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Lexie
(last edited Jun 04, 2013 06:18AM)
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Jun 04, 2013 06:17AM

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Back on the Odd Thomas roll with

I'm still on Brother Odd, although about 70% in. I'm remembering it more thsn Forever Odd, which is frankly odd


Also Matt Langford's The Watchman. Five star review for this. Wow!
Now reading Myrddin's War. Nearly finished and it's another cracker!

http://www.jhillwriter.com/2013/06/re...



Edit - here it is http://ignitebooks.blogspot.co.uk/201...
I've decided not to start a new book just yet - I'm going for a re-read. And it's not Andy Barrett or Cornelius Harker! There!


You aren't actually meant to like some of them but there is two kinds of dislikable characters I find. The ones you love to hate and the ones you just want to go away. Unfortunately they are all falling in to the second. I fear in going to give up before I even hit ten percent in /:
It's also went from okay to boring. Am I judging it too quick? For some, probably, but I know what I like and it's not this.

Apparently it's a middle-grade steampunk. I didn't get to the weird bit of it but lord, I don't want too.
Life indeed is too short, so I'm now reading Great Gatsby. I figured since I was subjected to the movie I would finally read it



A Healthy Fear Of Man is the second in a series of Paul Little books. I must confess to have skipped the first, but that puts me in the position of being able to highly recommend this book whether you read ‘The Science Of Paul’ or not. This book has very strong legs and can definitely stand alone.
PAUL LITTLE has inherited his grandfather’s house and land and is living in it as a total outcast. When visitors arrive, he does his best to shun them no matter what their intentions. There’s a little girl (GILLY) who want to fish in his pond, there’s a young African lady (LUISA) who wants to give him free meals from the church and there’s an old-timer and ex-sheriff (BO). He does his best to keep them away, but for various reasons they refuse to listen.
The good news for Paul is that he’s finally coming close to finding peace in his life, even if that means barely surviving from what he can eat from the land and has lost any real need to keep his personal hygiene routines up to scratch. The bad news is that Gilly is found dead in his pond one morning and he’s the main suspect, predominantly because he’s black and living in a backward county in North Carolina.
Bo, indebted to Paul’s grandfather for saving his life way back, joins Paul in his attempt to clear his name and Louisa has a big heart that means she can’t help but join the team.
What follows is a series of brutal encounters as corrupt politicians, vengeful brothers, loose policemen and wild drug dealers are all sucked into the action as Paul stirs up the muddy waters.
I really enjoyed this book. It’s thought provoking and gripping at the same time.
Aaron Clark can really handle plot and back up his ideas with well-written action sequences. As the novel plays out, he keeps a steady hand and right through to the end.
What I found particularly impressive, though, was the opening third of the book where things are set up. It’s a wonderful beginning, where Paul Little has cut himself off from the world to find an uneasy peace. He’s become a scavenger, but his life experience has prepared him well for the hardships he encounters. He stays away from people, for it is people who add complication to life. Relationships are tough, so in keeping people away, he’s safer and life is easier. And being alone is safe; by avoiding others he is able to keep his darker self under wraps:
‘I once had a beast inside me, one whose nature at times even eluded me, but since being on the land it appears the beast has been beaten into submission and these days it is still.’
Paul has a fear that when he gets close to people, what he has is contagious:
‘People around me...they catch hell – they catch it like a sickness.’
Unfortunately for Paul, he’s all too human. Isolation isn’t going to work because people aren’t going to leave him alone. This means he forms attachments to people and develops feelings for them in spite of his intentions. As soon as these feelings take root, he is returned to the complications of social existence With these building relationships come responsibilities, so when Paul tries to find out who killed Gilly, he is eventually more motivated by finding the murderer for her rather for the sake of his freedom.
Paul Little has a very positive view of human life, even though on the surface it may seem bleak. We’re all capable of making rash decisions or of acting entirely by animal impulse. Eventually, some people are going to end up getting caught when they’ve lost it:
‘For some, all it takes is one bad day, one bad decision – a crime of passion is what the cops call it, others call it temporary insanity – I call it human nature.’
A Healthy Fear Of Man is a serious book that’s a hell of a lot of fun to read.
I may be reaching here, but I was reminded of Ralph Ellison and his ‘Invisible Man’ in the early stages. Clark may have even offered a tiny reference point here as Paul Little talks about advice his grandfather gave him about being a black man:
‘You’ve got to keep invisible, boy. Stay out of the law’s view. They can’t kill what they can’t see.’
If Paul Little is being invisible, can he still have an impact upon a society where justice is multi-faceted, the law is corrupt, where people are struggling to get by and where racism is prevalent?
The biggest message in the book, the way I see it, is to all of us.
Should we go about congratulating ourselves on the progress the world has made over the years? Has racism been put to bed so that the world lives together as one happy family? In nations where laws are set and seem equal on the surface, is this equality carried through in all pockets of that nation?
Of course not. We need to be vigilant, active and avoid complacency. Take me, for example. I write about a black author and cite Ellison - is that something I need to check myself for (I still think that cap fits, though, and maybe you could let me know).
The book points a finger at the Southern States of the US and challenges them to find out whether the New South with all of the rosy connotations, isn’t just the Old South with a flaking coat of paint.
Which is where I find myself going out of my depth.
It’s a great book. One to be enjoyed and to be considered. Very good indeed.
A Healthy Fear of Man

Feel very inadequate after Nigel's post...


You've been missed."
aw, missed you all too - but hope I've talked a few others in our hols group into joining GR!
Now finished Blackened Cottage which I almost gave up on, but glad I persevered. Holiday over.
Going to indulge myself now and make a start on Hilary Mantel's Bring Up the Bodies

I'm now onto The Spirit of A Witch, which isn't my usual type of read, but I work with Sarah, so I'm curious to see what she's written :-)



And I think oldest daughter lent them to her boyfriend at the time's parents as well.

I finished Brother Odd yesterday,and between a hairdresser app and nice weather, I've read 37% of Odd Hours, another nice day and I'll have nearly finished.


Sorry, been on a three day conference and brain has now given up entirely.

I'd say the first and best of the genre, mainly due to the characturisation, Cadfael is such a great character. ALso being a monk means that he works with advantages and disadvantages. It's also nice that the hero isn't a great swordsman ;-)

I was on the iPod so I didn't want to exit the app or I would off :)


I have most of the books, one I borrowed from the library though. I haven't been to Shrewsbury yet (only passed through on the train) but I have a standing invitation to my brother's in-laws who live nearby so I could go any time. I enjoyed the TV series until they started changing the characters and making up their own stories - and Derek Jacobi was just too posh for my idea of Cadfael.

I once had to navigate through Shrewsbury with the only guide my memory of the map in the front of the books :-)



I once had to navigate through Shrewsbury with the..."
Interesting, now we have a one-way system and a road that cuts through the abbey grounds!

Still on the weird and wonderful The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde.

Must be me!


Must be me!"
I'm always wary of books described as 'weird and wonderful'

His discourse on "the had had and that that problem" in The Well of Lost Plots is utterly brilliant. (look it up under "quotes that tim likes" on my author page) :-D



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