Fiction is full of unhappy lives; the happy ones seem more difficult to write. The first part of Anna Quindlen's latest book Every last one depicts a happy, normal family and yet you know that something is going to happen to change that. What does happen is unexpected but the happiness is somehow restored by the end of the novel. My previous favourite novel by Quindlen is Blessings but I have also found her two small books of non-fiction very readable and well-written.
In How reading changed my life she comments that "In books I have travelled, not only to other worlds but into my own. I learned who I was and who I wanted to be, what I might aspire to and what I might dare to dream". In a Short guide to a happy life she reflects on how to live well taking nothing for granted. This is a short book with a message - one that I can relate to.
For several years Quindlen has written for the New York Times developing her concise, precise style. Many American and British newspapers publish columns by the best fiction writers of the time, readable for their choice of language and structure, and offering more than journalism. I'm looking forward to reading such columns while I am in England - look out for more comments on this.
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