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Showing posts from October, 2022

Treacle Walker by Alan Garner

  A tale of the fragile space that fills the gap between the past and the present, the living and the dead.  Here there is no certainty of which is dream or waking and anything imagined can be as real as what you see in front of you (if indeed you know what it is you see). I read this twice.  Once to get the frame of it and then to fill in the gaps, but even still, there was no telling if I had it right. I don't want to define this book or tell you what I think it all means because I want it to stay a fluid concept in my mind.  That's how I think it works best; no labels, no neat little boxes, just a glimmer of an idea passing through like light on water.

The Spy by Paulo Coelho

  This is an attractive little hardback that I picked up at the bowls club for the princely sum of twenty five pence.  The club has a book corner where everything is sold for that same price but, even so, much of the stock has celebrated several anniversaries sitting unloved and gathering dust on the shelves. Apparently there is not much of a market for dog-eared cookery books or old copies of Readers Digest, but every now and then an unwanted gift is dumped on the top, and I suspect that is how this one came to be there. Published in 2016, this is the story of Mata Hari, the exotic dancer and courtesan who achieved great fame in the early part of the twentieth century but was executed as a spy in 1917.  She billed herself as a Hindi artist, although she was actually Margaretha Zelle who was born in the Netherlands and had married an officer in the Dutch colonialist army.  The marriage was not a success, and her husband refused to let her have custody of their d...

Before the Fall by Noah Hawley

  Not so much a 'who done it?', more a 'how on earth did that happen?' kind of book.  It starts with a terrible accident, that may or may not turn out to be a crime, then tracks back through the lives of everyone involved to try and get at the truth. Noah Hawley writes with such a comprehensive attention to detail and order that I wondered if he was a lawyer before he became a writer.  A quick Google search reveals that his degree was in political sciences and he has also worked for the Legal Aid Society in New York City.  Each of his principal characters are observed in detail to allow the reader to start putting together theories for themselves and all these bits of evidence eventually add up to the full picture. Some scenes are very well written with just the right amount of tension to keep you turning the pages, but there were one or two places where I felt the methodology of the story construction slightly jarred against the flow of the story-line.  Th...

Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead

  The plot structure of this novel reminded me of the workings of a Celtic knot.  Everything weaves in and out and under, but in the end you realise all those strands are really just one unbroken line. This is a multi-generational saga that slowly draws the past closer to the present with the stories of two women from very different generations.  One was a pioneer aviator lost in an air-crash as she attempted to circumnavigate the globe, and the other a modern-day actress chosen to play the aviator Marian Graves in a film. The book captured my interest from the start and I especially liked the individuality of the characters.  There are no clichés here, no Barbie doll girls being rescued by Ken in a flying suit, these people are imperfect humans just like the rest of us, but some of them do extraordinary things through sheer determination and perseverance. There's a lot to read, as the book is 600 pages long, but there's no padding and the story sits neatly...

Anthem by Noah Hawley

  This book has a real cinematic quality to it.  While I was reading, I almost felt as though I was watching it play out in front of me on a screen, and the construction of the plot is very like that of a blockbuster movie with a young ensemble cast on the run from the bad guys.  It comes as no surprise that author Noah Hawley is also a screen writer and series creator, and that is in no way a bad thing, as the writing has pace and a strong sense of direction. Set in modern day America, it deals with many of the big issues facing society today, such as: political division, corruption bought about by great wealth, climate change, race, mental health issues and young people searching for the truth.  Quite a lot to bring together in one novel, but not so different from the world we all experience every day.  With the constant bombardment of news assaulting our senses through social media and streaming services, we are all dealing with this stuff every single day. T...