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Kell's 2008 Literary Quest!


Kell

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Mount To-Be-Read list

HERE.

Olympic Challenge list HERE.

1001 Challenge list HERE.

 

 

~~***~~

 

OC = Olympic Challenge

1001 = from Peter Boxall's 1001 books to read before you die

PC = Posh Club Reading Group

RC= Book Club Forum Reading Circle

CRC = BCF Comparative Reading Circle

JA = Jane Austen Book Group

TCM = Reviewed for TCM (Authors/Publishers)

AR = Review for Author

____________________________________________

 

CURRENTLY READING:

Lloyd Jones - Mr Pip

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OC = Olympic Challenge

Ch = Chunk Challenge

Cl = Classics Challenge

MC = Modern Classics Challenge

N = What's in a Name? Challenge

1001 = from Peter Boxall's 1001 books to read before you die

PC = Posh Club

RC= Book Club Forum Reading Circle

CRC = BCF Comparative Reading Circle

JA = Jane Austen Book Group

TCM = Reviewed for TCM (Authors/Publishers)

LT = Reviewed for Library Thing

AR = Review for Author

Red = Unfinished

Green = 10/10

Blue = Currently reading

 

~~***~~

JANUARY:

1. K T Casha - The Truth About Fairy Tales (TCM) - 7/10

2. Terry Pratchett - The Wit and Wisdom of the Discworld - 8/10

3. Thomas Hardy - Far from the Madding Crowd (Cl/1001) - 6/10

4. Natsuo Kirino - Out (Ch/OC - Japan / RC) - 7/10

5. Various - The Book Club Bible - 10/10

6. Various - How to Do Just About Everything (Ch) - 9/10

7. Gaston Leroux - The Phantom of the Opera (T / MC / OC - France) - 6/10

8. Charles Kingsley - The Water Babies (Cl / 1001) - 4/10

Michèle Desbordes - The House in the Forest (OC - France) - 0/10

9. H. G. Wells - The Island of Dr. Moreau (audio book) (Cl / 1001) - 7/10

10. Stef Penney - The Tenderness of Wolves (PC) - 8/10

11. Joseph Conrad - Heart of Darkness (audio book) (Cl / 1001) - 2/10

FEBRUARY:

12. Giles Brandreth - Oscar Wilde and the Candlelight Murders - 7/10

13. Global Ideas Bank - 500 Ways to Change the World - 7/10

14. Jules Verne - Journey to the Centre of the Earth (audio book) (Cl / 1001) - 7/10

15. Pierre Choderlos de Laclos - Les Liaisons Dangereuses (T / Cl / 1001 / OC - France) - 8/10

16. Judy Hamilton - Scottish Myths and Legends - 5/10

17. Various - Scottish Folk Tales - 6/10

18. Jenna Jameson - How to Make Love Like a Porn Star: A Cautionary Tale (Ch) - 7/10

MARCH:

19. Jonathan Barnes - The Somnambulist (TCM) - 7/10

20. G. M. Ford - Nameless Night (TCM) - 7/10

21. Roy L. Pickering Jr. - Feeding the Squirrels (AR) - 6/10

Karen Blixen - Out of Africa (MC/1001/N)

Charlotte Bronte - Villette (audio) (Cl/1001)

22. Dr. Sarah Jarvis - Pregnancy for Dummies - 7/10

Joel Rose - The Blackest Bird (LT)

23. Vicki Iovine - The Best Friends' Guide to Pregnancy - 7/10

24. Carole Matthews - The Chocolate Lovers' Club - 7/10

Michael Ellison - Invisible Man (PC)

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OC = Olympic Challenge

1001 = from Peter Boxall's 1001 books to read before you die

PC = Posh Club

RC= Book Club Forum Reading Circle

CRC = BCF Comparative Reading Circle

JA = Jane Austen Book Group

TCM = Reviewed for TCM (Authors/Publishers)

AR = Review for Author

Red = Unfinished

Green = 10/10

Blue = Currently reading

 

~~***~~

APRIL:

25. Jerry Bayne - The Gatherer (TCM) - 6/10

26. Paul Stewart and Chris Riddell - The Lost Barkscrolls - 7/10

27. Kelley Armstrong - Exit Strategy - 8/10

28. Alexander McCall Smith - The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency - 7/10

29. Terry Pratchett - Making Money - 8/10

MAY:

30. Carole Matthews - The Chocolate Lovers' Diet - 7/10

31. Derek Landy - Skulduggery Pleasant - 7/10

Kim Newman - Anno Dracula

Lily Strange - Eternal Death: Lost Beneath the Surface (TCM)

32. Christopher Brookmyre - Attack of the Unsinkable Rubber Ducks - 8/10

33. R. L. Royle - E11even Terrible Months - 6/10

34. F. Scott Fitzgerald - The Diamond as Big as the Ritz and Other Stories - 5/10

35. Kelley Armstrong - Personal Demon - 8/10

36. Stuart Macbride - Flesh House (PC) -9/10

JUNE:

37. Mario Puzo - The Godfather (1001) - 9/10

38. Rudyard Kiping - The Jungle Book - 4/10

39. Adriana Hunter - The Queen Charlotte's Hospital Guide to Pregnancy - 7/10

40. Ben Elton - Blind Faith - 8/10

41. Jasper Fforde - The Well of Lost Plots - 7/10

42. Jasper Fforde - Something Rotten - 7/10

Margaret Atwood - Surfacing (1001)

Edited by Kell
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OC = Olympic Challenge

1001 = from Peter Boxall's 1001 books to read before you die

PC = Posh Club

RC= Book Club Forum Reading Circle

JA = Jane Austen Book Group

TCM = Reviewed for TCM (Authors/Publishers)

R = Reviewed for author / Publisher (not through TCM)

Red = Unfinished

Green = 10/10

Blue = Currently reading

 

~~***~~

 

JULY:

43. Valerie Martin - Property (PC) - 7/10

44. Simon Scarrow - Centurion - 8/10

45. John Boyne - The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (RC) - 9/10

46. Sally O Lee - The Rabbit and the Snowman (TCM) - 7/10

47. Hanif Kureishi - The Buddha of Subburbia (1001) - 7/10

AUGUST:

48. Marie Mongan - Hypnobirthing - 8/10

49. Stuart Macbride - Sawbones (novella) - 8/10

50. Grantly Dick-Read - Childbirth Without Fear - 7/10

51. Robert Graves - I, Claudius - 7/10

52. Neil Gaiman - Stardust - 6/10

53. Alan Bennet - The Uncommon Reader - 7/10

SEPTEMBER:

54. Lisa See - Peony in Love (OC - China) - 6/10

55. Isabel - Allende - Daughter of Fortune (OC - Chile) - 5/10

Edited by Kell
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OC = Olympic Challenge

1001 = from Peter Boxall's 1001 books to read before you die

PC = Posh Club

RC= Book Club Forum Reading Circle

CRC = BCF Comparative Reading Circle

JA = Jane Austen Book Group

TCM = Reviewed for TCM (Authors/Publishers)

Red = Unfinished

Green = 10/10

Blue = Currently reading

 

~~***~~

OCTOBER:

NONE FINISHED THIS MONTH

 

NOVEMBER:

56. Sarah Waters - Fingersmith (1001) - 7/10

57. Ben Mezrich - Bringing Down the House: How Six Students Took Vegas for Millions - 8/10

DECEMBER:

58. Terry Pratchett - Nation - 10/10

Lloyd Jones - Mr Pip

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Title: The Truth About Fairy Tales

Author: K T Casha

ISBN: 9781419662935

Publisher: Echo Books, London

No. of pages: 397

Challenges: N/A

Other info: Reviewing for TCM

Rating: 7/10

Synopsis (from back of book):

Think passion is all over once you hit forty? Well, think again. Jaded after a series of failed relationships, Cate McCormack's channeling her "inner romantic" into her very successful books. Author of a series of contemporary takes on traditional fables and legends, Cate's surprised tofind herself caught up in her own fairytale as two "princes", one young and handsome and the other rich and powerful, vie for her affections. Head battles with heart as Cate slys the twin dragons of public perception and dented self-esteem to assert her right to her very own happy ending.

 

Review:

I don't usually go for romances, but the fairytale angle was the part that initially piqued my interest, as I'm very interested in folk and fairy tales, and I was drawn to the idea of life imitating art. Fortunately, what I found between the covers was a warm (but not fuzzy!) romance, that didn't paint life as pink and fluffy in any way; instead, it highlighted the problems in a relationship with quite a difference in age and background between the couple.

 

The characters weren't "to good to be true" and there was no guarantee that everything would come to a fairytale, "...and the all lived happily ever after." In fact, it was the fact that the characters were so down-to-earth that kept me reading - I got interested in the lives of these people and came to think of them almost as friends.

 

The story was sweet without being sugary and there were enough trials and tribulations thrown in everyone's paths without it seeming too much; decisions were made and consequences followed - all very true to the ethos of fairytales - but there was occasionally a harder edge and a tendency towards sadness without it swamping into melancholy.

 

Overall, it is an uplifting tale of not just overcoming our differences, but actively embracing them; and also to follow your heart where it may lead.

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Title: Far from the Madding Crowd

Author: Thomas Hardy

ISBN: N/A

Publisher: Librivox

No. of pages: N/A

Challenges: Classics / 1001

Other info: Free audio book

Rating: 6/10

Synopsis (from Amazon):

'I shall do one thing in this life - one thing for certain - that is, love you, and long for you, and keep wanting you till I die.' Gabriel Oak is only one of three suitors for the hand of the beautiful and spirited Bathsheba Everdene. He must compete with the dashing young soldier Sergeant Troy and respectable, middle-aged Farmer Boldwood. And while their fates depend upon the choice Bathsheba makes, she discovers the terrible consequences of an inconstant heart. Far from the Madding Crowd was the first of Hardy's novels to give the name of Wessex to the landscape of south-west England, and the first to gain him widespread popularity as a novelist. Set against the backdrop of the unchanging natural cycle of the year, the story both upholds and questions rural values with a startlingly modern sensibility.

 

Review:

Although I enjoyed this pleasant ramble through the countryside, I couldn't help feeling it dragged very slowly for much of the time, and I found that it was almost entirely predictable. I didn't find any of the characters particularly memorable; even the rakish Sergeant Troy and the wilfull Bathsheba Everdene seemed very weak in places and it was only the steady Gabriel Oak that seemed to have any real weight to him.

 

The language, however, was beautiful and there's no denying that Hardy's writing flows easily, making this a pleasing way to while away the hours, even if it's not earth-shatteringly exciting or suspensful. There's enough to keep the reader engaged and it's worth finishing, even if only to see if things turned out exactly as you thought they would when you started reading.

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Title: Out



Author: Natsuo Kirino

ISBN: 9780099492689

Publisher: Vintage Books

No. of pages: 520

Challenges: Chunk / Olympic (Japan)

Other info: BCF Reading Circle (January)

Rating: 7/10



Synopsis (from Amazon):

In the Tokyo suburbs four women work the draining graveyard shift at a boxed-lunch factory. Burdened with chores and heavy debts and isolated from husbands and children, they all secretly dream of a way out of their dead-end lives. A young mother among them finally cracks and strangles her philandering, gambling husband then confesses her crime to Masako, the closest of her colleagues. For reasons of her own, Masako agrees to assist her friend and seeks the help of the other co-workers to dismember and dispose of the body. The body parts are discovered, the police start asking questions, but the women have far more dangerous enemies -a yakuza connected loan shark who discovers their secret and has a business proposition, and a ruthless nightclub owner the police are convinced is guilty of the murder. He has lost everything as a result of their crime and he is out for revenge. Out is a psychologically taut and unflinching foray into the darkest recesses of the human soul, an unsettling reminder that the desperate desire for freedom can make the most ordinary person do the unimaginable.

 

Review:

I was expecting Out to be far more graphic and violent than I found it to be, but that's not to say I was disappointed. There's excitement of a sort, set against the mundane lives of four factory workers. The sharp contrast between the boredom of the factory and the harsh realities of dealing with a dead body make this quite a dark piece, especially when you realise that for some, there is very little difference in what they are doing.

 

There are some moments that are almost humorous (albeit of the blackest kind of humour), and others that are almost confusing, but things play out pretty much as expected, with only a few spanners thrown into the works. Strangely, the one character I enjoyed most was Jumonji - a colourful character who combined cowardice and courage (of a sort) and really stood out from the drabness of the others.

 

The fact that all the characters seem to tread a very fine line between dark and light, right and wrong, sane and psychotic, makes Out an dintriguing read that doesn't let itself be pigeon-holed too readily - part crime fiction, part kitchen-sink drama, part sisterhood/female bonding chick-lit - it's an odd combination, but it works.

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Title: The Wit and Wisdom of the Discworld

Author: Terry Pratchett (compiled by Stephen Briggs)

ISBN: 9780385611770

Publisher: Doubleday

No. of pages: 304

Challenges: N/A

Other info: None

Rating: 8/10

 

Synopsis (from Amazon):

'A marriage is always made up of two people who are prepared to swear that only the other one snores.' From, "The Fifth Elephant". 'Inside every old person is a young person wondering what happened.' From, "Moving Pictures. The Discworld is filled with a vast and diverse population - from witches to vampires and from the fiendish to the foolish, it is a world in which magical books can devour the unsuspecting, and Death can escape to the country for some time off. "The Wit and Wisdom of Discworld" is a collection of the wittiest, pithiest and wisest quotations from this extraordinary universe, dealing one-by-one with each book in the canon. Guaranteed to transport you back to your favourite or forgotten Discworld moments it is the perfect book for die-hard Pratchett fans, as well as anyone coming to the Discworld for the first time.

 

Review:

The brief introduction by Stephen Briggs instantly lets the reader know that this is not a "read straight through" kind of book, but more of a "dip into" book, and he's right. This is not really a Discworld book, more a book specifically put together for the fans - a compilation of fantastic quips and quotes from the Discworld novels, including such gems as "Tourist, Rincewind had decided, meant 'idiot'." and "If women were as good as men, they'd be a lot better!".

 

There are quotes from each of the Discworld novels, both one-liners and much longer segments, presented in order of publication, up to and including the most recent one, Making Money. Basically it's a trip down memory lane that reminds fans exactly why they love these novels so much and will perhaps prompt an outbreak of re-reading of the older novels!

 

It's beautifully presented and will guarantee a gaggle of giggles from fans as they reminisce over their first exploration into the Discworld, but will mean next to nothing to those who haven't experienced the joys of Pratchett's most famous creation. If you've read even just two or three of them, however, it will most likely have you gagging to read more (if you're not already, that is!).

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Title: The Water Babies

Author: Charles Kingsley

ISBN: N/A

Publisher: Librivox

No. of pages: N/A

Challenges: Classics / 1001

Other info: Free audio book

Rating: 4/10

Synopsis (from Wikipedia):

The protagonist is Tom, a young chimney sweep, who falls into a river after encountering an upper-class girl named Ellie and being chased out of her house. There he dies and is transformed into a "water baby", as he is told by a caddis fly — an insect that sheds its skin — and begins his moral education. The story is thematically concerned with Christian redemption, though Kingsley also uses the book to argue that England treats its poor badly, and to question child labor, among other themes.

 

Review:

Reading The Water Babies is like having a large quantity of morals and saccharine forced down your throat, and the constant digression (in particular, the one about salmon rivers; one of many digressions that seemed to have utterly no point!) makes it even more difficult to swallow.

 

The cloying condescension makes it even more unpalatable, as does the fact that if each meandering incident of digression and every lesson imparted to the reader were removed, we’d be left with a sweet story of about three pages in length.

 

This was very obviously written with an audience of just one in mind (constant personal references such as, “that’s more than you can do!” are certainly aimed at a specific young boy) and the rambling fairytale appears to have been constructed with the sole purpose of having him grow up to be a good, God-fearing man, which is all very well, but didn’t much endear it to me.

 

Overall, it was just far too sickly-sweet and moralistic (although the narrator claims the story has no moral on account of it being a fairytale – as if that ever made a difference to morals within tales!) to be completely enjoyable – I prefer not to be lectured while I’m reading!

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Title: The Phantom of the Opera

Author: Gaston Leroux

ISBN: 0140621741

Publisher: Penguin Popular Classics

No. of pages: 270

Challenges: TBR / MC / OC - France

Other info: N/A

Rating: 6/10

Synopsis (from back of book):

As Monsiers Richard and Moncharmin prepare to take over as acting managers of the Opera House, they discover their predecessors have bequeathed them the "Opera Ghost". A seperate memorandum-book has been set aside for his various whims, including extravagant financial needs. Heedless of the numerous warnings to comply with these strange demands, the managers shrug it all off as a practical joke taken too far. Then a sequence of eerie coincidences and tragic events follow, culminating in the sudden disappearance of the beautiful prima donna Christine Daae in mid-performance.

 

Tortured by the pangs of unrequited love, the mysterious figure living beneath the Opera Hose has been awaiting his chance to strike - and once he does, he is deadly...

 

Review:

Somehow I was expecting a little more from this novel, having seen several film adaptations (including the very famous musical), none of which have been completely true to the original story (although some have been closer than others).

 

At the start, it is presented almost in the style of a factual report, with the author relating events allegedly as told to him by those who were there, gathering information from various sources, including diaries, letters and anecdotal evidence, and indeed, parts of it are based on fact (the Opéra de Paris, for example, does exist as described, as does the subterranean lake; and on one tragic occasion, one of the counterweights for the magnificent chandelier fell, killing one), but the flights of fantasy as the story develops becomes wilder and wilder.

 

The Phantom himself is presented as a tragic-comic figure. His despair and loneliness inspire pity, but many of his escapades (such as the "joke" with the money) make him seem faintly ridiculous. There's also the psychotic nature which is, apparently, completely due to his being hideously ugly, which seems just a trifle far-fetched. As does Christine's relationship with him - one of attraction/repulsion - as there are several occasions where one cannot honestly be expected that any woman, no matter how gullible, would let herself be entrapped in such a way when there is very clearly more than one way out.

 

Ultimately, though, the opulent splendour of the tale and its setting redeems it and lifts it out of the murky depths. There are moments of absolute genius (mostly the descriptions of the Opéra de Paris) which make this a very worthwhile novel to read and one that perhaps should be read by anyone who loves a Gothic touch.

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Title: The Book Club Bible: The Definitive Guide That Every Book Club Member Needs

Author: Various contributors

ISBN: 9781843172697

Publisher: Michael O'Mara Books

No. of pages: 224

Challenges: N/A

Other info: Compilation / Guide

Rating: 10/10

 

Synopsis (from Amazon):

Every book-club member has felt the pressure to pick out a new title for the whole group to read and enjoy. Wouldn't it be great if there was a book that helped you to make that all-important decision and maintain your place of respect in the book club? Fear no more, "The Book Club Bible" is here to help, shining an illuminating light on to the treasures of the literary world, from "Pride and Prejudice" to the modern classic "The Inheritance of Loss". Containing a diverse selection of books to choose from, the guide explains why titles are book-club worthy, and includes interesting discussion points and facts, and potential partner books. From chart-toppers to old favourites, every literary taste is catered for and you'll be sure to make an informed and popular choice. Above all, "The Book Club Bible" suggests some damn good reads. Compiled by a range of English literature experts and avid readers, this informative and enthusiastic guide is guaranteed to inspire.

 

Review:

When I was handed this book to try, I was immediately over the moon, as it seemed to be the answer to every book club member's prayers - a guide to books, both classic and contemporary, that are each and every one perfect choices for discussion in reading circles.

 

The foreword is written by acclaimed author Lionel Shriver (who wrote We Need to Talk About Kevin, which has itself become a book club classic over recent years), who describes this as "like that one trustworthy friend upon whose taste you can pretty much rely." And she's not wrong!

 

Between the covers are no fewer than 100 books, each with a spoiler-free synopsis, a short note on what the critics said about it, a handful of suggested discussion points, a little background information, and several suggested companion books to try. Each book is given only a two-page spread, but this is exactly the right amount - there's just enough information to grab your attention and whet your appetite without negating the need to read the suggested titles.

 

On top of that, there is a smattering of Top Ten lists, covering Classics, Sci-Fi, Thrillers, Crime Fiction, and Foreign Authors to name but a few (and upon which I may base a future reading challenge!).

 

Whether you're new to book clubs or are a reading circle veteran, this is the book for you! It does exactly what it says on the tin and will leave your wish-list even linger than before as you discover books and authors you might not have considered beforehand. I've been frantically scribbling down notes for future reading and will certainly refer to it time and again.

 

This really is a must-have book for readers of all ages!

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The Book Club Bible sounds great Kell - I might have to check that one out.

 

I'll look forward to reading your review of The Water Babies. I read that book many years ago and seem to recall it was pretty good. I've actually added it to my 'priority reads' for 2008 because I've been wanting to read it again for a while now.

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Title: How to Do Just About Everything

Author: Multiple (eHow)

ISBN: 9780007798148

Publisher: Harper Collins Ltd

No. of pages: 688

Challenges: Chunk

Other info: Compilation / Guide

Rating: 9/10

 

Synopsis (from Amazon):

This text claims to have the answers to (just about) every question you might have. Whether you need to unclog a sink or wash your cat, you'll find clear, step-by-step instructions on how to do it. There are also checklists, calendars, charts and tools that will help you get the job done quickly and easily. For every task, there are concise step-by-step instructions, helpful tips and warnings, as well as useful lists of everything you'll need. Browse through these pages to discover how to: tie a tie; plant a lawn; carve a turkey; write a business plan; ask for a raise; unclog a sink; juggle; change your motor oil; lose weight; write a love letter; train a dog; prevent jet lag; burp a baby; and much more. Whatever you need to do, you'll know where to look for complete, authoritative instructions. A thorough keyword index will guide you to the exact solution you need. And with 1001 how-to-solutions, you'll not only find what you're looking for, but also a few things you hadn't considered.

 

Review:

This might just be the most useful book on the planet! It's packed with 1001 useful guides to doing, as the title says, just about everything, from helping your child prepare for the first day of school, to repairing your credit history; from planning a wedding to delivering puppies or kittens; and everything in between!

 

It's also very usefully split into sections like Computers and Home Electronics; Food; Family; Health and Fitness; and Sports and Recreation. Each guide is in easy-to-understand language (you'll find no jargon here!) and is simple to follow, also giving tips and warnings where appropriate.

 

If you're looking for a book that you can dip into and find out how to do pretty much anything, then this is the book for you. It even gives you the web address of the eHow website, where you can get your hands on even more useful guides. Seriously, this is a book you'll keep hold of and refer to time and time again, whenever life throws a curve-ball at you and you're not sure what to you - like an old and very knowledgeable friend, it will be there, waiting to tell you how to deal with it all!

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Title: The House in the Forest

Author: Michèle Desbordes

ISBN: 0571217796

Publisher: Faber and Faber

No. of pages: 186

Challenges: OC - France

Other info: Translated from the French by Shaun Whiteside

Rating: UNFINISHED - 0/10

 

Synopsis (from Amazon):

In her cottage in the rain-drenched French countryside, an old woman receives an unexpected visitor: a boy whispering in an unfamiliar language, and bringing sheaves of paper, the letters and jottings of her youngest son. Some time ago her son had done as she had told him, and left to seek his fortune on a Caribbean island. Once there, the promised wealth disastrously eluded him. Soon, not far from the old woman's cottage, the locals see a mysterious stranger, with a boy and a dog, carrying planks into the woods to build a place to live, perhaps a place to die...

 

Review:

It’s rare that I give up on a book so very quickly, especially one as short as this, but I got as far as page 32 and just could not force myself to read another word.

 

My boredom mostly stemmed from the fact that absolutely nothing seemed to be happening and the narrative (which continually switched between past and present tense) constantly returned to the same image of a man lying dead in a shack and a boy sitting motionless and silent beside him. And this wasn’t the only instance of repetition: Quite often, the sentence used to end one paragraph was almost identical (if not exactly the same) as the one that began the next. This got old very fast.

 

It was also filled with long sentences broken by far too many commas – I fear Desbordes is an auto-punctuator – which ground my nerves from the very start, as I found I lost track of where the sentence was originally heading.

 

I can honestly say that I will never be tempted to try reading anything else written by this author ever again. Whatever message was supposed to be conveyed was utterly lost on me.

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Title: The Tenderness of Wolves

Author: Stef Penney

ISBN: 9781847240675

Publisher: Quercus

No. of pages: 450

Challenges: PC

Other info: Debut novel / 2006 Costa Book of the Year

Rating: 8/10

 

Synopsis (from Amazon):

It is 1867, Canada: as winter tightens its grip on the isolated settlement of Dove River, a man is brutally murdered and a 17-year old boy disappears. Tracks leaving the dead man's cabin head north towards the forest and the tundra beyond. In the wake of such violence, people are drawn to the township - journalists, Hudson's Bay Company men, trappers, traders - but do they want to solve the crime or exploit it? One-by-one the assembled searchers set out from Dove River, pursuing the tracks across a desolate landscape home only to wild animals, madmen and fugitives, variously seeking a murderer, a son, two sisters missing for 17 years, a Native American culture, and a fortune in stolen furs before the snows settle and cover the tracks of the past for good.

 

Review:

Once in a while, the literary awards people get it right. When the Costa crowd made The Tenderness of Wolves their choice for Book of the Year and First Novel Award in 2006, they were certainly on top form!

 

This novel reads like a dream from start to finish, from the way the characters' lives and relationships are gradually revealed, to the unfolding of the mystery surrounding an artifact that may prove the existence of a written culture of the Native Americans, to the investigation of a murder that rocks a small and seemingly close-knit community. There's a timelessness to it all that means it could easily be transported to any era, but it sits perfectly in the onset of the harsh winter of 1867, and charts the journeys - physical, mental and emotional - of each of the players.

 

Told partly in first person from the point of view of Mrs. Ross, the mother of a teenaged boy who has gone missing immediately after the murder of a French trapper, and partially in the third person, taking an overview of what happens to the others as she ventures out on her quest - to find her son, and herself. It's a much internalised epic that strikes deep into your heart as you read, pulling you effortlessly into the narrative and forcing you to journey with her.

 

Highly recommended.

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Title: The Island of Dr. Moreau

Author: H. G. Wells

ISBN: N/A

Publisher: Librivox

No. of pages: N/A

Challenges: Classic / 1001

Other info: Free audio book

Rating: 7/10

Synopsis (from Amazon):

Adrift in a dinghy, Edward Prendick, the single survivor from the good ship Lady Vain, is rescued by a vessel carrying a profoundly unusual cargo a menagerie of savage animals. Tended to recovery by their keeper Montgomery, who gives him dark medicine that tastes of blood, Prendick soon finds himself stranded upon an uncharted island in the Pacific with his rescuer and the beasts. Here, he meets Montgomery's master, the sinister Dr. Moreau a brilliant scientist whose notorious experiments in vivisection have caused him to abandon the civilised world. It soon becomes clear he has been developing these experiments with truly horrific results.

 

Review:

Like Frankenstein almost 80 years before, The Island of Dr Moreau features a man of science playing God and finding that his creations do not act as he would prefer. The themes of human nature, law, religion and society are expertly mixed against the backdrop of a mysterious Pacific island.

 

Of course, in recent years, many of the issues faced by Moreau have come to the fore in the media, as the advancement of genetics and cloning have begged the question of whether it is ever right for Man to play God, and just how far is too far? There is also the question of forcing a belief system on another set of "people" - deifying ones-self in order to be protected from one's own creations - and the degradation of said creations when they are left to their own devices.

 

Wells has chosen a heady blend of science and nature to portray just how easily mankind can go astray - and one has to wonder if his ideas are not already becoming a reality - which makes for tense and exciting reading. It's not a particularly long story and it runs at breakneck speed from beginning to end, hurtling the reader into the action and offering no respite until the tale is told.

 

If you fancy trying a bit of classic sci-fi, this is definitely one to try!

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Title: Heart of Darkness

Author: Joseph Conrad

ISBN: N/A

Publisher: Librivox

No. of pages: N/A

Challenges: Classic / 1001 / Olympic - Poland

Other info: Free audio book

Rating: 2/10

Synopsis (from Librivox):

Set in a time of oppressive colonisation, when large areas of the world were still unknown to Europe, and Africa was literally on maps and minds as a mysterious shadow, Heart of Darkness famously explores the rituals of civilisation and barbarism, and the frighteningly fine line between them.

 

We get the tale through a classic unreliable narrator, relating as Marlow, a ship’s captain, tells how he was sent by the Company to retrieve the wayward Kurtz, and was shaken to discover the true depths of darkness in that creature’s, and in his own, soul. Conrad based the work closely on his own terrible experience in the Congo.

 

This work has been reinterpreted and adapted into many modern forms, the most well known being the film Apocalypse Now.

 

Review:

From all accounts, Heart of Darkness was based on Conrad's own experiences in the Congo some eight years before writing the book, which would, one would think, make for an interesting read. Instead, I found this dull, plodding and pretty pointless. I know it's held to be a classic full of symbols and ambiguity, but I just did not gel with any aspect of this novella - not the characters, nor the setting, nor their apparent motives (which seemed very weak) for any of their actions.

 

The ending, in particular, was anti-climactic, singularly lacking in any drama or discernable meaning, and seemed drawn out yet strangely abrupt (a combination that would seem impossible, but that's how it is!). Basically, it took a long time to get nowhere.

 

I'm not sure if it was the style of writing or the story, but I'm not much bothered about reading anything else by Conrad, at least, not in a hurry.

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LOL - you'd be right, Janet - I wasn't what you might call overly impressed! But The Book Club Bible is definitely a good call - very good to refer back to every now and then.

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Title: 500 Ways to Change the World

Author: Global Ideas Bank

ISBN: 9780060851767

Publisher: Ixos Press

No. of pages: 400

Challenges: N/A

Other info: Compilation / Guide

Rating: 7/10

Synopsis (from Tesco.com/books):

500 inspired ideas from around the world that cost nothing to implement but could enhance all our lives. 500 inspired ideas from around the world that cost nothing to implement but could enhance all our lives. They range from ideas that could benefit charitable organizations (donate airmiles to disaster relief fundraising schemes) to ideas that make people's working lives better (write the minutes of a meeting before it takes place) to ideas that help social relations as a whole (Boomerang Days when you return all the things you've borrowed over the course of the previous year. The book is bursting with brilliantly original initiatives. For anyone interested in doing something more than just grumbling and feeling generally fed up, this is probably worth about a whole year of press and TV.

 

Review:

This is one of those gorgeous little books that you can dip into every now and then and be sure of always coming away with something uplifting. No, it’s not one of those self-help books filled with soppy platitudes; instead, it’s a compact compendium of little things you can do to change things in a big way.

 

Set out in handy sections with headings such as Relationships, Crime and Law, Health, Environment and Ecology, Transport, and Spirituality, it gives handy little hints and tips that needn’t take much time, effort or money to put into practice, but which could make a huge difference to your life and that of others too. Some ideas are so simple that you’ll be left thinking, “Why did I never think of that myself?”, others are a little more complicated, but no less easy to slip into your everyday life. And if everyone took just a handful of these ideas to heart, then the world would be a much improved place!

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Title: Oscar Wilde and the Candlelight Murders

Author: Gyles Brandreth

ISBN: 9780719569302

Publisher: John Murray Publishers

No. of pages: 355

Challenges: N/A

Other info: 1st of The Oscar Wilde Murder Mysteries series

Rating: 7/10

Synopsis (from Tesco.com/books):

This work is set in London, 1889. Oscar Wilde, celebrated poet, wit, playwright and raconteur is the literary sensation of his age. All Europe lies at his feet. Yet when he chances across the naked corpse of sixteen-year-old Billy Wood, posed by candlelight in a dark stifling attic room, he cannot ignore the brutal murder. With the help of fellow author Arthur Conan Doyle he sets out to solve the crime - but it is Wilde's unparalleled access to all degrees of late Victorian life, from society drawing rooms and the bohemian demi-monde to the underclass, that will prove the decisive factor in their investigation of what turns out to be a series of brutal killings. The Oscar Wilde Murders is a gripping detective story of corruption and intrigue, of Wilde's growing success, of the breakdown of his marriage, and of his fatal friendship with Aidan Fraser, Inspector at Scotland Yard! Set against the exotic background of fin-de-siecle London, Paris, Oxford and Edinburgh, Gyles Brandreth recreates Oscar Wilde's trademark sardonic wit with huge flair, intertwining all the intrigue of the classic English murder mystery with a compelling portrait of one of the greatest characters of the Victorian age.

 

Review:

If Oscar Wilde and Arthur Conan Doyle had ever teamed up in reality, then this would have been exactly how it happened! Brandreth has captured the essence of both these astounding authors and combined their characters to superb effect in a crime novel that is every bit as clever and witty as the protagonists of the story.

 

 

The story is exciting and so full of twists and turns that the reader is kept on the edge of their seat from start to finish, and it’s so well written that once could really believe one was listening to Oscar and Arthur first hand. Their interaction and escapades remains faithful to both and the historical context is superbly represented.

 

 

If you like historical crime fiction, then please, do not hesitate to pick up this novel, especially if one admires the works of Wilde and Doyle - you will be in for a treat!

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Title: Journey to the Centre of the Earth

Author: Jules Verne

ISBN: N/A

Publisher: Librivox

No. of pages: N/A

Challenges: Classics / 1001

Other info: Free audio book

Rating: 7/10

Synopsis (from Amazon):

When Axel deciphers an old parchment that describes a secret passage through a volcano to the centre of the earth, nothing will stop his eccentric Uncle Lidenbrock from setting out at once. So, with silent Hans the guide, the two men embark on a perilous, astonishing, terrifying journey through the subterranean world.

 

Review:

Although completely unbelievable by today’s standards, this is a rip-roaring adventure, so jam-packed with action that one can’t help but get caught up in the escapades of the characters as they embark on their perilous journey into the Earth’s interior. Despite having large swathes of science included, Verne manages to grab hold of the reader’s interest and refuse to let go, explaining the reasoning behind the ideas in such a way that one is carried away by the theories and the story as it unfolds.

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Title: Les Liaisons Dangereuses

Author: Pierre Choderlos de Laclos

ISBN: 0140441166

Publisher: Penguin Classics

No. of pages: 396

Challenges: TBR / Classics / 1001 / Olympic - France

Other info: Translation and introduction by P W K Stone

Rating: 8/10

 

Synopsis (from Tesco.com/books):

The complex moral ambiguities of seduction and revenge make Les Liaisons dangereuses (1782) one of the most scandalous and controversial novels in European literature. The subject of major film and stage adaptations, the novel's prime movers, the Vicomte de Valmont and the Marquise de Merteuil, form an unholy alliance and turn seduction into a game - a game which they must win. This new translation gives Laclos a modern voice, and readers will be able a judge whether the novel is as 'diabolical' and 'infamous' as its critics have claimed, or whether it has much to tell us about the kind of world we ourselves live in.

 

Review:

I loved that the book was written solely in the form of letters between the various characters. Each character had a very distinct “voice” and their interaction as plots were devised and completed was fascinating. In particular, I found Marquise de Merteuil to be completely Machiavellian in her approach to everything. Her attention to detail and every possibility was nothing short of genius. Vicomte de Valmont has to be one of the most charmingly seductive characters ever written, and his constant display of deviant cunning is marvellous. These two driving forces are a winning combination that cannot fail… or can they? It seems that vanity is the downfall of one, whilst a change of heart causes the utter ostrazisation of the other.

 

This novel is sensual and glamorises depravity, but imparts a moralistic lesson that willful deviance carries the seeds of its own destruction. Being written entirely in letter form, it lends itself to short bursts of reading, and so it is perfect for those who have very little time to sit and read for any length of time. The writing is beautiful and cleverly arranged to keep the reader hooked on every page.

 

 

Highly recommended!

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Title: Scottish Myths and Legends

Author: Judy Hamilton

ISBN: 1842040596

Publisher: Lomond Books

No. of pages: 189

Challenges: N/A

Other info: Compilation

Rating:

 

Synopsis (from back of book):

Fairy folk, witches, giants, monsters, tales of heroic princes, magic and miraculous feats - all are the stuff of the myths and legends of Scotland...

 

Review:

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