Saturday, September 24, 2016

Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier

I wasn’t sure of this at first as it is written from several viewpoints.  However, as each section is headed up with the narrator’s name it was clear who was narrating the story.  As the story developed so did the individual voices.  The story is set over a ten year period from 1901.  It is about two middle-class households whose lives become entwined due to the fact their family plots in the local cemetery rest next to each other.  The daughters of both families and the son of a gravedigger meet on the day of Queen Victoria’s death and there begins an unlikely friendship between the three children.  I enjoyed the attention to detail.  It captures the frivolousness of the Edwardian period when the rich were comfortable, but bored, especially the women, who longed for something more meaningful to enrich their lives with.  No wonder a lot of women at the time embraced the suffragette movement, which the story also touches on.  I liked all the characters and it was interesting seeing the same scene through different eyes.  

Thursday, September 15, 2016

The Shock of The Fall by Nathan Filer

Winner of the Costa Book Awards 2013, this is the debut story by Nathan Filer.  The novel explores mental health in a sensitive but not an overly sentimental or bleak way.  It is also about grief and grieving.  It is the story of Mathew Homes and how he is haunted by the death of his older brother Simon who suffered from Down syndrome.  In the end, it is the memory of Simon that tips Mathew over the edge and the reader is taken on his emotional journey as he writes his story about living with mental health issues.  The story jumps about a bit just as if it is Matthew’s mind flitting from one subject to another and this gave it a unique style.  I found all the characters believable and I liked Matthew and found myself routing for him.  I look forward to reading more from Nathan Filer.           

Monday, September 12, 2016

The London Train by Tessa Hadley

The London Train consists of two novellas that are linked in a clever and unexpected way.  Both novellas could stand on their own as complete stories.  As the title implies, both have the London Train as a theme.  The first story is about Paul whose mother has just died.  Her death triggers a mid-life crisis and makes him question the direction his life is going.  A call from his first wife asking for help to track down their missing daughter seems to fulfil his restlessness and, as he goes to London to track her down, he finds himself drawn to her new friends, a group of Polish immigrants.  The second story is about Cora who is also facing a mid-life crisis.  She has moved back to her parents’ house in Cardiff, which she has inherited following their death, leaving her husband in London.  As she settles into her new life she is forced to question whether she should end her marriage.  As we discover more about Cora’s past and her reason for escaping to Cardiff, the connection between the stories is revealed.  The characters in both stories are realistically drawn.  It was an enjoyable read.

Thursday, September 8, 2016

The Story of You by Julie Myerson

I have not read anything quite like this before and I was intrigued by the poetical style of the writing.  The story opens with a flashback of a snowy scene and two young students sharing a single bed in a cold room.  Then the story jumps to the present day, some 20 years later, and it is clear from the narrator’s halting voice that some tragedy has gone before.  The narrator, Rosy, is struggling to come to terms with the death of her baby daughter, although the reason for her daughter’s death is not revealed until much later in the book.  Her husband Tom has taken her to Paris in a bid to escape the past, but Rosy is unable to confide in him.  Instead, she returns obsessively to the memory of her younger self and the man she shared a cold night with 20 years previously.  In Paris, as if conjured up by her memory, she bumps into him.  They catch up over coffee and he tells her he has become a successful business man and how he has never forgotten her or the night they shared.  She is unsure whether it is really him or a figment of her imagination.  It is a story of loss and grieving.  I enjoyed the writing style, but felt let down by the ending.