A mummy who is passionate about books and reading, both for herself and her children.
Friday, 23 November 2018
A selection of recommended John Boyne books
Tuesday, 16 October 2018
The Man Booker Prize shortlist 2018
Milkman by Anna Burns
The Overstory, by Richard Powers
This is an unusual, powerful and affecting novel.Trees of all kinds, but especially those native to North America are the real stars of this book and they are the glue that holds a complex web of characters and stories together to forma novel. There are 9 main characters who start out as strangers, and gradually over a period of 50 years or so their lives become intertwined with trees (each for a different reason) and then with each other. It is a long book but there is strong narrative drive throughout and I found it very difficult to put down. It is fascinating, traumatic and depressing in equal measure as it forces you to reflect on the impact of humans on the planet and what that may mean for future generations. It is beautifully written and highly recommended. This is the novel I would have chosen to win.
Washington Black, by Esi Edugyan
This is a novel of great scope. It begins on a sugar plantation in Barbados in 1830 where we meet the eponymous Washington Black, a young slave, who then escapes from the plantation with the owner's brother Titch. They travel first to America, then the frozen north of Canada where Titch disappears and Washington Black is left to fend for himself in this alien world. There follows Washington's search to find his place in the world and also for Titch who he cannot stop thinking about, which takes us (through incredibly vivid descriptions and beautiful writing) to Nova Scotia, London, Amsterdam and Morocco.
I started out absolutely loving this book, but that feeling started to wane. I think that there was simply too much going on and too much story trying to be told and when I reached the end I was left feeling a little flat. It is beautifully written and the science explored along the way (from early aviation to the first aquarium) is fascinating. The descriptions of the brutality faced by Washington Black both before and after his escape are haunting and cause us to reflect on this terrible notion that slaves were no more than livestock. There is a lot to think about in this book, and the over-riding theme is of Washington Black struggling to live a fully human life in a prejudiced world. Some food for thought and some beautiful writing in a book undeniably worth reading, but not a Booker Prize winner, in my opinion.
Everything Under by Daisy Johnson
This is another powerful, original and affecting novel. The writing is lyrical and descriptive and the narrative utterly compelling as we follow Gretel in her search for her estranged mother and examines her unconventional childhood and their difficult relationships. Emotive themes of suicide, abandonment, dementia, fluid gender identity, and ambiguous sexuality are explored sensitively,and though the novel is ultimately quite dark (inevitable in a modern retelling of a Greek tragedy) it is a thing of beauty that will stay on your mind for a long time after finishing.
Friday, 24 August 2018
8 Crime Fiction series that will make you fall in love with crime fiction
Wednesday, 25 July 2018
Book Review: Home Fire, by Kamila Shamsie
Tuesday, 24 July 2018
8 of the Best Booker Prize Winners
Monday, 16 July 2018
Book Review: Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor
Reservoir 13 won the Costa Novel Award in 2017, but has very mixed reviews from readers on Amazon. So I knew before I started this would be be an unusual novel and not to everyone's taste, but I was completely blown away by it.
In the early years of the 21st century a 13 year old girl goes missing whilst on holiday in a Peak District village. The book follows the life of the village and villagers over the next 13 years. Each chapter covers 1 year of village life. There's no denying that the narrative style is unusual: there are no paragraphs and no "main characters". Instead the omniscient narrator seems somewhat removed from what is happening as he narrates on the annual cycles of the plants, animals and humans in the village, almost as if for a documentary, and therefore the reader feels somewhat removed from the characters. No character is given any more importance in terms of storyline or word count than any of the others. The prose is sparse and the details gleaned about each character are few and far between but over time the reader does feel close to each character and begins to feel that they know them intimately. Indeed the reader becomes totally immersed in the rhythms and life of this small, un-named rural community. At the same time the natural world and its seasonal rhythms are described with poetic beauty, often reminding me of the novels of Melissa Harrison (http://thisreadingmummy.blogspot.com/2018/03/book-review-clay-by-melissa-harrison.html).
There are no extraneous words in this novel. It is remarkable how McGregor manages to say so much and create such beautiful pictures and so much empathy for characters with so few words. The magic comes in the ordering of the sentences. A sentence or 2 about one character (always providing a snippet of important information about their life - sometimes heart breaking, sometimes brutal, sometimes funny) before moving on to the next character or village event, interspersed with fascinating details about the natural world.
I found this to be a beautiful and very affecting novel. I could not stop thinking about the characters. A real triumph of descriptive writing, celebrating the power of words to convey both pictures and emotions. I would wholeheartedly recommend it.
Tuesday, 3 July 2018
Book Review: Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race, by Renni Eddo-Lodge
Friday, 22 June 2018
Book Review: Where the World Ends, by Geraldine McCaughrean
Where the World Ends, by Geraldine McCaughrean has just been awarded the 2018 Carnegie Medal. My eleven-year-old daughter and I have both read and enjoyed it, although my daughter found it very scary, and I can see why. I am not sure of McCaughrean's target audience with this book and it has been categorised as teenage fiction in our local library. Having read it, I think this is probably a wise move as some of the content is quite graphic when describing injuries sustained- it could be described as gruesome in places - and the categorisation as teenage fiction means younger readers cannot check the book out on their own card, so parents are alerted that content may be unsuitable for some younger readers.
That said, this is a fabulous book, capable of totally transporting the reader to another time and place. For readers of my daughter's age and young teenagers this is a time and place so completely alien to their own experiences that this in itself is remarkable and makes for a magical reading experience. The setting is the archipelago of St Kilda, the most remote habitable islands in Britain, in the 1720s. A group of 9 boys of varying ages and 3 men are sent from the island of Hirta to Warrior Stac (basically a large lump of rock 4 miles out to sea) in order to hunt sea birds for their feathers, oil and meat. This expedition takes place every year and most of the boys have done the trip before. They are usually collected 3-4 weeks later. This particular year, the boat does not return to collect them and summer becomes autumn, which in turn becomes winter, and the weather worsens and the food begins to run out as they are marooned indefinitely on the Stac.
By turns terrifying, heartwarming, heartbreaking and even humorous, we learn of the ways the boys cope and learn to survive in their extraordinary situation and we also learn a little of what everyday life would have been like on this remote archipelago 300 years ago. Fascinating, and a real page turner - a compelling adventure story and a study of group dynamics under stress.
This is fiction based on events that actually happened, and I think this is what made it even more frightening for my daughter, but it also makes for very poignant reflection on the hardships of life 300 years ago.
This is a deserved winner of a prize that aims to celebrate "outstanding books written in English for children and young people" as it has the power to offer total escapism whilst encouraging empathy with a people and way of life previously unimagined, as well as providing enjoyment, learning and the chance to reflect on your own behaviour in group situations. Powerful stuff, beautifully written.
Wednesday, 16 May 2018
Book Review: My Year of Meats, by Ruth Ozeki
Jane is a documentary film maker who lands a job making a TV series filming American families to promote American meat to families in Japan. The production company have a specific idea in mind of a wholesome American wife and family to be portrayed on each show but Jane wants to show her Japanese audience more of the real and diverse America. As the series progresses Jane makes some shocking discoveries about intensive meat production in the USA and becomes intent on exposing this.
Akiko is the unhappy wife of an executive within the production company, who is tasked by her husband with reviewing each episode and cooking the meat dish showcased within it. Her honest reviews cause further deterioration of her already unhappy marriage, but Akiko feels the families shown in the series resonate with her and she is driven to make contact with Jane. Eventually their 2 stories come together.
This book may seem primarily to be a shocking exposure of the flaws of factory farmed meat in the USA (nothing new to me reading in 2018 - still shocking, but not things I didn't know- but I imagine this was totally new to readers when it was published in 1998) but it is so much more than that. It explores the clash of cultures between America and Japan, particularly with regard to food, looks at domestic abuse (some scenes are very hard to read) and how this violence can be condoned and perpetuated by paternalistic societies idealising the submissive wife and is ultimately a shocking, compelling, moving and occasionally funny exploration of love, grief and the experience of growth and finding oneself. Masterfully written, with human and believable characters, this is a novel that stays with you.
Tuesday, 10 April 2018
Book Review: Everything I Never Told You, By Celeste Ng
It is a while since I have been so moved by a book and so consumed by thoughts of what might have been.
Sunday, 8 April 2018
If you haven't read Hannah Kent's books, you should.
The world described is so different to our own, yet the characters are utterly believable and often likeable. Particularly touching is the relationship between Mary and Michael, the boy she cares for. She begins by being frightened off him, but soon grows to love him.
Monday, 26 March 2018
Book Review: Clay, by Melissa Harrison
Clay is quite simply a beautiful book. The writing is hauntingly lyrical and the descriptions of the changing seasons are incredible. Sometimes amazing, detailed descriptions can detract from the plot, but not in this case.
The story tells us about TC, an unhappy 10 year old boy finding solace in the few wild spaces of the city. He loves nature and eventually finds a kindred spirit in Jozef, a Polish immigrant yearning for the land he used to farm, who begins to look out for the boy and pass on his wisdom about the natural world. This unlikely friendship is observed by Sophia, an old lady who has lived most of her adult life on the edge of one of the city's few green spaces and has come to understand and cherish the natural rhythms of the seasons. She is also worried about TC and encourages her sheltered grand-daughter, Daisy to play with him, despite knowing that Daisy's mother would not approve. TC and Jozef discover and delight in a great deal of unlikely wildlife in the heart of the city and observe the microscopic details of their environment with joy and wonder.
As well as being a joyous and beautiful reminder of the importance of green spaces everywhere and the difference contact with nature can make to people's lives, this book examines themes of loneliness, class and urban decay with insight and poignancy. Just fantastic.