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Showing posts from May, 2020

THE EIGHTH LIFE by NINO HARATISCHVILI

THE EIGHTH LIFE by NINO HARATISCHVILI I have been reading this book for a month (since  @scribe_uk  started their read-along) and in that time these characters have become part of my life. I feel like I have lived with their stories for so long that I have become part of their family. This book is the definition of epic. It is 944 pages long (the longest book I’ve ever read) and it spans over 100 years of Georgian history; living under Tsar rule, WWI, The October Revolution, Lenin, Stalin, WWII, all the way up to the fall of the Soviet Union and 2007 political demonstrations. In that time I relearned my intrigue for Soviet history, I fell in love with the Jashi and Eristravi families and I craved chocolate more than ever before. If you haven’t read this then you probably should and if you have read this, please comment with your favourite character(s). I think mine would have to be Christine or Stasia or Kitty. But honestly I loved them all and all their stories. I don’t think...

SWIMMING HOME by DEBORAH LEVY

SWIMMING HOME by DEBORAH LEVY Picture this: a villa in France, a heatwave, two middle aged couples; one rich, one bankrupt, one teenage daughter, one dirty swimming pool, some guns, some poems, the French Riviera and an unwelcome (oft naked) guest. Intrigued yet? I thought this book was brilliant. I enjoyed reading it so much! It reminded me of Hot Milk by Levy and also The Accidental by Ali Smith. I got all the French villa vibes.

THE LONG SONG by ANDREA LEVY

THE LONG SONG by ANDREA LEVY Right. Bear with me. This is a difficult one to review. The reason for that is because at times I really disliked this book - worse: I found it boring. However, at other times I was completely gripped and in love with the characters and their journeys. Sigh. Alas, my overall reading experience was not a positive one. I wanted to DNF many times but my enjoyment of the “good bits” prevented me from doing so. So, the story is about Jamaica slightly before, during and after the end of slavery. The main character is July and she is the daughter of a slave and a white man; the product of rape. She works for an Englishman and his sister in their plantation house. Alongside that storyline, we have the present day, wherein a woman named July is writing this story under the watchful eye of her son Thomas. I found that Thomas was an irrelevant character in the present day as was the entire present-day storyline. Maybe I missed the point. What I found interesting was l...

BONJOUR TRISTESSE / A CERTAIN SMILE by FRACOISE SAGAN

BONJOUR TRISTESSE by FRACOISE SAGAN French Literature at its finest. There are actually two novels in this book and Bonjour Tristesse is the first and that is the one I’ll review first. The novella (100 pages) takes place over a summer on the French Riviera. Cecile and her father have rented the villa for two months to escape from the heat of Paris. Her widowed father brings with him his young and beautiful mistress, but then another guest turns up... The star of this book, though, is the setting. The French Riviera. The beach. The glistening ocean. The sailing. The sex. The sun. The wine. The cigarettes. The sadness that only comes with being seventeen and in love, or not in love. I just can’t get over the fact that the author was 18 when she wrote this. A CERTAIN SMILE  by FRACOISE SAGAN Well, well, well, I had no idea that I could love the second novella more than the first. What an exquisite story. I felt like I was reading a French Sally Rooney. It is very much like Conversati...

THE ARRANGEMENTS by CHIMAMANDA NGOZI ADICHIE

THE ARRANGEMENTS by CHIMAMANDA NGOZI ADICHIE I just listened to this and it’s hilarious! It’s a fictionalised account of a day in the life of Milania Trump. I love Adichie’s writing anyway, but this is just a blimmin laugh out loud piece of satire. It was cheap on Audible so I recommend that you all have a listen and a laugh.

THE SECRET HISTORY by DONNA TARTT

THE SECRET HISTORY by DONNA TARTT THE SECRET HISTORY by DONNA TARTT The cleverest thing about this book is that most of the action is told through dialogue. I think there are only two occasions when the protagonist is actually experiencing the action for himself. This only made the book more unique, however. You could call this a murder mystery but not because the murder is a mystery. The reader knows exactly who has been murdered and how and by whom on the first page of the book. Instead, the mystery lies within the goings on and personalities of the members of an elite group of Greek Scholars. I remember from The Goldfinch absolutely loving reading about the lavish lifestyles of Tartt’s characters and this book delivers once again on that front. The characters are super rich and privileged (apart from the protagonist) and I particularly enjoyed their names; Laura Stora, Cloke Rayburn, twins named Charles and Camilla, Judy Poovey to name a few! With the popularity of Greek myth retell...