by Richard Powers
This is an amazing book. It is about trees and the people who try to save them. The characters are fascinating, and the commentary on the human race depressing but the beauty of the storytelling is wonderful. It would be up there as a possible Booker winner this year for me. 9/10
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
The Flemish House
by George Simenon
Maigret is invited by a distant cousin to look at a murder near the Belgian border. It is an interesting book in that Maigret is investigating in an unofficial role and the end of the book is surprising while displaying another side of his character. As usual I enjoyed this book 8/10
Maigret is invited by a distant cousin to look at a murder near the Belgian border. It is an interesting book in that Maigret is investigating in an unofficial role and the end of the book is surprising while displaying another side of his character. As usual I enjoyed this book 8/10
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Milkman
by Anna Burns
Another surprise from this year's Booker longlist.
It is a book set in 1970's Belfast although the book never mentions the city, or the country or the conflict by name. It also never mentions the characters names other than by relationship to the nameless narrator.
All of this made me reluctant to pick this book up but I ended up listening to an audiobook and this was definitely the right choice. The narration of Brid Brennan is fantastic, catching the language of the book in a compelling and gripping way. This is important because the central character is forever going down side roads as she tells the story of how Milkman came into her life and how he was shot.
Along the way it is very funny in places, very sad in others and, for those who remember those years, a reminder of how unusual and scary a time it was. 7/10
Another surprise from this year's Booker longlist.
It is a book set in 1970's Belfast although the book never mentions the city, or the country or the conflict by name. It also never mentions the characters names other than by relationship to the nameless narrator.
All of this made me reluctant to pick this book up but I ended up listening to an audiobook and this was definitely the right choice. The narration of Brid Brennan is fantastic, catching the language of the book in a compelling and gripping way. This is important because the central character is forever going down side roads as she tells the story of how Milkman came into her life and how he was shot.
Along the way it is very funny in places, very sad in others and, for those who remember those years, a reminder of how unusual and scary a time it was. 7/10
Sunday, September 16, 2018
The Long Take
by Robert Robinson
I did not expect to like this novel. A novel written largely in verse about a Canadian soldier returning to America after the second world war.
He travels from New York to California and the book gives us impressions of his experience and flashbacks to France. I found it mesmerizing and much better than I expected it to be. The experiences, past and present, are presented raw and without comment - a good read 8/10
I did not expect to like this novel. A novel written largely in verse about a Canadian soldier returning to America after the second world war.
He travels from New York to California and the book gives us impressions of his experience and flashbacks to France. I found it mesmerizing and much better than I expected it to be. The experiences, past and present, are presented raw and without comment - a good read 8/10
Wednesday, September 05, 2018
Normal People
by Sally Rooney
The writing here is compelling and it drew me in against my will. The subject matter are two young people from Ireland, both intelligent but both flawed in some way. They have a peculiar relationship that lasts through various angst that did wear me down a bit. I can see why people rave about Rooney's writing talent but I fear I am a little too old for the subject matter to resonate with me. I have still not made up my mind about this book. 7/10
The writing here is compelling and it drew me in against my will. The subject matter are two young people from Ireland, both intelligent but both flawed in some way. They have a peculiar relationship that lasts through various angst that did wear me down a bit. I can see why people rave about Rooney's writing talent but I fear I am a little too old for the subject matter to resonate with me. I have still not made up my mind about this book. 7/10
The Mars Room
by Rachel Kushner
This is a story about life in a Californian prison and the lives of those incarcerated there. It is a depressing and tedious life that is reflected perfectly n this book. I did not enjoy it. 4/10
This is a story about life in a Californian prison and the lives of those incarcerated there. It is a depressing and tedious life that is reflected perfectly n this book. I did not enjoy it. 4/10
Monday, September 03, 2018
Warlight
by Michael Ondaatje
This was a fascinating book. It did however fall into two parts. Part one set just after the second world war is full of Dickensian characters and Wilkie Collins mystery as Nathaniel and his sister are seemingly abandoned by their parents and looked after by various seedy characters.
The second part moves on to 1959 and Nathaniel is working for the government trawling through files to see what still needs to be destroyed to protect the history being written about the still recent war. It is also where he slowly unpeels what happened with his parents-or his mother at least. I found this second part of the book less convincing. Too many unresolved questions. Characters who are painted so vividly in part one fade away leaving you wanting more. What did happen to his father? The writing, as you would expect, is beautiful 8.5/10
This was a fascinating book. It did however fall into two parts. Part one set just after the second world war is full of Dickensian characters and Wilkie Collins mystery as Nathaniel and his sister are seemingly abandoned by their parents and looked after by various seedy characters.
The second part moves on to 1959 and Nathaniel is working for the government trawling through files to see what still needs to be destroyed to protect the history being written about the still recent war. It is also where he slowly unpeels what happened with his parents-or his mother at least. I found this second part of the book less convincing. Too many unresolved questions. Characters who are painted so vividly in part one fade away leaving you wanting more. What did happen to his father? The writing, as you would expect, is beautiful 8.5/10
Sunday, August 26, 2018
Washington Black
by Esi Edugyan
This is in many ways a tall yarn in the style of Peter Carey and I loved it.
It tells the story of a slave called George Washington Black and the brother of a cruel slave owner. His nickname is Titch and he is a mad inventor who takes Washington on board, releasing him from the ever close cruelty inflicted on his fellow slaves. Trying to get a flying machine to work they have a number of adventures and following a tragic suicide both Titch and Wash make a dramatic escape taking the across America to the Arctic and eventually to Europe and Africa.
Beneath the adventure there is the pain of finding a place of belonging and home and self worth. It is the best booker nominee I have read so far this year 9/10
This is in many ways a tall yarn in the style of Peter Carey and I loved it.
It tells the story of a slave called George Washington Black and the brother of a cruel slave owner. His nickname is Titch and he is a mad inventor who takes Washington on board, releasing him from the ever close cruelty inflicted on his fellow slaves. Trying to get a flying machine to work they have a number of adventures and following a tragic suicide both Titch and Wash make a dramatic escape taking the across America to the Arctic and eventually to Europe and Africa.
Beneath the adventure there is the pain of finding a place of belonging and home and self worth. It is the best booker nominee I have read so far this year 9/10
Thursday, August 16, 2018
Snap
by Belinda Bauer
This worked as a crime novel but not sure how it ended on the Booker longlist-other than Val McDermid is one of the judges this year and she appears on the cover of the book raving about how good it is.
It has a good plot line which keeps you reading but the language was pretty underwhelming and cliched in places.
It is the story of Jack who gets abandoned by his mother- along with two younger siblings- on the hard shoulder of the M5 while she goes to call for help. She never comes back and is found murdered a week later. The story is what happened next. 7/10
This worked as a crime novel but not sure how it ended on the Booker longlist-other than Val McDermid is one of the judges this year and she appears on the cover of the book raving about how good it is.
It has a good plot line which keeps you reading but the language was pretty underwhelming and cliched in places.
It is the story of Jack who gets abandoned by his mother- along with two younger siblings- on the hard shoulder of the M5 while she goes to call for help. She never comes back and is found murdered a week later. The story is what happened next. 7/10
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
The English Patient
by Michael Ondaatje
Fascinating book examining the interaction of four characters in an abandoned villa in Italy at the end of the second world war.
The characters are wonderfully portrayed and tension remains throughout. A book to read in large chunks and let the prose wash over you. 9/10
Fascinating book examining the interaction of four characters in an abandoned villa in Italy at the end of the second world war.
The characters are wonderfully portrayed and tension remains throughout. A book to read in large chunks and let the prose wash over you. 9/10
The Water Cure
by Sophie Mackintosh
I did not enjoy this book. Set slightly in the future you guess it appears at first to be a tale about some distopian future but starts to shed scales and reveal what seems more like child physical and sexual abuse. Very little that is redeeming about it. 4/10
I did not enjoy this book. Set slightly in the future you guess it appears at first to be a tale about some distopian future but starts to shed scales and reveal what seems more like child physical and sexual abuse. Very little that is redeeming about it. 4/10
From a Low and Quiet Sea
by Donal Ryan
A collection of short character studies of three very different characters that are brought together in the final chapter in a rather contrived way.
I enjoyed the writing but didn't feel it held together as a novel. 7/10
A collection of short character studies of three very different characters that are brought together in the final chapter in a rather contrived way.
I enjoyed the writing but didn't feel it held together as a novel. 7/10
In our Mad and Furious City
by Guy Gunaratne
This story is told in a number of different voices over 2 days on a London housing estate. It tells the story of young second and third generation british asians as well as giving us the background on early immigration waves from the West Indies and Ireland. It took me a while to get into the language but I enjoyed the book a lot. 8/10
This story is told in a number of different voices over 2 days on a London housing estate. It tells the story of young second and third generation british asians as well as giving us the background on early immigration waves from the West Indies and Ireland. It took me a while to get into the language but I enjoyed the book a lot. 8/10
Sunday, July 29, 2018
Flights
by Olga Tokarczuk
This is a collection of tales wound together by airports and flights and travel. They go back and forth in time and are beautifully told. Almost before you realise it you have tumbled into a new story and then just as you are settling down with it you take off on the back of another story. 8/10
This is a collection of tales wound together by airports and flights and travel. They go back and forth in time and are beautifully told. Almost before you realise it you have tumbled into a new story and then just as you are settling down with it you take off on the back of another story. 8/10
Friday, July 06, 2018
Dawn of the Belle Epoque
by Mary McCauliffe
I have always enjoyed Mary McCauliffe's writing about Paris, ever since Paris Notes-which I still miss by the way.
This is a very readable book and well researched, and it left me wanting to seek out places I have never been to in Paris-small galleries and quirky corners. It's also about 19th Century France/Paris so how can you not love it. 8/10
I have always enjoyed Mary McCauliffe's writing about Paris, ever since Paris Notes-which I still miss by the way.
This is a very readable book and well researched, and it left me wanting to seek out places I have never been to in Paris-small galleries and quirky corners. It's also about 19th Century France/Paris so how can you not love it. 8/10
Brideshead Revisited
I really enjoyed revisiting Brideshead after a long break-it must be 30 years ago I last read it. It has lost nothing of its attraction and I fell in love with the characters all over again. 9/10
Blood Wedding
by Pierre Lemaitre
Typical Lemaitre, gruesome, gripping and full of twists and turns it is a can't put down, can't take any more type of book. 9/10
Typical Lemaitre, gruesome, gripping and full of twists and turns it is a can't put down, can't take any more type of book. 9/10
A far cry from Kensington
by Muriel Spark
Really enjoyed this. Great characters with a narrator offering useful asides to the reader which made me chuckle on ore than one occassion. Will definitely read more of Muriel Spark 8/10
Really enjoyed this. Great characters with a narrator offering useful asides to the reader which made me chuckle on ore than one occassion. Will definitely read more of Muriel Spark 8/10
Sunday, May 20, 2018
The Saint-Fiacre Affair
by Georges Simenon
An unusual tale where it is not clear a murder has taken place but a lady is dead and her death was induced by a malevolent act.
This book is more interesting for the back story on Maigret's childhood on an old landed estate. I enjoyed it a lot 9/10
An unusual tale where it is not clear a murder has taken place but a lady is dead and her death was induced by a malevolent act.
This book is more interesting for the back story on Maigret's childhood on an old landed estate. I enjoyed it a lot 9/10
The Beast in Man
by Emile Zola
A rereading of this novel, which was even more powerful than when I first read it, exploring mental illness and psychosis to a devastating conclusion. 9/10
A rereading of this novel, which was even more powerful than when I first read it, exploring mental illness and psychosis to a devastating conclusion. 9/10
Winter
by Ali Smith
Second in a planned quartet charting the state of modern britain. Ok storyline, funny in places and a /great quirky introduction. 7/10
Second in a planned quartet charting the state of modern britain. Ok storyline, funny in places and a /great quirky introduction. 7/10
A Sultan in Palermo
by Tariq Ali
Fourth in the Islam Quintet this as the title suggests is set in Palermo in the court of King Roger in the twelth century. It tells the tale of Idrisi the court cartographer against the backdrop of encroaching christian invaders. Great story with a different ending to what I had expected 8/10
Fourth in the Islam Quintet this as the title suggests is set in Palermo in the court of King Roger in the twelth century. It tells the tale of Idrisi the court cartographer against the backdrop of encroaching christian invaders. Great story with a different ending to what I had expected 8/10
Monday, April 02, 2018
Balzac
by Graham Robb
Telling the life of a figure like Balzac is difficult. He spent much of his life constructing stories about his life while running away from his creditors or lovers that seperating fact from fiction becomes very difficult. Robb recognises this difficulty but puts together a very readable account of A life of Balzac. However, I finished by thinking this was one life amongst many that could have been constructed and many others that probably died with Balzac and his acquaintances. 8/10
Telling the life of a figure like Balzac is difficult. He spent much of his life constructing stories about his life while running away from his creditors or lovers that seperating fact from fiction becomes very difficult. Robb recognises this difficulty but puts together a very readable account of A life of Balzac. However, I finished by thinking this was one life amongst many that could have been constructed and many others that probably died with Balzac and his acquaintances. 8/10
Thursday, March 01, 2018
My Life, Our Times
by Gordon Brown
A fascinating self portrait of Gordon Brown in power. He tries to spell out why he thought and acted as he did, much of which was admirable. The book really comes to life with the financial shocks of 2007-8 and their aftermath which Brown played a leading role in.
A man like Brown seldom seems to think they are wrong and the apologies he makes in this book are of a minor nature. The true assessment of Brown as Chancellor and Prime Minister will have to come from others.
A minor criticism but I did find the prose rather clunky in places 6/10
A fascinating self portrait of Gordon Brown in power. He tries to spell out why he thought and acted as he did, much of which was admirable. The book really comes to life with the financial shocks of 2007-8 and their aftermath which Brown played a leading role in.
A man like Brown seldom seems to think they are wrong and the apologies he makes in this book are of a minor nature. The true assessment of Brown as Chancellor and Prime Minister will have to come from others.
A minor criticism but I did find the prose rather clunky in places 6/10
Friday, February 16, 2018
Soviet Milk
by Nora Ikstena
This book is published in translation by Peirene press.
As usual it is a great read. The story is told in alternating chapters by a mother and daughter who are born and live in Latvia.
The mother is born just after the second world war and the daughter in 1969. The mother grew up as the Soviet Union tightened its grip during the Cold War. The daughter grew up as that grip was loosening and the breakup of the Soviet Union drew near. It is also the story of a mother and daughter who despite desperately trying were prevented by life and illness and circumstances from ever bonding.
It is a sad but beautiful story that I missed when it ended.8/10
This book is published in translation by Peirene press.
As usual it is a great read. The story is told in alternating chapters by a mother and daughter who are born and live in Latvia.
The mother is born just after the second world war and the daughter in 1969. The mother grew up as the Soviet Union tightened its grip during the Cold War. The daughter grew up as that grip was loosening and the breakup of the Soviet Union drew near. It is also the story of a mother and daughter who despite desperately trying were prevented by life and illness and circumstances from ever bonding.
It is a sad but beautiful story that I missed when it ended.8/10
A long Way from Home
by Peter Carey
This novel starts off as a road caper movie as an off the wall and suspended teacher teams up with his neighbours to take on the Redex trial- a gruelling road race around Australia.
However, part way through he becomes seperated from husband and wife team-the Bob's and at a section aptly named a fork in the road his life starts in a new direction.
Set in the 1950's, it is, as well as being funny in places, a stark look at what racism looks like at ground level. Willy, the hero, is brought up to believe he is the child of German immigrants. It turns out he is not. His escapades in Northern Australia bring him face to face with the realities of his own past and at the same time, the past of Australia's white settlers. Great book 9/10
This novel starts off as a road caper movie as an off the wall and suspended teacher teams up with his neighbours to take on the Redex trial- a gruelling road race around Australia.
However, part way through he becomes seperated from husband and wife team-the Bob's and at a section aptly named a fork in the road his life starts in a new direction.
Set in the 1950's, it is, as well as being funny in places, a stark look at what racism looks like at ground level. Willy, the hero, is brought up to believe he is the child of German immigrants. It turns out he is not. His escapades in Northern Australia bring him face to face with the realities of his own past and at the same time, the past of Australia's white settlers. Great book 9/10
Echo Park
by Michael Connelly
Bosch sailing close to the wind again and displaying a slightly dark side to his character as he takes on the hunt for a serial killer and his latest victim who may be still alive. 7/10
Bosch sailing close to the wind again and displaying a slightly dark side to his character as he takes on the hunt for a serial killer and his latest victim who may be still alive. 7/10
Sunday, January 14, 2018
Dombey and Son
By Charles Dickens
What to say, he makes you laugh, he makes you cry, he is far too sentimental yes but this does not take away from the drama and fast moving plot lines that are Dicken's hallmark. A great read over the new year period 9/10
What to say, he makes you laugh, he makes you cry, he is far too sentimental yes but this does not take away from the drama and fast moving plot lines that are Dicken's hallmark. A great read over the new year period 9/10
The French Art of War
by Alexis Jenni
A great start but meandered it's way through the latter 20th century French wars. It tells the story of Victorien Salognen who has fought in the second world war, Indochine and Algeria.
The story is told by a young man who stumbles across Victorien in Lyon, having given up on his job and girlfriend. It turns out that Victorien is an artist and he offers to teach the younger man to paint in return for writing the story of his life. The book jumps from the present day to the various war zones.
It is a vast book and I felt it only partly worked. I loved the bits about painting but the war scenes were very mixed. 5/10
A great start but meandered it's way through the latter 20th century French wars. It tells the story of Victorien Salognen who has fought in the second world war, Indochine and Algeria.
The story is told by a young man who stumbles across Victorien in Lyon, having given up on his job and girlfriend. It turns out that Victorien is an artist and he offers to teach the younger man to paint in return for writing the story of his life. The book jumps from the present day to the various war zones.
It is a vast book and I felt it only partly worked. I loved the bits about painting but the war scenes were very mixed. 5/10
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Review of 2017
Quite a varied year with crime-Maigret and Bosch yet again-biography, a session of Evelyn Waugh, a couple of books by Thomas Mann and a couple by Salman Rushdie and a record attempt at the Booker longlist where I managed 12 out of 13!
The Booker list this year was the best for a while. The winner was unusual, funny at times but definitely not my favorite. I really liked Elmet and home fire. I liked Autumn by Ali Smith and Exit West by Moshin Hammad, not to mention Swing Time and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, but I think my favorite of the crop was Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor which charts the circle of life as the years roll by in a village in Northern England.
For the others, Waugh was very funny but poignant too examining Britain around the wars of the last century, and Thomas Mann was a great family saga and the beautiful Death in Venice. However, I think my absolute favorite of the year was Salman Rushdie's Satanic verses. I love the breadth of his imagination and his use of language.
On the non-fiction side I think the prize must go to Claire Tomalin's biography of Thomas Hardy.
The Booker list this year was the best for a while. The winner was unusual, funny at times but definitely not my favorite. I really liked Elmet and home fire. I liked Autumn by Ali Smith and Exit West by Moshin Hammad, not to mention Swing Time and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, but I think my favorite of the crop was Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor which charts the circle of life as the years roll by in a village in Northern England.
For the others, Waugh was very funny but poignant too examining Britain around the wars of the last century, and Thomas Mann was a great family saga and the beautiful Death in Venice. However, I think my absolute favorite of the year was Salman Rushdie's Satanic verses. I love the breadth of his imagination and his use of language.
On the non-fiction side I think the prize must go to Claire Tomalin's biography of Thomas Hardy.
The Shadow Puppet
by Georges Simenon
Set in the Place des Vosges this case involves addiction, family secrets and greed. Claustrophobic and Maigret at his best. 8/10
Set in the Place des Vosges this case involves addiction, family secrets and greed. Claustrophobic and Maigret at his best. 8/10
Saturday, November 18, 2017
Thomas Hardy-The time torn man
by Clare Tomalin
This book was a joy to read, especially as while reading it we stayed for a couple of nights at the Old rectory in St. Juliot, where Hardy met his first wife.
The book is very accessible and paints a great picture of the contradictions and tensions in his life and particularly with his women. It also gives a great picture of the novels and their setting which makes you want to visit Dorset and read the books again. 9/10
This book was a joy to read, especially as while reading it we stayed for a couple of nights at the Old rectory in St. Juliot, where Hardy met his first wife.
The book is very accessible and paints a great picture of the contradictions and tensions in his life and particularly with his women. It also gives a great picture of the novels and their setting which makes you want to visit Dorset and read the books again. 9/10
The two-penny bar
by George Simenon
Another enjoyable outing with Maigret, this time investigating a six year old murder brought to his attention by another criminal, the night before the man is guillotined. Great stuff 8/10
Another enjoyable outing with Maigret, this time investigating a six year old murder brought to his attention by another criminal, the night before the man is guillotined. Great stuff 8/10
The Golden House
by Salman Rushdie
Set in America this book tells us the story of a family of Indian immigrants with secrets to hide. They move into a large house in New York in the same block as our narrator Rene Unterlinden, himself the son of Belgian immigrants. The Indian family take the name Golden and hence The Golden House.
Salman Rushdie is a great story-teller and hence the narrative moves along and keeps you interested as we hop between the stories of the three golden children and eventually their father. From the beginning we know something bad is going to happen. I enjoyed the book but it is not the best of his I have read. There are endless lists in the book which are both tedious and pretentious and this bugged me. Having said that there is also a back story running about the 2016 presidential election where Trump is portrayed as the Joker to Clinton's Batwoman, and also a quirky aside about the origins of a fedora hat! It apparently has a claim to be on the list of famous belgians. 7/10
Set in America this book tells us the story of a family of Indian immigrants with secrets to hide. They move into a large house in New York in the same block as our narrator Rene Unterlinden, himself the son of Belgian immigrants. The Indian family take the name Golden and hence The Golden House.
Salman Rushdie is a great story-teller and hence the narrative moves along and keeps you interested as we hop between the stories of the three golden children and eventually their father. From the beginning we know something bad is going to happen. I enjoyed the book but it is not the best of his I have read. There are endless lists in the book which are both tedious and pretentious and this bugged me. Having said that there is also a back story running about the 2016 presidential election where Trump is portrayed as the Joker to Clinton's Batwoman, and also a quirky aside about the origins of a fedora hat! It apparently has a claim to be on the list of famous belgians. 7/10
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
Dance by the Canal
by Kerstin Hensel
A short novel published by the ever wonderful Peirene press.
This story is set in East Germany and tells the story of Gabriela. She was born into a family of privilege but also a troubled family. She never fit in and by the time we catch up with her she is living rough under a bridge in Leipzig. The story darts back and forwards in time as Gabriela tells us the story of her childhood at the same time as we discover what is happening to her in the present. It is a beautiful sad story 7/10
A short novel published by the ever wonderful Peirene press.
This story is set in East Germany and tells the story of Gabriela. She was born into a family of privilege but also a troubled family. She never fit in and by the time we catch up with her she is living rough under a bridge in Leipzig. The story darts back and forwards in time as Gabriela tells us the story of her childhood at the same time as we discover what is happening to her in the present. It is a beautiful sad story 7/10
4321
by Paul Auster
A novel about an American called Archie Ferguson who shares my birthday!
The numbers in the title refer to the four lives that this character might have lived between his birth in 1947 and the early 1970's.
It is beautifully written with common links along the way in American history. It could have been a little bit cliched and forced but it wasn't. The final chapter of the book unlocks some of the secrets of what has been happening in the storytelling which just added to its pleasure. I will miss you Archie(s)! 8/10
A novel about an American called Archie Ferguson who shares my birthday!
The numbers in the title refer to the four lives that this character might have lived between his birth in 1947 and the early 1970's.
It is beautifully written with common links along the way in American history. It could have been a little bit cliched and forced but it wasn't. The final chapter of the book unlocks some of the secrets of what has been happening in the storytelling which just added to its pleasure. I will miss you Archie(s)! 8/10
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
Elmet
by Fiona Mozley
This is a debut novel but what a novel. From the outset it throws you off balance.
The narrator, a teenage boy seems to be wandering through some future post apocalyptic landscape but it turns out he isn't.
He calls his father daddy throughout the book but this does not quite fit with the character we learn about as the book unfolds and we learn why the boy is wandering as he is.
The other character is his sister who turns out to be far from the quiet retiring sort we are lulled into thinking she might be. It is a compelling read and although I found the ending very difficult to read it was a novel that challenged our views of family, commitment and society. 8/10
This is a debut novel but what a novel. From the outset it throws you off balance.
The narrator, a teenage boy seems to be wandering through some future post apocalyptic landscape but it turns out he isn't.
He calls his father daddy throughout the book but this does not quite fit with the character we learn about as the book unfolds and we learn why the boy is wandering as he is.
The other character is his sister who turns out to be far from the quiet retiring sort we are lulled into thinking she might be. It is a compelling read and although I found the ending very difficult to read it was a novel that challenged our views of family, commitment and society. 8/10
Lincoln on the Bardo
by George Saunders
A remarkable novel told in an unusual way through a myriad of voices.
The basic construct is that on the night Abraham Lincoln's son dies he gets caught in the bardo(purgatory) and some well meaning souls also caught there try to help him along to paradise while at the same time the grieving father visits the grave to hold his son for one last time. The characters are at various times funny, horrific, coarse but all universally dead!
I got a bit bored with it by the end but I enjoyed the imagination 6/10
A remarkable novel told in an unusual way through a myriad of voices.
The basic construct is that on the night Abraham Lincoln's son dies he gets caught in the bardo(purgatory) and some well meaning souls also caught there try to help him along to paradise while at the same time the grieving father visits the grave to hold his son for one last time. The characters are at various times funny, horrific, coarse but all universally dead!
I got a bit bored with it by the end but I enjoyed the imagination 6/10
Monday, September 11, 2017
History of Wolves
by Emily Fridlund
An interesting story of a girl brought up in the backwoods of Minnesota as part of a hippy commune already broken up by the time the story starts.
Madeline is fifteen and this story takes place over the summer as she gets involved with a family across the lake who employ her to look after their four year old. Not everything is as it seems and we soon realise something dreadful is going to happen. It is a gripping story with a number of sub plots that left me a little perplexed-her ex school teacher for one. Would still recommend it though 7/10
An interesting story of a girl brought up in the backwoods of Minnesota as part of a hippy commune already broken up by the time the story starts.
Madeline is fifteen and this story takes place over the summer as she gets involved with a family across the lake who employ her to look after their four year old. Not everything is as it seems and we soon realise something dreadful is going to happen. It is a gripping story with a number of sub plots that left me a little perplexed-her ex school teacher for one. Would still recommend it though 7/10
Exit West
by Mohsin Hamid
A retelling of Antigone set in the modern day this story had me gripped from beginning to end. A tale of three british asian siblings who get caught up in the struggles of our times. It does not have a happy ending but in the way of the Sophocles play, family devotion wins out over loyalty to the state which is uplifting 9/10
A retelling of Antigone set in the modern day this story had me gripped from beginning to end. A tale of three british asian siblings who get caught up in the struggles of our times. It does not have a happy ending but in the way of the Sophocles play, family devotion wins out over loyalty to the state which is uplifting 9/10
Days Without End
by Sebastian Barry
A story set in the American civil war lent some wry humour by a cross dressing soldier and his lifelong friend. It was very readable but not really my cup of tea 5/10
A story set in the American civil war lent some wry humour by a cross dressing soldier and his lifelong friend. It was very readable but not really my cup of tea 5/10
Reservoir 13
by Jon McGregor
The supposed central character of this book is Rebecca who disappears just before new years eve. She pops up throughout the book but the real star of the show is the village and it's changing and unchanging life over a period of some 10 years. It is a simple story beautifully told and, living in a village and having an allotment, I found resonances in so much of the detail. I loved this book 9/10
The supposed central character of this book is Rebecca who disappears just before new years eve. She pops up throughout the book but the real star of the show is the village and it's changing and unchanging life over a period of some 10 years. It is a simple story beautifully told and, living in a village and having an allotment, I found resonances in so much of the detail. I loved this book 9/10
Friday, August 25, 2017
The Underground Railroad
by Colson Whitehead
This book grew on me as it went along. The story of a black slave in pre-civil war America is a timely reminder of the evils of racism and how barbaric man can be.
Cora, the slave in question who tries to runaway, is the character who holds the narrative together. I liked the construct of a physical underground railroad that was used to take slaves from state to state and examine the various stances different parts of the US took.
However, I never quite engaged with the narrative for some reason 5/10
This book grew on me as it went along. The story of a black slave in pre-civil war America is a timely reminder of the evils of racism and how barbaric man can be.
Cora, the slave in question who tries to runaway, is the character who holds the narrative together. I liked the construct of a physical underground railroad that was used to take slaves from state to state and examine the various stances different parts of the US took.
However, I never quite engaged with the narrative for some reason 5/10
Home Fire
by Kamila Shamsie
A story of 3 siblings -British Asians who are torn apart by current political turmoil. This book is riveting reading and definitely one of the best books I have read this year. It progresses at a breathtaking pace as the storytelling passes from one character to another. 9/10
A story of 3 siblings -British Asians who are torn apart by current political turmoil. This book is riveting reading and definitely one of the best books I have read this year. It progresses at a breathtaking pace as the storytelling passes from one character to another. 9/10
Sunday, August 13, 2017
Autumn
by Ali Smith
A round up and, to some extent, a comment on the current state or mood of the country. It is a story of the friendship between an old man, Daniel and a young girl/woman, Elisabeth that is full of imagination and humour that I loved. Quirky at times and maybe lopping off characters -such as Elisabeth's lovers-too quickly I really enjoyed it which almost certainly kills off its chances in the Man Booker prize for which it has been longlisted. 9/10
A round up and, to some extent, a comment on the current state or mood of the country. It is a story of the friendship between an old man, Daniel and a young girl/woman, Elisabeth that is full of imagination and humour that I loved. Quirky at times and maybe lopping off characters -such as Elisabeth's lovers-too quickly I really enjoyed it which almost certainly kills off its chances in the Man Booker prize for which it has been longlisted. 9/10
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
by Arundhati Roy
This is an engaging book but I found that when I picked it up I found it hard to put down, but when I put it down I felt no urgency to pick it back up.
The story is that of an Indian transexual who sets up an odd but engaging community in an old graveyard. The characters are tragic and comic and larger than life but they have a vibrancy that draws the reader in. A large part of the middle of the book is taken up with the Kashmir conflict and the relationship of 2 people caught up in it. This was interesting but for me a bit to long but a good read all the same 8/10
This is an engaging book but I found that when I picked it up I found it hard to put down, but when I put it down I felt no urgency to pick it back up.
The story is that of an Indian transexual who sets up an odd but engaging community in an old graveyard. The characters are tragic and comic and larger than life but they have a vibrancy that draws the reader in. A large part of the middle of the book is taken up with the Kashmir conflict and the relationship of 2 people caught up in it. This was interesting but for me a bit to long but a good read all the same 8/10
Les Parisiennes
by Anne Sebba
A fascinating book that I found difficult to follow at first because of all the names mentioned, but it gives a very balanced view of the role women played in Parisian life during the second world war and some of the reasons they may have acted as they did. 8/10
A fascinating book that I found difficult to follow at first because of all the names mentioned, but it gives a very balanced view of the role women played in Parisian life during the second world war and some of the reasons they may have acted as they did. 8/10
Unconditional Surrender
by Evelyn Waugh
The final part of the Sword of Honour trilogy sees things work out not too badly for Guy. This is a book full of pathos as the war nears its end and society realises that things have changed forever.
It has some interesting comment on being a catholic and the cultural as well as religious implications. I enjoyed this better than the second volume but still enjoyed the first book best 8/10
The final part of the Sword of Honour trilogy sees things work out not too badly for Guy. This is a book full of pathos as the war nears its end and society realises that things have changed forever.
It has some interesting comment on being a catholic and the cultural as well as religious implications. I enjoyed this better than the second volume but still enjoyed the first book best 8/10
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
A horse walks into a bar
by David Grossman
This book has a number of very amusing jokes in it but it s far from a comedy.
It is the story, set in a stand up club, where a man's life unfolds during his act, to which he has invited a childhood acquaintance. As a side story we also get a bit of his life too.
It is a short, gripping piece of writing that kept me enthralled from beginning to end. 8/10
This book has a number of very amusing jokes in it but it s far from a comedy.
It is the story, set in a stand up club, where a man's life unfolds during his act, to which he has invited a childhood acquaintance. As a side story we also get a bit of his life too.
It is a short, gripping piece of writing that kept me enthralled from beginning to end. 8/10
Officers and Gentlemen
by Evelyn Waugh
The second part of the Sword of Honour trilogy.
Continuing the story of Guy Crouchback, an outsider in many ways but part of the English elite. In this volume we have the story of preparations for war on the isle of Mugg, which is very amusing and the comedy of errors that leads to the elevation of trimmer.
The second part is based around Crete and is much more sombre and sobering but continues to show up the senselessness of war. 7/10
The second part of the Sword of Honour trilogy.
Continuing the story of Guy Crouchback, an outsider in many ways but part of the English elite. In this volume we have the story of preparations for war on the isle of Mugg, which is very amusing and the comedy of errors that leads to the elevation of trimmer.
The second part is based around Crete and is much more sombre and sobering but continues to show up the senselessness of war. 7/10
Monday, July 03, 2017
The Satanic Verses
by Salman Rushdie
The imagination of Rushdie is astounding. 30 years nearly after first published, it still bowled me over with its bizarre happenings from the very start to its tragic-tinged with a glimmer of hope-ending. The best book I have read this year and I will be lucky if I read one to equal it 9/10
The imagination of Rushdie is astounding. 30 years nearly after first published, it still bowled me over with its bizarre happenings from the very start to its tragic-tinged with a glimmer of hope-ending. The best book I have read this year and I will be lucky if I read one to equal it 9/10
Men at Arms
by Evelyn Waugh
The first part of the Sword of Honour trilogy finds Guy Crouchback joining the army 8 years after a failed marriage. He stands melancholy and aloof from the host of comic characters he meets en route as he grapples with his Catholicism and the boredom of army life at the start of WW2. It is laugh out loud funny in places but equally sad in others as the loneliness of human existence is laid out. His fellow officers struggles with his thunderbox are a great piece of theatre. 9/10
The first part of the Sword of Honour trilogy finds Guy Crouchback joining the army 8 years after a failed marriage. He stands melancholy and aloof from the host of comic characters he meets en route as he grapples with his Catholicism and the boredom of army life at the start of WW2. It is laugh out loud funny in places but equally sad in others as the loneliness of human existence is laid out. His fellow officers struggles with his thunderbox are a great piece of theatre. 9/10
The Closers
by Michael Connelly
Harry Bosch is back in the LAPD after a 3 year "retirement" and working cold cases, or as they like to refer to them open unsolved. This first case brings him into conflict with Irving Irvine who himself has been moved out of Parker Centre. The case centres around a murdered teenager and the trauma left in the wake of her killing. A good return for Harry 8/10
Harry Bosch is back in the LAPD after a 3 year "retirement" and working cold cases, or as they like to refer to them open unsolved. This first case brings him into conflict with Irving Irvine who himself has been moved out of Parker Centre. The case centres around a murdered teenager and the trauma left in the wake of her killing. A good return for Harry 8/10
Friday, June 09, 2017
The Narrows
by Michael Connelly
The return of a notorious fbi agent turned criminal known as The Poet keeps Harry more than occupied in a tense cat and mouse chase 7/10
The return of a notorious fbi agent turned criminal known as The Poet keeps Harry more than occupied in a tense cat and mouse chase 7/10
Buddenbrooks
by Thomas Mann
Mann's first novel published in 1901 is the story of a wealthy merchant family in Germany covering three generations from the 1830's to the late 1870's. It charts the gradual decline of the family fortune.
I loved this book. The descriptions of the characters were such that I could see them immediately in my minds eye. I loved Toni, who is constantly referring to herself as a silly goose but actually was the most committed to maintaining the family position and suffers personally as a result. Little Hanno with his artistic bent was wonderful and then Christian and Thomas - so different but so true to life. I will miss them all 10/10
Mann's first novel published in 1901 is the story of a wealthy merchant family in Germany covering three generations from the 1830's to the late 1870's. It charts the gradual decline of the family fortune.
I loved this book. The descriptions of the characters were such that I could see them immediately in my minds eye. I loved Toni, who is constantly referring to herself as a silly goose but actually was the most committed to maintaining the family position and suffers personally as a result. Little Hanno with his artistic bent was wonderful and then Christian and Thomas - so different but so true to life. I will miss them all 10/10
The Orange Grove
by Larry Tremblay
Another great short novel from Peirene Press.
This novel left me tearful as it examines the fate of twin brothers caught up in a bloody civil war and being forced to take actions that we in the West find hard to comprehend.
Being the father of twin boys I recognised the friendship that bound the two central characters and ultimately ripped them both apart. 8/10
Another great short novel from Peirene Press.
This novel left me tearful as it examines the fate of twin brothers caught up in a bloody civil war and being forced to take actions that we in the West find hard to comprehend.
Being the father of twin boys I recognised the friendship that bound the two central characters and ultimately ripped them both apart. 8/10
The Pen and the Brush
by Anka Muhlstein
A look at the link between novelists and painters in nineteenth century French fiction looking at Balzac, Zola and Proust together with Maupassant and Huysmans.
This is a fascinating survey of the painter in the French novel and how the novelist uses their own relationships with painters and painting to influence their writing. I particularly liked the piece on Proust's painter Elstir. Made me want to pick up the book again 8/10
A look at the link between novelists and painters in nineteenth century French fiction looking at Balzac, Zola and Proust together with Maupassant and Huysmans.
This is a fascinating survey of the painter in the French novel and how the novelist uses their own relationships with painters and painting to influence their writing. I particularly liked the piece on Proust's painter Elstir. Made me want to pick up the book again 8/10
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
The Last Summer
by Ricarda Huch
A thriller set in St Petersburg in the early 1900's. The governor has closed the University following student unrest and has received a death threat.
His wife, concerned for his safety, hires a secretary to look out for him. But not everything is as it seems. Told through letters written by the main characters this book is a real page turner. 8/10
A thriller set in St Petersburg in the early 1900's. The governor has closed the University following student unrest and has received a death threat.
His wife, concerned for his safety, hires a secretary to look out for him. But not everything is as it seems. Told through letters written by the main characters this book is a real page turner. 8/10
Death in Venice
by Thomas Mann
I read this book in Venice and it evokes the city in a loving and perfect way.
The story is about a wealthy artist who falls in love with a young boy whom he adores from a distance. It is always a doomed attraction but is one of the most beautiful books I have read in some time 9/10
I read this book in Venice and it evokes the city in a loving and perfect way.
The story is about a wealthy artist who falls in love with a young boy whom he adores from a distance. It is always a doomed attraction but is one of the most beautiful books I have read in some time 9/10
Vile Bodies
by Evelyn Waugh
The story of Adam Fenwick-Symes and of England and the upper classes between the wars.
This satire is bitingly funny in places but ends up in a very somber and, for a book published in 1930, prophetic place. 8/10
The story of Adam Fenwick-Symes and of England and the upper classes between the wars.
This satire is bitingly funny in places but ends up in a very somber and, for a book published in 1930, prophetic place. 8/10
Monday, March 27, 2017
The Disappearance of Emile Zola
by Michael Rosen
In 1898 Zola had to disappear following a court case relating to his stance in the Dreyfus case.
This book charts the time he spent in England during the year before he was able to return to France. Using letters that remain and newspaper accounts it charts a very personal account of the pressure Zola was under and the cost he had to pay for his speaking out in support of a wrongly accused man. Although it is a story I know well I enjoyed this book and I liked the fact that J'accuse was included as an appendix together with a ghost story he wrote while in England. 9/10
In 1898 Zola had to disappear following a court case relating to his stance in the Dreyfus case.
This book charts the time he spent in England during the year before he was able to return to France. Using letters that remain and newspaper accounts it charts a very personal account of the pressure Zola was under and the cost he had to pay for his speaking out in support of a wrongly accused man. Although it is a story I know well I enjoyed this book and I liked the fact that J'accuse was included as an appendix together with a ghost story he wrote while in England. 9/10
The Courtesan and the Gigolo
by Aaron Freundschuh
This book uses the Pranzini Affair from 1887 Paris to examine social and political life at the time. Parallels with today are hard to avoid as the book examines the rise of right wing xenophobia and the looking for scapegoats among the outsider. Very interesting 7/10
This book uses the Pranzini Affair from 1887 Paris to examine social and political life at the time. Parallels with today are hard to avoid as the book examines the rise of right wing xenophobia and the looking for scapegoats among the outsider. Very interesting 7/10
Zero K
by Don Delillo
On the face of it this was a novel examining why someone might go for cryogenic freezing ranging from hope for a cure for a disease to escaping the current human disasters in hope of a better future.
The story is narrated by the son of a wealthy man who has set up a hidden and highly secure facility in the middle of nowhere. The father and step mother end up going through the cooling process and the son is a witness, opposed to the whole idea.
The book works best and is at it's most engaging when the father and son are interacting. They are not close and the exchanges between them bring out some of the ethical issues raised. Much of the rest of the book I found laboured but as you would expect written in a prose that was wonderful. 6/10
On the face of it this was a novel examining why someone might go for cryogenic freezing ranging from hope for a cure for a disease to escaping the current human disasters in hope of a better future.
The story is narrated by the son of a wealthy man who has set up a hidden and highly secure facility in the middle of nowhere. The father and step mother end up going through the cooling process and the son is a witness, opposed to the whole idea.
The book works best and is at it's most engaging when the father and son are interacting. They are not close and the exchanges between them bring out some of the ethical issues raised. Much of the rest of the book I found laboured but as you would expect written in a prose that was wonderful. 6/10
Frog
by Mo Yan
This is a novel about a chinese midwife called Gugu and her nephew called Tadpole who narrates the story. However, it is much more than that. It tells the story of the one child policy in China from the time of post second world war to the current day. At one point it is talking about the national level and the benefits the state would see and then seamlessly, takes it down to the individual level and the pain and problems caused to families and individuals.
It was funny in places and heartbreaking in others. Personally, I found difficulty in getting to grips with the names but that did not get in the way of a thought provoking and enjoyable novel 8/10
This is a novel about a chinese midwife called Gugu and her nephew called Tadpole who narrates the story. However, it is much more than that. It tells the story of the one child policy in China from the time of post second world war to the current day. At one point it is talking about the national level and the benefits the state would see and then seamlessly, takes it down to the individual level and the pain and problems caused to families and individuals.
It was funny in places and heartbreaking in others. Personally, I found difficulty in getting to grips with the names but that did not get in the way of a thought provoking and enjoyable novel 8/10
Sunday, February 19, 2017
William Morris
by Fiona MacCarthy
This is a heavy tome in terms of weight but is a very enjoyable read. Published 20 years ago it looks at the phases of life that Morris went through and is particularly good on his socialist phase-how he arrived there and the contribution that he made to the early days of the labour movement. I would definitely recommend this to anyone wanting to know about the man and his relationships with Burn-Jones(a lifelong friend) and Rosetti etc. 9/10
ps To protect your wrists from permanent damage buy it for your kindle!
This is a heavy tome in terms of weight but is a very enjoyable read. Published 20 years ago it looks at the phases of life that Morris went through and is particularly good on his socialist phase-how he arrived there and the contribution that he made to the early days of the labour movement. I would definitely recommend this to anyone wanting to know about the man and his relationships with Burn-Jones(a lifelong friend) and Rosetti etc. 9/10
ps To protect your wrists from permanent damage buy it for your kindle!
Decline and Fall
by Evelyn Waugh
A very funny book with a great bunch of comic characters. The book follows the story of Paul Pennyfeather, who gets wrongly thrown out of Oxford for indecent exposure following a party of the Bollinger club.
As we follow his life subsequent to this we come across some marvelous specimens of which my favourite is Captain Grimes who he meets at Fagan's school. He, by his own admission, is always in the soup but manages to pull himself through due to his public school background.
The book was written in 1928 and seems to cross certain PC lines at times but does take a gigantic swipe at "the privileged" 8/10
A very funny book with a great bunch of comic characters. The book follows the story of Paul Pennyfeather, who gets wrongly thrown out of Oxford for indecent exposure following a party of the Bollinger club.
As we follow his life subsequent to this we come across some marvelous specimens of which my favourite is Captain Grimes who he meets at Fagan's school. He, by his own admission, is always in the soup but manages to pull himself through due to his public school background.
The book was written in 1928 and seems to cross certain PC lines at times but does take a gigantic swipe at "the privileged" 8/10
Thursday, February 09, 2017
Lost Light
by Michael Connelly
Harry has left the police force and picks up a job as a private eye tracking down the killer in a cold case he worked on in the past.
Along the way he picks up a bank heist and learns to play saxaphone from an old jazz player he visits. Perhaps his biggest surprise waits until the end of the book though. 7/10
Harry has left the police force and picks up a job as a private eye tracking down the killer in a cold case he worked on in the past.
Along the way he picks up a bank heist and learns to play saxaphone from an old jazz player he visits. Perhaps his biggest surprise waits until the end of the book though. 7/10
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
The Story of the Lost Child
by Elena Ferrante
So the final book in this quartet. I left book 3 feeling annoyed with Lenu. This book brings us back to Naples and covers the second half of the six decades this quartet covers.
It is a very sad and at times painful portrayal of friendship and whether it can last the ravages of time. I find myself wondering with which character I empathise most. Lenu is extremely selfish. I didn't buy her justifications for writing a novel that borrows from her friends deeply personal loss, but I guess at the end of the day she had her own battles to fight.
I think my sympathy lies mostly with Pietro. Even though the book talked a lot about Leila it would be wonderful to hear this story told from her perspective. Like Lenu, I guess we know that will never happen. A memorable quartet of books 9/10
So the final book in this quartet. I left book 3 feeling annoyed with Lenu. This book brings us back to Naples and covers the second half of the six decades this quartet covers.
It is a very sad and at times painful portrayal of friendship and whether it can last the ravages of time. I find myself wondering with which character I empathise most. Lenu is extremely selfish. I didn't buy her justifications for writing a novel that borrows from her friends deeply personal loss, but I guess at the end of the day she had her own battles to fight.
I think my sympathy lies mostly with Pietro. Even though the book talked a lot about Leila it would be wonderful to hear this story told from her perspective. Like Lenu, I guess we know that will never happen. A memorable quartet of books 9/10
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Round up 2016
A year when I read a greater number of non-fiction books including a very enjoyable biography of Napoleon and books around the French revolution and France after the second world war.
I also reread War and Peace and 3 of the Neopolitan quartet by Elena Ferrante which I mostly enjoyed. Continued in crime with Harry Bosch and Maigret.
I also reread A Christmas Carol which is always fun and sure to bring a tear to the eye.
Putting aside the classics, hard to find a really standout book this year. Maybe Hot Milk by Deborah Levy for the beauty of the language or The Childhood of Jesus by JM Coetzee. Ian Macewan and Nutshell was so quirky I enjoyed it but I have to say nothing that will stay with me for a long time.
The Booker was disappointing with the winner being funny but maybe more suited to a reader more in touch with America.
I also reread War and Peace and 3 of the Neopolitan quartet by Elena Ferrante which I mostly enjoyed. Continued in crime with Harry Bosch and Maigret.
I also reread A Christmas Carol which is always fun and sure to bring a tear to the eye.
Putting aside the classics, hard to find a really standout book this year. Maybe Hot Milk by Deborah Levy for the beauty of the language or The Childhood of Jesus by JM Coetzee. Ian Macewan and Nutshell was so quirky I enjoyed it but I have to say nothing that will stay with me for a long time.
The Booker was disappointing with the winner being funny but maybe more suited to a reader more in touch with America.
Swing Time
by Zadie Smith
Based in London, New York and Africa it follows the fortunes of an unnamed narrator and her relationship with her parents, her pop superstar boss and her childhood friend, Tracey.
The parts looking back to her childhood worked really well and resonated with me but it then seemed to lose its way. The big revelations in the book were not so great and the ending felt rushed and didn't quite work for me. The nameless narrator became quite forgettable. 6/10
Based in London, New York and Africa it follows the fortunes of an unnamed narrator and her relationship with her parents, her pop superstar boss and her childhood friend, Tracey.
The parts looking back to her childhood worked really well and resonated with me but it then seemed to lose its way. The big revelations in the book were not so great and the ending felt rushed and didn't quite work for me. The nameless narrator became quite forgettable. 6/10
Monday, December 12, 2016
City of Bones
by Michael Connelly
A tough story about child abuse and a cold case as bones of a young boy are found 20 years after he was killed. Lots of false trails and some further development of the Bosch character make for compelling stuff. 7/10
A tough story about child abuse and a cold case as bones of a young boy are found 20 years after he was killed. Lots of false trails and some further development of the Bosch character make for compelling stuff. 7/10
breach
by Olumide Popoola and Annie Holmes
This book is a collection of eight short stories formed and crafted in the Calais jungle. They tell stories of immigration from different standpoints and vary from being very good to so-so. However, what they do-even after the jungle has been dismantled-is raise questions about the migrant crisis which we cannot ignore. The stories highlight the fact that this crisis is about individual lives and not indistinguishable, expendable masses. This alone makes it worth reading. 6/10
This book is a collection of eight short stories formed and crafted in the Calais jungle. They tell stories of immigration from different standpoints and vary from being very good to so-so. However, what they do-even after the jungle has been dismantled-is raise questions about the migrant crisis which we cannot ignore. The stories highlight the fact that this crisis is about individual lives and not indistinguishable, expendable masses. This alone makes it worth reading. 6/10
Nutshell
by Ian McEwan
An unusual book. Therese Raquin told with humour by an unborn infant. This book totters along the edge of will it/won't it work from beginning to end. It is hilarious in places- this foetus must be the most knowledgable wine buff who has never been born-and dark in others but it works. By the end I was desperate to find out how it ends despite the narrator. Maybe not the best McEwan I have read but certainly the funniest and at the end of the day it was a great yarn. 8/10
An unusual book. Therese Raquin told with humour by an unborn infant. This book totters along the edge of will it/won't it work from beginning to end. It is hilarious in places- this foetus must be the most knowledgable wine buff who has never been born-and dark in others but it works. By the end I was desperate to find out how it ends despite the narrator. Maybe not the best McEwan I have read but certainly the funniest and at the end of the day it was a great yarn. 8/10
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Napoleon the Great
by Andrew Roberts
This is the first biography of Napoleon I have read but I found it engaging, informative and, despite its size of 800 pages, interesting both when describing battles and when describing his adminastrative acheivements which were huge. 8/10
This is the first biography of Napoleon I have read but I found it engaging, informative and, despite its size of 800 pages, interesting both when describing battles and when describing his adminastrative acheivements which were huge. 8/10
The Crowd in History 1730-1848
by George Rude
A book first published in 1964 this was the revised version of 1981.
It was very interesting looking at the French revolution and 1848 revolution in France and the Luddites, Chartists and Gordo riots in England along with a number of food and labour riots in both countries. He gets behind "the mob" by looking at some of the individual participants with some surprising results.
I found the style of writing a bit flat at times. I found the maps charting the spread of riots really fascinating. 7/10
A book first published in 1964 this was the revised version of 1981.
It was very interesting looking at the French revolution and 1848 revolution in France and the Luddites, Chartists and Gordo riots in England along with a number of food and labour riots in both countries. He gets behind "the mob" by looking at some of the individual participants with some surprising results.
I found the style of writing a bit flat at times. I found the maps charting the spread of riots really fascinating. 7/10
Sunday, November 06, 2016
Do not say we have nothing
by Madeleine Thien
This is a long novel covering a long and eventful period in chinese history.
The book starts in Canada and is told by a chinese woman looking back over her life' or more importantly, the life of her parents. They have both now died, her father committing suicide in Hong Kong and she tries to piece together the gaps in what she knows about her family. The result is a story covering the latter half of the twentieth century taking in the rise of Mao, the cultural revolution and Tianemen square.
It took me a while to get into this novel as I was trying to piece together who was who but by half way through I was hooked by a story examining the impact of world events on individuals and families. Definitely worth reading and close to getting the vote of my favourite from the Booker shortlist. 9/10
This is a long novel covering a long and eventful period in chinese history.
The book starts in Canada and is told by a chinese woman looking back over her life' or more importantly, the life of her parents. They have both now died, her father committing suicide in Hong Kong and she tries to piece together the gaps in what she knows about her family. The result is a story covering the latter half of the twentieth century taking in the rise of Mao, the cultural revolution and Tianemen square.
It took me a while to get into this novel as I was trying to piece together who was who but by half way through I was hooked by a story examining the impact of world events on individuals and families. Definitely worth reading and close to getting the vote of my favourite from the Booker shortlist. 9/10
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
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
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
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
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
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
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 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
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
Monday, August 22, 2016
Hot Milk
by Deborah Levy
The story of a 20 something woman who has ended up in Spain with her English mother to try and find a cure for a puzzling illness. Her Greek father left when she was young but he does put in appearance in the book as she struggles to find meaning in it all. The use of language is at times mesmerising and beautiful to listen to on the audio book I listened to this on. The story fely a bit laboured toward the end but I would happily read this again. 9/10
The story of a 20 something woman who has ended up in Spain with her English mother to try and find a cure for a puzzling illness. Her Greek father left when she was young but he does put in appearance in the book as she struggles to find meaning in it all. The use of language is at times mesmerising and beautiful to listen to on the audio book I listened to this on. The story fely a bit laboured toward the end but I would happily read this again. 9/10
Eileen
by Ottessa Moshfegh
Set in 1960's America this is a strange book that tells the story of a young women who is a loner from an abused background who forms an unlikely friendship with a young women at the detention facility in which she works. It builds suspense very well but I was disappointed with the story telling. A sure sign it will win the booker prize for which it has been longlisted. 5/10
Set in 1960's America this is a strange book that tells the story of a young women who is a loner from an abused background who forms an unlikely friendship with a young women at the detention facility in which she works. It builds suspense very well but I was disappointed with the story telling. A sure sign it will win the booker prize for which it has been longlisted. 5/10
The Bitter Taste of Victory
by Lara Feigel
A look at Berlin from 1944 to the early days of the cold war. It is told from the angle of writers and artists, journalists and musicians who all for various reasons chose to get involved or went to have a look. It is a fascinating read. There are fascinating sections on the relative positions to Germany of Thomas Mann and his children, the involvement and responses of British writers such as Auden and Mervyn Peake. Who wouldn't marvel at James Gavin of the 82nd Airborne who at one time was carrying on simultaneous affairs with Martha Gellhorn and Marlene Dietrich. It was a mad, depressing time that led to mad unreal responses. 9/10
A look at Berlin from 1944 to the early days of the cold war. It is told from the angle of writers and artists, journalists and musicians who all for various reasons chose to get involved or went to have a look. It is a fascinating read. There are fascinating sections on the relative positions to Germany of Thomas Mann and his children, the involvement and responses of British writers such as Auden and Mervyn Peake. Who wouldn't marvel at James Gavin of the 82nd Airborne who at one time was carrying on simultaneous affairs with Martha Gellhorn and Marlene Dietrich. It was a mad, depressing time that led to mad unreal responses. 9/10
A Climate of Fear
by Fred Vargas
Gorgeously quirky Commissioner Adamsberg at it again with his team of bizarre French detectives. The story just hangs in there for an enjoyable romp which I had just about unravelled before the end. 8/10
Gorgeously quirky Commissioner Adamsberg at it again with his team of bizarre French detectives. The story just hangs in there for an enjoyable romp which I had just about unravelled before the end. 8/10
Thursday, July 21, 2016
Sappho-Parisian Manners, A realistic novel
by Alphonse Daudet
The attraction of this book for me was it's publisher, Vizetelly and Co in 1888. This was the famous publisher of Zola novels who was tried for publishing such obscene works as La Terre!
Sappho is full of melodrama and not a book to grip you. A story of a young aristocrat, Gaussin and his relationship with an aging prostitute. The ending is predictable but it moves along at a good pace and the numerous illustrations are fun. 5/10
The attraction of this book for me was it's publisher, Vizetelly and Co in 1888. This was the famous publisher of Zola novels who was tried for publishing such obscene works as La Terre!
Sappho is full of melodrama and not a book to grip you. A story of a young aristocrat, Gaussin and his relationship with an aging prostitute. The ending is predictable but it moves along at a good pace and the numerous illustrations are fun. 5/10
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Angels Flight
by Michael Connelly
The next Bosch and we cover a lot of ground from Civil rights, child sex crimes, and corrupt cops on the LAPD. Add to that problems with Harry's marriage and you realise this book is not short on plot.
The body count is quite high in this one and as ever has a fairly ambivalent conclusion. A good listen on the commute to work though. 7/10
The next Bosch and we cover a lot of ground from Civil rights, child sex crimes, and corrupt cops on the LAPD. Add to that problems with Harry's marriage and you realise this book is not short on plot.
The body count is quite high in this one and as ever has a fairly ambivalent conclusion. A good listen on the commute to work though. 7/10
Tuesday, July 05, 2016
Those who leave and those who stay
by Elena Ferrante
Part three of the Neopolitan quartet and Lenu and Lena grow up. Lenu leaves, goes through university and marries into a good northern family. Lena leaves her husband and works in a sausage factory owned by Bruno from the beach in Ischia.
We are taken on a whirlwind tour through late twentieth century Italian history and some long drawn out passages on life as a mother which can be a bit tedious. I finished this book absolutely infuriated with Lenu. For someone intelligent and able to think and write about feminist issues how can she get so taken in by a shit who she knows the complete history of. I know I have to read part four but Lenu and I are not friends at present so I am putting it off! 7/10
Part three of the Neopolitan quartet and Lenu and Lena grow up. Lenu leaves, goes through university and marries into a good northern family. Lena leaves her husband and works in a sausage factory owned by Bruno from the beach in Ischia.
We are taken on a whirlwind tour through late twentieth century Italian history and some long drawn out passages on life as a mother which can be a bit tedious. I finished this book absolutely infuriated with Lenu. For someone intelligent and able to think and write about feminist issues how can she get so taken in by a shit who she knows the complete history of. I know I have to read part four but Lenu and I are not friends at present so I am putting it off! 7/10
Sunday, June 26, 2016
Her Father's Daughter
by Marie Sizun
The story of growing up at the end of the second world war seen through the eyes of a child. For her early years she is brought up by her mother alone as the father is away at the war. But then he comes back and everything changes. This is a moving portrayal of how a child deals with adult issues and draws you in immediately. I loved it. 9/10
The story of growing up at the end of the second world war seen through the eyes of a child. For her early years she is brought up by her mother alone as the father is away at the war. But then he comes back and everything changes. This is a moving portrayal of how a child deals with adult issues and draws you in immediately. I loved it. 9/10
Camille
by Pierre LeMaitre
The third in a crime trilogy featuring Camille Verhoeven. There is a good back story about the quirky and very short commandant in the French police force.
His girlfriend gets caught up in a violent robbery and Camille breaks a number of rules to track down the perpetrators. As in all three there are a number of twists along the way but in this one I did see the end coming. Still a real page turner 8/10
The third in a crime trilogy featuring Camille Verhoeven. There is a good back story about the quirky and very short commandant in the French police force.
His girlfriend gets caught up in a violent robbery and Camille breaks a number of rules to track down the perpetrators. As in all three there are a number of twists along the way but in this one I did see the end coming. Still a real page turner 8/10
Friday, June 03, 2016
Trunk Music
by Michael Connelly
Another Harry Bosch novel where he returns to homicide after a previous case had put him on suspension.
A simple murder case on Mullholland drive turns serious when Harry discovers that they are treading on the toes of an FBI engagement. Harry also discovers an old love. 7/10
Another Harry Bosch novel where he returns to homicide after a previous case had put him on suspension.
A simple murder case on Mullholland drive turns serious when Harry discovers that they are treading on the toes of an FBI engagement. Harry also discovers an old love. 7/10
Zola and the Victorians
by Eileen Horne
This is the story of the Vizetelly publishing house and the trouble it got into by publishing the novels of Emile Zola. It highlights the sheer madness of a society that allows a bunch of people with extremely clear views of what is right and wrong to drive public opinion over the edge of a cliff. The outcome of these 2 cases which resulted in Henry Vizetelly being imprisoned for 3 months had long repercussions in England with many books banned/destroyed. This was not reversed until the 1960's and the new laws on obscene publications together with the Lady Chatterley case.
The author of this book covers the ground really well but I found the novelistic style a bit much at times. I also would have to complain again about the poor editing, with words missed out or spelt incorrectly or merged together. Who does read these books before going out?
The dustjacket cover is fabulous! 6/10
This is the story of the Vizetelly publishing house and the trouble it got into by publishing the novels of Emile Zola. It highlights the sheer madness of a society that allows a bunch of people with extremely clear views of what is right and wrong to drive public opinion over the edge of a cliff. The outcome of these 2 cases which resulted in Henry Vizetelly being imprisoned for 3 months had long repercussions in England with many books banned/destroyed. This was not reversed until the 1960's and the new laws on obscene publications together with the Lady Chatterley case.
The author of this book covers the ground really well but I found the novelistic style a bit much at times. I also would have to complain again about the poor editing, with words missed out or spelt incorrectly or merged together. Who does read these books before going out?
The dustjacket cover is fabulous! 6/10
The Story of a New Name
by Elena Ferrante
The second in the Neopolitan quartet follows Lila on her disastrous marriage and Lenu on her journey through the education system. It deals in raw detail with domestic violence and the male dominated society of the girls upbringing. These parts of the book were difficult for me but what drew me in was the reflections of Lenu on growing up in a working class environment where little things we now take for granted(telephone, fridge, washing machine) were luxury goods only owned by the well to do in society. This kept lighting up memories from my own past.
I also empathised with the struggle to fit into a society where everyone but you seems to know the rules, and no matter how bright you maybe you are always one step away from your next social faux pas.
But underneath this is a story of a friendship that endures and that is what makes it so engaging and so human. I am looking forward to part 3. 9/10
The second in the Neopolitan quartet follows Lila on her disastrous marriage and Lenu on her journey through the education system. It deals in raw detail with domestic violence and the male dominated society of the girls upbringing. These parts of the book were difficult for me but what drew me in was the reflections of Lenu on growing up in a working class environment where little things we now take for granted(telephone, fridge, washing machine) were luxury goods only owned by the well to do in society. This kept lighting up memories from my own past.
I also empathised with the struggle to fit into a society where everyone but you seems to know the rules, and no matter how bright you maybe you are always one step away from your next social faux pas.
But underneath this is a story of a friendship that endures and that is what makes it so engaging and so human. I am looking forward to part 3. 9/10
Sunday, May 15, 2016
The Dancer at the gai-moulin
by Georges Simenon
Yet another Maigret and I think my favourite to date. Two young lads get caught up in a much bigger story when they see a dead man in a club they meant to rob. Lots of tension as Maigret unravels what really happened at the gai moulin. 8/10
Yet another Maigret and I think my favourite to date. Two young lads get caught up in a much bigger story when they see a dead man in a club they meant to rob. Lots of tension as Maigret unravels what really happened at the gai moulin. 8/10
The Grand Banks Cafe
by Georges Simenon
Another enjoyable Maigret yarn. This time set in a normandy fishing port where a whole crew appear traumatised from a recent trip and the captain has ended up dead. Who did it and why is that radio operator acting so stangely? 7/10
Another enjoyable Maigret yarn. This time set in a normandy fishing port where a whole crew appear traumatised from a recent trip and the captain has ended up dead. Who did it and why is that radio operator acting so stangely? 7/10
Cousin Bette
by Honore de Balzac
Great storytelling and character painting from one of the greats. Bette is a horrible person with a huge chip on her shoulder and the book unfolds the devious way she goes about trying to get revenge on her virtuous cousin using the outrageous characters she is surrounded by. Very funny in places, gut wrenching in others this was an enjoyable novel and did not speak well of early nineteenth century parisians! 9/10
Great storytelling and character painting from one of the greats. Bette is a horrible person with a huge chip on her shoulder and the book unfolds the devious way she goes about trying to get revenge on her virtuous cousin using the outrageous characters she is surrounded by. Very funny in places, gut wrenching in others this was an enjoyable novel and did not speak well of early nineteenth century parisians! 9/10
A People's History of the French Revolution
by Eric Hazan
A very readable account of the French revolution and told from the left's point of view. I found this very engaging and particular the positive view of Robespierre's role in the events of 1789-1793.
Definitely would read again 9/10
A very readable account of the French revolution and told from the left's point of view. I found this very engaging and particular the positive view of Robespierre's role in the events of 1789-1793.
Definitely would read again 9/10
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