Friday, September 23, 2016

The Sellout

by Paul Beatty
The winner of the 2016 Booker prize so I felt duty bound to give it a go.
I have to say it was very funnily written in places which is impressive given its subject matter is slavery and segregation and a look at racism in modern America.
The basic premise is that a black man has a slave (albeit not of his own doing) and also looks to implement segregation in his home neighbourhood with a view to improving the lot of black people.
Although the book was well written and comic I had trouble keeping up with some of the language and references back to American cultural items, so not my favourite on the shortlist but part of the fun of the shortlist is disagreeing with the judges. 6/10

Paris Reborn: Napoleon III, Baron Haussmann, and the Quest to Build a Modern City

by Stephane Kirkland
You get the impression that the author is a fan of Napoleon III, which is different to much of the bad press the man gets.
He also tries to show that Hausmannisation was not all the idea or the delivery of Haussman himself.
The book gives a great picture of the changes wrought by the second empire on Paris, both for good and bad. I enjoyed the book very much. 9/10

All that Man is

by David Szalay
Shortlisted for the Booker prize this book should not work but it does.
On the face of it, it is a collection of nine short stories. The stories are about unrelated men all of whom are travelling or living away from home and each story places the men at a different stage in life starting at 18 and finishing at 73 and by doing so builds a picture of everyman. I really enjoyed it 9/10

The North Water

by Ian McGuire
This was a f****ng C*!t of a book with more use of these two expletives than I have ever come across in a book.
Having said that it was a good story with an Irish doctor-disgraced unfairly in India-signing up to a whaling boat with a psycho on board.
He is also not the only person on board hiding a secret which becomes clear as the story unfolds. I particularly liked the ending. Longlisted for the Booker it did not make the longlist. 8/10

Monday, September 05, 2016

The Childhood of Jesus

by J. M. Coetzee
As the sequel to this book is on the Booker longlist I thought I had better read this first.
It is a strange tale where nothing is quite what it seems. The story is not about the biblical Jesus.
It is set in the 20th century but we are never told when. They have telephones but not mobiles. They have cars but they still use horses at the docks where Simon works. They speak Spanish but they are not in Spain. They have arrived from somehere by boat but we do not know where. On the way nearly all there memories have been erased but we do not know why.
The central characters are a young boy called David(or is he) and a middle aged man called Simon who has taken him under his wing on the boat with a promise to help him find his mother.
The book asks lots of questions about family ties and what is a father/mother? It offers no answers. The little boy is very irritating at times and the story has no satisfactory conclusion.
All that said, it is a tribute to Coetzee's storytelling that you get carried along with ease, and although I ended the book with more questions than I started I enjoyed the ride. 8/10

Work Like any Other

by Virginia Reeves
A book set in 1920's Alabama, concerning a young man enthralled by the new industry of electricity and power distribution. Having married and been forced by circumstance to take over his wife's family farm, he is uninterested until he realises he can tap in to the local power company's supply and bring electricity to the farm.
We learn right at the start that this experiment goes badly wrong and a man is killed. Found guilty of theft and manslaughter he is given a sentence of 20 years imprisonment. The book tells us the story of what happened next as well as what went before.
Told by alternate chapters from within the prison and life outside it is a beautifully crafted story that I really enjoyed and would probably put at the top of booker longlist novels I have read so far. This almost certainly means it has no chance of winning, but that is part of the fun of long lists! 9/10

Saturday, September 03, 2016

The Ghost Stories of Charles Dickens vol. 3

by Charles Dickens
'The Signalman', 'The Portrait Painter's Story', 'The Mortals of the House', 'The Ghost in Master B's Room', 'Captain Murderer and the Devil's Bargain', 'Well-Authenticated Rappings', 'A Child's Dream of a Star'.
This collection, published as an audiobook is a pretty mixed collection with well known favourites such as the signalman combined with a bit off victorian horror in Captain Murderer and some dross such as the last 2 stories. 4/10

The Empress and the Cake

by Linda Stift
This starts in the most normal way with an old lady offering a young woman a piece of cake at a pastry shop.
It then descends into a sinister creepy tale as the young woman becomes enmeshed in the strange goings on of the older woman.
Both women exhibit traits of the Austrian Empress Elisabeth which is both funny and creepy at different times. The book ends with the darkest of sentences.
There was an awful lot of vomiting in this book which is a bit hard to take, and probably best not read while eating cake! 8/10