Tuesday, March 29, 2016

War and Peace

by Tolstoy
Have listened to this over the last 3 months as an audiobook and it is epic in so many ways.
The thing Tolstoy seems to do effortlessly is move from the large scale of the franco russian conflict to the lives of individual russians and their concerns and daily lives. His detailing of character is wonderful and even his fatalistic philosophising gives you pause for thought-although he does go on a bit! 9/10

Sunday, March 27, 2016

What a carve up!

by Jonathan Coe
Part satire on the 1980's and 90's life in Britain, part out and out farce this is the story of the Winshaw family who represent everything dreadful about Thatcher's Britain. They have a butler who goes by the wonderful name of Pyles.
There story is told by Michael Owen, an author down on his luck and whose life is far from staightforward.
It is very funny in places and a good bedtime read 8/10

Voices from the Dark Years

by Douglas Boyd
This was a survey of what it was like in France after the German occupation.
It looks at the wider picture but ties the narrative together by looking at particular families and individuals and the way they dealt with life in this difficult period for France. I found this approach helpful and offered some fresh aspect on living ordinary lives in difficult times. I found some of the editing a bit flawed but I am being picky 7/10