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Critics Corner - give us your reviews of your recent reading
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Howard
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May 12, 2014 09:16AM

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This is only a vague review because that's how I felt about the entire book. It was vague.
The Book Thief left me feeling underwhelmed. As sometimes happens, my desire to love a book meant it was virtually impossible to impress and, as such, I have designated it to the box labelled "probably wouldn't read again". I'd still love to see the film out of curiosity, but I felt that, stylistically, there was too much of the 'down' or 'rest' narrative and not enough tension. And any tension that did capture intrigue resulted in an anticlimactic sense of waiting. By the end there really wasn't much happening.
The final eight was the most impressive and it seems the author tried to bring the entire book to a head here. Overall, it was easy to read and very interesting from a writerly perspective, but I am happy to be putting it back on my shelf.

@Angela - good review also. I already have a copy, would like to read soon, approaching now with a bit of trepidation, will let y'all know how it strikes me.
Two excellent reviews
@ Hilary - I unfortunately overdosed on "war books" some years ago when I read everything I could find on WW1 (having said that I have just bought Ice Cold in Alex - though that's really more of an adventure story). I would, however, totally recommend Lyn Macdonald's WWI books - which tell the stories of 100's of soldiers based on diaries, letters and extensive interviews. My favourites were Somme and They Called It Passchendaele: The Third Battle of Ypres & the Men Who Fought in It.
@ Angela - The Book Thief wasn't really my cup of tea either - I found it a bit gimmicky.
@ Hilary - I unfortunately overdosed on "war books" some years ago when I read everything I could find on WW1 (having said that I have just bought Ice Cold in Alex - though that's really more of an adventure story). I would, however, totally recommend Lyn Macdonald's WWI books - which tell the stories of 100's of soldiers based on diaries, letters and extensive interviews. My favourites were Somme and They Called It Passchendaele: The Third Battle of Ypres & the Men Who Fought in It.
@ Angela - The Book Thief wasn't really my cup of tea either - I found it a bit gimmicky.

1. the Prologue was too cryptic and confusing (I had to go back and re-read it later in the book)
2. the author puts a massive spoiler in the middle of the book, so taking away the 'wonder what will happen' tension
3. the personification of Death is ambiguous - is it a comic character (cf. Terry Pratchett books) or a compassionate angel of mercy?
But I still loved the people in it - Liesel, Rosa and Papa, and above all Rudy Steiner. I'd like to read it again some day.


I wonder if it will age well.
@ Tracy - glad you enjoyed Girl with a Pearl Earring - you'll have to let me know what you think of her other books. The one which really put me off her was Falling Angels - set in Victorian Britain - it just seemed entirely unrealistic to me and annoyed me so much that it has put me off rereading Girl etc. which is v daft of me because I really loved that one
I enjoyed The Book Thief but don't get the hype - the way people go on about it I was expecting something amazing. I think the gimmick as Angela says was too overdone and also the spoiler thing was an experiment on the author's part (according to my brother who I borrowed the book from and who wasn't that impressed with it) (view spoiler)
I totally agree Laurel - how annoying of him!


@Hilary - will definitely be putting his other book on my Authors I Like And Want To Read More Of list.
Just finished Laird Barron's The Croning which was good but felt like it had been 'padded out' to make it into a full-length novel when it would have worked better as a novella. There was a bit too much extra detail about things and people that didn't really have any bearing on the story and kept detracting from the tension. That said, when it was to the point, it was a good story and very creepy, and the ending was great-horrible so I will definitely be trying his short stories.

I found this an extremely difficult and at times very boring read. I enjoy philosophy so it is not the content but the way it is relayed.
I couldn't decide whether the main character was just mad, bad or dangerous to know. would be really interested in what others thought
I've never read this one - it's on my "maybe sometime" list :0)

Somewhere I've still got my battered old original copy.
So now I've got to climb into the loft and rummage around in old boxes until I find it!

A Time of Gifts
In the winter of 1933 the 18 year old Patrick Leigh Fermor decided that perhaps the army wasn't the career for him after all and instead of enrolling in officer training school set off on a walking tour from the hook of Holland to Constantinople.
Why should you read this book?
- For a glimpse of Old Europe - already fast disappearing, it was all but swept away by WWII.
- For the pleasure of Mr Leigh Fermor's company
- For the delightfully eccentric people he meets along the way
I particularly like Konrad who has learnt English almost entirely by reading Shakespeare
Konrad is down on his luck but has a cunning plan "for many moons, dear young I have been longing to be a smuggler , a saccharin smuggler, dear young" .Various European countries had placed a huge tax on saccharin and there were large profits waiting to be made - all you needed was a small initial outlay and "there are people - wise, daring and nimble ones.... who on nights when the moon lacks, scull across the Danube in barques" bringing "succour to persons who ail " and enabling "those of great girth to become slender again"
I loved this book which follows Mr Leigh Fermor from Holland to the boarder of Hungary - there are 2 further books tracing the rest of his journey.
P.S. If you've ever seen the film "Ill Met by Moonlight" about the kidnapping of a German General by British SOE agents and the Cretan resistance you will already know something about Patrick Leigh Fermor who is the character played by Dirk Bogarde.
In the winter of 1933 the 18 year old Patrick Leigh Fermor decided that perhaps the army wasn't the career for him after all and instead of enrolling in officer training school set off on a walking tour from the hook of Holland to Constantinople.
Why should you read this book?
- For a glimpse of Old Europe - already fast disappearing, it was all but swept away by WWII.
- For the pleasure of Mr Leigh Fermor's company
- For the delightfully eccentric people he meets along the way
I particularly like Konrad who has learnt English almost entirely by reading Shakespeare
Konrad is down on his luck but has a cunning plan "for many moons, dear young I have been longing to be a smuggler , a saccharin smuggler, dear young" .Various European countries had placed a huge tax on saccharin and there were large profits waiting to be made - all you needed was a small initial outlay and "there are people - wise, daring and nimble ones.... who on nights when the moon lacks, scull across the Danube in barques" bringing "succour to persons who ail " and enabling "those of great girth to become slender again"
I loved this book which follows Mr Leigh Fermor from Holland to the boarder of Hungary - there are 2 further books tracing the rest of his journey.
P.S. If you've ever seen the film "Ill Met by Moonlight" about the kidnapping of a German General by British SOE agents and the Cretan resistance you will already know something about Patrick Leigh Fermor who is the character played by Dirk Bogarde.

Thanks Angie
Hilary - that's a very good idea :0)
Hilary - that's a very good idea :0)

Just downloaded the Autobiography of a Supertramp for £1.79 - sounds excellent :0)
Pointed Roofs is the 1st part of Pilgrimage - a series of 13 semi autobiographical novels by Dorothy Richardson who is often credited with being the 1st author to write in the "stream of consciousness" style ( though Richardson herself preferred to call it interior monologue).
This instalment covers the 17 year old Miriam's time as an English teacher in a German girls school. I Found the experience of being inside her head really quite enthralling but I can see that some might find it irritating and/or dull.
The back of my copy has fulsome praise from both Rebecca West and Virginia Woolf and I think that if you like Ms Woolf you're likely to enjoy Pointed Roofs. I shall definitely be reading more of Pilgimage.
This instalment covers the 17 year old Miriam's time as an English teacher in a German girls school. I Found the experience of being inside her head really quite enthralling but I can see that some might find it irritating and/or dull.
The back of my copy has fulsome praise from both Rebecca West and Virginia Woolf and I think that if you like Ms Woolf you're likely to enjoy Pointed Roofs. I shall definitely be reading more of Pilgimage.

I think I discovered the last 2 I mentioned in various editions of the a Slightly Foxed magazine https://foxedquarterly.com/buy/curren...
I very much recommend it - I always find at least 5 books I want to read in each issue.

A fairly good 'light' (pardon the pun) read set in 1920's Australia. A lighthouse keeper and his wife find a crying baby and a man's body in a dinghy washed ashore on the isolated island they live on. They decide to keep the baby as their own and thereby start a chain of deceit and conflict that draws the reader into their moral dilemma. Jodi Picoult fans would like this, I think
For a longer review see https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


The only section where Kundera started to lose me was his focus of 'kitsch' and the subsequent interlacing political discussion. Overall, it was a fascinating book and I'd love to read more of his work.

The 15 year old narrator and heroine of Claudine at School is a clever, sophisticated and mischievous mixture of honesty and deceitfulness. She is also entirely charming.
This book, which covers her last few terms at a school which would definitely be under special measures these days, is highly amusing and really quite shocking - it may sound like a work by Enid Blyton, but it would be hard to find anything less similar.
I loved it.
This book, which covers her last few terms at a school which would definitely be under special measures these days, is highly amusing and really quite shocking - it may sound like a work by Enid Blyton, but it would be hard to find anything less similar.
I loved it.

I loved Half of a Yellow Sun and I expected to love this book, which I did until Ifemelu had returned to Nigeria, when I gradually lost my absorption in the story. I think this was partly because it becomes more linear in structure, but I also began to feel differently about Ifemelu herself. One of her admirable qualities is her straightforwardness and honesty, but I felt this became selfishness and the grand romantic fervour left me cold, as the two main characters didn’t seem to care who they hurt.


However, this sad and oddly haunting tale of Jed reminded me again why I saw so much of my young, angst-ridden self amongst it's pages.
"I'm just not normal, that's all. Other kids seem so normal, so together. They laugh at dumb things. I only wish I could."
A heart-breaking read.

I spent a good hour and a half reading Salome by Oscar Wilde without prior knowledge of the story or it's length. This one-act play details good old King Herod's scheming to get in the pants of his young step-daughter. Salome, the object of his lecherous lust, is more than a little mentally unbalanced and prattles on endlessly to the prophet/prisoner Jokonaan (John the Baptist) in an attempt to ultimately gain a kiss from him. At Jokonaan's refusal, she is rejected, scorned, and downright fuming.
Moving along, Herod convinces Salome to dance and she finally relents on the proviso that he owes her a favour. After she sashays around a bit, she requests (as most of us know) the head of said prophet/prisoner on a silver platter, to which King Herod responds with a lengthy soliloquy on what he would prefer to give her instead (not quite THAT honest actually...)
True to the biblical account, the head is served. But all does not end there!
On further research, it seems there are some magnificent paintings that accompany this brief tale but my version was text-only so I used my imagination. The question I am left with is how would someone never acquainted with the Bible story take this play? And what was Mr. Wilde's intention?
I like the sound of Shoovy Jed - could only find an audio version on Amazon so I'll have to trawl the 2nd hand shops.
Don't think that Salome would be my cup of tea :0)
Don't think that Salome would be my cup of tea :0)
I've just finished S. by J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst which I really enjoyed. It's the novel Ship of Theseus by the fictitious author V.M. Straka plus coded footnotes by his translator and annotations by Jen and Eric, a student and a post-grad who are trying to unravel the mystery of Straka's life and death. Fascinating although maybe difficult to follow at times if you like a nice linear narrative - the annotations are from different periods in Jen and Eric's friendship/relationship (they write in different colours each time they go through the text)so sometimes you get them referring to things in one colour ink that haven't happened yet to the Jen and Eric writing the earlier notes...
Loved the mystery and even though it left some questions unanswered (like life), I felt like I got enough to be happy with the story - 5 Stars.
Loved the mystery and even though it left some questions unanswered (like life), I felt like I got enough to be happy with the story - 5 Stars.

In contrast i also finished Five Days a book that i would tell everyone to avoid - too much detail and not enough storyline

interesting - i hated this book it appeared repetitive to me but it is good to read another view

In the winter of 1933 the 18 year old Patrick Leigh Fermor decided that perhaps the army wasn't the career for him after all and instead of enrolling in officer traini..."
I like the sound of this one
Marie wrote: "I have just read The Curiosity. This is a fabulous book with an individual story line a real change from some of the repetitive ideas in today's fiction - I am all over slave fictio..."
Sounds interesting
Sounds interesting
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