Friday, October 10, 2008

The Road by Cormac McCarthy



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It is difficult to assign this novel a genre. Horror? Science Fiction perhaps? Regardless, it is a compelling read - hardly surprising given its Pulitzer Prize winning status. It is both bleak (VERY bleak) and beautiful, the story of the love between a father and son who remain unnamed throughout the story, and who are on a journey to survive(the Road of the title)in a post apocalyptic world. We are left to draw our own conclusions about the cause of the apocalypse. This is an existential piece in which cause and history is irrelevant, nothing that was is any longer. The future is a meaningless concept, all that matters is to survive the day. The father and son however, hold onto a remnant of hope - "the fire". They are "good guys" and this keeps them going.

It is impossible to do justice do McCarthy's prose. Through his profound talent with words, McCarthy takes us on the journey with the two protagonists,in language that like the landscape,is terse and sparse but overwhelming in its descriptive power. It is ultimately a triumph of the power of a father's love and belief in his son, and a little boy's trust that somewhere, in some of the few of the world's survivors, there is still good to be found among the horrors encountered almost daily, in the struggle to survive. Perhaps it is also a comment of hope for the world, that even in the most unspeakable and evil circumstances,somewhere at sometime, the flame of humanity will continue to flicker.

---- Reviewed by Barb, guest

Monday, October 6, 2008

Resistance by Agnes Humbert


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Genre - Non Fiction

Agnes Humbert was an art historian living in Paris when the Germans invaded in 1940. She immediately became part of a group which spread anti-Nazi propaganda throughout occupied France through newsletters called Resistance. The title of the newsletter, Resistance, became the name of all the groups opposing the occupation. Agnes’ group was quickly betrayed & Agnes was arrested & sentenced to 5 years imprisonment for distributing propaganda. This book was written using the diary she kept until her arrest & her memories of her trial & deportation to a German labour camp. Agnes was forced to work in German factories in shocking conditions as slave labour. Slave workers were forced to do the most dangerous jobs such as weaving nylon without any protective clothing. Their hands were continually burnt by acid & they were considered unworthy to receive medical attention or adequate food. Agnes fought back by sabotaging her work so as to make the nylon useless or the wooden boxes she made in another factory fall apart because she cut short the nails she was given. After the Americans liberated the camp in 1945, Agnes began organizing supplies for the refugees pouring into Germany & collecting evidence to prosecute the Nazis. This remarkable book is a testimony to the strength of Agnes Humbert. She never loses her sense of humour, or her sense of outrage at the fate of her country & her determination to survive.

---- Reviewed by Lyn, Headquarters

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Star gazing by Linda Gillard


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Genre - Romance

This is a wonderful romantic novel with an unusual heroine. Marianne has been blind since birth. Tragically widowed in her 20s when her husband was killed in the Piper Alpha oil rig explosion, she now lives in Edinburgh with her sister Louisa, a novelist who writes Scottish Gothic vampire romance. Now in her 40s, Marianne is lonely but determined not to admit it, spiky, prickly & resistant to help or pity. One night, she arrives home in the snow & loses her door key. A man appears, helps her find her key, they have a brief conversation about Puccini, and he disappears. Keir Harvey lives on Skye, and as he gets to know Marianne, he becomes determined to take her to Skye and “show” her the stars. As a sighted person, I can’t judge how accurate Linda Gillard’s portrayal of blindness from the inside is, but, as a reader, I was totally convinced. Keir is a heart-stoppingly attractive hero, and Marianne is so stroppy, you just have to love her & want this relationship to last. It’s unusual in romantic fiction to have a heroine who exasperates the reader as much as Marianne does, but, the book is all the better for it. There are more than enough bland heroines out there. Marianne is real & the journey she takes with Keir is a delight. Edinburgh & Skye in winter are gorgeous settings for the story, and Louisa & her Goth assistant, Garth, provide some lighter moments. This is a fantastic romance with real characters. I read it in one afternoon, unputdownable.

---- Reviewed by Lyn, Headquarters

The fears of Henry IV by Ian Mortimer


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Genre - Non Fiction

Henry IV is one of the lesser-known English monarchs. Most lovers of English history would know that he deposed Richard II, had leprosy & was the father of Henry V, & most of that was learned from Shakespeare. Actually, he didn’t have leprosy, just a nasty skin disease. He did depose Richard II, but Richard was far from the noble monarch depicted by Shakespeare. He was a paranoid tyrant who planned to disinherit Henry when his father died & threatened the inheritance rights of all the nobility. Parliament virtually begged Henry to accept the crown, but once Henry was king, they thwarted his plans by keeping him short of money. His reign was plagued by rebellions in Wales & in the North of England, wars with France & Scotland, & the struggle with Parliament. In contrast with the glorious military achievements of his son, Henry V, his reign seems disastrous. However, Mortimer’s portrait of the king is a sympathetic one. He had little choice but to depose an unfit monarch, but then had to live with the consequences of an act that was seen to be violating God’s laws.

---- Reviewed by Lyn, Headquarters

The private patient by P D James


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Genre - Mystery


Investigative journalist Rhoda Gradwyn is booked into a private clinic in Dorset to have a scar removed from her face. The scar was inflicted over 30 years before, and when Mr Chandler-Powell, the plastic surgeon, asks Rhoda why she’s having the scar removed now, she says “Because I no longer have need of it.” This is the intriguing opening of the new mystery by P D James. We know on the first page that Rhoda is the murder victim, but why is she murdered? Is it because of who she is, or is it what she knows? James always uses wonderfully isolated locations for her books, & the Dorset clinic is just the kind of remote place with a small group of suspects which she enjoys. The staff of the clinic are the main suspects & most of them have something to hide. The book has an air of finality about it, as Commander Adam Dalgliesh contemplates marriage & a new job when his investigative team is disbanded. Recommended for lovers of the classic English detective story.

---- Reviewed by Lyn, Headquarters

Monday, September 8, 2008

Still no fixed address by Jackie Hartnell


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Genre - Non-fiction


Jackie has travelled extensively through the world, mainly by herself and sometimes with members of her family. Her travel dialogues are very easy to read, enjoyable and entertaining.

With a backpack an an enquiring mind, Jackie has adventures in southern England, Spain, Prague, Norway, Cambodia and Vietnam. The details of her 'moto' rides in Cambodia and her funny experiences in outback Australia are just two examples of her travels. Read her first book, No fixed address, for further fun and adventures.



---- Reviewed by Julie, Ferntree Gully

Friday, August 29, 2008

The Warrior's Princess by Barbara Erskine


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Genre - Mystery




Best read from Barbara Erskine, read this book in 3 days. Once again she makes you feel part of the story. I wait with baited breath for the next one. I wish she could write as fast as I read her books.

---- Reviewed by Georgina, Guest

Friday, August 15, 2008

The guernsey literary and potato peel pie society by Mary Ann Shaffer


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This remarkable book is an epistolary novel, a style which went out of fashion around the time of Jane Austen. It consists of letters written in 1946 by Juliet Ashton, a writer living in London, her friends & the members of a literary society on Guernsey. Dawsey Adams has bought a book which Juliet once owned, and has written to the address in the front cover to tell her how much he enjoyed it. The book was the essays of Charles Lamb, and this starts a correspondence which changes Juliet's life. She hears about the formation of the Literary Society during the German occupation of the Channel Islands in WWII, learns what a potato peel pie is, & learns of the harsh conditions of life for the islanders, who were completely cut off from the world & relied on their German captors for news, food, & life itself. I smiled with recognition, laughed & cried. The book is full of the love of books & reading, friendship, & tells a relatively unknown story of WWII. The author worked on the book for many years, and sadly died just before it was published. This is a unique reading experience.

---- Reviewed by Lyn, Headquarters