Showing posts with label Booker 2024. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Booker 2024. Show all posts

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Wild Houses

 by Colin Barrett

A story of rival families caught up in small town drug dealing in Ireland. The characters were generally well drawn but it did engage me greatly. 5/10

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Playground

 by Richard Powers

I so enjoy this author. His imagination and cast of characters are Dickensian in scope.

This story is about a couple of friends who meet at school and play a lot of games together but get absorbed by the game of go. One of them goes on to become a tech billionaire, the other does not. There stories intersect and fly apart and along the ways we meet a host of characters, learn about the oceans and AI and climate change and French Polynesia. It is capped off with a fantastic twist in the tale. 

The biggest surprise though is how this book did not reach the Booker shortlist. 9/10

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Orbital

 by Samantha Harvey

This is a very short book at just over 100 pages and deals with one day -or I should say 24 hours on board the International space station and the interactions and lives of the astronauts aboard. I did not expect to enjoy it and yet it was strangely absorbing as well as being informative about life in space. 8/10

Creation Lake

 by Rachel Kushner

A spy story with a difference. Sadie Smith is sent to infiltrate a commune in South West France as well as keep an eye on a low ranking government official. She used to be employed by the FBI but her current employer remains unknown. 
The book never really got going for me and although I enjoyed some of her fun one liners to end various sections I was yearning for something to happen. By the time it did happen it all felt too late. 6/10

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Wandering Stars

by Tommy Orange

Another family saga. This time about a twentieth/twenty first native american family in Oakland. A look at life for the underprivileged and discriminated against in modern America. It was well written but left me a bit cold 6/10


Friday, August 30, 2024

Held

 by Anne Michaels

This is a book told in fragments over the course of a century, beginning in the first world war when John, a soldier loses his leg in an explosion. From then on we are given fragments of stories as he and his descendants are shown to us fleetingly before we move forward -or back-to the next episode.

The writing is beautiful at times-the author comes from poetry, but I enjoy a book with more plot than this. 

If asked whether I enjoyed this book I would probably respond, "Maybe". 6/10

Monday, August 26, 2024

Enlightenment

 by Sarah Perry

I found this an unusual book and as such really enjoyed it.

Thomas is a reporter on the Essex Chronicle, homosexual and a member of a local baptist church. He is a close friend of Grace, thirty years his junior and daughter of the church pastor. 

Reluctantly, Thomas gets drawn to astronomy while Grace is drawn to a young man. The story unfolds over the next twenty years as they each pursue their passion. The characters are beautifully drawn and will stay with me for a while. 8.5/10

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

This Strange Eventful History

 by Claire Messud

A family sage covering much of the twentieth century and much of the globe in its reach, as we move from Algeria to the States to Australia to Greece, Lebanon and France among others. 

However, it is the story of one family in which nothing remarkable happens and yet the writing is such that I was drawn in to these lives and shared their pain-there seemed more pain than happiness. I loved the writing but less so the story. Was it that strange? Was it that eventful?  7/10

Wednesday, August 07, 2024

The Safe Keep

 by Yael van der Wouden

The first Dutch author to make the longlist. The story revolves around a house and Isobel who has lived in it since a child. The book is set in the early sixties but refers back to 20 years earlier when the family acquired the house. Isobel is very closed and possessive now that she lives alone. Her parents are dead and her brothers have left. Then one day her brother turns up with his new girlfriend Eva and leaves her to stay for a month. Isobel's life is about to change forever! Suspenseful, erotic tension and an ending I found surprising make this a really enjoyable book. 8/10

Saturday, June 01, 2024

James

By Percival Everett 
A retelling of Huck Fin by Jim. Very amusing in places, it gets darker as the book moves on and swerves away from following the Mark Twain path. A really interesting read 9/10

Wednesday, April 03, 2024

My Friends

 by Hisham Matar

The story of three Libyan friends, Khaled, Mustafa and Hosam brought together in Edinburgh and London by events in their homeland and the shooting of a police officer at the Libyan embassy in 1984.

Khaled has just said goodbye to Hosam at St. Pancras, probably for the last time. On the six mile walk back to his flat in Shepherds Bush he reflects on their friendship over the previous 30 odd years and on other friendships that have come and gone. It is a moving book, a sad book but also a life affirming book that is beautifully written. 8/10