Monday, 29 October 2018

The Mist in the Mirror, Susan Hill

I loved this, the atmosphere and sense of place she evokes is so British, wintry, cosy and sometimes bleak that it almost satisfied a homesickness.

Mist in the Mirror is a story within a story, the narrator is given a manuscript by an acquaintance, which tells the story of a man returned to the UK, after being sent abroad as a child. He plans to research his hero, an explorer who he has modelled his life on, and in so doing begins to ask questions about his own family and Yorkshire roots, none of which he can remember.

The novel is definitely a ghost story, and is creepy in the vein of Edgar Allen Poe or Oliver Onions. It is a mystery, and one which is not really solved. There is no big reveal where all the ends are tied up, rather we are given drops of information and end with a feeling of the 'true' events, but not a finished story. I love this in literature, you're given freer reign and it feels more honest or real somehow.


Sunday, 21 October 2018

The Irish Sea, Carlos Maleno

I'm fascinated be Maleno, just from the blurb on the back of the book which mentions he is a slaes broker for an international produce company, which seems like such an unlikely job for someone who writes such strange and inventive short stories.

History of Wolves, Emily Fridlund

I enjoyed half of this book, it conveys an excellent sense of place but the characters are lacking somehow. The narrator becomes interesting in the second half of the novel, when we are let into more of her personality and thoughts, before that she seems a detached and sometimes callous narrator. It's as if the story arc for her is the wrong way around. The first half of the novel seems redundant, as if it should have been told in snapshots during the second half of the novel, rather than in full in the beginning.


Sunday, 14 October 2018

The Descent of Man, Grayson Perry

Masculinity, it's effect on both the world and individuals and the way this all needs to change is the subject of Descent of Man. As usual Perry is engaging, funny and well informed, the argument is clearly illustrated and is sympathetic, though also cuts quite deep. He offers examples of his own behaviour and also ideas for how to change the cycle.
I had thought of masculinity and the way it affects personal relationships and work, essentially the ways it affects me directly, but Perry opens that up to include the whole way the world works. He puts forward the argument that the processes of international politics and war are direct results of a masculine way of looking at things, with all its associated competition, repression of emotion and insecurity.
Cut through with humour and illustrations.


Thursday, 20 September 2018

Angela's Ashes, Frank McCourt

I had been putting off reading this; I expected to be thoroughly depressed as McCourt describes his desperately poor Irish Catholic childhood. It is an eye opener, both to that level of poverty and to catholic guilt in the head of a boy, but I was completely surprised at how addictive it is. McCourt's voice is distinctive, and feels very raw, as if his childhood self is narrating through him.


Friday, 14 September 2018

As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning, Laurie Lee


This follows on from Cider with Rosie, Lee's description of growing up in a village in the 1920s. Here Lee leaves his home and walks to London, and then through Spain. Lee has a casual, compelling way of writing and is a brilliant observer and travelling partner. As with Cider with Rosie it's a fascinating peek into life for people at that time, both fellow travellers and local people. 

Monday, 3 September 2018

Fates and Furies, Lauren Groff


Beautifully written and just keeps getting richer and richer. Groff muses on how we present ourselves to the world and to those we love, how and why that happens, and possible fallout. Based around the marriage of Lotto and Mathilde, in Fates we first learn of Lotto's past and his view of their life Furies tells us Mathilde's view. Mathilde and Lotto haunt each other's stories; Mathilde is a particularly strong presence and can be felt throughout Fates. Groff has drawn the characters unsympathetically, but we also see them through the eyes of each other, with all their love, idolation, indulgence and annoyance.