Monday, 27 June 2011

Neil Gaiman - Anansi Boys



I have already confessed a quite deep abiding love for Neil, and I have to admit, Anansi Boys was no different.

Fat Charlie is a cringe-worthy character, one of those spineless people that are meant to be the sidekick or enemy, not the main protagonist. And yet, Gaiman writes him with such grace and humility that you are on his side, you want him to win the girl, be the hero at the end of the day. Spider, is the same, yet in the complete opposite way, he is the cocky, do-it-now, don’t worry about the consequences. It’s kind of brilliant, because you don’t really realise what Gaiman has done with the two main characters, until it is revealed to them also. The way that he makes you singularly feel sorry for fat Charlie, and dislike Spider is so brilliantly constructed (I think I have said brilliant too many times) it borders on perfection. For those of you wondering, Fat Charlie and Spider are brothers, originally part of each other, until they were separated by magic, creating Spider, Charlies alter-ego, the mischievous, self-absorbed, confident, good-looking, oh, and magic, brother.

You see, their dad is the spider god, Anansi, the trickster god, and he has pissed off a few people. And gods. People-gods? And embarrassed Fat Charlie a lot. But that’s what dads do, right?

Exciting, funny and BRILLIANT, full of old myth and electrifying adventure, get on it! 

Sunday, 12 June 2011

First book completed

The Butterfly Cabinet by Bernie McGill



I have to say, at first, that I was ever so slightly disappointed with my latest read, Bernie McGill’s The Butterfly Cabinet. I’m never usually swayed by new releases, as they are expensive, and usually you don’t have any feedback apart from the publisher pushing the title onto the shelves (with the classics I buy at least you have years of proof that they are worth a read). But something about the Butterfly cabinet entranced me, maybe because it is set in Ireland, maybe the title, maybe the cover of the book.

The story is of a child killed in an Irish estate in 1890’s, and the novel is retellings of the events around that day, leading up and the aftermath. It is told by the mother, accused of the murder of her child, Harriet Ormond, and the nurse at the estate, writing letters in the 1960’s, telling her side of the story many years later.

Harriet is a character that you are meant to dislike, I think. I haven’t quite figured it out yet. She seems utterly cold and cruel, which is what is expected in a character that leaves her child tied up in a room until she is strangled to death. You hear during the trial that Harriet was prone to cruelty towards her children in their punishments, and you hear from her point of view that she was just trying to make the children remember their crimes and punishment so they would learn. However, what really added to my, I want to call it dislike, but its not really that I disliked Harriet, I think it is more that you see her as a misunderstood figure, is the whole premise of a butterfly cabinet. I love how people’s own experiences in the world and in their past can alter how a book is read, how a character is perceived, and that each individual feels towards something differently. It made me feel quite ill, how Harriet described the killing of a butterfly, by the squeezing of their thorax, when she describes the creatures with such reverence. I remember when I once went to a zoo and there was a butterfly display. I can still remember how nauseous it made me feel to see these beautiful creatures dead, and pinned so cruelly and on display, and I had to leave the place, nearly in tears. I remember saying to my Dad, ‘would you kill humans, and pin them on a wall in a museum, just because they are beautiful?’ That is the same feeling I get when I think of Harriet, killing these butterflies for sport, her leaving her only daughter tied up in a wardrobe until she suffocates and is strangled.

You are probably thinking, that if the novel can make you feel all that, why was it a disappointing read? I just have to say that the writing just didn’t draw me in enough, but since this was a debut novel, I think we can forgive Bernie for that one. The character development is quite interesting, and you begin to understand Harriet more when she describes her childhood, and motherly failings.

“My mother did teach me an important lesson. She taught me the importance of armour. She taught me how to construct my own impenetrable cocoon. She taught me how to protect the spirit. She taught me how to hide within myself. I have tried to teach the same lesson to my children, but they have always been stronger than me. If I am guilty of failing to do my duty of a mother than it is in this: I have not succeeded in teaching them how to safeguard themselves from love.” 240.

The storyline was the one thing that kept me going until the end, and it is truly surprising the emotions that McGill makes you feel at the conclusion of the novel. The twist makes you re-evaluate the feelings you had towards Harriet, the events of that day, and all who was involved. Well worth a read.

Lifeline Bookfest!



I am very excited about my haul this year, and I must say it is rather tame. I focused on getting up to date with some of the more recent titles that I've wanted to read, in the past I've always gotten carried away with finding nice editions of the classics. For 50c each, I bought D.H. Lawrence Lady Chatterly's Lover, Naomi Wolf The Beauty Myth, Michael Ondaatje The English Patient, Arundhati Roy The God of Small Things, Mark Haddon The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Joan Lindsay Picnic at Hanging Rock, Umberto Eco The Name of the Rose, Paul Auster The Book of Illusions, Kazuo Ishiguro The Remains of the Day (!! So excited about this read!!) and Roddy Doyle Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha. 

I guess I should add them to the list of books to read before February next year??!

Friday, 10 June 2011

The Uncommon Reader Alan Bennett






As you know, since I work in the book industry I see all the new authors works come in, some I’ve heard of or read before, some I have not. The writer Alan Bennet had a new book come out this month, called Smut, which is I think two short stories? Anyway, it just reminded me of another of his works which I read about a year ago and thought I would do a general ramble about it. It ‘s called ‘the Uncommon Reader’ and it is about the Queen of England discovering the joys of reading and henceforth neglecting her queenly duties. It is absolutely heart-warmingly adorable in theme. The Queen starts questioning her place in the world and all she has to do with it, gets short with her irritating and exasperating advisors and starts to aspire to being a writer. It's brilliant!

Edward Marriot observed “A gloriously entertaining comic narrative, but it is also much more: a deadly serious manifesto for the potential of reading to change lives”. When I read this on the back cover I absolutely had to get the book, because that is a sentiment that I live my life for. The potential of reading to change lives. Books do change lives. They inspire. They give you an escape. You can be someone else, to forget all the everyday annoyances or even the life changing problems and for however long, ten minutes, an hour, a day, escape yourself. To encounter problems and things dreamt up by other big minds to feed our hungry ones. Be someone else, as they face dragons or people they hate, or the president, To fall in love, be part of them as they fall in love, as they experience loses we’ve never had to face, or ever ordinarily relate to. Books to me are the highest form of intelligence, enjoyment, fulfilment and escapism. To me, books are perfect. 


This gorgeous little work is from a Lithuanian Agency called Love for Mint Vinetu, a campaign called 'Become someone else'. So lovely. 

The Great Reading Challenge of 2011



So we are all aware that I am a raging bibliophile, and it is getting quite ridiculous. I have managed to buy books at a faster rate than I can read, times this by four years working in bookshops, and what do you get? A MASSIVE to-be-read pile. Well, you can really call it a ‘pile’ because if you stacked them up, it would be more like an unread book mound, or perhaps mountain. I have been challenged by my mother to read all the books I own before I go overseas next year, so I’m going to accept that mission. Just so we can gather our wits and see the enormity of the task I have been set, I’m going to publish a list of all my unread books that I own, to wow you with its sheer velocity (and also make your imagination run wild… if that’s the amount of books I HAVENT read…). This challenge also means I can’t buy any new books (after lifeline bookfest this weekend of course!) in line with the saving-for-overseas mentality. Ok so here goes…






Great Expectations Charles Dickens
The Witches of Eastwick John Updike
It’s raining in Mango Thea Astley
Regeneration Pat Barker
Holding the Man Timothy Congrave
Civilisation and its Discontents Sigmund Freud
Histories Herodotus
The Woman in White Wilkie Collins
Trainspotting Irvine Welsh
Possession A.S. Byatt
Naked Lunch William Burroughs
The Quick and the Dead Judy Gardiner
A Wizard of Earthsea Ursula LeGuin
The Mayor Of Casterbridge Thomas Hardy
Gullivers Travels Jonathon SwiftThe Eyre Affair Jasper Fforde
The Last Days of Hitler Anton Joachimsthaler
The Truth of the Matter Gough Whitlam
The Return of the Native Thomas Hardy
The turn of the Screw and other short works Henry James
Siddhartha Herman Hesse
Le Morte De Arthur Thomas Malory
War and Peace Leo Tolstoy
Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy
Gough Whitlam Jenny Hocking
The Making of Julia Gillard Jacqueline Kent
The Indispensible Chomsky Noam Chomsky
Jude the Obscure Thomas Hardy
Brideshead Revisited Evelyn Waugh
I, Claudius Robert Graves
Watership Down Richard Adams
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Muriel Spark
A Streetcar named Desire Tennesse Williams
Madame Bovary Gustav Flaubert
Catch-22 Joseph Heller
Tess Of the D’Urbervilles Thomas Hardy
Crime and Punishment Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Ghost Stories of Edith Wharton
Wolf Hall Hilary Mantel
The Case of the Pope Geoffrey Robertson
Peter Pan J.M. Barrie
The Beach Alex Garland
Silas Marner George Eliot
Robinson Crusoe Daniel Defoe
Vanity Fair W.M. Thackery
David Copperfield Charles Dickens
The Last of the Mohicans J. Fenimore Cooper
The March Of the Patriots Paul Kelly
Freedom Jonathon Franzen
Weekend Wodehouse P.G. Wodehouse
The Wind-up Bird Chronicle Haruki Murakami
The Tall Man Chloe Hooper
Heart of Darkness Joseph Conrad
Everything is Illuminated Jonathon Safron Foer
The Butterfly Cabinet Bernie McGill
Sabriel Garth Nix
Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell Susanna Clarke
Sons and Lovers D. H. Lawrence
Survival In Auschwitz
The Celtic Twilight W.B. Yeats
God Is Not Great Christopher Hitchens
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Douglas Adams
Paradise Lost John Milton
The Age of Innocence Edith Wharton
Little Big John Crowley
Pygmalion George Bernard Shaw
Franny and Zooey J.D. Salinger

The Lacuna Barbara Kingsolver
Great Tales and Poems Edgar Allen Poe
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
The Master and Margarita Mikhail Bulgakov

Anansi Boys Neil Gaiman
Angela Carter's Book of Fairy Tales
The Bloody Chamber Angela Carter
The Remains of the Day Kazuo Ishiguro
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha Roddy Doyle
The Book of Illusions Paul Auster
The Name of the Rose Umberto Eco
Picnic at Hanging Rock Joan Lindsay
The God of Small Things Arundhati Roy
The English Patient Michael Ondaatje
The Beauty Myth Noami Wolf
Lady Chatterley’s Lover D.H. Lawrence 
 

The Call of Cthulhu and other weird Stories H.P Lovecraft

Thats it folks! I think I should make some sort of plan, maybe like one classic then one contemporary, one other (bio, political or historical??) Im not sure yet, but let the games begin!

~images are of Karl Lagerfeld's Parisian Studio (sigh) and the Prague Library's Pile of Books

Saturday, 14 May 2011

Just Finished Reading...


NEVER LET ME GO - By Kazuo Ishiguro




Ok, so here is a book that is just so beautiful in its simplicity. No, I’m not saying it is a ‘simple’ book, not by any means. Its layered and multi-faceted and just encrusted with pure emotion. The way Ishiguro gently talks about these children’s lives, in this seemingly mild natured boarding house, and their life afterwards whilst subtlety hinting at the dark nature of their very existence is astounding.  

Its strange, isn’t it, how something like a novel can effect you so profoundly. The words just seem to touch you somewhere you can’t reach. Its not a visible change, maybe, its something that you carry around with you.

For some reason, Never Let Me Go made me feel like that. It’s not even something I can describe, and it didn’t even fully hit me until part three of the novel, the donor chapters. When it all comes together. And though you knew it was happening from the beginning, you can somehow feel you are these people, because to me, they are people, not some soulless body bags, and they come to terms with what purpose they were created for. I felt like Tommy, and wanted to just scream and rage, at the unfairness of it all, for the hope they lost.
This all might sound really vague if you haven’t read the novel, so come back and read this afterwards, and maybe you will feel some kind of change, like I did

Tuesday, 10 May 2011



Ok, so before I do a review of one of my favourite books of all time, Neil Gaiman’s American Gods, I thought Id have a quick rant about my undying love for Neil. Gaiman is one of those authors that can just write, you know? He has just got such incredible talent, and I haven’t finished all his works yet, but American Gods, Stardust and Neverwhere are just out of this world (sometimes literally).
And nobody can say anything that will make me love Neil Gaiman less. You tell me he kicks puppies? I say they probably had it coming. He lures small children into vans after school? I’m sure the kid would be happy to be in a van with the writer of Coraline and The Graveyard Book (I sure would). He takes candy from babies? He’s just watching out for them. Developing a sweet tooth at such a young age is not good in this world plagued by obesity. 
And just to put it all out there, I would have this man's children where he not married to the fantastic Amanda Fucking Palmer, the stunningly brilliant American performer (as well as singer,  lyricist, pianist and composer). Anyway, here goes...


AMERICAN GODS BY NEIL GAIMAN



This extraordinary book follows a man, Shadow, who is just out of prison and somehow manages to find himself involved in a war, between the old time gods of mythology, and those of the 20th century, the relatively new gods of media, celebrity, technology and drugs, etc. Shadow is thrust into this fight with no warning, after he finds out his wife has been killed in a car accident, and he is recruited to serve as a bodyguard by the enigmatic and oddly captivating Mr. Wednesday, who is in charge of the final frontier battle for survival against these new gods.

Gaiman’s premise of the novel that these Gods exist because we worship them is one that I can’t help but fall in love with. Brought over to America on slave ships, existing in the minds and the souls of the people were the spirits and the dwarves and gods of Norse, Pagan, African, Hindu and Egyptian mythology. These gods that are in the novel, Gaiman gives a voice and a personality, and you feel with them all that they have been through, their weariness at the state of the world.

Just writing this review makes me want to pick up the novel again, and plunge straight back into this world that Gaiman creates. I could live there for days, just hanging with Mr ibis and Sheeba, Czernobog and Kali. If you haven’t gathered already, this book is a must read. Stop what you are doing and go buy it now. Don’t borrow it; trust me, you’ll want to read it again and again and again and again…