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Ruth

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  1. LOL Ruth.  My 30th, 40th birthdays didn't bother me a bit.  It wasn't till I hit 50, plus that was when I started showing my age more.  I looked the same from about 16 to 40.  It was nice, but was annoying at times.  Especially when I was asked for ID to go into a place.  :roll: heh  But when I hit 60, I said, what the hell?  This is a breeze! 

     

    It was only a few years ago!  No kidding! :P

     

    It's funny; I spent most of the my teenage years trying to look older than I was, and most of the years since hoping I look a bit younger (but in truth, I don't really worry about it now.  Life is for living, and there is no way I would have my face all sliced up or botoxed just to look a few years younger). :D

  2. Frankie, you are such a gem :). I really enjoy reading this thread, even if I don't always remember to comment. I remember when I was in my 30s, and DREADING turning 40 - and like Marie said, it came and....nothing bad happened. I don't worry quite so much these days, but sometimes I do think surely it was only a couple of years ago that I was in my mid- 20s!!

  3. Yes, lovely review :smile: , of one of the most beautiful and haunting books I've read. Everyone should try it.

    Great review of The Remains of the Day Ruth. I haven't read it but now I really want to :) I have seen the film but ages ago and I'm a bit hazy on it so I don't think it will spoil my enjoyment. Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson .. that's all I remember :D

    The film is really good :yes: , but the book goes much, much deeper, in time scale and in Stevens character. A wonderful book :smile: .

    Thanks both of you :)

     

    I saw the film when it came out - I remember enjoying it, but it was quite a while ago, and I definitely wouldn't think it would spoil anything about the book. I thought the book was wonderful (as you can tell!) Haunting is exactly the word I'd use Marie. Hope you enjoy it too Poppy.

  4. Free Country : A Penniless Adventure the length of Britain -George Mahood  4/5

     

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    This is a book about 2 guys who decide to travel the length of Great Britain, from the most southern to most northern piece of land . They intend to take their entire adventure using no money whatsoever, and depending on strangers to help them along the way with food, clothing and bikes ,so they can bike the entire way . They begin their journey with nothing but their underpants . They hope to complete the trip in 3 weeks .

    They have some very interesting stories to tell along their way . The book also has pictures ,mainly of the people who helped them . Parts of it are very funny  .

     

    I've read a few books like this before, set in our country. A young guy named Peter Jenkins decided to do the same thing back in the late 70's (?) or early 80s  ,and wrote two books about it : A Walk Across America - and  .The Walk West: A Walk Across America 2 .

     

    I also read another ,about a guy who I think (?) walked from West to East across our country ,called The Kindness of Strangers: Penniless Across America by McIntyre, Mike 

    Oh, that sounds like a good read. Great review Julie :) (I'm going to look out for the Peter Jenkins books too!)

  5. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society - Mary Ann Shaffer - I agree with Frankie...I loved this book, and hope you do too.

     

    I've added Step Back In Time to my wishlist too - I like the sound of that one, and also Life After Life, by Kate Atkinson (I've heard good things about that!)

     

    Hope you get some good news about your test results soon, x

     

    Oh, and those pigs sound like a huge bundle of cuteness!  

  6. Eowyn Ivey - The Snow Child

     

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    Genre: Historical Fiction

    Format: Paperback

    Pages: 438

    Synopsis (back of the book): Alaska, the 1920s. Jack and Mabel have staked everything on a fresh start in a remote homestead, but the wilderness is a stark place, and Mabel is haunted by the baby she lost many years before. When a little girl appears mysteriously on their land, each is filled with wonder, but also foreboding - is she what she seems, and can they find room in their hearts for her?

     

    My thoughts: I bought this book a while ago after Amazon recommended it to me. It's getting colder outside so I thought it'd be a great wintery read (and it was!).

     

    The book starts off a bit slow, introducing the reader to the characters and their life. I really enjoyed reading about them though, so it didn't bother me so much.

     

    The characters are interesting. The book is a great wintery read, reading about the cold and the snow, and the characters' life there in Alaska. I can imagine it probably won't have the exact same impact if one reads it in the summer. The book is very atmospheric, I could really imagine it. I particularly liked the second part of the book, where more things happen and things got more interesting.

     

    The book didn't end the way I thought it would, but I like this ending even more so it's all good :).

     

    I'm really glad I bought this book and read it, it was really good. Reading it in the winter time, or at least when it's cold where you live, is really nice.

     

    Rating: ***** (9/10)

     

    What a great review :)  I read this book early this year, and I wasn't over-keen, but looking back, I feel that it may have been that I wasn't in the right mood for it.  (It was picked by our book group for our January meeting, so I read it because I felt I had to, rather than because it was something I fancied at the time.)  Your review has reminded me of the things that I did like about it, and I'm glad I held onto my copy, because I think I shall probably read it again at some point.

  7. The Remains of the Day, by Kazuo Ishiguro

     

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    The narrator of this book is Stevens, a loyal butler, who has worked at the grand Darlington Hall for most of his adult life.  Set in 1956, when Stevens receives a letter from former housekeeper Miss Kenton, who left Darlington Hall several years earlier to get married, he sets out to meet her.  En route, he reminisces about his time at Darlington Hall, specifically the years when he served the now deceased and disgraced Lord Darlington, in the years between World War I and World War II.

     

    I found myself being drawn into this book, and ended up being very moved by it.  The characters – principally Stevens himself and Miss Kenton are believable, and if not always completely likeable, are certainly shown as two very decent people, who may have both missed the best years and opportunities of their lives.  (Such as when Stevens meets some villagers on his journey and allows them to believe that he had more influence over world affairs than he ever could really have hoped to have had.)

     

    The dual narration works well, and while most of the book is devoted to Stevens’ time serving Lord Darlington, his present day narration show how those earlier years have affected him, despite his seeming never to want to show emotion.  Tellingly, on a couple of occasions in the present day narrative, he denies having worked for Lord Darlington, due to Darlington’s reputation as a Nazi sympathiser.  At times I wanted to shake Stevens and tell him to allow himself to show his feelings; not to miss out on an opportunity.  He was a perfectly drawn character, sometimes frustrating to read about with his fastidiousness and his occasional obtuseness, and ultimately a sympathetic character.

     

    Also, this book is surprisingly funny at times.  Stevens attempts to teach Lord Darlington’s godson about sex (under Lord Darlington’s instruction) had me giggling, and his occasional referrals to the art of banter, and his attempts to learn this art, were also very amusing.

     

    In the end, the message behind the book is a simple (and obvious) one, but this story is so beautifully told and so absorbing.  It’s no surprise that this book won the Man Booker Prize…I would highly recommend reading The Remains of the Day.

  8. Great review :)! I've got the film on DVD but I haven't watched it yet. The book sounds good too.

     

    Thanks :) The film is great.  I only watched it because Jimmy Smits is in it and I think he's rather lovely (although he's not so nice in this  :o ), but I ended up absolutely loving it.  Hope you do too :)

     

    Great review. I brought this a few years ago but havent got around to it yet. Having read your review hopefully I will pick it up soon!

     

    Thanks :)  I've seen some negative reviews about the book, but I really enjoyed it.  If you enjoy it, I would definitely recommend the film too (as you can probably tell)!

  9. The Jane Austen Book Club, by Karen Joy Fowler

     

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    I picked this book up a few years ago in a charity shop, because (a) it was ridiculously cheap, and (b) I like Jane Austen.  I finally got around to reading it because I watched the film adaptation a few weeks ago, and really enjoyed it, and I wanted to see how the book and film compared.  Of the many reviews I’ve read of this book since finishing it myself, the vast majority are unfavourable, but while I can see what might put people off, I actually enjoyed it a lot.

     

    Six friends start a book club which meets once a month, to discuss the novels of Jane Austen.  Each takes their turn at hosting, and while the novel does discuss their meetings, it takes much more time to describe each character’s back story, and the issues which they are facing in their current life.  The narration is quite unusual – it is as if the book club has a collective consciousness, and it is from the point of view of this consciousness that the story is told; I can see how that could irritate, but for me anyway, it worked.  I did think that the characters were pretty well drawn, although two of them – Prudie and Bernadette – seemed slightly set apart from the other four, this possibly being because the other four had connections between them that excluded Prudie and Bernadette (this may also explain why these two characters were my least favourites).

     

    It’s a very charming book, if slightly predictable.  Not entirely predictable however – the resolutions of Sylvia’s and Allegra’s stories were not what I had expected (or at least in Sylvia’s case, it would have been unexpected, but I knew what happened, only because I had seen the film).  However, as each chapter is devoted mainly to one character (that being whoever is hosting the book club that month), it almost feels like a series of separate short stories which relate to each other through shared characters.

     

    I wouldn’t say that you need to like, or even to have read any Austen novels to enjoy this book, as in truth, only small parts of the books are devoted to the actual book club meetings – in fact, you could probably have written this book about any author’s works (Karen Joy Fowler is clearly a big Austen fan, as she notes in her acknowledgements) – but I do think it helps, as I found myself nodding along with the assessments of certain Austen characters.  I enjoyed it a lot, but on balance, I’m not sure I would read it again, while I would certainly watch the film adaptation again.

  10. I love your reviews :)  Have added The Luminaries to my wishlist, which actually means I'll probably buy it this weekend :D

     

    Glad I'm not the only one who struggled with The Turn of the Screw.  I think I was extra disappointed because I started it expecting to enjoy it.  I didn't finish it, although I probably could have - I've finished books which I've enjoyed less.  Maybe I'll give it another try one day (but probably not)!

  11. The Battle for America 2008: The Story of an Extraordinary Election, by Dan Balz and Haynes Johnson

     

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    This is a brilliantly readable account of what was indeed an extraordinary election in America in 2008.  It starts from the beginning, with the candidates announcing their intentions to run, thoroughly discussing the Democratic and Republican campaigns to get the nomination, and then the presidential campaign.  The Democratic nomination campaigns quickly became a two-person race, between the well-known Hillary Clinton and the newer face of Barack Obama.  (While I do think Obama is terrific and I was lucky enough to be in a blue state in America for both of his elections, this book reinforced my view that Hillary would also have done an excellent job.)  The book demonstrates how important the Iowa caucus was to both candidates, and how infighting and bad management of finances within Hillary’s campaign caused so many problems.  Barack Obama’s campaign, while certainly not without its problems and mis-steps, seemed to run much more smoothly, in the end helping to win the nomination for him instead of the Clinton powerhouse.  (I actually found Bill Clinton’s part in Hillary’s campaign to be fascinating, as it seemed to hinder her as much as help her.)

     

    McCain’s campaign for the Republican nomination was not without its problems either, as many of the party viewed him with some suspicion.  However, he got the nomination and then faced an even tougher battle against the by this time seemingly unstoppable Obama.  The successful parts of his campaign are discussed, although at times there do not seem to be too many of them, and his bizarre choice of running mate is also examined in detail.

     

    Sometimes I think if this was fiction and was made into a film, people would find it too unbelievable, but this is all true! The narrative is presented in an engaging tone, and it never feels dull or dry.  It also stays unbiased, and although it reports on some of the more unsavoury press which the candidates received during their campaigns, it never resorts to using the same tactics.  Overall, I would say that this is well worth a look to anybody with even a passing interest in politics or the election process.

  12. Great reviews Ruth :)Mansfield Park is my least favourite Jane book but there's still plenty to enjoy. I liked all the scandal involving the Crawfords .. I think the book needed it as it was in danger of being a bit too prim and proper otherwise.

     

    What was your take on the ending of The Little Stranger? There is a twist but it's not easy to see at first .. though it may be one you guessed earlier which can take some of the suspense out of it. I didn't see it and felt flat (after such a great build up) but then someone told me to look again. All the same I think Sarah says people are to make up their own minds and she isn't saying if it's right or not .. which is a pain .. but she does say the clue is in the last line.

    The last paragraph and last line is

    'If Hundreds Hall is haunted, however, its ghost doesn't show to me. For I'll turn and am disappointed - realising that what I am looking at is only a cracked window pain, and that the face gazing distortedly from it, baffled and longing, is my own.

    That to me says ..  

     

    .. it's the curse of the unreliable narrator again .. Dr Faraday is the little stranger. 

     

    Ah, that is VERY interesting.  I remember reading that line and wondering if it meant that

    Faraday was the little stranger.  Also, he had been to Hundreds the night of Caroline's death, although he had not gone in and had spent the night in his car.  But his memories of the evening in his car later seemed blurry, and I did wonder whether or not he had actually gone into the house, and caused Caroline's death.

     It's probably a book I'll read again at some point. :)

     

    Re Mansfield Park - agree about the Crawfords :)  Have you watched The Jane Austen Book Club?  I watched it the other week, and loved it (I've got the book too, but haven't read it yet).  When they talk about Mansfield Park, one character says that just once she would love to read it and have Fanny end up in bed with Henry Crawford! 

     

    Great review, I haven't yet read any Austen but I think Mansfield Park is in my omnibus edition of her works.

     

    I hope you enjoy it - and all of her books.  I think Emma is probably my favourite, but they are all worth reading :)

  13. Mansfield Park, by Jane Austen

     

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    (I listened to this as an audiobook, having previously read it many years ago.)

     

    At a young age, the virtuous and sweet Fanny Price is sent to live with her Uncle and Aunt Bertram, and her four cousins, the feckless Tom, the moral Edmund, and their flighty sisters Maria and Julia.  Fanny falls for Edmund, but keeps her feelings hidden and has to watch as he falls for their friend Mary Crawford, while Maria and Julia are both attracted to Mary’s sister Henry Crawford.  As the Crawford and the Bertrams become closer, entanglements and complications ensue.

     

    In all honesty, there is too much story to put into one small summary, and in many ways this is the most socially aware and least romantic novel of Austens.  It is also probably the least popular of her novels, and I can understand why, although I did enjoy it.

     

    The thing that struck me about the characters is that none of them are particularly likeable.  Fanny is sweet and kind, and Edmund is very moralistic and by far the most thoughtful of the Bertram children, but (for me anyway) they were both ever-so-slightly boring.  The rest of the characters don’t have much to redeem them, with Mrs Bertram seeming kind, but practically catatonic for most of the novel, and Mr Bertram being well-meaning, but cold and distant.  The other youngsters are pretty self-absorbed, and Fanny’s other aunt, Aunt Norris, is mean-spirited and never misses an opportunity to put Fanny down.

     

    Despite this, there were moments of humour, and the plot was interesting, with a pivotal scene being the play which the youngsters hope to stage, and which is the point at which feelings and attractions start to develop.  (Edmund’s horror at the thought of something so scandalous a play taking place at Mansfield Park – even with no audience – was unintentionally funny!)  There was a lot of angsty dialogue between the characters, and some scenes were overplayed, but I did like the gradual growth in characters as Edmund tries to excuse some of Mary Crawford’s behaviour which he would have found unacceptable in anyone else, and as Fanny starts to be more confident about giving her own opinion (in the first half of the book Fanny is really little more than an onlooker through whose eyes we see the proceedings, but as the story develops she features more, and becomes more interesting to read about).

     

    Overall, it’s well worth reading, and I didn’t think it the disappointment that some Austen fans do.  Fanny, while not the most engaging of characters – she does not have half as much personality as Emma Woodhouse or Elizabeth Bennet for instance – is likeable, and eventually admirable, and the story is well told, even if the ending is predictable to anyone who has read any other of Austen’s books.

     
  14. The Little Stranger, by Sarah Waters

     

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    Hundreds Hall in Warwickshire, home to the Ayres family for years, used to be a grand country house.  However, in the post-WWII era, it is dilapidated, practically falling down around the family’s ears, and the finances are such that they are struggling to maintain it at all, while coming to terms with a changing society.  Doctor Faraday – the narrator of the book – meets the family, the widow Mrs Ayres and her two grown children Roderick and Caroline, when he comes to the hall to treat their young housemaid, but he is drawn into their lives, and becomes friendly with them.  But a series of strange and unsettling events, starts to take effect on the Ayres’, and it seems that there may be something sinister within Hundreds Hall, that is taunting the family.

     

    I have read all of Sarah Waters’ books, and without exception, have enjoyed them.  The Little Stranger was brilliantly written, with a slow, creeping atmosphere, that left me feeling unsettled a couple of times.  Waters’ writing always flows so well, and I found myself reading huge chunks at a time, just not wanting to put the book down.  It was not a light or happy read, and in truth, not all (in fact, not many) of the characters were easy to warm to, although I suspect that may have been entirely intentional.  The Hall itself was just as much a character as any of the people that lived in it, and it was vividly described, making it, and the events which took place in it, all too easy to imagine.  The Doctor’s narration too, perfectly described both the isolated life of the Ayres, and his own, somewhat lonely life as a bachelor with few real friends.

     

    I had no clue as to how the story was going to end, and was eager to find out what would happen – and here is my only criticism of the book, because the ending was something of a let-down.  I don’t want to say too much, because I don’t want to give away any spoilers, but I certainly did not find the big twist that I felt sure must be coming at any moment, the nearer I got to the last page.  That kind of left me with a “is that it?” feeling, when I finished the book, which is something that I’m not used to feeling with Sarah Waters books.  All the time I was reading this, I thought it was going to be a 5 star book, but because of the ending, I ended up giving it 4.

     

    Having said that however, it was still a book which was thoroughly worth reading, and which I would recommend, purely because the writing itself is so good, and Waters really knows how to ratchet up the tension.

  15. I'm adding Amazing Grace (2006) to my list.  It is the story of how William Wilberforce struggled for years to get anti-slavery laws passed in England, despite stiff opposition.  It made me cry, but at the same time it was wonderfully uplifting.

  16.  The Reading Promise : My Father and the Books We Shared  -----  Alice Ozma

     

     

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    We've all probably had a Reading SLUMP ,but how many of us have had a Reading STREAK ?

     

    How about making yourself a promise to someone ,to read to them every night for 100 nights ?

     

    How about 1000 nights ?

     

    Alice is being raised mainly by a single dad ,who is somewhat of a quirky character ,but a wonderful father. He uses his love of books to help raise his daughter. When she is nine, her dad says he is going to read to Alice each night for 100 nights in a row, never missing it for any reason .

    They accomplish that ,and to celebrate ,they decide to try it for 1000 nights.

    They both enjoy the books and time spent together each night ,and the challenge ends up lasting from age 9 until Alice starts her first day at college at age 18 .

     

    It's a beautiful book-lover's true story .Alice wrote the book to honor her dad and her love of books. It's become her life's mission to get as many other people to love books, and read to their children ,grandchildren, or anyone else in their lives. Or make a promise to yourself to read each night .

    It's a really well written book, with a small piece of each book at the beginning of each chapter.

     

    At the end, there is a list of all the books they read together , and also a "contract" that you can fill in with your name, and a promise to read to yourself or someone else each and every night .

     

    For anyone who is a book lover or who has been in a reading slump ,pick this book up. It will restore your love of books !

     

    Wonderful story !

     

    Great review Julie.  I've seen this book and picked it up a few times in the bookshop, but your review has inspired me to buy it.  I remember my Dad teaching me to read when I was little - and he and my Mum both still love reading, which has rubbed off on me and both of my brothers, who he also taught to read when they were very young too.

  17. A Damsel in Distress, starring Fred Astaire, George Burns and Gracie Allen.  I love love love this film :)  Seen it before, but will always record it to watch again when it pops up on tv.

     

    Also watched The Jane Austen Book Club, which I really liked a lot.  It stars the yummy Jimmy Smits (although he is a bit of a jerk in this), and is just a charming and lovely film.  I have the book on my tbr pile, so I want to get to it soon.

  18. Kommandant's Girl, by Pam Jenoff

     

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    Emma Bau, a Polish Jew, has only been married a few weeks when the Nazis come into her home town, and life as she knows it is changed dramatically.  While her husband Jacob leaves their home to go and work for the Jewish resistance, she is forced to take on a fake name, pretend that she is not Jewish, and live with Jacob’s Catholic aunt, Krysia.  When a chance arrives for her to help the resistance by working in the office of a high-ranking Nazi official, she takes it, but against all her inclinations, finds herself attracted to her boss – and the feeling is mutual.  While the devastating effects of the Nazi regime are being felt all around her, Emma (now known as Anna) must keep up the charade, and cope with her conflicting feelings.

     

     

    I usually enjoy books set in the WWII, and this was no exception.  I thought it was an easy read, despite the subject matter, and events were moving quick enough that I was drawn in and always eager to find out what had happened.

     

    The story was definitely more plot driven than character driven, and I was never sure how I actually felt about Emma/Anna on a personal level.  Nonetheless, the book does highlight the considerable risks that people took to fight back against the Nazis, and I am always slightly awed by such stories (because yes, these characters were fictional, but there were people who took such risks).  I felt that the author tried to humanise the Kommandant, for whom Emma has such unwanted feelings of attraction; he was almost - almost - likeable, but I couldn’t get away from the fact that he was a Nazi.  However, as Jacob barely featured in the book, he was also not a character about whom I could feel very much.  Krysia, on the other hand was a wonderful character – probably my favourite out of the whole book.

     

    This aside though, I really like the book a lot, and an hour of reading it seemed to pass by in about 20 minutes!  The atmosphere of suspicion and not knowing who could really be trusted was depicted well, and I certainly felt thankful that I never lived through such times or make such decisions as Emma did.

     

    On the basis of this book, I bought another book by Pam Jenoff (actually a prequel to this one, where more is written about the Kommandant’s first wife), and I look forward to reading it very soon.

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