Saturday, May 17, 2008

'The Iraqi' by J.A. Mulholland

Theiraqi2stars Fiction - paperback; Stamford House Publishing; 399 pages; 2008. Review copy.

Although I generally prefer modern literary fiction, I pride myself on having fairly eclectic reading tastes and will happily try genres and authors I haven't read before. If a book is set in an exotic location, particularly if it’s a place that hasn’t featured in any other novel I have read before, it will immediately pique my interest.

And I am always very happy to read first-time novelists, often preferring them to more established names.

The Iraqi, by J.A. Mulholland, ticked all these boxes.

Admittedly, I had my doubts about the premise -- an English woman going on "a secret mission into occupied Iraq to save a man she has only met by email" – but felt that the Middle Eastern setting would make up for this.

Continue reading "'The Iraqi' by J.A. Mulholland" »

Saturday, February 02, 2008

'Whitethorn Woods' by Maeve Binchy

Whitethornwoods 2stars Fiction - paperback; Orion Books; 450 pages; 2007.

Holed up in bed mid-week with a terrible head cold I didn't feel much like taxing my brain power, and so it was I came to read Maeve Binchy's latest paperback, Whitethorn Woods. I won't be the first to admit that Binchy's novels aren't exactly intellectually stimulating -- they're warm and fluffy and make you feel all gooey inside, perfect fodder for reading on the beach or curled up in bed when you're unwell. But this one, I'm sorry to say, was a disappointing read.

The thing that bugged me most was not the storytelling, which is typically enjoyable, heart-warming Binchy fare, but the complete failure of the publisher to specify anywhere on the cover or blurb that this is actually a collection of interconnected short stories and not a novel. I am not a fan of the short story for no other reason than they  generally leave me feeling dissatisfied, because I want to know more about the characters, their motivations and lives. On that basis I'm a novel-reading kind of gal, and that's probably how it will always be.

Whitethorn Woods comprises 13 short stories, each one divided into two parts so that the same story is told from two different points of view, an interesting "twist" which demonstrates Binchy's exemplary story-telling skills. The characters in each story are all from the same place -- a once sleepy Irish town called Rossmore, which is now booming but is choked by traffic. These stories are connected by three "bridging" chapters -- at the start, middle and end --  which explain how the town's woods and a well dedicated to St Ann are threatened by a new bypass. It's a nifty idea, but I couldn't help but wonder if Binchy had simply chucked together all those unpublished short stories she's written over the years, perhaps the ones languishing in the bottom drawer, and inserted a few common themes -- the woods, the spiritual well, the town's traffic problem -- in order to get the next book out and into the shops. That might sound harsh, but as a reader I have to admit feeling slightly cheated by this book.

Still, if you like short stories, this is a good little collection, provided you don't mind Binchy's rather simplistic, sometimes cloying, view of life in which hard work is always rewarded, love can be found in the most unexpected of places and good things happen to kind people. But personally, as much as I enjoyed reading about the quiet lives told within each story, I struggled to enjoy Whitethorn Woods as a whole.

If you've not read anything by Maeve Binchy before, I suggest this is not the place to start, because if you do it could well be the last Binchy you ever read -- and that would be a sad thing given her extraordinary back catalogue of feel-good fiction.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

'School's Out' by Christophe Dufosse

Schoolsout 2stars Fiction - paperback; Vintage; 400 pages; 2007. (Translated from the French by Shaun Whiteside.)

I'm not sure what it is with modern French novels, because I never really seem to enjoy them despite the fact that the blurb makes them sound fantastic. The cover of School's Out boasted all kinds of glowing reviews from "cool, sexy and sinister" to "forcibly reminds one of Donna Tart's A Secret History". And the note about the author on the first page said it had been translated into 10 languages and was the winner of the Prix Premier Roman, which is a French prize for first novels (I think?), so how could I go wrong?

The story opens with the death of a young teacher at a secondary school. He has killed himself by leaping out of a classroom window and it is largely thought that his class of unruly 13-year-old students are to blame. But when Pierre Hoffman takes over the class for the rest of the school year he finds the students incredibly well-behaved, quiet and submissive. But he soon learns that there is something slightly abnormal about them, as if they are "existing only as a whole, in a group". Cue spooky music here...

Continue reading "'School's Out' by Christophe Dufosse" »

Sunday, June 03, 2007

'Rant' by Chuck Palahniuk

Rant 2stars Fiction - hardcover; Jonathan Cape; 336 pages; 2007. REVIEW COPY.

Chuck Palahniuk is one of my favourite authors. He has a distinctive, often experimental, style that mixes black humour with scathing satire. The result is often a very funny, completely surreal, rollicking good read. But his new novel -- subtitled The Oral History of Buster Casey -- fails to deliver the usual offbeat and inspired narrative I have come to expect.

Rant is essentially a story about a now-dead wayward weirdo -- Buster L "Rant" Casey -- who is responsible for an urban plague of rabies and other "pranks" across America. It is set in a technologically advanced dystopian future in which people are separated into two distinct groups -- daytimers and nighttimers.  The nighttimers, who come out when it is dark, spend a large proportion of their time Party Crashing. This is a sport in which participants deliberately cause car accidents in a rather destructive and surreal version of a demolition derby.

Continue reading "'Rant' by Chuck Palahniuk" »

Saturday, April 07, 2007

'Mergers and Acquisitions' by Dana Vachon

Mergersacquistions 2stars Fiction - hardcover; Riverhead Books; 304  pages; 2007. REVIEW COPY.

When Jay McInerney, he of Bright Lights Big City fame, described this book, about young Manahattanites living it up in their first year on Wall Street, as a "witting and entertaining immorality tale" I jumped at the chance to acquire an advanced readers copy. It sounded like a right old romp that would do for investment banking what The Devil Wears Prada had done for magazine publishing. Alas, it did not live up to expectations.

Mergers and Acquisitions (published on April 5) starts out well. Tommy Quinn, a recent Georgetown graduate who dreams of becoming a medical doctor, lands a plum job with investment banking firm J.S. Spenser (the promotional website is definitely worth a look) instead and, unsurprisingly, finds himself out of his depth: numbers were never his strong point.

Continue reading "'Mergers and Acquisitions' by Dana Vachon" »

Saturday, February 17, 2007

'The Atom Station' by Halldór Laxness

Atomstation_1 2stars_16 Fiction - paperback; The Harvill Press; 180  pages; 2004. (Translated from the Icelandic by Magnus Magnusson.)

The Atom Station was first published in 1948 at a time of great political upheaval in Iceland. The American Military had been resident since 1941 (during World War Two) and was in the process of establishing a permanent military base at Keflavík in the south-west of Iceland. This was considered by many Icelanders to be incredibly controversial, not least because it would make the country a potential nuclear target at a time when the horror of Hiroshima was very much present in people's minds.

This is important background detail for anyone wishing to tackle this novel.

It's also important to realise that Iceland has rich -- and very old -- literary roots. The Icelanders' Sagas from the Middle Ages are constantly name-checked -- and helpfully footnoted -- throughout The Atom Station.

This political and cultural history form the backbone of what is essentially a sharp, often witty and sometimes laborious, satire. The story is told through the eyes of a young peasant girl, Ugla, who moves to Reykjavík to take up the position of a house maid for a politician.

Continue reading "'The Atom Station' by Halldór Laxness" »

Sunday, August 13, 2006

'Siegfried' by Harry Mulisch

Sigfried2stars_15 Fiction - paperback; Penguin; 180  pages; 2004. (Translated from the Dutch by Paul Vincent.)

An elderly and celebrated Dutch author, Rudolph Herter, goes on a literary tour to Austria, taking his partner, Maria, with him. During a television interview promoting his latest novel, The Invention of Love, he offhandedly mentions that despite all the books and studies about Hitler humankind is no closer to understanding the Fuhrer and why he did what he did. "All those so-called explanations have simply made him more invisible," says Herter. "Perhaps fiction is the net that he can be caught in."

Later at a book signing, an elderly couple who survived the war, approach Herter with a story of their own to tell. Herter agrees to hear their tale, thinking that he may be able to use it as the basis for his next novel, which he has already decided should be about Hitler.

Over the course of an afternoon in their room at an old people's home, the couple, Ullrich and Julia Falk, break the oath they once swore to Hitler and share their terrible secret with a gob-smacked Herter. Their story is so utterly astonishing that Herter soon realises that even the best fiction writers can never properly compete with the truth...

Continue reading "'Siegfried' by Harry Mulisch" »

Sunday, June 18, 2006

'A Wedding in December' by Anita Shreve

Weddingindecember_22stars_14Fiction - paperback; Abacus; 336 pages; 2006

A group of college friends, many of whom have not seen each other for 27 years, gather for a wedding at an inn in the Berkshire Mountains of western Massachusetts.

This once tight circle of friends - Rob, an out-of-the-closet pianist; Harrison, a book publisher; Jerry, a burly businessman with a stuck-up wife; Agnes, an umarried history teacher tormented by a long-running love affair and writing a novel; Nora, the widowed owner of the inn; and the wedding couple, Bill and Bridget, who dated at school but then went on to marry other people - spend three days at the inn.

The ceremony, restricted to just this group of seven friends and one or two others, takes on a special significance because Bridget, the mother of a 15-year-old son, has breast cancer and isn't expected to live much beyond two years.

And if this doesn't sound melancholy enough there are other shadows hovering over this group of friends, including the death of Steven, a charamastic classmate, at a drunken highschool party all those years ago, and the tragic events of 9/11 just three months earlier.

Amid this somewhat downbeat atmosphere the party gets snowed in and, fueled by the ensuing claustrophobia, tension and too much alcohol, comes the spilling of sordid secrets from the past...

Continue reading "'A Wedding in December' by Anita Shreve" »

Saturday, May 06, 2006

'Jessica' by Bryce Courtenay

Jessica_42stars_13Fiction - paperback; Penguin; 676  pages; 2000.

This best-selling novel is set in outback Australia during the early 20th Century. Jessica Bergman, the heroine of the book, is a tomboy who helps her father, a Danish immigrant, run the family farm. Meanwhile her elder sister, the beautiful but stuck-up Meg, dreams up plans, with the help of her mother, to wed the local rich boy.

When a brutal murder is carried out at a neighbouring farm, Jessica helps the killer survive a lynch mob hell bent on delivering their own form of justice. This one act of compassion has long-term implications for the rest of Jessica's life - and she is banished from her family, from society and, later, from her child, who is born out of wedlock.

Continue reading "'Jessica' by Bryce Courtenay" »

Sunday, March 19, 2006

'A Noble Radiance' by Donna Leon

Nobleradiance2stars_12Fiction - paperback; Arrow; 289  pages; 1999.

This is book number 7 in Donna Leon's crime series featuring Commissario Brunetti, but only the second one that I have read.

In this book Brunetti reopens an investigation into a kidnapping that was never solved. The badly decomposing body of the victim, a young man from a noble Venetian family, has been discovered on farm land in the Italian Dolomites several years after his disappearance.

Brunetti has the difficult task of breaking the news to the victim's family and then sets about trying to work out who murdered him and why.

As a story it is a relatively interesting and fast-paced one. But I had some problems with the book as a whole.

**Please note there are spoilers below**

Continue reading "'A Noble Radiance' by Donna Leon" »

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Books read in 2008

An Irish Writers' Year




  • During 2008 I plan to read one piece of work by each of the following Irish literary greats:
    * Brendan Behan
    * Flann O'Brien
    * George Bernard Shaw
    * James Joyce
    * John Millington Synge
    * Johnathan Swift
    * Oliver Goldsmith
    * Oscar Wilde
    * Patrick Kavanagh
    * Samuel Beckett
    * Sean O'Casey
    * William Butler Yeats.

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