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Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey

  Alright, a...... No, No, won't write that, too obvious.  There's more to Mr McConaughey than that infamous quote.   This is a memoir punctuated with the lessons he learnt from life, and every time MM finds something that allows him to move forward, he sees that as a green light and on he goes. I don't think there are too many people who could have experienced his childhood and then come out the other side so well balanced, but there are no victims in here.  Despite the physical violence between his parents and the use of corporal punishment meted out to the three boys in the family, MM considers he was bought up with strong values that made him who he is today. He learnt he could do wrong, even steal, but when questioned by his father he must never lie.  Once when he and a friend went to Pizza Hut and left without paying, the other boy's father called to let MM's father know what had happened.  MM was given two chances to confess that he knew the foo...

A book token

  I was given a book token back in early May and it has taken me all this time to decide what to buy. I'm sure most of you have a comprehensive wish list, and would never find yourself in this kind of quandary, but my book choices generally come from the library and I just randomly select books without really knowing what to expect before I start reading. Anything I don't like just gets hauled back the following week. Luckily, I happened to listen to a podcast where Jordan Peterson spoke to Matthew McConaughey about his memoir, and it seemed full of tales that Texans would like to hear in a bar after enjoying the hospitality for a while, so that was my first choice. The second was Rory Stewart's account of his long walk through Afghanistan. I've lready read his book Politics on the Edge, and discovered i had underestimated Rory in every way. Let's see how this one goes! I'll let you know how they pan out.

Mrs Bridge by Evan S Connell

  ' Everyone sees what you appear to be, few experience what you really are.'                                                                                                          Machiavelli  Not a quote from the book, but a line that kept coming to mind as I read on through the life of Mrs Bridge.  All those of you who think that our lives have never been put through such scrutiny should spare a thought for the Country Club classes living in Kansas between the wars. The picture on the cover is very apt because the story is told through a collection of short accounts that gradually develop into a detailed personality portrait of India Bridge.  Throughout...

Quantum Radio by A G Riddle

  I grew up in a household where transmission of radio signals was part of our daily life.  My father spent his life researching radio signals, and having spent the last few months writing about his career, I felt as if this book was calling my name. It has the writing style of a Dan Brown blockbuster with particle physics and the existence of a multiverse taking the place of cryptic symbols and religion.  The plot line is complex, and it's a big book at 500 pages, but everything moves along at pace and has plenty to keep the reader's interest. Tyson Klein is a quantum physicist working with the Large Hadron Collider and in the course of his work he has discovered sub atomic particles that appear to be carrying some kind of radio signal.  It soon becomes clear that the signals carry a code that could have moved across space and time, and Ty's DNA is identified by the message along with three other people who all have skills that will help save the planet in the quest...

The Wren, The Wren by Anne Enright

  This is about family, or more specifically three generations of Irish women, who have to work out how to deal with the men who weave in and out of their lives.   Nell is the youngest of the three, just starting her independent life after college, and her mother is Carmel who has never told Nell who her father was.  Carmel's mother was Terry who was married to, and then abandoned by, a (fictional) well-known Irish poet, Phil, whose work is referenced throughout the book.   In each case, the women link up with men who they imagine to be better than they are, and so form relationships with a vision of a man rather than the reality.  Men come and go throughout the book, but it is the women who remain in their places and each generation carries on as best they can. Women carry the weight of the family despite all the squabbles and personality clashes. Anne Enright is a master of fine detail that can be unexpected and all the more powerful for that: 'Ronan...

The Second Murderer by Denise Mina

  I had another birthday this month (66 in case you were wondering - finally got my bus pass!) and this fine book arrived in the post.  I thanked several members of the family for it before I identified my brother as the sender, but he hadn't immediately sprung to mind as he's not generally known for reading anything that was written after the Edwardian era.  When I spoke to him on the phone he said he had been to lunch with the author, and after investigating her work, decided this book sounded fun and would make a great birthday gift.  Now, his idea of fun might possibly include The Canterbury Tales so one has to take his use of the f word with caution, but in this instance we were on the same page and it was fun.  Set in Los Angeles between the wars, the story follows a private detective, Philip Marlowe, at the point he is called in to find a wealthy heiress who has gone missing right after her engagement party.  Marlowe doesn't normally do business with...

News of the Dead by James Robertson

  There are some books that seem to have more to tell than just the story, and this is certainly one of them.  It's set in a remote part of highland Scotland, and there are three stories about the inhabitants of Glen Conach, separated by centuries, but happily running concurrently in the book. The land is known as Glen Conach after a religious man who lived in a cave on the hillside, and had been known to perform miracles.  The legends associated with Conach were passed down verbally for many years, but there was also a written account of his life held in the library of the local Laird who lived in the middle of the nineteenth century.  At that same time, a young man called Mr Gibb wrote to the Laird to ask if he could come and make a transcript and a translation of the document, which was written in Latin, and he was invited to stay for a summer to complete his work. Jumping up to the present time, the highland scenery is much the same, and the older villagers can s...