Saturday, December 30, 2023
Maigret at Picratt's
Saturday, December 09, 2023
Review of the Year 2023
Another interesting year but no totally stand out books. I read three Rushdie novels of which Shalimar the Clown was good and the Enchantress of Florence fun. His latest book Victory City, I did not enjoy so much.
On the Booker front my two favourite books did not make the shortlist(Sebastian Barry and Tan twe Eng) but the winner Prophet Song was ok but not standout.
In non fiction Technofeudalism was interesting and tied in well with Runciman's How Democracy Ends, but my favourite was probably writers and revolution about 1848 as seen through different writers eyes.
My standout book of the year. There were some good new books from Barbara Kingsolver, Zadie Smith and Sebastian Faulks but the most memorable book was a Simenon book. Not Maigret, although Maigret's Memoirs was great fun, but The Man who Watched the Trains go By. It was scary and compelling. This probably was followed by The Wide World, the first in a new trilogy by Pierre LeMaitre.
Love in a Time of Hate
by Florian Illies
The sub-title of this book is Art and Passion in the shadow of War, 1929-1939. It is a wide ranging look at numerous artists during that period and their complicated love lives. That said the vast array of people covered is also the books weakness as it becomes impossible to keep up with who they are all as we jump in and out of stories. 6/10
Saturday, November 25, 2023
The Seventh Son
by Sebastian Faulks
Seth was the seventh son of Adam and also the name given to the hero of this book who is born to two London based people via a surrogate mother supposedly using their eggs and sperm. However, the rich entrepreneur who runs the clinic has some problems of his own regarding the dementia that is killing his father and he uses his clinic to carry out some "research" that impacts on the child born in 2031. It is a thought provoking story as we follow Seth and his parents and surrogate mother over the next 25 years with some twists and turns along the way. 8/10
Maigret's Memoirs
by George Simenon
One of the best Maigret novels as this is Maigret writing about Simenon and filling in some of the gaps and correcting some of his minor errors, It is very funny in places but also quite poignant in others when he talks about real issues of society seen on a daily basis by the police. 10/10
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
As the Eagle Flies
by Nolwenn le Blevennec
A french book about an affair. The affair started three years before the time of the book and lasted three months but then spent three years coming to an end and we get taken through it on a self absorbed retelling of the time by the narrator.
The saving grace of the book is that it is very funny in places and made me laugh out loud. Otherwise too introspective for me. 6/10
The Fraud
by Zadie Smith
I think this is Zadie Smith's first historical novel but it is a lot of fun. It is based around real people and events, but the main characters have been largely forgotten by history. Characters such as Dickens and Maclise also make an appearance, and we don't always see their best sides!
The story follows Mrs Touchet and her cousin Ainsworth through their colourful lives and their interaction with a celebrated legal case over the identity of Roger Tichborne and whether the claimant of an inheritance is actually him. Great larks! The story moves from London to Jamaica to Australia and my only disappointment is that the story ran out of steam about two thirds of the way through. The earlier parts of the book I really enjoyed 7/10
Tuesday, November 14, 2023
Technofeudalism
by Yanis Varoufakis
A book examining the rise of the big tech companies. The argument is that the rise of cloud capital has brought about the death of capitalism as we know it and that power now lies with a few cloudalists for whom most of us work for free.
YV loves to come up with new terms-indeed, one chapter of this book is devoted to explaining why the term used in the title is important- and we have many in this book including cloud proles and cloud serfs.
I found the argument difficult to follow at times but this is a very thought provoking book that will leave me wondering about the way this will move. The most sobering part of the book was his chapter looking at China and the USA and the new cold war. The most disappointing was the last chapter which paints a utopia that we are unlikely to ever reach and left to many questions unanswered 6/10
Wednesday, November 08, 2023
Prophet Song
by Paul Lynch
A dystopian vision set in present day Ireland but could be anywhere in the western world. The country descends to civil war as a far right party takes over the country and bit by bit clamps down on dissent. A depressing but captivating read as a mother tries to keep her family together after the husband is arrested.
Some of the characters were a bit unbelievable but still powerful storytelling 7/10
Sunday, November 05, 2023
The Wide World
by Pierre LeMaitre
The first in a planned trilogy of the post war years but there is a surprise appearance of characters from the previous trilogy of the interwar years!
This story revolves around the Pelletier family. The father runs a very successful soap company in Lebanon but his four children are still finding their way in life with mixed results. This is the tale of how it unfolds, which takes us from Lebanon to Saigon to Paris and in true LeMaitre style is peppered with surprises along the way. A bit gruesome in parts, along with a smattering of humour this is great storytelling 9/10
Friday, October 27, 2023
The Bee Sting
by Paul Murray
The longest book on this years list it is set in a small town in Ireland a couple of hours from Dublin.
It tells the stories of the four members of the Barnes's family as the family faces up to various challenges such as bankruptcy, mid life crisis, marriage breakdown, male rape, bullying, transition to college life, climate change etc etc. It is very funny in places and exceedingly dark in others and I felt it ran out of steam by the end with an ending that left you guessing. I enjoyed the structure as the four members took it in turns to be central stage and tell their story. Not sure why the mother had to do this without punctuation but no doubt it made sense to some! 6/10
Things I don't want to Know
by Deborah Levy
This book was written as a response to George Orwell's essay called why I write. In that he identifies four things he believes motivate writers to write.
Levy's response as a woman living in the twenty first century is both thought provoking and interesting. I loved it and it was beautifully produced by Notting Hill Editions 9/10
Saturday, October 07, 2023
Madame Maigret's Friend
by Georges Simenon
A new twist, with Mme Maigret being given a central role in this mystery of what turns out to be a double murder and in which Mme Maigret's conversations on a park bench turn out to be the key to solving the crime. 8/10
Follow the Money
by Paul Johnson
A 2023 take on the British economy, looking at where the money comes from and how it is distributed. Along the way he comments on the good and the bad of the British tax system and the failings and strengths of the various spending departments.
You may not agree with all of his analysis but it does offer food for thought. It is fairly well balanced in its swipes at politicians from all sides but it is written by somebody who rising from modest roots, has embraced the establishment of which he is now a part. As such he comes across as a bit arrogant in places but I still found it an enjoyable and stimulating read 8/10
Thursday, October 05, 2023
How to Build a Boat
by Elaine Feeney
You get the impression as you read this that Elaine Feeney may well have built a boat at some time in her past.
This book is about a lot of things other than boat building though. It is about grief, growing up on the spectrum, single parenthood, relationship breakdown, abuse and misogyny in the catholic church and more. In fact, although I enjoyed this book its weakness is that it tries to deal with too much and feels missing something as a result. Definitely an author I would read again though 6/10
Friday, September 15, 2023
This Other Eden
by Paul Harding
A small island community made up of black and mixed race poor is forcibly evicted from their homes in a story, based on fact, about our inability to tolerate difference. It is a sombre tale, told brilliantly with a poetry to the language that makes the darkness of the story even more painful. It took me a while to get into it but I ended up racing through the second half 8/10
All the Little Bird Hearts
by Viktoria Lloyd Barlow
This is, I suppose, a story of three women set in a rural town not far from Lancaster. Dolly is sixteen and growing up fast. She lives with her divorced mother. There summer is disturbed when new neighbours move in next door. They are from London and looking to do some property deals in the area. Dolly becomes thick with Vita and starts spending more and more time with them. So far so normal but thrown into this mix is the fact Vita has always wanted a daughter and Dolly's mother, Sunday, is on the aspergers spectrum. The tale is told slowly and keeps and element of gentle tension throughout.
The book focuses a lot on pronunciation and hearing it read on an audiobook worked really well. It is spliced with humour but I felt it was too long in the end with repetition that was unnecessary. An interesting ending though 6/10
Tuesday, September 05, 2023
A Spell of Good Things
by Ayobami Adebayo
A story set in Nigeria detailing how the lives of two families from different parts of society are altered by external events. The stories overlap in a deadly way and from the moment the title of the book is explained it is clear the story can only end badly which is does for all concerned. Both sad and moving it is not a book I would read again. There was no redemption here, no hope. Must be in with a chance of winning! 5/10
Monday, August 28, 2023
Old God's Time
by Sebastian Barry
Set in 1990's Dublin this is the story of a recently retired police officer dealing with grief and getting old, overshadowed throughout by child abuse in the Catholic Church and the impact on him and his immediate family.
The book constantly unsettles you from simple things like the main character's references to cheese on toast as welsh rabbit through to whole sections of the book, which are told as fact suddenly becoming dreams or the misplaced memories of the protagonist. Excellent novel 9/10
If I survive you
by Jonathan Escoffery
A collection of stories about a Jamaican family making its way in America which hangs together fairly well. The ending had some sort of resolution but felt rushed compared to much of the rest of the story.
The way it deals with feelings of belonging and displacement I found really good and there were also some shocks I was not expecting as well as moments of humour. 7/10