 17, 2015

The Buried Giant

by Kazuo Ishiguro
This book is set in medieval England in a land where peoples memories are being lost and the land is populated by giants and dragons and ogres. A definite departure from Remains of the Day etc but still beautifully told. It is not a genre I particularly like but I did enjoy this. 8/10

A year of Marvellous Ways

by Sarah Winman
I loved this book. The language was poetic and magical just as the story itself is.
It is set in Cornwall and London just after the second world war and tells the story of an old cornish woman and her meeting with a young London man who has returned belatedly from the war in France. 10/10

The Green Road

by Ann Enright
A story of Irish families which Enright does well, and the first of the 2015 Man Booker crop I have read. This tells the stories of four siblings, their lives brought to us in vignettes from the different decades between the 1970's and today. The stories are great and the family have a final get together one christmas when their mother decides to sell the house.
I enjoyed the book up until the end when it sort of fizzled out, but as a master of telling stories about ordinary people in an engaging way, this is a good book. 7/10

The Black Ice

by Michael Connelly
The second book in the Harry Bosch series. We get a bit more background on Harry but I found this not as good as the Black Echo. There was a bit more, Harry as superman, rather than flawed cop trying to get through. It was still a good read focused around a drug gang operating between Mexico and LA. 6/10

Sunday, July 19, 2015

The Stone Woman

by Tariq Ali
The third novel in Tariq Ali's Islam quintet is set at the end of the nineteenth century as the Ottoman empire is crumbling. The stone woman of the title is a rock in the family home of Nilofer, the narrator of the title who returns home after a troublesome marriage. All the members of the family go to talk to the rock when they need to get things off their chest. The device is a bit contrived at times but the story is great and is peopled with colourful characters who stay with you long after the last page 8/10

A philosophy of Walking

by Frederic Gros
A look at the lives and motivations of philosophers and poets who have walked. It may sound dull but it is not. It was fun and insightful. Good read for a long train journey. It will make you want to walk home! 8/10

The Black Echo

by Michael Connelly
The first book in the Harry Bosch series. Harry is introduced as a maverick LA cop who is endearing in his own way. The pace is fast as Harry investigates a murder of an old Vietnam veteran Harry served with 20 years before. He falls foul of Internal Affairs and the FBI but as we learn more of his background some of his motivation becomes apparent.
The book was written in 1992 and is noticeable for the lack of mobile phones and the primitive IT used. Good police procedural; I will read more of Harry Bosch 7/10

Communal Luxury

by Kristin Ross
This is a short fascinating take on the Paris Commune of 1871 and in particular a look at why it has become such a rallying point for the political left.
The discussion around Marx and William Morris was particularly interesting as was the sections dealing with Peter Kropotkin. It is a book I will dip back into 8/10

Sunday, June 28, 2015

The Women Incendiaries

by Edith Thomas
A great book about the role women played in the Paris commune of 1871.
Their role was significant and the book produces good evidence to refute the belief that the main role of women in the commune was burning things down.
The question it leaves you with is why it took so long afterwards to give women a strong role in French politics and society. 9/10

The Emperor Waltz

by Philip Hensher
First off, this is a long book. I am not sure that splitting stories up between other stories makes this a novel as opposed to a collection of short stories. That aside these are engaging stories on the whole. I particularly liked the story of Duncan trying to set up the first Gay bookshop in London. I particularly disliked the story of Christian, a student at the bauhaus. He and all the other characters were particularly horrible and the last section featuring them was something in nothing. Throw in some christians being fed to the lions and middleclass kids sniffing poppers while the parents had a very nice party downstairs and you have a good collection of stories. Part of the fun was trying to find a link. I failed to find one. Fun at the time but not a book I would race back to. 6/10

Saturday, June 06, 2015

Reader for Hire

by Raymond Jean
The story of Marie-Claire who has a beautiful reading voice and places an advert in the paper offering to read to people. She gets an odd assortment of takers and this becomes a very funny book as she tells us of her encounters. I really loved the ending 9/10

Massacre

by John Merriman
This is a very readable history of the events of spring 1871 and the 10 weeks of the Paris commune. These events are made very personal by use of first hand accounts and memoirs, but also takes in the impact that these few weeks have had on subsequent history. He does not hide away the incredible contribution made by women to the commune and what is surprising is that it took so long for women to be given equal rights with men. Many would argue, with some justification that this is still an issue.
This is a very pro communard history but none the worse for that 9/10

The Night at the Crossroads

by Georges Simenon
A really enjoyable Maigret where a man complains about his car being stolen only for it to be found in a neighbors garage with a dead body inside. So begins a long investigation with a number of nice twists, but rest assured, our hero sorts it in the end! 8/10

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Restless

by William Boyd
A novel split between World War II and 1976 as a mother unfolds a hidden past to her adult daughter. This was a really enjoyable read and had me hooked from the first few pages. 9/10

Irene

by Pierre Lemaitre

This is the book that precedes Alex but was published in the UK after this.
It is violent to the point of being gratuitous and thereby losing some of its tension. Camille the main investigator in the trilogy is caught uop in a series of brutal murders undertaken by a serial killer who copies scenes from books written at the darker edges of the genre(Ellroy, Brett Easton Ellis etc). The trail leads to a dark and horrific ending.
I did not enjoy this as much as Alex but still an intriguing tale. Some of the tension was relieved by having read Alex first, which gives away the ending to this book. 6/10

Arab Jazz

by Karim Miske

A really enjoyable crime novel set between the 19th in Paris and New York. The story follows Ahmed, who has been mentally injured by a crime seen some years before, following the discovery of a brutal murder in the flat above his own apartment. Peopled with interesting characters across varying cultures and backgrounds it sits nicely between the violence of Pierre LeMaitre and the quirkiness of Fred Vargas 8/10

Sunday, May 03, 2015

Dog will have his day

by Fred Vargas
A dog craps near a tree in Paris, that after rain leaves a small piece of bone, a bone that turns out to be human. This sets Louis Kehlweiler on a trail that leads him and his acquaintances (Marthe and the three evangelists) around Paris and on a trip to Finistere.
A murder mystery develops, complete with the quirkiness we have come to expect from Fred Vargas. Great fun 8/10

Portrait of the Writer as a Domesticated Amimal

by Lydie Salvayre
A 2007 novel from a winner of the Goncourt prize in France, This is a satire based around a writer brought in to write the biography of a fast food mandate. Against her better judgement she enjoys part of the lifestyle, and who wouldn't enjoy meeting with Robert de Niro! ...... or Bob as she called him. The subject of her biography is called Tobald and he is in all ways obnoxious. This leads to some very funny passages as the foundations of modern society success is examined, and found wanting 8/10

White Hunger

by Aki Ollikainen
This book is set in 1867 Finland where a failed harvest has led to an appalling winter of famine.
The book is bleak and there is little in the way of happy outcomes and yet the language-even in translation- is beautiful, and helps paint the horrors of the individuals involved. 8/10

Sunday, April 05, 2015

The Carter of 'La Providence'

by Georges Simenon
The next in the Maigret series and one I liked a lot. A murder on a trading canal around Paris with a host of suspects and dark pasts. I think the cliché is "vintage Maigret" 8/10

Things to Make and Break

by May-Lan Tan
This series of short stories has everything I like and hate about short stories. You get hooked very quickly to the plot driving the story and then, just as you want to know what happens next, or more about a particular character, its over. End of. If you like short stories these are good. 6/10

Friday, March 20, 2015

Elisabeth is missing

By Emma Healey
This is a mystery with a twist.  The story is told by an eighty two year old narrator suffering with dementia and called Maud. Her current life is full of forgotten words, places, and people. She is convinced her friend Elizabeth is missing and because we only ever hear her confused version of the story it takes a long time to solve the mystery.
However, Maud's long term memory is crystal clear and in these passages she tells us about the events of 1946 when her sister disappeared never to be found.
The two stories intertwine beautifully and the story is at one time intriguing and at another incredibly sad.
Having said that I am not sure the story worked entirely and I was left a little frustrated with the ending. 8/10

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

The book of Saladin

by Tariq Ali
The second book in an intended quartet that ended as a quintet of novels about the tensions and conflicts between Christendom and Islam over the ages. This book tells the story of Saladin and his rise to power in the twelth century, and his part in what the english refer to as the crusades.
It is peopled with great characters ranging from the sultan's wife, Jamilla and her various lovers, to Eunuchs, to old retainers and not least the Jewish narrator of the story who is employed by Saladin to write an accurate account of his life.
As with the first book I find I love the characters but the story can sometimes be a bit flat. 8/10

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

by Rachel Joyce
A thin soil for a plot. Harold gets a letter from an old work colleague who is dying of cancer. He writes a reply and sets off to post the letter and just keeps walking from Kingsbridge in Devon to Berwick on Tweed in Scotland. Along the way he meets an assortment of characters who all help him find himself and come to terms with life changing events in his past. A little like Harold the plot seems to lose its way now and then and, like Harold, could probably have reached the end sooner than it does. The book handles the end well though. 6/10

MadAddam

by Margaret Attwood
The third book in the MadAddam trilogy this book takes the story on beyond the global catastrophe and fills in the backstory on Adam 1 and Zeb as well as several of the other characters. This is a book about endings and beginnings and hope as well as sadness.
I get the felling that the author had fun writing this book. There are some very funny parts such as the story of Fuck and fuck's place in the evolving mythology of the Crakers.
Not as good as the first book in the trilogy I still enjoyed this book. 7/10

Friday, February 20, 2015

The Paying Guests

by Sarah Waters
A novel set in the aftermath of WW1 and a mother and daughter who have lost the men in their family and trying to hang on to their upper middle class standing. With money running out they take in a young couple as lodgers and over the course of a summer their lives become increasingly entwined with disastrous consequences. A new time setting but this is vintage Sarah Waters with drama and tension right to the end, not to mention the odd twist and turn as the story unfolds.
The characters are brilliantly drawn and the detail of life after the war is fascinating 9/10

Saturday, February 14, 2015

The Year of the Flood

by Margaret Attwood
This is the second book in the MaddAddam trilogy and tells the story of God's Gardeners in the years immediately preceeding the waterless flood or plague that is at the centre of the trilogy.
I did not enjoy this book as much as Oryx and Crake. I found the characters hard to identify with and it was very late in the book before I managed to sort out who was who. However, it did keep me wanting to know what happened after the flood. Bring on part three! 7/10

Monday, January 26, 2015

The Shadow of the Pomegranate Tree

by Tariq Ali
The story of one muslim family in Southern Spain at the time of the expulsion of the Moors. The family are very engaging and the portrayal of family life is beautifully drawn against a background of the harsh realities of the time. 9/10

Oryx and Crake

by Margaret Attwood
A reread of a book I read first over 10 years ago. I enjoyed it much more this time. It is the tale of Snowman formally Jimmy who is trying to survive and make sense of the post apocalyptic world he lives in. Through flashbacks we learn how this came about and the roles that Crake and Oryx played in it. 8/10

Thank you for this moment

by Valérie Trierweiler
The inside scoop on the Francois Hollande love triangle and what really drove him to the croissant on a scooter caper. Very trashy but some interesting insights to life at the top of French politics. One feels the lady doth protest too much however. 4/10

Money

by Emile Zola
My second reading of this book and still very enjoyable. One cannot help feeling Zola would have loved to have been around in the years following 2008 and have written about unscrupulous bankers and a corrupt financial system. There is nothing new under the sun! 9/10

Holy Disorders

by Edmund Crispin
A tale of Geoffrey Vintner, church organist, summoned to Devon in wartime by his friend Gervase Fen who has asked him to bring a butterfly net. Murder and mayhem ensue, not to mention a spy ring and very little use for a butterfly net. This is a crime mystery told with tongue firmly in cheek and very enjoyable as a result. 8/10