Skaville
Well-known member
To Kill a Mockingbird. Never read it, thought I should. Only 20 pages in but already loving it.
To Kill a Mockingbird. Never read it, thought I should. Only 20 pages in but already loving it.
To Kill a Mockingbird. Never read it, thought I should. Only 20 pages in but already loving it.
Anne Tyler 'A Spool of Blue Thread'. A book about an average family in Baltimore written with a lot of humour and intelligence. Tyler doesn't need to make her characters super-successful to make them interesting, her attention to detail turns the mundane into the sublime. She writes in a style that will please Garrison Keiller or Bill Bryson fans, I enjoyed this book a lot. An easy read but still some very clever moments.
Just finished Station Eleven by Emily St.John Mandel. Brilliantly written, simple, but completely absorbing. Very original take on the post apocalyptic genre.
Coming to the end of my Man Booker Prize longlist 13 book challenge and am just starting Sunjeev Sahora's 'The Year of The Runaways'. Reading all the nominated books has been hard-going at times with this year having a lot of lacklustre nominations. The 13 books have also been shortened to the 12 book challenge seeing as Bill Clegg's book isn't even out yet! How rubbish is that - a book nominated for best novel of the year and it's not even been published.
Here's my reviews of the latest 5 books:
Anne Tyler 'A Spool of Blue Thread'. A book about an average family in Baltimore written with a lot of humour and intelligence. Tyler doesn't need to make her characters super-successful to make them interesting, her attention to detail turns the mundane into the sublime. She writes in a style that will please Garrison Keiller or Bill Bryson fans, I enjoyed this book a lot. An easy read but still some very clever moments.
Marilynne Robinson 'Lila'. Excruciatingly dull.
Anna Smaill - 'The Chimes'. Dystopian tale set in London where memories are wiped daily by the repeated playing of music by the authorities. A very clever concept, written cleverly but let down by being yet another dull story and so many obscure music notation references. Long, long paragraphs of not much happening keep the story from flowing.
Anne Enright - 'The Green Road'. More a study in family relationships rather than a plot-driven story. This book focuses around 2 brothers and 2 sisters returning to the family home in Ireland for Christmas. Enright has a sardonic wit that she displays often and it's a fun read. Not my favourite but certainly one of the better ones.
Anuradha Roy - 'Sleeping on Jupiter' By far the shortest Indian novel I've ever read and one with a fairly tight plot too which is unusual for Indian writers. Another book dealing with sexual abuse but written in a far better way than the other Booker Prize candidate 'A Little Life' it's also very colourfully described with the main protagonists having three dimensional characters. I liked this book a lot.