If you are what you read, right now, I am
Thursday, September 27, 2007
same books, different channel.
only to resurface at http://aforangst.wordpress.com/
do drop by, she'll be thrilled to see you, even if she doesn't admit it.
Thursday, May 17, 2007
And it's hard at the end of the day/ I need some distraction.
ALEXANDER MCCALL SMITH
Great follow-up to 44 Scotland Street. Lovely characters, but this one seemed to be rather dominated by young Bertie. (Or did it just feel that way?)
A second novel that's utterly faithful to the first. Seems there's a third. More about that when I get to it.
THE READING GROUP
ELIZABETH NOBLE
Depressed the living daylights out of me a few chapters in. So was abandoned, with more than a little guilt, for the following reasons: A fabulous construct (the lives of five different women who come together at a book club, and whose stories are amplified by their selection of fiction). Several interesting characters that you could probably recognise at the third sentence (in fact, that was my principal problem - it was all too damn real for me). A truly interesting set of books (including Atonement, and The Woman Who Walked Into Doors).
Still, it wasn't meant to be. And much as I'd like to blame it on Bad Luck And Trouble, the new Lee Child I'd been lusting after and finally obtained, I know it isn't so.
Maybe, someday, when I'm older.
BAD LUCK AND TROUBLE
LEE CHILD
As a friend from school used to sing in chorus to a certain Boney M song: Delicious, delicious. It's a super book, and actually adds a level to the already quite fabulous Jack Reacher franchise. Reacher has friends!
I was so happy for him for the brief minute before I was plunged headlong into crazy action. Hope to see the rest of the gang in other books.
The large format paperback I read promised the next Reacher escapade, Play Dirty, sometime in 2007, so I guess I just have to wait.
LIGHT
M. JOHN HARRISON
Abandoned a few chapters in, solely because I wasn't in the mood for SF. But this one will be retrieved later, for certain. It's too highly recommended to not make the effort.
Maybe when I'm on holiday. AFTER the Eco book that's been earmarked for long trips.
MCSWEENEY'S MAMMOTH TREASURY OF THRILLING TALES
MICHAEL CHABON (ED.)
Read a couple. Loved them. And have installed the book on my bedside table to dip into whenever a. I'm in between books, b. I hate the book I'm actually reading, or c. Feel like a short.
Thursday, May 03, 2007
I/ I'm smiling next to you/ In silent lucidity.
MARK HADDON
Self-assured and unexpected as hell, it's the follow-up to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time.
It's the story of sweet old George Hall, trying to go mad politely. While his wife carries on with a neighbour. His daughter tries to settle for a suitable man. His son loves, and loses. And his grandson watches video.
The characters are drawn perfectly, with more restraint and humanity than I've seen in a really long time. The descriptions are lush; the choice of words, unselfconscious. It's such a well-finished piece of writing, it immediately calls to mind McEwan.
It's a book that sticks out for its non-literariness. It's not Literary Award Bait. Not a metaphor for poverty in the Third World. Not manically overwritten ot overtold. It's a story about a man and his family - and it describes, narrates, and entertains, at that level alone.
Just with a degree of polish and certainty that few have attempted before.
Click here for excerpts from the book. My favourite lines remain Katie's description of the opposite sex:
They took up so much space. That was the problem with men. It wasn’t just the leg-sprawl and the clumping down stairs. It was the constant demand for attention. Sit in a room with another woman and you could think. Men had that little flashing light on top of their heads. Hello. It’s me. I’m still here.
For the publishers' websites on the book, click here, and here. Though I suggest heading for the nearest bookstore instead. It's well worth it.
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
Roam if you want to/ Without wings/ Without wheels.
LEE CHILD
Just finished The Hard Way. And like a true Reacher junkie, will be picking up Bad Luck and Trouble on my way home. Hardback, large format paperback, whatever.
For other diehard Lee Child fans, there's a Reacher short story to be found here. The Hard Way review will be up shortly; I'm a little behind, comme d'habitude.
Monday, April 30, 2007
Forget what we're told/ Before we get too old.
EOIN COLFER
Another one from my kiddie book phase. Not fantasy at all, just a really nice detective yarn starring a twelve year-old Irish boy nicknamed Half Moon. Definitely worth a read.
So don't delay/ Act now/ Supplies are running out.
EOIN COLFER
Prebooked my copy of Deathly Hallows, and found myself itching for a really cracking kiddie read. Considered reading Half Blood Prince again, but I think I'll save it for July, just before HP7 is released. (In fact, I think I'll catch Order of the Phoenix as soon as it opens, then start rereading HBP, and finish just in time for the new book.)
Didn't really feel like Pullman. Neither did I want to take a chance and pick up Stroud, whom I've never read. (But sounds like fun.)
Which brought me straight to Colfer. Loved the first Artemis Fowl book. And though I didn't exactly adore the other two, they were quite good.
Needless to say, I loved Opal Deception. Nice plot. Elaborate doublecrosses. Lovely aside about responsibility versus action. Ultracute villain. And the usual dwarf gags.
Will get to Lost Colony really, really soon.
Lessons learned:
1. Eoin's pronounced 'Owen'.
2. Dwarf spit is luminous.
And it's sink or swim/ Like it's always been.
JOANNE HARRIS
Liked Chocolat. Made it through (a little falteringly, though) Blackberry Wine. Quite liked Five Quarters of the Orange. Still, would never count myself as a Harris fan. Picked this one up pretty much by chance, was in the mood for short stories somehow.
The book wasn't bad. Which isn't to say it was good.
I found her stories a little too self-conscious. And formulaic. You know, like they were set as writing project topics or something - very constructed.
There are some good ones, of course. One about the last original story ever written. Another, about a spooky cookbook. Discovered some others online, you could read them here, here, here, or here.
Dropped it halfway, largely due to my shortattentionspanitis, which has assumed chronic proportion in the last few weeks.
Plus I was dying to get into an Artemis Fowl state of mind.
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Foolishly laying our hearts on the table/ Stumblin' in.
ALEXANDER MCCALL SMITH
Compulsory reading for all writers-in-hiding. Purely as a study in characterisation, 44 Scotland Street belongs on your bookshelf. It's beautifully written, and the episodic structure (it was originally serialised in The Scotsman) keeps it fresh all the way to the end - a quality I often missed in the Botswana books.
What I liked most about the residents of 44 Scotland Street wasn't their general weirdness (a la Woody Allen's Sherry, or Kugelmass), but their underlying normalness. Little Bertie just wants to play with his trains. Young Pat, a memorable gap year. Pushy Irene, some distraction from her dull marriage. Diffident Matthew, to be taken seriously. Philosophical Lou, to be loved.
Can't wait to read Espresso Tales.
Lessons learned:
1. Knowing that someone is wrong for you doesn't affect your falling in love with him. (Pat)
2. Your parents are/ were always right. (Pat)
3. Youthful vanity is so satisfying. (Bruce)
4. The systemic absorption of hair gel makes you immune to good sense. (Bruce)
5. Curiosity can only wound you seriously. It's boredom that will kill you. (Domenica)
Thursday, April 12, 2007
We are spirits/ In the material world.
SUSANNA CLARKE
Heard so much about this book. All complimentary, too. Imagined it to be a bit like Pullman, which I think it is. But I never quite sank my teeth into it.
I don't know if it was the teeny-tiny print of my edition. Or the fact that it was set in the eighteenth century.
It just gave me this strange(!) CS Lewis vibe.
Maybe I'll come back to it at a later point in time. It's happened with Tolkien. And Stephen King's Dark Tower series.
Or then again, maybe I won't.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Sending out an SOS/ Sending out an SOS.
SUE TOWNSEND
Not the best of the Mole oeuvre, but fairly representational. Funny in bits, peopled with dysfunctional characters, and hysterically British.
Perhaps I discovered it too late. After all, the first Mole diary appeared in '82, a good fourteen years before Bridget introduced us to a world populated by Colin Firth, singletons, smug marrieds, and f*kwits.
Gave up reading it a couple of times, but it's one of those harmless little books that forgive you easily. I really appreciate that.
Can't see myself as a huge fan, but the Mole books would fit quite comfortably on a shelf alongside Gayles and Fieldings.
Lessons learned:
1. There is a place in Leicestershire called Ashby-de-la-Zouch. Seriously.
2. Every British comic novel must feature an obsession with a TV character completely unknown to the rest of the world. For instance, Bridget worships the completely unfanciable (or so I thought till I read this!) Colin Firth. And young William Mole, Jeremy Clarkson.
Well, it's one for the money/ Two for the show.
ALEXANDER MCCALL SMITH
Another happy Botswana tale that relaxed my frown lines and lowered my blood pressure the minute I started to read it.
It's the usual blend of tea and crime, set right by the traditionally-built Mma Ramotswe.
If you're planning to read it, do it now. If not, head straight to the Guardian's highly condensed version.
Lessons learned:
1. New shoes are good.
2. Agony Aunts are not.
3. Tea improves thinking.
4. Even the nicest of men have stupid, preconceived notions about feminism.
5. In Any Damn Thing vs. Happiness, Happiness always wins.
She asked me to stay and she told me to sit anywhere.
AMIT CHAUDHURI
It's a slim volume of poetry cleverly disguised as a novel. Lyrical, romantic, and subtle as a feather, it barely lasted me a stifling summer afternoon.
A simple enough love story elevated by a delicate interlacing of flashback, dislocation, and irony, it's a book so light that it practically evaporates as you read it. (Cotton candy comes to mind, but, unfortunately, that's a phrase reserved for a different kind of writing. However, I must admit that it's closest to describing the deliciously sweet floatiness of Chaudhuri's prose.)
I loved its elegance. And the sureness of its writing. (Remember the phrase 'felicity of expression'?)
Will be reading more of him, I'm sure.
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Showers wash/ All my cares away/ I wake up to a/ Sunny day.
THE ROBBER BRIDE
MARGARET ATWOOD
Zenia is every woman you know, mixed up with little bits of yourself. (Or the reverse, if you're me, but that's pretty damn unlikely, isn't it?)
It's a lovely read: light, unassuming, and sure-footed. As someone I know commented, it's the sort of book you believe no man should read, because it lays bare the inner workings of every woman's heart and mind.
HOUSE OF LEAVES
MARK Z. DANIELEWSKI
Mysterious, engaging, and quite astonishingly scary. It's an ambitious debut, that I've heard, more than once, compared with White Teeth. And it's true, they share a great deal: a perfectly self-assured voice, a refusal to be dumbed down, and a strangely endearing density.
It taught me a new word: ergodic, meaning a kind of literature that requires effort to be read.
It's a lovely book, on many levels, and I'm just surprised I haven't run into it earlier.
SACRED GAMES
VIKRAM CHANDRA
Took ages to make my way through this one, as it was simply too heavy a book to carry around with me. Was completely worth the effort, though, since it's beautifully written, and, in combination with Shantaram and Maximum City, forms a sort of 2006 Bombay trilogy for me.