Category Archives: books

The Shadow Year

Shadow_Year

This was a reading group choice. It’s a page-turner and very absorbing. There’s an interesting idea of a group of recent graduate friends decide to live self-sufficient lives in a deserted cottage in the Peak District. But the characters aren’t well-drawn, at times are completely unbelievable and some aspects of the plot I saw coming a mile off.


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* I knew about halfway through the book that Mac would be William.
* As soon as Freya became pregnant I knew the baby was Lila.
* I found it very difficult to believe that Kat would love Simon even after Freya told her that he raped her.
* It was difficult to believe that Kat, by trying to pull Lila back, ended up pushing her down the stairs.

Us

Us

I really liked this book. I read most of it but I listened to some parts while working. It’s got all the romance of One Day but this book is about a family rather than a couple, so there are parent-child relationships as well as the couple’s. The book goes back and forth between past and present and all links together beautifully. Like in One Day, the characters are real, whole and utterly believable and, in spite of the sadness, the book is life-affirming. Recommended.

Elizabeth is Missing

Elizabeth_is_Missing

This was recommended to me by Kay the reading group leader. I found the book to contain a wonderful, very realistic portrayal of dementia, showing both a sufferer’s and carer’s point of view. I didn’t get any satisfaction from the solution to the mystery at the end of the book. I would recommend it though, purely for the dementia aspect; I really felt the terror and frustration of it.


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You don’t know for sure how Sukey died. Elizabeth turned out to be in hospital:
Elizabeth_is_Missing_ending

The Language of Flowers

Language_of_Flowers

This was a reading group book. It’s a fairly absorbing tale of a girl who is finding her own way in life after 18 years in foster care. It’s something of a page-turner, with alternate chapters providing flashbacks to the past which explain the present. The protagonist is unlikeable but how she comes to be the way she is is explained as the book unfolds. The plot is slightly unrealistic – Victoria always seems to land on her feet – but the part about her (SPOILER) motherhood more than makes up for it. I wasn’t very taken with the language of flowers itself either, which is annoyingly unscientific.

Overall this book is ok; thought-provoking and easy to read.

Family Life

Family_Life

This has quite a dark storyline but I did enjoy it. It is so evocative of Indians, from India, as opposed to British Indians. I asked Mum and Dad to read it because I imagine Dad’s life must have been a lot like that described in the book; the protagonist is a young boy who emigrates from India to the USA in the late 70’s. I would recommend this.

The Girl in the Red Coat

Girl_in_the_red_coat

This was recommended to me by members of the book group. Not an ‘official’ read but an optional one as the author came to the library to do a talk.

It seemed like nothing happened for the first 100 pages but afterwards I became sucked into the plot, despite my disbelief that a child of 8 would know anything about people’s ‘energies’. Actually the whole spiritualism aspect annoyed me. The chapters written from the young girl’s point of view were very convincing though. The Gramps and Pastor characters were thoroughly menacing. The end felt rushed; it was a happy ending and I would have expected the author to make more of that. Anyway. Not sure I’d recommend this to anyone as there are better thrillers out there (e.g. The Girl on the Train) but it was a page-turner with some interesting ideas in it.

The Emergence of Judy Taylor

Emergence_of_Judy_Taylor

This was a reading group choice. A rather mixed bag of a book. All the characters apart from the protagonist are quite sketchily portrayed, to the point where I kept mixing people up or forgetting who they were. The thought that kept recurring to me throughout the book as Judy went through one bad experience after another was, why doesn’t she give her husband (more of) a chance? On the plus side there are many very astute observations about life as a woman in her mid-thirties that jumped out of the book and spoke to me. Also to the book’s credit is that fact that the front cover gives the impression that it is chick lit, but the book is far from light, bubbly reading.

Overall, I probably wouldn’t recommend this; life is too short to spend reading books that are just ok.

The Miniaturist

Miniaturist

My reading group leader Kay said that she would be interested to know what I thought about this book.

Nothing happens for thr first 152 pages so I almost gave up ir. However, the language is alluring and the mysteries kept me hooked. SPOILERS: I guessed right from the start that Johannnes’ husband was gay. I was disappointed that the mystery of the miniaturist was not resolved in the end.

I would recommend this book if you are interested in that period of history because it is very evocative, but not really otherwise.

The Girl on the Train

girl-on-the-train

This one is a real page-turner, on a par with Before I Go to Sleep in that it plays with your perceptions. Better than Gone Girl, which it has been compared to. I’d definitely recommend this one.