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I'd rather be reading

  • 09-01-2010 10:13pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭


    So, following the general trend, I'm starting a new log for the new year. I was off to a slow start for the year but for the last three days I've been snowed in, and got some proper reading done.

    1. The Ladies of Grace Adieu and other stories by Susanna Clarke

    This is a collection of companion stories to Clarke's earlier novel Jonathon Strange and Mr Norrell. It's written in a sort of faux Austen/Dickens style, with footnotes and a historical preface. It was a delightfully cheerful, funny book - if you're a fan of the earlier novel, I'd recommend you pick it up. There was a particularly funny footnote on the case of a faerie lord imprisoning a pistol.

    4/5

    2. The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold

    People have been telling me about this book for years, as a consequence, I pretty much knew the entire plot. Anyway, with the film coming out, I was loaned the book to read before going to see it in the cinema. It's difficult to say whether I liked it or not. It's certainly very emotive, and made me cry a lot. The novel opens with the brutal murder and rape of a young girl, but the heart of the novel is about her family's reaction and attempts to cope. I thought the family's experience was very well portrayed, poignant and scarily believable. On the other hand, the whole Paradise/watching over earth aspects didn't really resonate with me.

    3/5


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Oryx and Crane by Margaret Atwood

    I'm a big fan of Atwood's novels, and this certainly didn't disappoint. It's set in a dystopian future which strikes ominously close to home. Seemingly the sole human survivor of the human race of an unrevealed disaster, Snowman is charged with the care of a new race of semi-humans. As the story progresses, Snowman is plagued with the memories of how he came to live in this broken world, remembering the people he loved, charting the road to human annihilation. It was a really excellent read, one of the most chilling novels I've read in a long time, probably due to its sheer plausibility.

    5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Well of Ascension by Brandon Sanderson

    Book two of the Mistborn trilogy, really excellent fantasy book. The plot is gripping and unpredictable, the characters interesting and affecting. Highly recommended if you enjoy books in the fantasy genre.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Hero of Ages by Brandon Sanderson

    The final installment of the Mistborn trilogy. I can't really say anything about it, or I'd give away the endings to books one and two - anyway, I'll just say it's brilliant.

    4.5/5 Only because I'm sad that the series is ended.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Saplings by Noel Streatfield

    I really enjoyed Streatfield's books as a child and didn't realise any of her adult books were still in print until I came across this one. It follows the Wiltshire family, who have two daughters and sons. We meet them on an idyllic holiday in Eastbourne. But the war is coming, and the family will never be the same. What is really successful in these books is the way the author tells the story predominantly from the perspective of the children. To see the horrific effect of the blitz and the war on these innocent creatures is truly tragic.

    A very good novel, Streatfield really understands children.
    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Making of a Marchioness by Frances Hodgson Burnett

    This author is famous for writing The Secret Garden, which was among my favourite books as a child. However, in her own time she was better known as a writer for adults. This story follows Emily Fox-Seton, a well-born woman in her early thirties who was orphaned young and has worked as a governess, companion and generally helped her wealthier peers to survive. She has a lot of charm to her, not intelligent but unrelentingly kind, even to those who don't deserve it. This was a strange book in terms of the narrative, it seemed to be half romance, half mystery, but for anyone who is a fan of Austen or Wilkie Collins I'd recommend this, it's gripping and I came to really like the protagonist. Though there was some racism in the book, which takes away from the novel a bit.

    4/5


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Mariana by Monica Dickens

    This novel opens on a bleak scene. Mary waits, the phone-lines down, for news of her husband, away at war, waiting to hear if he lives or dies. Then we move back and hear the story of Mary's life. Raised by a single mother, having lost her father in the First World War. It is remarkably full of domestic details and the effect is to create a full, vivid world. Though the story is not singularly unique, the characters are flawed enough to make them believable and it is terribly romantic at times. It is semi-autobiographical, and as such an interesting insight into the author, great grand-daughter of Charles Dickens, who wrote the novel at only 24.

    3.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson

    The protagonist of this book is a former porn star who nearly dies when he crashes his car on a drug binge and suffers 3rd and 4th degree burns to most of his body. For months he hovers between life and death, suffering agonising surgeries and treatments. But Marianne, a mysterious woman who claims to know him and to be over 700 years old.

    The initial phase of the book is truly horrifying as the author describes the protagonist's pain and disfigurement. But the book is compulsive and constantly surprising. It pulls together love stories from different times and societies, religious metaphors and borrows liberally from Dante. It made me want to tackle Inferno, I have to say. I really enjoyed this, a story about the redemptive power of love and faith.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Girl at the Lion D'Or by Sebastian Faulks

    I was a little disappointed with this, I have to say, having enjoyed Birdsong and Charlotte Gray so much. Anne Louvet arrives as the new waitress at a provincial french hotel and Charles Hartmann, a married lawyer, catches her eye. Mainly, I couldn't relate to the central characters. Some of the minor characters had interesting stories, and I would have liked to see more of them. Not a bad book, just not particularly engrossing.

    2.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood

    This is Atwood's most recent work, a sequel to Oryx and Crane, which I read earlier in the year. Unbelievably, I think this was probably better. Highly recommended.

    5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Life of Pi by Yann Martel

    I'd heard great things about this novel before I read it, and I think it may have suffered a little in the reading due to my high expectations. Pi, or Piscine Motilier Patel as named by his swimming-pool enthusiast father, a 15 year old subscriber to Hinduism, Islam and Christianity, finds himself marooned on a lifeboat with only the company of a menagerie of wild animals.

    It's a sad book, oddly structured narrative. I found my interest waning in the middle of it. There were some excellent sections, I particularly enjoyed the sections on his childhood in India, and the ending was particularly powerful. A middling book really, in terms of my enjoyment of it.

    3/5


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 104 ✭✭bealfeirste5


    So, following the general trend, I'm starting a new log for the new year. I was off to a slow start for the year but for the last three days I've been snowed in, and got some proper reading done.

    1. The Ladies of Grace Adieu and other stories by Susanna Clarke

    This is a collection of companion stories to Clarke's earlier novel Jonathon Strange and Mr Norrell. It's written in a sort of faux Austen/Dickens style, with footnotes and a historical preface. It was a delightfully cheerful, funny book - if you're a fan of the earlier novel, I'd recommend you pick it up. There was a particularly funny footnote on the case of a faerie lord imprisoning a pistol.

    4/5

    2. The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold

    People have been telling me about this book for years, as a consequence, I pretty much knew the entire plot. Anyway, with the film coming out, I was loaned the book to read before going to see it in the cinema. It's difficult to say whether I liked it or not. It's certainly very emotive, and made me cry a lot. The novel opens with the brutal murder and rape of a young girl, but the heart of the novel is about her family's reaction and attempts to cope. I thought the family's experience was very well portrayed, poignant and scarily believable. On the other hand, the whole Paradise/watching over earth aspects didn't really resonate with me.

    3/5

    I read the lovely bones a few years ago and was very impressed. I'ts a very
    touching story.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    I read the lovely bones a few years ago and was very impressed. I'ts a very touching story.

    Yes, I'd agree it's poignant, I think I had too high expectations of it however.

    The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

    This was a very compulsive reading, I ended up reading it late into the night, desperate to know what was next. Margaret Lea, who works in her father's bookshop, is written and asked to write the biography of the most famous author of her time. The stories that unravel are unpredictable and very compelling. I particularly enjoyed the style of the author, maybe a little old-fashioned and tending to the overblown, but it simply worked in context. A great book for people who love books!

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Race of a Lifetime: How Obama Won the White House by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann

    This was a great read, particularly recommended if you have an interest in politics. It follows the last presidential campaign in the US. It's written like a novelisation, but it's all based on interview, and the authors are explicit about explaining what is direct quote and what is paraphrased. What I really enjoyed about it was the insight into the marriages in question, Barrack and Michelle Obama, John and Elizabeth Edwards, the Clintons. It gave me a whole different outlook on the process, the scheming and posturing at play.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    I've been in rather a reading rut at the moment; I keep picking up books and leaving them down again, that said, I have finished two books recently.

    15. Fidelity by Susan Glaspell

    Eh, merely okay. The story was flat, and suburban/small-town America is better dealt with elsewhere, Richard Yates for example.

    2/5

    The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

    This was a fantastic fantasy debut novel. I stayed up finishing it, and then went online only to be disappointed to find out that he has not written the rest of the trilogy yet. This was the origin part of the hero's tale, laying the groundwork for magic and battles, romance and adventure. I cannot wait for the next book.

    5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    I'm on a fantasy kick at the moment, latest two I've finished:

    17. Spirit Gate by Kate Elliott

    This is the first of Elliott's new series, I picked it up after having really enjoyed her Crown of Stars series. This is a promising start to a new series. Not spectacularly original, dead gods, unobserved villains who slaughter entire towns, an exiled prince. But the world-building is very interesting, Elliott has drawn a lot from Eastern cultures, and she really creates an inner morality for the characters. One to keep an eye on.

    3.5/5

    18. The Painted Man by Peter V. Brett

    This on the other hand was strikingly original. At nightfall demons emerge from the earth and kill any people found outside warded havens. The human race are on the brink of dying out, people defeated and afraid. The book follows three main characters from childhood into adulthood as they traverse this dangerous world. The book is very brutal, particularly as sexuality is portrayed. Interestingly, Brett has a very realistic view of a medieval-inspired world, it is not idealised, women are subjugated, people die of simple diseases. To be recommended for fans of the genre.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch

    I've had little time for reading with college, and I keep picking up books and leaving them down again, but stuck with this one. It's a slow burner, and when I started it I wasn't sure if I was going to enjoy it. Once it got going, however, I really loved it. It's not run of the mill fantasy, the characters are great and fairly original, though the world building at times seems a little lazy.
    It seems he just based it on Italy, though maybe the subtleties are lost on me.
    Very exciting to the last page, brutal and shocking at times, but definitely a good read.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Fermat's Last Theorem by Simon Singh

    Purporting to be the story of how Andrew Wiles solved Fermat's famous last conjecture, this book actually told a much wider story. Singh skilfully charts the history of those mathematical methods Wiles employed. It reveals a world of mathematical wonder that would otherwise be inconceivable to many I suspect. Not having studied any maths in three years, I found the book very accessible, yet the concepts stretched my mind in most interesting ways. A story of pure human triumph, highly recommended.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    If on a winter's night a traveler - Italo Calvino

    It's hard to describe what this book is... it's an experiment in narrative I suppose. There are stories within stories, but not much in the way of plot. It's mostly written in the 2nd person or sections of alternating stories. Mostly, it's about the nature of the reading experience.

    I was gripped to this book at the beginning, hooked by the sheer inventiveness. I had picked it up in the bookshop and started reading it there and then. I had read some of Calvino's short stories a few years back - this is very different, different to anything I'd read before.

    Hard to review, but a 3.5/5 I suppose - definitely worth reading, don't know if it's worth re-reading


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Gift of Rain by Tan Twan Eng

    To be honest, I only really bought this book because it was set on an island in Malaysia where I've been on holidays. That said, I did enjoy it. It's set predominantly in the 1930s and 40s, as we meet Phillip Hutton, half Chinese, half English, isolated from his family and cultures. The arrival of a mysterious Japanese man, Endo-san, is a catalyst for change. As the timing will tell you, war is not far behind.

    It's a lot of things at once, a book about fate and friendship, loss, forbidden love.
    That said, I didn't see the gay relationship coming until there it was!
    It's an interesting insight into the convergence of cultures and the difficulties and rewards that come with it.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathon Safran Foer

    Half of the time I loved this book, half the time I hated it. And when I loved it it was generally making me cry. It's split narration, between 9 year old Oskar, whose father died in the trade centre in 9/11. He finds a key in his father's closet and sets out to solve the mystery.

    It's very sad, as you would guess from the premise. Very effective in portraying the grief of the situation. But I didn't like the narrator. I understand as a little boy suffering such a loss he was intended to have emotional difficulties, but I couldn't warm to him.

    Considering I liked it half the time, it's 2.5/5


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    One Day by David Nicholls

    This is the story of Emma and Dexter, who meet on the day they graduated from university. It's told in one year intervals, looking at one day in their lives over 20 years. It reads like an epic love story, but it's firmly grounded in the culture of the 1980s - 2000s. It's very moving and funny, and ultimately seemed to reinforce the notion that timing can be the biggest influence in our lives.
    Have to say though, the ending was heartbreakingly, gutwrenchingly sad. Not for emotional saps like me...

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    I know why the caged bird sings by Maya Angelou

    This is the first volume of Angelou's autobiography, charting her childhood and teen years in the 1930s and 1940s in California and Arkansas. It a story of extreme hardship, racism, poverty. It's all the more shocking knowing that it is true.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees

    This was a lovely little fantasy novel from the 1920s, written by a contemporary and friend of Virginia Woolf and Bertrand Russell. I picked it up because of the recommending quote by Neil Gaiman on the cover. It's the story of a town on the border with Fairyland, with an unlikely hero in Nathanial Chanticleer, the middle aged town mayor.

    I really enjoyed this book. The style is delightful, old-fashioned and whimsical. Any mention of fairies is taboo in Lud, which gives rise to a number of funny little curses. The only thing that made me dislike the book a little was the pacing, which was a little uneven. The ending was also a little less than I was hoping, but not enough to spoil the book.
    The whole notion of the Fairy delusion being overcome through the man-made Law was really innovative. I found it especially appealing as a law student.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Gift by Alison Croggan

    Standard fantasy fare really, but enjoyable. A slave is rescued by a Bard, a powerful mage, who discovers she has a powerful gift. Cut to a long journey across the land, quest-style.

    It's certainly entertaining; the story's compelling and the world building is fairly good. It leaves a little to be desired though, the faux scholarly introduction and appendices irritated me, there was a lot of explanations by the campfire and the characters could have done with more development.

    3/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Priory by Dorothy Whipple

    This is the story of the Maywood family, living in Saunby Priory, a mansion in an unknown English location. There are a number of plots that run through the novel. A newly arrived step-mother whose happiness is wrapped up in the success of a new family. Two teenaged daughters who still live as children in the nursery, forced to confront their adult lives as they are moved out of the nursery by their step-mother. An absent father who obsesses with cricket. The downstairs staff and an illicit affair.

    It's a very interesting insight into a changing period in history, set in the 1930s, the changing landscape for the independently wealthy as rents fall and the idle lifestyle becomes unsustainable. The tone of the story runs progressively more tragic until the final chapters where it is suddenly wrapped up in a happy bow. Nonetheless, the spectre of approaching war looms and though the characters believe the war has been averted as the book ends, the reader's knowledge of true events cannot be ignored.

    3.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Miss Pettigrew Lives for the Day by Winifred Watson

    This is one of the rare occasions when I saw the film before I saw the book, which spoiled the book a little, as I found it hard to picture the characters other than as the actors who portrayed them. Nevertheless, this was a very enjoyable read. Silly and very much of its time, but funny and entertaining.

    3.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Children who Lived in a Barn by Eleanor Graham

    This is really a children's novel, but offers a lot to the adult reader. It tells the story of two sisters and three brothers who have to fend for themselves after their parents disappear in an air disaster. There are some really charming aspects to the book; the dynamic between brothers and sisters is well described, the line-drawing illustrations, the sense of village life and family life that seems forgotten today. At the same time, from modern eyes, the situation the children find themselves is truly horrifying. The eldest sister, Sue, is only 14 and is left to wrestle with the care of the children and the home. The only support, in the form of the District Visitor, is cruel and judgmental. The villager come together to help them providing food, but see no problem with the children living alone in a barn.

    It's the sort of book I would have loved as a child, for the adventure the children seem to be having, catching fish and growing vegetables. But reading as an adult, one cannot help but notice the stilted nature of the plot at times.

    Overall, a 3/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    31. The Curse of the Mistwraith by Janny Wurts

    Fairly pedestrian fantasy fare. Didn't enjoy it, it was a chore to finish.

    0/5

    32. The Crimson Rooms by Katharine McMahon

    A delightful piece of historical fiction. It's light, but rattles along, and I really enjoyed it. It's the tale of Evelyn Gifford, a trailblazing female solicitor in the 1920s in England. A spectre of sadness hangs over the family, Evelyn's younger brother;s death in the first world war. The novel opens when a woman arrives claiming she bore his child, but brings with her the secrets of Edmund's final days which threaten to destabilise the family. The characters are well-drawn, though mostly a book of female characters.

    Recommended for a holiday read 4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    33. The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas

    The adventures of the three inseparable musketeers, Porthos, Aramis and Athos, are made more interesting when they are joined by young D'Artagnan, new to Paris, who seems to have a talent for finding trouble. This story is a series of adventures, there is little connection between each quest. There is an overall political intrigue running throughout the novel however, which is probably the best part of the book.

    I enjoyed this quite a bit, but the characters suffer a little from a modern perspective, as they fleece married women for money, treat their servants despicably and seem to spend most of their time gambling and drinking. Nevertheless, a good read.

    3.5/5

    34. Liars and Saints by Maile Meloy

    I read this in an insomniac spell, in about three hours. It charts the lives and sorrows of a Catholic family over fifty years, from the second world war to the end of the twentieth century. It rattles along nicely, a very easy read. That said, it's very tragic, and had me in tears. It's not a brilliant book, but I enjoyed it a lot - a light, holiday read really.

    3/5


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Bone People by Keri Hulme

    The most striking aspect of this book initially was the form of its writing, almost closer to poetry than prose at times, it's beautiful language really gives you an ear for the cadences of the character's voices. The book follows three main characters; Kerewin, a weathly loner who appears European, but identifies with her distant Maori ancestor, Joe (Hohepa) a Maori man with troubling secrets, and Simon (Haimona), his adopted son, mute and emotionally challenged, whose mysterious origins might answer questions about him. At times funny, often tragic, this book is a difficult read emotionally, yet very rewarding, in offering insights into a very different way of life and portraying singular characters.

    4/5

    Dragon Haven by Robin Hobb

    Hobb's latest book, the second in her Rain Wilds Trilogy, doesn't disappoint. The dragons, who I never liked in the earlier books, take on interesting personalities, and the dynamic between keeper and dragon was my favourite part of this book. The strong, varied characters are challenged by the hazards of a great river journey, an exceptionally well thought out environment.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Desert Spear by Peter V Brett

    A follow up to The Painted Man, I had forgotten a few details, so it took me a while to get into. Generally, very enjoyable, the brutal world of night demons is made worse as two men appear, at odds with each other, to be the promised messiah who will rid the world of these demons. Some aspects annoyed me a little, some of the world building was a little lazy, merely taking real world civilisations and transplanting them, other than that, a good read.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Warbreaker by Brandon Sanderson

    As may have become apparent, I am a big fan of Sanderson's, that said, this wasn't my favourite of his works. The magic system wasn't as well developed as in the Mistborn or Elantris books. But the characters were very appealing, and there was a good cheesy sense of humour running through the book that I liked a lot. As always, Sanderson does succeed in putting a new spin on the fantasy genre. I did find the conclusion a little unsatisfying though.

    3.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Man of my Dreams by Curtis Sittenfeld

    I picked this up because I had enjoyed Prep, sort of snarky teen novels written for adults, a bit of a guilty pleasure. This disappointed though, the main character, Hannah, was very similar to the protagonist in Prep, but much more annoying. She is shy and bitter and cruel to her sister and cousin. She wastes her young life believing only a man will make her happy, coming to a realisation only after 14 years of treading water. Could have been interesting if it explored more of the psychology behind Hannah's behaviour, her emotionally hostile father, her parent's messy divorce, her difficulties making friends - but it was more a life story than a consideration of any deeper issues.

    1.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver

    I've enjoyed many of Kingsolver's books and her latest doesn't disappoint. The Lacuna recently won the Orange prize. It's a touching book, following the life of Harrison Shepherd, half Mexican, half American, yet belonging truly no-where. The book is made up of diaries, letters and a mix of faux and real newspaper articles. Yet the narrator is often strangely absent, as he keenly observes those around him and seems to regard his own actions as insignificant. There is a strong dramatic irony running throughout, as Shepherd befriends Frida Kahlo, Leon Trotsky, attracts the attention of the HUAC, he is unaware of the tragedies are awaiting him.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    2666 by Roberto Bolano

    I didn't enjoy this and it took forever to read - can't be bothered to add much more than that really.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Riddle by Alison Croggan

    The second in the Pellinor series, this was very enjoyable - I enjoyed it more than the first. It's not mentally taxing, nor very original, but it is easy and just the remedy I was needing after 2666.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Possession by AS Byatt

    Pretty good, got better as I read on - the narrative structure was a little annoying though, I have to admit I skimmed the long poems.
    3.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Amo, Amas, Amat and all that by Harry Mount

    I enjoyed this a lot, it's a lighthearted introduction to Latin, overviewing the grammar, history, common terms of Latin. Makes me want to dedicate some serious time to the language.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Red Seas under Red Skies by Scott Lynch

    The follow up to The Lies of Locke Lamora, this sequel is phenomenally good. At the heart of the book, amidst intrigue, cracking plot and sub-plots, is a touching friendship. I really enjoyed this, the only tiny bugbear was the confusing narrative sequence at the beginning.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    46. Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky

    Considering this is often cited as a premier work of classic fiction, I'm fairly embarrassed to have to say I didn't particularly enjoy this. While the ideology discussed was interesting enough, the moral repugnancy of the central character appalled me (as I guess it was supposed to) and I did not really care what happened to him.
    Ultimately, the religious redemption disappointed me too.

    2/5

    47. The Help by Kathryn Stockett

    This was a great read. It's the story of African American domestic servants in the United States in the 1960s in Mississippi. The story is told from the perspective of two of the female servants and one white woman, who finds herself questioning the status quo. I read this in one sitting as I just could not put it down. An excellent insight into the race relations and relationship dynamic between two women in an unbalanced power dynamic.

    5/5


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Confinement by Katharine McMahon

    A light, but enjoyable read. The narrative is split between a modern woman's life, from girlhood at a private girl's grammar to her adulthood and career as a teacher, and a 19th century woman who taught at the school. It is an interesting story, of what it means to be teacher, a mother, a student.

    4/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind by Ann B Ross

    This is a very gently written story of a widowed woman in the American south who finds her life altered when her late husband's illegitimate child is deposited on her doorstep. It was a nice, easy read, not much to it, but enjoyable.

    3/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Children's Book by AS Byatt

    This is an extraordinarily beautiful book. It spans a fertile historic period, the late Victorian era into the early twentieth century - the depth of research is evident, yet the historic detail is slipped in unobtrusively. The book opens with the meeting of a number of intertwined families meeting, their young children playing and the parents play-acting. The seemingly idyllic picture is explored as the children grow, their life plans at odds with their parents' ideas, and they are swept along by social change.

    Astonishingly good, I'd recommend it to anyone who can get their hands on it 5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Alchemist's Daughter by Katharine McMahon

    Just terrible


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver

    Another excellent book by Kingsolver, more cheerful than many of her others too. Set in an Appalachian farming community, the book tells the story of intertwining characters, with a backdrop of an environmental message - inspired by Kingsolver's own career as an ecologist.

    4.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Twin by Gerbrand Bakker

    I'm not sure about this one, there were aspects of the book I enjoyed, but it was very depressing and while the concept was interesting I thought I could have been better explored.

    2/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie

    Mm, not too sure about this one - good in parts, fairly original tone for a fantasy book, and yet something about it wasn't quite doing it for me.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    The Memory Keeper's Daughter by Kim Edwards

    Tragic, poignant, lovely.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    Cane River by Lalita Tademy

    This was a good read, a fictionalised account of Tademy's female ancestors, focusing on those who were born into slavery, their horrific circumstances. A tale of the survival of human spirit in spite of the most oppressive treatment. Well worth reading, if not the most technically accomplished, it represents extraordinary research and the determination of a descendant to give a true account of her forebears.

    3.5/5


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭lemon_sherbert


    A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel

    I've been reading this for weeks, taking breaks here and there, it's a huge tome of a book, and to be honest, just like Wolf Hall, I got sick of it towards the end. That said, it was definitely an interesting read. A historical account of three men's roles in the French revolution, the detail and insight you get from this book is phenomenal. I have to say, however, I found it hard to follow the enormous cast of secondary characters. Worth reading if you like historical fiction.

    2.5/5


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