Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Homesick Creek


By Diane Hammond 2005

ISBN 0-385-50944-8


This is a five star book.

Themes of love, family, friendship, faithfulness, privilege and parenting are treated in a very sensitive fashion.

The plot is skilfully unfolded with layers of complexity unfolding gently without any sense of being rushed or any of the confusion that can occur when a story is written in a non-sequential manner.

Sections I particularly enjoyed:

“Bunny had got out of the habit of leaving town. There wasn’t anything beyond Hubbard that she really wanted. She wanted Vinny to give her grandchildren and be around to care for her when she got old. She wanted to have enough money for a new deck and decent wallpaper in the bathroom and a washing machine that didn’t walk around during the spin cycle. She wanted to have a wine cooler with her mother, Shirl, in the afternoon sometimes and to get on a later shift at the Anchor. She wanted to be the wife of someone who planned to stick around. Those weren’t the kinds of things you could get over in Sawyer.” Page 17

“…four months ago she had found a rat in the toilet. The property manager had told her just to put something heavy on the toilet lid and give it an hour. That was when Anita knew she might as well stop waiting for her real life to begin, the life that included a nice yard and a man who could maintain it. This was her real life, right here, right now, waiting in a piece-of-shit dump for a rat to die in her toilet.” Page 42

“You know what you end up asking yourself?” Fanny said. “How little can I live with? You ask yourself how little can I live with, and how much do I need. And the answer keeps getting smaller, and your marriage keeps shrinking. In the beginning it fits fine, you know, roomy enough to keep you warm, and you can move all around in it. Then you have the kids, and when your husband stay away from you, you’re mostly glad, because They just get in the way, and who gives a shit about sex when you haven’t had two minutes to yourself in five years? And all that time your marriage is getting smaller and smaller, except you don’t notice because it hasn’t occurred to you to notice, and why should you? You just pull it down and stretch it out, and if you feel a draft now and then, you ignore it because you don’t have time to deal with ti anyway. By the time you do, your marriage is this little tiny thing that doesn’t cover shit and you’re freezing to death out there in the cold.”

Saturday, May 10, 2008

The Dirty Dollar


by Gerald Hammond (2002)
ISBN 0-7278-5842-4

This was a feel-good book about a young woman who went from rags to riches via a stint of swimming for a life in the midst of the Florida Everglades, complete with crocodiles in mid-breeding season. A non-challenging but satisfying read, with a strong main character who had what it took to grab life with both hands.

Friday, May 02, 2008

Seduced by Moonlight



by Laurell Hamilton 2004
ISBN 0-345-44356-X

This one surprised me and I nearly gave up. Trying to get my head around the Seelie and the Unseelie, sidhe, mortals, fays and hybrids, Kings, Queens, Princes and goblins and starting part way through a series was not a good idea. However I persevered and enjoyed some of the lyrical descriptions of wings, eyes and other body parts.
From a review by Alisa McCune it appears that this is not the best of the series so perhaps I should follow up on the earlier ones. However two of my requested books arrived at the library yesterday and will keep me busy added to term starting again on Monday.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Sugar Skull



by Denise Hamilton 2003
ISBN 0-7432-4539-3

Sugar skulls - I knew nothing, but now I do.
The past history of Eve Diamond and Silvio was also new to me.
It is weird reading a series backwards, at times it seems pointless when you know what is going to happen next, but it does fill in the background.
I finished reading this two weeks ago at PPTA Conference in Auckland, and can't remember much about it, but I did learn stuff, and I did enjoy it, and now it is due back to the library. It is much easier to write about books when they are fresh in your head!
I marked some pages but am a bit vague about why now.
  1. On page 23, Eve writes "I felt acutely aware of my own dishabille." Is that spelled right? Having now researched it I see that is in fact correct, although it comes from the French déshabillé which is why I was confused, I guess. (I studied French all my time at high school.)
  2. On page 47, Eve is avoiding police on a hillside and peeking into a cabana through windows that open onto a bathroom. She sees through the bathroom to a bedroom and observes "a man's black Speedo racing suit crumpled" at the foot of the bed. It strikes me as unlikely that anyone could be so sure about this observation in these circumstances.
New resolutions: to make notes about each book as I finish it, even if I don't have the Internet on tap, and to write pencil notes on pages that I mark.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Renfield Slave of Dracula



by Barbara Hambly 2006
ISBN 0-425-21168-1

Renfield is mad and he eats flies and spiders to maintain his strength.
This book is a "re-imagining of Bram Stoker's classic novel - told from the point of view of Renfield himself - exploring the chilling circumstances of his madness, his devotion to the Vampire Prince, and the mortal fear that feeds his need for revenge." As Dave Roy says at the start of his review, having not read the original Dracula made me wonder whether Renfield would make any sense. I suppose there are subtleties that I missed because of this lack of preparation, but I still found the book intriguing.
I loved the fly-spider theme as it developed from page 1 (20 May: 7 flies, 3 spiders) onwards.

Red herring: "There was an old lady who swallowed a fly. I don't know why she swallowed a fly. I think she'll die!" - see a delightful animation of this children's song.

And an explanation: I am not reading these books as fast I am posting comments on them - I have a pile that I have read and not
recorded that I need to process before they are overdue.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Adverbs


By Daniel Handler (aka Lemony Snicket) 2006
ISBN 978-0-06-072441-2

A weird concept this, with separate vignettes about people who may or may not be the same people. After all, sharing a name does not make two people identical! There is also an on-going thread of song lyrics, taxis, volcanoes, and birds (especially magpies). Having read a section in Creative Journal Writing by Stephanie Dowrick yesterday on free association, this book serves to illustrate the concept in an intriguing fashion.

A quote to explain the title:
"It is not the nouns. The miracle is the adverbs, the way things are none."
Each chapter has an adverb as its title, descriptive of the particular love story. Reminiscent of Love Actually, but less soppy.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Wet Grave


By Barbara Hambly (2002)

ISBN 0-553-10935-9

This “novel of suspense” is another instalment in the life of Benjamin January. Sequentially, the first few pages precede and the bulk of the story follows A Free Man of Color. Tales of piracy and hurricanes, of love and slavery, of treasure and illness, of mosquitoes and alligators, of fire and flood – a good holiday read. Characters also sympathetically described, and relationships drawn with a fine brush. As a teacher, I enjoyed my first meeting with Rose Vitrac, who tutored Artois and encouraged his pursuit of understanding of scientific principles.


Sunday, April 13, 2008

Knight of the Demon Queen

(Click here if you are looking for my blog post about blogging for teachers.)

by Barbara Hambly (2000)
ISBN 0-345-42189-2

This book is a sequel to Dragonsbane and Dragonshadow, but I did not find it as compelling to read. This may have been my state of health at the time, or may have been a function of reduced lyrical beauty and increased desperation and despair. Other reviewers have made similar comments. However I still care enough about John and Jenny, their children and their world to want to carry on.

In this book, John goes on a quest for the Demon Queen which involves him visiting different Hells, all of which have their snares. One of the aspects of the book that I did find intriguing was the hell he visited that was reminiscent of the worst of our civilized world - advertisements and drugs everywhere, no sunshine or trees.

"Day came. The rain ceased for a time, but the gray blank overhead smelled of more. Te crowds increased, unbelievably." "The noise was dizzying, the sides of the buildings plastered and patches with garish lights and flashing panels of color. Panels of pictures, too, that moved as if living: tiny as a thumbnail or towering a dozen stories up the side of a building whose uppermost floors were wreathed in low-hanging cloud. These pictures spoke, and music - if it was music - rivered from them, but because the speech was artificially produced he could not understand wast was being said."

Sunday, April 06, 2008

Prisoner of Memory


by Denise Hamilton (2006)
ISBN 9780743261944

My first Eve Diamond book was a good read. Eve is a reporter, and her involvement with reporting and investigating a murder puts her at risk but also helps her to understand herself and her family better. The story includes Cold War spying, hacking, Russian Mafia, and the drinking of tea while holding a sugar cube in one's mouth.

A Free Man of Colour



by Barbara Hambly (1997)
ISBN 9780553102581

An historical novel of suspense set in New Orleans in the 1830s, this is gripping story that kept me intrigued.
The hero has three black grandparents but is a free man. He is accused of murder and has to save himself by finding out who the real murderer was. The backdrop to the story includes Carnival costumes, social distinctions of the time, issues of slavery, voodoo and attitudes to the incoming Americans and riverboat men.
Having enjoyed this book I was pleased to find that it is one of a series, so I can follow the fortunes of Benjamin and his family.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Dragonshadow


by Barbara Hambly (1999)
ISBN 0-345-42187-6

Sequel to Dragonsbane, this book adds demons to the fantasy mix. I love the concept of dragons being rainbow coloured when young and growing into their particular colouring as they develop the music that describes them and is their name. The drama and battle with evil continues with the addition of fabulous machinery invented and constructed by one of the main characters. The story does not end yet - I have requested the next volume, The Knight of the Demon Queen.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Amazing Disgrace


by James Hamilton-Paterson (2006)
ISBN 0-571-22939-5

A crazy book with recipes, medical "experimentation"; musical references and poetic quotes/inventions. The hero is a writer who works with sports people to "write other people's books for them" and sees his work as "the personal toad beneath which I have suffered for years", referring to Philip Larkin's Toads.

The recipes are incredible, probably inedible, and explained in detail. One can imagine them but they don't exactly set the saliva flowing!

The Daily Telegraph is quoted as saying that the author has "a genius for comic witticisms". Here is one I particularly enjoyed:
"... here we all, drowning in food and goodies as though to the manna born."
Another clever use of language that kept me on my mental toes was the character named Christ - to rhyme with wrist - I found it impossible to make my brain see Christ and think anything other than the obvious/religious one!


I finished reading this book over the weekend of my 50th birthday, and wondered if there was an omen in the tragic ending - but you will have to read the book yourself to express an opinion as I do not want to spoil the tale. (There is a hint in the picture on the front cover of the book!)

Endeavour's Children

by R.J. Tinsley (1992)
ISBN 1-86948-090-2

Found on my bookshelf when out of library books, I started this from desperation for something to read.
To start with I found it irritating, as the descriptions of nautical terminology used so many of what I assume to be the correct words, that I felt like I was being lectured without having taken the prerequisite beginners course. There continues to be a didactic tone to the writing style, but I found it less annoying as I became more attached to the main character. Set in the early days of the European exploitation and settlement of New Zealand and Australia, and based on a true story, this is a jolly good yarn. If the original heroine had a fraction of the spirit of Lisla (with a silent s) in the book, she would have been an amazing woman.
I would really have appreciated a map to go with the story - set mostly in the South Island of New Zealand, and using place names that were known around 1800, i should have done some research to get the geography straight in my head.
I can't find a picture of the cover and don't have a flat bed scanner at home, hence no picture this time.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

2nd Chance


by James Patterson with Andrew Cross
2002
ISBN 1 876590 80 7

Following on from 1st to Die, this is another tale of the Women's Murder Club. More drama for Lindsay, Cindy, Jill and Claire, and new threats to life and well-being. The killer gets personal and Lindsay's father turns up from the distant past - what is the connection? Again, a good beach/airplane/sick bed story.

1st to Die


By James Patterson
2001
ISBN 0446610038

A great read for holiday or sickbed - I read it when suffering a nasty cold that kept be off work for a few days. Four strong women form a club to track a vicious killer of newlyweds. Also Negli's aplastic anemia and a new and promising relationship for Lindsay, the homicide inspector and heroine.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

The Lovely Bones


By Alice Sebold
2002
ISBN 978-0-330-48538-8

I bought this in Rotorua, the first in the display of Whitcoulls Top 100 List that I had not yet read.
I had heard about the movie-in-the making, and was not sure that I would like the book but did thoroughly enjoy it. The characters made sense, as did the concept of life-after-death that is central to the plot. The idea of an "intake counselor" in heaven took me by surprise, and I loved the way that the younger brother grew up after the early loss of his big sister. Now that I love the book, I don't know whether I will ever want to see the movie!

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Beach Road


James Patterson with Peter de Jonge (2006, ISBN 9780755323135)

Different from my normal choice of reading and not part of my progression through writers starting with H, I picked this up to bring to Rotorua with me. Small enough to fit in my laptop bag and not too heavy either physically or mentally it has been good for those in between moments presented by the hectic programme of keynotes, breakouts, eating and socialising. The story of a black teenager wrongfully accused of several cold-blooded murders and his defense, it is not as straight forward as it first seems. I did not find it ‘unputdownable’ as The Times is quoted as saying on the back cover, and I did find it hard to get inside the head of the actual murderer. I guess it is written to be read in a hurry and not analysed to death, but I prefer more meat to my reading.


Friday, February 15, 2008

Lilah


By Marek Halter
Translated from the French by Howard Curtis
2006

Third in the series which includes Sarah and Zipporah, this is a tragedy.
Lilah is the sister of Ezra, and encourages him to lead the exiled Jews to Jerusalem to rebuild the temple. At great personal cost she accompanies him.
As the story moves from Susa to Jerusalem via Babylon and its ziggurat, hope gives way to despair. Zealotry and the desire to be pure to please Yahweh lead to the tragic ending.
As with the other stories in this series, Biblical stories are brought to life and ancient cultures described in a way that adds colour.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Love Without Hope


By Rodney Hall 2007

Madness - or insanity, or even lunacy - are these set and scientific states, or are they labels applied to suit personal agendas?
In this book, an elderly lady is put into an institution controlled by the "Master in Lunacy". Other residents wear coir head protectors in case of epileptic fits. An equally elderly alcoholic doctor comes to a dramatic rescue, and there is a bull involved.
Quotes I liked:
"You are not dying because you are ill. You are dying because you are alive." Montaigne
And, describing a view from the main character's bedroom, when she thinks she can hear a storm approaching:
" Each tree stands in its customary pot of shadow. Upright remains upright. Reflections on the dam lie flat. And down at the sea's edge sculpted dunes expose flanged and sensuous curves to the sun. Grasshoppers swarm unharmed and unswept from the sky till the non-impeded birds swoop among them for a mid-air harvest."

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Dragonsbane



Dragonsbane by Barbara Hambly
1985
ISBN0345349393

I started reading the third book in this series, and realised that I needed to go back to the beginning to make sense of it. I am glad that I made the effort to request Dragonsbane and now look forward to reading the rest of the series.
Themes include magic, power and the secret desires of mages, dragons, gnomes and humans. And it is a great story, with vivid descriptions. There are very strong female characters.
If you want to know more about this book read this comprehensive review or get the book yourself.

Note that I am not posting so often now as I am back at work again!