Saturday, 23 April 2016

A Strangeness in my Mind by Orhan Pamuk



       

It is the story of boza seller Mevlut, and his life in Istanbul set over four decades which is basically a history of Istanbul through main character, Mevlut Karatas between 1969 and 2012. Mevlut works a number of different jobs on the streets of Istanbul and observes a large number of changes.

Pamuk's title is taken from Wordsworth's poem, The Prelude

"I had melancholy thoughts ...
a strangeness in my mind,
A feeling that I was not for that hour,
Nor for that place."


I loved the  detail given creating a set of characters and a sense of place that I felt I had got to know intimately
The story moves forwards by seamlessly shifting from one character’s viewpoint to another and adding gradually new viewpoint which I initially didn't like but I quickly found to be effective and interesting! 
It felt like a Dickensian saga.

Saturday, 16 April 2016

At Hawthorn Time by Melissa Harrison




This is a fiction novel by the author of Rain

I loved the variety of characters from young to old and all are utterly believable.
I also enjoyed the slowly disintegrating marriage of Howard and Kitty is beautifully done - maybe hints of green shoots or maybe a separation and divorce - we are left wondering.
She also beautifully writes descriptions of the English countryside.

The ending was totally unexpected and slightly shocking - and it felt really unfinished, like she has just got bored with writing.
Also I did find the switching between characters confusing.

Tuesday, 12 April 2016

All That Man Is by David Szalay



This is a story of nine seemingly unconnected stories about nine men each of them at a different stage in life. 

They are all linked by theme where various men come together to produce an exploration of male vulnerability.

I preferred some stories to others.
I think Szalay relies too heavily on its themes to give it the unity of a novel.

Sunday, 10 April 2016

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson



  

This is a delightful fairy tale  set in a between-the-wars London that is a mixture of 1930's unemployment and a 1920's glamorous and free-wheeling lifestyle where  a man gets to prove his manhood by punching another on the nose

It's a fun lighthearted easy-to-read frivolous novel.

Nothing much happens - so as such it lacks substance, but enjoyable none the less.

Thursday, 7 April 2016

Notes from Walnut Tree Farm by Roger Deakin



I loved this book. It is full of close observation of the countryside and its seasons.

The notes range from quite short observations, or thoughts of a few sentences to the occasional longer account over a page or so of some peculiar adventure or happening. All of the notes are taken from exercise books that Deakin kept during his last 6 years, being put together for this book posthumously. He died in 2006 and most of the notes are about his home of 30 years in Suffolk, living, working on and exploring the land and countryside of his farm.


It contains such beautiful words - Deakin's lovely evocations of place and mood builds up a gorgeous and very alive portrait of where he lived and the passage of the seasons.


it was a shame though that the editors combined the 6 years that the authors notes covered into one just one, rather than allowing the changes in thoughts appear as the years passed as it lead to somewhat disjointed reading.

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

Raven Black (Shetland Book 1 by Ann Cleeves



Ann Cleeves’ Shetland series has been turned into a major TV series of BBC One network called Shetland which I watched and loved. It turns out the adaption was faithful to the book!

Cleeves writing is extraordinarily exquisite and articulate. 
 
Cleeves has a natural ability to describe the places in her books and the reader can imagine the locations clearly, it almost feels like you are transported the Shetland island.

Raven Black has not many twists or turns and it is even easy to predict the killer’s true identity.



Friday, 1 April 2016

The Green Road Into The Trees by Hugh Thomson



 
Thomson undertakes a walk the Ichnield Way, an ancient path. He starts in Abbotsbury in Dorset, at the far end of the Fleet, and crosses Dorset and Wiltshire continually passing hill forts, barrows, mound, stone circles and other glimpses of prehistoric and bronze age life in this country. The journey takes him across the country to Norfolk where he end his walk at the place where Seahenge was excavated from.

I quite enjoyed it, as it combined interesting subjects, history and travel, and the writing is effortless to read.

I enjoyed less the personal bits he added; about his divorce, and of friends past.

He is also funny and opinionated which means he probably upset a lot of the people who read this... if fact he has included a rejection letter at the end of the book where the rejector lists everybody he manages to insult. Had me chuckling, a really good letter.