Dear friends. The darker months bring the promise of more time for reading. I'm on target to finish my challenge of 100 books in 2023 (Goodreads) but need to read a bit faster to make sure.
As always I hope to bring a varied selection for you, fiction and non-fiction.
Water by John Boyne (5 out of 5)
Tears of a Shadow by Oliver Silver (4 out of 5)
The book starts with a very disquieting prelude where 2 individuals are waiting to give a performance. They appear to be in a cellar, and there's just one piece of furniture, a shabby sofa. "Uncle Simon" comes down the rickety stairs and demands to see what they've prepared. Michael has nothing, his brother Jonathon is word perfect with Hamlet.
Fast forward and Jonathan is an actor whose life is spiralling out of control. He's having problems finding acting work, he's cruel to his on-off girlfriend, drinking too much, taking drugs, and getting into fights.
He's obsessed with his brother Michael, a successful businessman with a wife and son. Michael tries to hold him at arm's length. Silver creates an uneasy atmosphere that fizzes with tension. Eventually the traumas of childhood and PTSD resurface with devastating results.
A promising debut from Silver.
The Snow Girl by Javier Castillo (3 out of 5 stars)
A three year old girl disappears during a crowded Thanksgiving event. Miren Triggs, a student journalist, makes finding out what happened to Kiera Templeton her life's work.
The book has multiple timelines for different protagonists. Castillo loves the device of ending a chapter on a cliffhanger and then reverting to a different timeline.
The book shines a light on gun culture in America, as well as the detailed and time consuming policing needed for resolution of cases of missing people.
I had to suspend belief on a couple of occasions, particularly with the number of attacks and attempted burglaries that seemed to follow Miren (unrelated to the main plot).
Miren's character development throughout the book is fascinating: initially she is fearful and needing to speak often to her mother. Later, as a seasoned journalist, she is a cold and determined assassin.
I found it an intriguing book but it didn't quite add up to the hype.
Amsterdam by Ian McEwan (3 out of 5 stars)
Regular readers will know I'm a great admirer of writer Ian McEwan, and recently reviewed his latest novel Lessons.
Catching up with his back catalogue, I decided Amsterdam was a must read, as it was the novel for which he won the Booker Prize.
It's a fairly slim volume of 173 pages, published in 1998. It starts with the death of Molly. Two of her former lovers, and friends, meet up at her funeral.
There's a lot of focus on Molly and her unpleasant demise, with the once vibrant woman reduced to a shell of a person and entirely dependent on her husband for care. The two friends, Clive and Vernon, make a pact that should one of them become similarly incapacitated, the other will help facilitate their end, in Amsterdam.
I won't give any spoilers but both men - one is a celebrated composer, the other a newspaper editor - make dubious moral decisions and end up in Amsterdam.
I didn't realise until I read the reviews later that the book is supposed to be a dark comedy.
I found the race towards the ending a bit undignified and a little confusing. I didn't feel I knew any of the characters very well, except perhaps the dazzling Molly, and she was dead throughout the book.
It was, unusually for McEwan, a bit of a dog's breakfast. I was surprised that it won the Booker, as some of his other novels, notably Atonement and Lessons, are far more deserving.
NON-FICTION
Went to London took the dog by Nina Stibbe (4 out of 5 stars)
From SOE Hero to Dressing the Queen by Lynda Rowland
The name of Sir Hardy Amies is well known in connection with the late Queen Elizabeth. He was one of her couturiers.
But there was a lot more to him than fashion. He was an intelligence officer during the Second World War and his work for the Belgian resistance effort. as part of the Special Operations Executive, was so significant that he was awarded l’Ordre de la Couronne, or Order of the Crown, by the Belgian Government in 1948.
Not only did Sir Hardy conduct these operations, but he also simultaneously developed his burgeoning fashion business through the British Board of Trade’s drive to promote UK manufacturing throughout the conflict.
He was a man who at once epitomised and challenged the reality of being homosexual in an era when society was deeply unaccepting. He was thrust into what was an overtly macho and potentially hostile environment and, against that backdrop, made a valuable and courageous contribution to the war effort.
The Queen was obviously aware of his proclivities: when she knighted him, he said he expected he was the first queen she had honoured, and she laughed.
A well researched and fascinating account of an enigmatic man.
I hope you enjoyed this month's selection and can find at least one book you'd like to read. Sharing this post with these fantastic sites.
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October Books including reviews of Geneva by Richard Armitage, The Ideal Couple by Annie Willett and The Wisdom of Sheep and Other Animals by Rosamund Young.
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I enjoyed your thoughts on the books! From Soe Hero to Dressing the Queen sounds like an amazing book!!!
ReplyDeleteSome great books on here - like the sound of Nina Stibbe's diary and snow girl
ReplyDelete