Plain words, uncommon sense

Category: Book Reviews (Page 9 of 39)

Fight Night by Miriam Toews

How fun is this title! I love the jacket cover and heard amazing things about this book. It’s sad, it’s funny, it’s Toews at her peak. Awesome. Usually I don’t go in for the hype but this time I wholeheartedly agree.

Fight Night is told from 9-year-old Swiv’s perspective. And she is a smartass. Swiv lives with her pregnant mother (who finds herself single and very preggers with “Gord”) and her elderly Grandma (who is a total card and cheeky, sassy, funny). Swiv is expelled from school, seems not to be the first issue, and she and Grandma are homeschooling. They assign each other writing assignments and have editorial meetings. It’s great.

“Gord” is the temporary name for the baby and there is a lot of stuff hung on “Gord” but Swiv is a protective big sister already and tries to keep the adults in line.

It’s a slow moving but very quirky look at a little family of women who are surviving in their own way, fighting the good fight.

The peak of hilarity is when Swiv and Grandma go to the US to visit her nephews. There’s a runaway wheelchair incident, an accident at a nursing home, and a hot young guy who gives Grandma his phone number.

The story is wild and fun and so lovely. Please give Fight Night by Miriam Toews a read.

The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman

The second book in A Thursday Murder Club Mystery

Could this book be any more hilarious!

Elizabeth, Joyce, Ron, and Ibrahim are back in action as the Thursday Murder Club. They meet in the puzzle room of their luxury retirement home to solve mysteries and cold cases. Well, this time the case isn’t cold.

Elizabeth’s ex-husband shows up at Coopers Chase as its newest resident. The thing is he is MI5, has bungled an operation, and is now being protected—but not very well. He needs Elizabeth’s help, and of course Joyce, Ron, and Ibrahim are involved.

There are many dead bodies in this story, some 20 million pounds of missing diamonds, and all the beloved characters from book 1. It’s a real caper.

Richard Osman’s writing is so funny. Yes, there’s a mystery and several murders, but this is a “cozy”

Joyce

I do wish something exciting would happen again. I don’t mind what.

Perhaps a fire, but where no one gets hurt? Just flames and fire engines. We can all stand around watching, with flasks, and Ron can shout advice to the firefighters. Or an affair, that would be fun. Preferably mine, but I’m not greedy, so long as there’s a bit of scandal, like a big age difference, or someone suddenly needed a replacement hip.

chapter 3

Perfect read for fans of The Thursday Murder Club—this one is even better—or The Little Old Lady Who Broke All the Rules by Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg and A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman.

State of Terror by Louise Penny and Hillary Rodham Clinton

The perfect title. Louise Penny is the author of the beloved Inspector Gamache series, and Hillary is the former US Secretary of State. Could there be any better writing duo for a nail-biter about tumultuous American politics, civil wars, international terrorist attacks, and the threat of nuclear weapons falling into the wrong hands? It’s a great page turner.

I heard an interview with Louise Penny and Hillary Clinton. Penny said she asked Clinton what kept her up at night and then they built the book around that. Chilling.

Summary: The new president of the US and his Secretary of State Ellen Adams are already at odds, but they are forced to work together when a series of terrorist attacks rock Europe and the next are planned for the US.

This is a horrifying scenario for a novel and all too real. The cheeky, carefully constructed mystery is 100% Louise Penny and the conspiracy and political turmoil 100% Hillary Clinton. I loved it.

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

https://amzn.to/3GkofBy

What a strange novel! But what else would you expect from the author of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell? This is a brilliant creative exploration of reality.

Summary: A man named Piranesi moves through the rooms of a vast series of buildings. He has mapped the buildings and corridors of the labyrinth where he lives but it’s uncertain where he is and why he is there. Piranesi also produces detailed journals on the statues found in each building, along with the mysteries of the sea tides that swamp different floors. There is one other human that Piranesi encounters, the Other. But the Other only appears once a week and he has secrets that Piranesi slowly pieces together. To say it all comes crumbing down is an understatement.

Once the Other was in the Eighth Northern Hall. A strong Tide from the Northern Halls rose in the Tenth Vestibule, followed moments later by an equally strong Tide from the Eastern Halls in the Twelfth Vestibule. Vast quantities of Water poured into the surrounding Halls, including the one where the Other was. The Waters plucked him up and carried him away, sweeping him through Doors and battering him against Walls and Statues. Several times he was completely immersed, and he expected to drown. Eventually the Tides cast him up on the Pavement of the Third Western Hall (a distance of seven Halls from where he began). That is where I found him. I fetched him a blanket and hot soup made of seaweed and mussels. As soon as he was able t walk, he took himself off without a word. I do not know where he went. (I never really know.) This happened in the Sixth Month of the Year I named the Constellations. Since then the Other has been afraid of the Tides.

Part 2, The Other

Spoiler alert: Well, not a real spoiler, but the man’s name is not Piranesi, this is a name given to him by the Other. And this the fun of Susanna Clarke’s writing. Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778) was one of the greatest printmakers of the 18th century. He also loved architecture, in particular the grandeur of Rome, and was considered a creative genius. He’s best known for his hundreds of etchings including views of Rome, Pompeii, and his series on “Le Carceri d’Invenzione” or “The Imaginary Prisons.” I can see why the name Piranesi fits. A perfect quote from the 18th century Piranesi, “I need to produce great ideas, and I believe that if I were commissioned to design a new universe, I would be mad enough to undertake it.”

The characters in Piranesi are not the magicians of Susanna Clarke‘s earlier works. There is some of the world-exploration and mystery of Erin Morgenstern’s The Starless Sea, but again it’s not really magic and fantasy, even though there’s some magic realism here.

Perfect for fans of The Midnight Library by Matt Haig.

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V. E. Schwab

What an unsettling novel. Adeline LaRue grows up in the quiet village of Villon, France. She’s adventurous and curious about the world beyond the village paths. Adeline gets a small taste of freedom the few times she is allowed to travel with her father to market in a larger town but that soon ends when her mother deems her too grown up.

Next thing Addie knows, she is being married off to old Roger and there’s nothing she can say about it. It’s 1714. Addie runs away and prays to one of the old gods to save her. Anything but marrying Roger and living and dying within the small village. But Adeline doesn’t realize she is praying, begging, after dark, and you should never pray to the gods that answer in the dark.

Addie makes a deal with the wrong god. She wishes for freedom, and get immortality. The Dark has saved her from marriage but the curse is that she’ll never be remembered. As soon as she leaves someone’s sight, they forget her.

Adeline lives this way for 300 years before it all changes.

The novel bounces around from 1714 to 2014 and many years in between. Addie sees Wagner operas performed in their time, she watches Beethoven meet his end, sees Sinatra on stage, witnesses the French Revolution, World Wars, the 60s. It’s a crazy novel. And enjoyable read, but unsettling they way she is never there, never remembered. There’s something about making deals with the dark that is deeply unsettling, and captured so well here.

The Secret Life of Miss Mary Bennet by Katherine Cowley

I absolutely loved this book. It is fast, fun, witty, and a pleasure to read.

Summary: Miss Mary Bennet’s life is thrown into turmoil upon the death of her father. He’s left the estate to a relative and Mary, her younger sister Kitty and their mother are now at the mercy of relatives who will take them in.

Their best bet are the married sister: Jane the eldest (Mrs. Bingley), Elizabeth (Mrs. Darcy), and Lydia the first to marry (Mrs. Wickham). But Mary wants none of it. She’d like to be independent, play the pianoforte, and read. Not get married off.

The four sisters (Lydia is absent) are sitting with their mother making funeral arrangements when one of the movers ends up stealing some rings. Mary is quick to deduce what’s happened and stops the theft. This seems unrelated to a strange nighttime visit from an unknown relative Lady Trafford who comes to pay respects to the dead Mr. Bennet. And yet, this book is full of twists and turns.

Mary ends up accepting Lady Trafford’s offer to train as a governess. But Lady Trafford is not all she seems and Mary is often left alone in her castle where she seeks to discover the truth about Lady Trafford and her intentions.

I don’t want to spoil any of the fun. But I do want to say this is a delightful mystery, very much in the Austen style. So glad I picked this one up.

The Chimera’s Apprentice by Roslyn Muir

If you like fantasy, dragons, and a quest narrative this is for you. Ok, there aren’t dragons but there is a chimera (kai-mir-ah — 3 headed monster) and Raturro (talking rats).

Kyra is celebrating yet another birthday without her Dad. And this birthday she’s home from school because she accidentally let some rats out in the classroom during her presentation. Her mom is busy working from home (accountant) and sends Kyra down to do the laundry. Now most laundry rooms in apartment buildings are creepy but this one beats them all. A blast of light explodes from the laundry room wall, there’s a talking rat named Shale who tries to save Kyra, and soon after her mom gets kidnapped by another rat. Basically the novel enfolds from there.

Kyra finds herself transported to Antiica, where her dad is busy waging war. Too busy to find her mom. So Kyra goes in search of her and along the way is helped by forgotten friends and new friends. It’s a good adventure story.

Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor

Fans of Jane Austen will love Elizabeth Taylor.

Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont has all the nuanced observations of high society along with a bit of icy wit. Mrs Palfrey is sharp as a tack and in pretty good form for an old bird. But she’s widowed, running out of funds (not too badly), and does not want to impose on her daughter or nephew by moving in with them (unimaginable). Instead on a rainy Sunday afternoon in January, she arrives at the Claremont Hotel, which is where many an old codger end up who have financial means and do not need hospital care. It’s a seniors home without the nurses.

The group quietly accepts her, or perhaps she quietly accepts them. Everyone cues like cattle for the dining room to open. And they are mostly stiff upper lipped, formerly wealthy Brits, with opinions.

Mrs Palfrey quickly finds herself telling a fib about her nephew coming to visit. Then it becomes a bit of a gossipy playing card with the other ladies who do have visitors. Everyone is quite nosy in this novel. Well, dear Mrs Palfrey finds herself having a bit of a tumble one day while out on a walk. A young writer named Ludo helps her up and delivers her home. It’s an unlikely friendship but Mrs Palfrey asks if Ludo might pop in for a drink at the Claremont so she can pass him off as the nephew who’s been too busy to visit.

Well, it’s all funny in a Jane Austen way from there. I won’t spoil it.

This is a quaint read, and in some ways reminds me of The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman.

The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

Summary: Esther Greenwood is working as an intern for a fashion magazine in New York. It’s 1953. Her day-to-day routine involves writing magazine pieces, doing research, and mostly attending various fashion events and getting free drinks. It’s darkly funny. There’s no Devil Wears Prada character but the first part of the novel has that energy. The second half is more Girl, Interrupted. Esther’s internship ends and she returns to her sleepy little town. The Bell Jar was published in 1963 so in many ways the second half of the novel is a horrifying look at how mental health was treated. And it’s a sad read when you see what Esther goes through, and also know that Plath committed suicide weeks after the publication of this novel.

There were twelve of us at the hotel.

We had all won a fashion magazine contest, by writing essays and stories and poems and fashion blurbs, and as prizes they gave us jobs in New York for a month, expenses paid, and piles and piles of free bonuses, like ballet tickets and passes to fashion shows and hair stylings at a famous expensive salon and chances to meet successful people in the field of our desire and advice about what to do with our particular complexions.

I still have the make-up kit they gave me.

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I enjoyed this book a lot. It’s a novel that captures a distinct time. Very Mad Men, 1950s society and culture. And yet so many things remain the same. This is Sylvia Plath’s only novel so it’s worth the read.

The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

A beautiful bit of philosophy

Summary: On the surface The Alchemist is the story of a boy learning to listen to his heart. But of course this little novel is a deep philosophical look at what it means to find your place in the world.

My favourite moment is when the boy, Santiago, is far away from the girl he loves and he feels the warm air of the desert on this face and thinks it is her sending a kiss. “She’s not done that before.”

Santiago’s journey starts in Andalusia. He’s a shepherd with a recurrent dream of finding treasure at the Pyramids. One day Santiago meets an old man who claims to be a king and who encourages him to seek the treasure, to follow his heart, to achieve his Personal Legend.

Achieving ones’ Personal Legend is about finding a way to have a satisfying life. This little book is a life lesson barely disguised.

And the cover for the anniversary edition is gorgeous.

Visit the author’s website
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