Sunday, December 28, 2014
Grand Central – by bestselling authors Melanie Benjamin, Jenna Blum, Amanda Hodgkinson, Pam Jenoff, Sarah Jio, Sarah McCoy, Kristina McMorris, Alyson Richman, Erika Robuck and Karen White
A collection of post war stories set on the same day in September 1945 and in the same place Grand Central Terminal, New York. The stories are written in a mixture of styles, some written in first and some in third person. I enjoyed all of them. Each story stands alone, but also picks out a character or two from the previous story, which I thought was cleverly done. I liked the fluid feel to each story, which captured the sense of place with everyone on the move, some coming home from the war, some embarking on a new life and others escaping their past.
Monday, December 15, 2014
The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton
The story opens in 1961 when sixteen year old Laurel Nicolson witnesses a shocking event concerning her mother Dorothy, and a stranger. She and her mother are the only ones who know the truth, but it has never been discussed. The story then jumps forward fifty years and Laurel, who is now a famous actress in her sixties, has been summoned to the family home as her mother is dying. Laurel has always been haunted by the shocking event and, before her mother dies, she wants answers. The story then alternates between 2011 and 1941. The chapters in 2011 are narrated by Laurel, but the 1941 chapters are narrated by Dorothy, her boyfriend Jimmy and her friend Vivien. I especially enjoyed the chapters from Vivien’s point of view. I found myself skipping pages as I felt there was a lot of overwriting with lots of unnecessary scenes. I am glad I had the patience to finish this book because the twist at the end was worth it.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Before We Met by Lucie Whitehouse
Before We Met is a thriller based
on the secrets within a marriage. It
also explores the relationship between siblings. The narrator, Hannah Reilly is happily married
after a whirlwind romance - she met her husband Mark while he was on a business
trip in the US and she was living there.
Now they have moved to his luxurious London home. Mark is a successful businessman running his
own software company and is away on business quite a bit. Hannah is coming to terms with married life
and the loss of her financial independence as she struggles to find a job. The story opens with Hannah waiting at
Heathrow for the arrival of Mark who is flying back from New York. As the passengers file through arrivals we
feel Hannah’s anticipation and then gradually the feeling is replaced by worry as
Mark fails to arrive. The worry is intensified
as Hannah tries unsuccessfully to contact him.
The worry is later replaced by suspicion as Hannah searches for clues as to why Mark has failed to arrive. I found it a fast paced
read.
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Kind of Cruel by Sophie Hannah
This is the first Sophie Hannah
book I have read and it won't be the last. Amber Hewerdine is
suffering from insomnia and goes to see a hypnotherapist not expecting it to
help. She is obsessed by an event that
happened several years earlier when her sister-in-law, Jo, rented a large house,
Little Orchard, for the whole extended family to stay one Christmas. While there, Jo, her husband and their two
sons went missing for 24 hours on Christmas day. They returned unharmed, but no mention was
made of it again. While under hypnosis
Amber utters the words ‘kind, cruel, kind of cruel’ – these words mean nothing
to her, but as the story unfolds she realises she has seen the words before. She thinks she must have seen them at Little
Orchard. She is arrested two hours later
as a result of having said the words.
The words are somehow connected with the murder of woman Amber has never
met or heard of. I liked the intrigue
from the start. The story is mostly
narrated by Amber, but there are also chapters narrated by the
hypnotherapist. I was a little
disappointed by the end.
Monday, November 3, 2014
The Stone Diaries by Carol Shields
Winner of the 1995 Pulitzer Prize. The story is a fictionalised autobiography
of Daisy Goodwill Flett. The novel
details Daisy’s long, at times mundane, life. It is structured in ten
chapters starting with her Birth in Canada in 1905 and ending with her death in
a nursing home in Florida. I liked the use of different narrative voices and
devices – it is written in a mix of first person, third person and uses letters, lists,
tributes to tell the story. The book contains a family
tree and family photographs to complete the biographical feel. I enjoyed more sections than others.
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
The Other Side Of The Bridge By Mary Lawson
The story is set in a rural
community in Canada in the 1930s, 40s and 50s. It is a book about relationships. The
story revolves around the Dunn family farm. We know from the beginning that Arthur Dunn and
his younger brother Jake have always had a turbulent relationship. Ian,
who is fifteen, goes to work on the Dunn’s farm to escape the tensions of his
home life and because he has a schoolboy infatuation with Arthur’s beautiful
wife, Laura. Ian becomes adept at
helping on the farm and gradually gets to know and respect the sometimes
reticent Arthur. Everything seems peaceful on the farm until
the day that Jake comes home. The
chapters alternate between Arthur’s point of view in the 1930s and Ian’s point
of view in the 1950s.
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
The Lighthouse by Alison Moore
I found this a dark sad
tale. The loneliness seeps from the
book. The story opens with Futh as he
sets out on a ferry for Germany. He is
newly separated from his wife and is taking a restorative walking holiday in
Germany. Futh is awkward and not good at
handling emotions or social situations. As
he walks he contemplates. He remembers
his childhood, his mother, father and wife. The book is permeated with smells and these
act as triggers for Futh’s memory. Interspersed
with Futh’s narrative we hear Ester, another lonely person looking for
affection. Their paths cross when Futh
spends the first night of his walking holiday at Hellhaus, the hotel Ester runs
with her husband Bernard. Their paths
cross again at the end of the book. It
is a short read at 182 pages. I enjoyed
it and found it a thought provoking read.
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