Sunday, December 30, 2012

The value of books

Nearing the end of 2012, I realise that I have read the same number of books this year as last year. My post on my reading year 2011 notes that I read 57 or maybe 59 books. This year I have noted each title in the side bar and have reached 58 to date with one more at my bedside currently bookmarked. Coincidentally, I have also recommended a similar number of titles during this year.

Two recently enjoyed titles have been intimately concerned with books and reading. The End of your life bookclub by Will Schwabe describes the last years of his mother's life and discusses the books they read together. I had read several of the titles mentioned and discussed them in my book groups but it was interesting to revisit them in a different context. Will and Mary know these are the last books that they will read together and so their reflections often touch upon illness, loss, death and grief, but their conversations also explore memory, relationships, social structures and world events. They talk often about kindness and gratitude and express their own personal values - and this is what makes the book such worthwhile reading. As an added extra, the 6 page appendix of titles read would make a good starting list for any book group.

The Little Bookstore of Big Stone Gap by Wendy Welch is also about the importance of good books but this time from a business as well as a personal perspective. The author founded a second-hand bookstore and discovered friendship and community. A good addition to my list of books about books.








Look out for my new list of books read in 2013. Happy new year and happy reading.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Taking flight

This is your summer must-read!
Flight behaviour by Barbara Kingsolver begins with a vision, both beautiful and terrifying, and its implications are explored through the thoughts, feelings and actions of some interesting characters. It also incorporates issues in class, poverty and climate change but these are integrated into the story so that we are able to understand the complexities that create and surround our lives.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Names for the sea

In Iceland in winter the surface of the sea freezes but there are people still swimming in the hot pools. In this book, Sarah Moss, writes about a year in Iceland with her young family. The tone is conversational but the content is so informative: ranging from vulcanology to knitting, from poetry to fruit (or lack of), from the financial crash to historic treasures, from bad driving to the Aurora Borealis; all the ups and downs of life made fascinating.

The title Names for the sea is from W.H. Auden's Letters from Iceland written in 1936 and hints at the isolation felt by Icelanders. Moss also found that they were disenfranchised by distance especially aggravated by the eruption of the volcano and its implications for travel. The most heartfelt moments, though, are the personal stories about being in another country, not understanding the langauage and culture but learning so much about people and places and different ways of doing things. And it's so well written.

Iceland is on my visiting list too!

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

An alternative alphabet

The ACB with Honora Lee by Kate de Goldi is another charming family story for well-read children and adults. Kate de Goldi understands people; 9 year old Perry and her grandmother Honora are special individuals and when they get together they are amusing and charming. In making her own alphabet book Perry chooses "jolly old" for J - an apt play on words. Kate de Goldi has a way with words; the conversations between Perry and her grandmother and between Perry and her parents give insights into their thoughts, feelings and hopes. The perceptive drawings by Greg O'Brien also add humour to the story. Indeed, it is a beautifully packaged little book and worth reading slowly to enjoy all the nuances.

Praised as heart-warming and endearing, this book shows how we can all get along together with kindness, patience and acceptance.

See this interesting article for Kate's experience of trying to understand and accept dementia.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

casual or causal?

J.K.Rowling's first novel for adults A Casual Vacancy is so clever. The vacancy on the Pagford Parish Council, politically classed as casual, that occurs on the death of Barry Fairbrother is the catalyst for all sorts of problems and events in the troubled community.


This is a big book with a large cast of characters and an even longer list of social issues. The deceptions and intrigues that unfold during the narrative are circumscribed with past details and reflective comments and are plausible (well mostly, I did have a bit of a problem with the Epi-pen). What really stands out is Rowling's understanding of teenagers and her ability to create lively interesting young characters. Those chararcters' struggles with authority: their parents, schoolteachers, employers, are universal but in this novel at least two of them reach a reasonable resolution. The rest is social realism, some of it quite dark and some of it very worrying. Pagford is a microcosm of a troubled world and worth reading about.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Where would you go?

Looking for a quirky, amusing, contemporary story with a few issues to think about? Where'd you go, Bernadette is it. A mother and daughter story that comments wryly on career parents, elitist education, neighbourly relationships, church going, the weather in Seattle and the ice in Antarctica. Never a dull moment - a fun read, with some great read aloud moments, that satirises many current preoccupations in American society and has a great ending. Enjoy!


Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Ladies' Litera-tea


The Women's Bookshop annual event with a line-up of local writers and tea tables of delicious cakes is always a wonderful event. Last Sunday's session connected diverse writers: Joan Druett, Joanne Perry, Hannah McQueen and also highlighted the commonality in female experience: Mary Paul, Gigi Fenster, Emily Perkins.

Gigi Fenster opened with the question about what makes a New Zealand book or a Jewish book? Her analysis of the contents of the story and the sensibilities of the characters made me realise that although I like a location I respond to the universal in a novel. The Intentions book is just that, being subtle and thought-provoking.



Emily Perkins closed the afternoon with an explanation of how she wanted to write a life in fiction through feelings and memory. Her descriptive snapshots of Dorothy Forrest through a long and ordinary life, explored in her latest novel The Forrests, show a depth of observation and understanding and reveal the common experiences of sisterhood, motherhood, loving and longing.



The next Litera-tea is on Sunday 4 November at the Raye Freedman Arts Centre, Epsom Girls' Grammar School with Stephanie Johnson, Paula Green, Fiona Farrell, Lynda Hallinan, Xanthe White, Jacqueline Fahey and Kate de Goldi. Tickets from The Women's Bookshop.