Friday, October 27, 2023

The Bee Sting

 by Paul Murray

The longest book on this years list it is set in a small town in Ireland a couple of hours from Dublin.

It tells the stories of the four members of the Barnes's family as the family faces up to various challenges such as bankruptcy, mid life crisis, marriage breakdown, male rape, bullying, transition to college life, climate change etc etc. It is very funny in places and exceedingly dark in others and I felt it ran out of steam by the end with an ending that left you guessing. I enjoyed the structure as the four members took it in turns to be central stage and tell their story. Not sure why the mother had to do this without punctuation but no doubt it made sense to some! 6/10

Things I don't want to Know

 by Deborah Levy

This book was written as a response to George Orwell's essay called why I write. In that he identifies four things he believes motivate writers to write. 
Levy's response as a woman living in the twenty first century is both thought provoking and interesting. I loved it and it was beautifully produced by Notting Hill Editions 9/10

Saturday, October 07, 2023

Madame Maigret's Friend

 by Georges Simenon

A new twist, with Mme Maigret being given a central role in this mystery of what turns out to be a double murder and in which Mme Maigret's conversations on a park bench turn out to be the key to solving the crime. 8/10

Follow the Money

 by Paul Johnson

A 2023 take on the British economy, looking at where the money comes from and how it is distributed. Along the way he comments on the good and the bad of the British tax system and the failings and strengths of the various spending departments.

You may not agree with all of his analysis but it does offer food for thought. It is fairly well balanced in its swipes at politicians from all sides but it is written by somebody who rising from modest roots, has embraced the establishment of which he is now a part. As such he comes across as a bit arrogant in places but I still found it an enjoyable and stimulating read 8/10

Thursday, October 05, 2023

How to Build a Boat

 by Elaine Feeney

You get the impression as you read this that Elaine Feeney may well have built a boat at some time in her past.

This book is about a lot of things other than boat building though. It is about grief, growing up on the spectrum, single parenthood, relationship breakdown, abuse and misogyny in the catholic church and more. In fact, although I enjoyed this book its weakness is that it tries to deal with too much and feels missing something as a result. Definitely an author I would read again though 6/10