Sunday, 8 October 2017

Finished Reading, Great History and the Birthday Thing

HAPPY THANKSGIVING CANADA!😁

Finished Reading

I finished my first two books of October this past week.

1. Dear Fatty by Dawn French.  













"Dear Dawn French. I enjoyed my first exposure to your writing style in Dear Fatty. Note how witty I am by employing your technique for the start of each chapter. (For those that haven't read the book, each chapter starts Dear 'Someone' as you address your thoughts to a family member or dear friend) I was introduced to Dawn by my wife, who is from England. We have enjoyed so much of your humour and acting; French and Saunders, The Vicar of Dibbley, your acting in Lark Rise to Candleford, etc.
So I have been interested in reading this for quite awhile since I bought it for the missus back in 2008. I have to say that I've enjoyed this look at your life, the highs and lows. I found it especially interesting that you were a military brat like I was; my father was also in the Air Force, the Canadian Air Force, mind you. So I have an appreciation with that portion of your life; the moving around constantly, the trying to make and keep friends who you might only know for 2 or 3 years.
There were many touching and poignant moments in this book. I can't relate to it but I found those portions dealing with your father's internal struggles very touching. Your family dealt with it strongly and seems to have made the most of their lives, especially your mothers.
I particularly enjoyed hearing about your life in the Comic Strip and your development as a comic and actress. I wish there might have been more covered about that aspect of your life. All in all, it was an enjoyable read and I liked discussing with my wife, especially your references to pop culture in the UK. Thanks for the enjoyment. (3.5 stars)"

2. A Taste For Death by Peter O'Donnell

















"A Taste for Death is the 4th book in the Modesty Blaise adventure / thriller series by Peter O'Donnell. I enjoyed this as much as the first three. Modesty is a strong, independent woman (think Lara Croft) who finds herself in many sticky situations and is helped to deal with them by her partner / best friend Willie Garvin. Both started out in the criminal world and have retired. Living in England and enjoying life they regularly help British spymaster, Tarrant, with various situations that need an independent, non-governmental hand.
In this story, Willie Garvin is on vacation in Panama, diving for pearls, when he comes across an attack on two women and saves one, her sister being murdered.
The enemies involved include Gabriel and McWhirter, who Modesty and Willie have battled previously. A new foe also is involved, one from Willie's past. The two, along with Modesty's beau, Stephen Collier, must travel to Algeria, to try and save blind Dinah Pilgrim and a group of archeologists, from Gabriel and Delicata (one of the more vicious villains I've met yet), risking their lives in the process.
Like the others, this is an entertaining, page turner, with strong likeable characters who you find yourself rooting for. Most enjoyable (3.5 stars)"

Currently Reading

 I've started the following books as replacements.

1. The Car Bomb by T.V. LoCicero. I received this from the author to see what I thought of it. Enjoying so far and I've just seen. 









"Detroit Nielson king Frank DeFauw hunts down the story of a judge who may be corrupt - and is one of his best friends. Booze, drugs, womanizing and a passion for the news are all part of what makes this brilliant,erratic TV anchor a major player in this deeply troubled city. Finally, Frank decides if digging out the truth about his pal the judge is worth risking his own career, family and life." 

2. The Wrecker by Clive Cussler

















"1907: In a year of financial panic and labor unrest, a series of train wrecks, fires, and explosions sabotage the Southern Pacific Railroad's Cascades express line. Desperate, the railroad hires the fabled Van Dorn Detective Agency, who send in their best man, Agent Isaac Bell.
Bell quickly discovers that the saboteur is known as the Wrecker - a man who recruits poor, down-and-out accomplices to attack the railroad, and then kills them afterward. The Wrecker traverses the vast American West, striking at will and causing untold damage and loss of human life. But just who is he? And what does he want?
Whoever he is, whatever his motives, the Wrecker knows how to wreak havoc, and Bell senses that he is far from done. In fact, his quarry is building up to a grand act unlike anything ever committed before. And if Bell doesn't stop him in time, more than a railroad could bw at risk - it could be the future of the entire country."

Great Historical Events

It's been awhile since I excerpted this book. Today I'll look at the first US Census.

1791 - First Census

First census taken - population 4,000,000.
Samuel Slater, the father of cotton manufacturing in the United States, set up first machinery for spinning cotton.
United States Bank chartered by Congress with a capital of $10,000,000; stock all taken the first day.
Congress laid a tax on whisky - the first internal taxation to raise money in the United States.
 First patent issued for threshing machines.
Gen. Wayne appointed Commander-in-Chief of the American forces.
Canada divided into Upper and Lower, or afterward, East and West Canada."

Nice to see something about Canada for a change. 

Science of Common Things

Today the good Professor L.G. Gorton discusses twilight and other interesting sky phenomenon.

"What causes twilight? The bending and reflecting of light by the atmosphere. What causes the colored sky at sunset? The sun's rays are partially decomposed by the vapor that is in the atmosphere. Why does a highly colored sunset predict a storm? (Ed Note - oddly that seems to run in the face of 'red sky at night, sailor's delight) Because it shows that the air contains a great amount of moisture."

The Birth Date 10 November 2012

(Winding down now. I presume my last will be on my birthday this year) 

US Billboard #1 Single 10 November 2012

One More Night by Maroon 5. Maroon 5 is an American rock band fronted by Adam Levine. One More Night was their 3rd US #1 hit.

UK #1 Single 10 November 2012

Candy by Robbie Williams. England singer / songwriter has had success as both a member of pop group Take That and as a solo performer. Candy was his 7th UK #1. It was written by Williams, Gary Barlow and Terje Olsen.

New York Times #1 Fiction Best Seller 10 November 2012

The Bone Bed by Patricia Cornwell.  This is the 20th book in Cornwell's Kay Scarpetta forensic mystery series.










"A woman has vanished while digging a dinosaur bone bed in the remote wilderness of Canada. Somehow, the only evidence has made its way to the inbox of Chief Medical Examiner Kay Scarpetta, over two thousand miles away in Boston. She has no idea why. But as events unfold with alarming speed, Scarpetta begins to suspect that the paleontologist’s disappearance is connected to a series of crimes much closer to home: a gruesome murder, inexplicable tortures, and trace evidence from the last living creatures of the dinosaur age.

When she turns to those around her, Scarpetta finds that the danger and suspicion have penetrated even her closest circles. Her niece Lucy speaks in riddles. Her lead investigator, Pete Marino, and FBI forensic psychologist and husband, Benton Wesley, have secrets of their own. Feeling alone and betrayed, Scarpetta is tempted by someone from her past as she tracks a killer both cunning and cruel.
"

Pulitzer Prize Winner 2012

There was no winner in 2012.

Nobel Prize Laureate 2012

Mo Yan (China). Mo Yan is a Chinese novelist and short story writer. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature for his work as a writer "who with hallucinatory realism merges folk tales, history and the contemporary"

Hugo Award Winner 2012

Among Others by Jo Walton.  











"Raised by a half-mad mother who dabbled in magic, Morwenna Phelps found refuge in two worlds. As a child growing up in Wales, she played among the spirits who made their homes in industrial ruins. But her mind found freedom and promise in the science fiction novels that were her closest companions. Then her mother tried to bend the spirits to dark ends, and Mori was forced to confront her in a magical battle that left her crippled--and her twin sister dead.

Fleeing to her father whom she barely knew, Mori was sent to boarding school in England–a place all but devoid of true magic. There, outcast and alone, she tempted fate by doing magic herself, in an attempt to find a circle of like-minded friends. But her magic also drew the attention of her mother, bringing about a reckoning that could no longer be put off…"

Edgar Award Winner 2012

Gone by Mo Hayder.  I've read a couple of the Jack Caffery books, Birdman and The Treatment, and enjoyed very much.

















"November in the West Country.
 
Evening is closing in as murder detective Jack Caffery arrives to interview the victim of a car-jacking. He's dealt with routine car-thefts before, but this one is different. This car was taken by force. And on the back seat was a passenger. An eleven-year-old girl. Who is still missing. Before long the jacker starts to communicate with the police: 'It's started,' he tells them. 'And it ain't going to stop just sudden, is it?' 

And Caffery knows that he's going to do it again. Soon the jacker will choose another car with another child on the back seat. Caffery's a good and instinctive cop; the best in the business, some say. But this time he knows something's badly wrong. Because the jacker seems to be ahead of the police - every step of the way..."

Man Booker Prize Winner 2012

Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel. This is the 2nd book in the planned trilogy dealing with the rise and fall of Thomas Cromwell, advisor to Henry VIII. The first book won the award in 2009.









Giller Prize Winner 2012

419 by Will Ferguson.











"A car tumbles down a snowy ravine. Accident or suicide?

On the other side of the world, a young woman walks out of a sandstorm in sub-Saharan Africa. In the labyrinth of the Niger Delta, a young boy learns to survive by navigating through the gas flares and oil spills of a ruined landscape. In the seething heat of Lagos City, a criminal cartel scours the internet looking for victims.

Lives intersect, worlds collide, a family falls apart. And it all begins with a single email: “Dear Sir, I am the son of an exiled Nigerian diplomat, and I need your help ...”

419 takes readers behind the scene of the world’s most insidious internet scam. When Laura’s father gets caught up in one such swindle and pays with his life, she is forced to leave the comfort of North America to make a journey deep into the dangerous back streets and alleyways of the Lagos underworld to confront her father’s killer. What she finds there will change her life forever.."

So there you go. It's been fun getting back to this. There are still a few to go. Enjoy your holiday weekend, if you're having one. 

Thursday, 5 October 2017

New Books and Future Reading Part 5

Jo is painting and I'm and I'm in the bedroom with the puppies watching some news shows, enjoying the whole kerfuffle about the US Sec of State calling 45 a 'moron'. It's nice to have something to laugh about in this whole thing. The reporters seem to be getting so much enjoyment about saying that Tillerson called Trump a 'moron', or as Stephanie Ruhle from MSNBC pointed out; he actually said Trump is a 'effing' moron...  Anyway, enough about that...

My mom, center of photo
My brother got a great photo of my Mom and her family from one of our cousins. I'm sure I've seen before but it's a fantastic photo. I'm not sure if that was taken in Germany before they emigrated to Canada or had already moved here. It's about the right time I think. Anyway, fantastic photo!

New Books

I found a few books when I stopped at Nearly New Books yesterday. Two by Adam Hall and two from other series I've been enjoying.

1. Adam Hall - Scorpion Signal.













"The KGB kidnaps a top British spy, and the lives of the Leningrad cell are immediately endangered. Quiller is sent to get him out. Escaping from Lubyanka will be harder..."

2. Adam Hall - Quiller's Run.













"On a freelance mission in Southeast Asia. Probing the shadowed secrets of a devastating arms deal.
Stalking a beautiful smuggler who seduces, then kills any man who crosses her. Especially a man who knows too much. Like Quiller."

3. John Burdett - Vulture Peak.













"Nobody knows Bangkok like Royal Thai Police Detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep, but ow he is heading out of his comfort zone. Way out.
Assigned to Thailand's highest profile case. Sonchai is tasked with ending international human organ trafficking. His hunt will lead him across five countries and will draw in a host of unwitting players, including an aging rock star wearing out his second liver, and his quarry, twin Chinese queenpins of the international body parts trade known as the Vultures. Meanwhile, there are rumors at home that Sonchai's wife is having an affair. Confronting the rumors - and controlling his jealousy - while embroiled in the most contentious case of his career may well be more than his Buddhist soul can handle."

4. Tarquin Hall - The Case of the Love Commandos.












"When Ram and Tulsi fall in love, the young woman's parents are dead set against the union. She's from a high-caste family; he's an Untouchable, from the lowest stratum of Indian society. Fortunately, India's Love Commandos, a real-life group of volunteers dedicated to helping mixed-caste couples, come to the rescue. But as soon as they free Tulsi from her father, Ram mysteriously disappears. It falls to Vish Puri to track him down. Unfortunately, Puri's having a bad month. He's failed to recover a stolen cache of jewels, and his wallet was stolen, forcing him to rely on his Mummy-ji to get it back. Worse yet, his arch-rival, suave investigator Hari Kumar, is hot on the case as well. In the daring race to find Ram, Puri and his team must infiltrate his village and navigate the caste politics shaped by millennia-old prejudices."

Future Reading Part 5
 (Click on Future Reading above to see book synopses and book choices)

 1. Canadian Content (CanCon). I planned to read 5 books and so far have read 3. Of the three books I'd proposed, I've read two so far. I still would like to read the third proposed -

1. Seaweed on Ice by Stanley Evans (Seaweed #2 / 2006).












Other possibles might include -

1. Nights Below Station Street by David Adams Richard.











"This book is the first in Richards' acclaimed Miramichi trilogy. Set in a small mill town in northern New Brunswick, it draws us into the lives of a community of people who live there, including: Joe Walsh, isolated and strong in the face of a drinking problem; his wife, Rita, willing to believe the best about people; and their teenage daughter Adele, whose nature is rebellious and wise, and whose love for her father wars with her desire for independence. Richards' unforgettable characters are linked together in conflict, and in articulate love and understanding."

2. The Accident by Linwood Barclay.













"Glen Garber, a contractor, has seen his business shaken by the housing crisis, and now his wife, Sheila, is taking a business course at night to increase her chances of landing a good-paying job. But she should have been home by now. With their eight-year-old daughter sleeping soundly, Glen soon finds his worst fears confirmed: Sheila and two others have been killed in a car accident. Grieving and in denial, Glen resolves to investigate the accident himself - and begins to uncover layers of lawlessness beneath the placid surface of their Connecticut suburb, secret after dangerous secret behind the closed doors. Propelled into a vortex of corruption and illegal activity, pursued by mysterious killers, and confronted by threats from neighbors he thought he knew, Glen must take his own desperate measures and go to terrifying new places in himself to avenge his wife and protect his child."

2. The Classics (Pre-1900)

 I hoped to read 4 books in this category in 2017. I've only read two so far so I'm pretty sure I'll only read one more. But we'll see. I've read one of the two proposed so far. I may manage to just read the other.

1. North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell (1854).












Another possibility might be - 

1. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte (1848).











"Set in the rakish Regency society and written during the 1840s when the oppression of women was at its height, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is extraordinary for its impassioned and bold treatment of the issue of women's equality. 'The slamming of Helen's bedroom door against her husband,' wrote one critic, 'reverberated throughout Victorian England.' In short, Wildfell Hall can be said to be the first sustained feminist novel.

Much of Anne Bronte's painful experience acquired while she was governess is imprinted on the action of the novel. Nevertheless, the story of Helen Huntingdon and her swaggering, debauched husband and of Gilbert Markham, the man who falls in love with Helen, is notable for its honesty, psychological truth and burning sincerity--and for its startling modernity."


Non-Fiction

 I hoped to read 5 books in this challenge and have so far completed 1, with one currently on the go. I will have one left of the 3 proposed books.

1. The Elephant to Hollywood by Michael Caine.












Other possibilities might be - 

1. John le Carre, the Biography by Adam Sisman.












"Always secretive about his background and Secret Service career (blocking one biography from publication in the 1990s, then choosing a biographer who abandoned the project), John le Carre (David Cornwell) has finally given his blessing to Adam Sisman, who has delivered a biography that reads like a novel.From his bleak childhood--the departure of his mother when he was five was followed by "sixteen hugless years" in the dubious care of his father, a serial-seducer and con-man--through recruitment by both MI5 and MI6, his years as an agent for British Intelligence during the Cold War, to his emergence as the master of the espionage novel, le Carre has repeatedly quarried his life for his fiction. His acute psychological renderings of undercover operations and the moral ambiguities of the Cold War and our present-day politics lend his novels a level of credibility that is unmistakable. Sisman's great biography uncovers for us the remarkable story of an enigmatic writer whose commercial success has sometimes overshadowed appreciation for his extraordinary abilities."

2. Calendar Girl by Tricia Stewart. 











"It was a crazy idea and good for a laugh at the time: When Tricia Stewart proposed a more risqué treatment for her local Women’s Institute’s annual calendar, which normally featured tranquil scenes from nature, laughing alongside her was John Baker, the husband of the soon-to-be Miss February, Angela. When John passed away from cancer, the Ladies of Rylstone decided that posing nude for the calendar and donating the proceeds was one way to honor his memory and cope with this devastating loss. No one could have predicted what happened next. The calendar began to sell, and soon the whole world, it seemed, was interested in their story, with an American tour following and appearances on the Today show, 20/20, CNN, and the Tonight Show."

So there you go, my last look at what books I might read for the rest of the year. It'll be interesting to see what I end up choosing in the next three months.

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

Future Reading - Part 4 - Spy, War, Thriller, Catch-alls

This is my 4th look at what I hope to read for the rest of 2017. Back when I made this category, I was trying to catch those books that didn't fit into my other categories, such as Mystery series and modern fiction. I hoped to read 10 books in this challenge and so far have completed 5. I have somewhat covered this particular challenge with my post on Thrillers back on the 25th of September. (Click on Thrillers, of course if you want to refresh your memory.

In my post back in November 2016, I had provided a list of 5 probably books that I might read. Of those initial 5 selections, I've read 2. So along with those books I mentioned on the 25th, I still have the following to try. (The synopses of these books can be found be clicking on here.)

1. The Third Option by Vince Flynn (Mitch Rapp #2).













2. Gunner Asch Goes to War by H.H. Kirst (1956).












3. The Unlikely Spy by Daniel Silva (1995).













I do have many options in this category. As I look through my various lists, these are some other possibilities.

1. Kolmsky Heights by Lionel Davidson (1994). I've had this for years. About time I read it.










"From the heart of Siberia have come coded messages implying a mysterious secret to be entrusted to only one man. How that individual gets in, finds the contacts, and tries to get the secret out is a masterpiece of wrenching excitement and immensely intelligent storytelling. Lionel Davidson is an award-winning author critically acclaimed on a par with Le Carre, Forsyth and Follett."

2. The Quiller Memorandum by Adam Hall. This is a new book and series for me. Looking forward to trying it.












"You are a secret agent working for the British in Berlin. You are due to go home on leave, but you are being followed-by your own people, or by the enemy. A man meets you in the theatre and briefs you on a plot to revive the power of Nazi Germany. You do not believe him, but you remember that one of the suspects mentioned was a senior SS officer you met with in the days when you were working as a spy in Nazi Germany. The next day you make contact with a beautiful girl who may know something. Someone tries to kill both of you.
Your name is Quiller. You are the hero of an extraordinary novel which shows how a spy works, how messages are coded and decoded, how contacts are made, how a man reacts under the influence of truth drugs-and which traces the story of a vastly complex, entertaining, convincing, and sinister plot."

3. The Guns of Navarone by Alistair MacLean (1957). MacLean was one of my favourite authors when I was in high school. It's been nice to be exploring his early works again.









"An entire navy had tried to silence the guns of Navarone and failed. Full-scale attacks had been driven back. Now they were sending in just five men, each one a specialist in dealing death."

4. Shout at the Devil by Wilbur Smith (1968). I've read one book by Smith so far and was pleasantly surprised by it. Hope this is the same.










"Together O'Flynn and Oldsmith braved the terrors of Africa to make a private paradise, fighting only for family and fortune. But then Germany's shadow fell across the savage land, shattering their lives and making their jungle home a bloody battleground."

I wonder which books I end up picking. I've one more group to look at. I'll try to do that in the next day or so. Take care!

Sunday, 1 October 2017

September 2017 Reading summary and a Couple of Other Things

It's been a beautiful Fall day today, sunny and fresh. Really quite perfect. I was so tired this morning, mind you. I don't know if you've experienced this, but I was in bed after walking the dogs, reading a bit and trying to watch footie. This is the thing. I'd be reading a page then my eyes would close and I would still think I was reading but the story would change. Kind of strange, I think. Anyway.....

I managed to finish two books before the end of the month, both quite good.

Just Finished

1. American Gods by Neil Gaiman. Excellent story. My review is below.
















"American Gods is the 2nd book by Neil Gaiman that I've read and enjoyed. I wanted to read this especially because I wanted to start watching the TV series based on the book.
I have to say that this was so very interesting. I can see similar themes between American Gods and the other book I've read, Neverwhere, but on a bigger scale. You have this blending of the 'real' world with the world of gods and demons, the breaking down of barriers between the two and you have these supernatural beings that wander between both worlds.
American Gods is basically about Shadow, who has just been released from prison and discovers that not only was his wife, Laura, unfaithful to him, but was also killed. Shadow meets Mr. Wednesday who hires him as a chauffeur, and since he has nothing to go home to, he agrees. Wednesday is an 'old' god who is trying to unite the varied old gods who live in the US to battle against the new gods; god of internet, god of airwaves, etc. who are out to destroy them. That is the story on its most basic level, but there are so many questions to be answered as the story develops.
Who is Shadow really? Who is Wednesday? Which is the good side? Why is his dead wife following him around? It's a fascinating, interesting concept and a well-developed story that gets more and more interesting as the story moves along. I loved it, found it to be a page-turner and most enjoyable story. I will continue to check out Gaiman's stories; Stardust awaits me on my bookshelf. (4 stars)"

2. The Cruellest Month by Louise Penny.













"The Cruellest Month is the third book in the Chief Inspector Gamache mystery series by Canadian writer, Louise Penny and like the first two, I enjoyed it very much. Once again we find Gamache assigned to investigate a murder in the small town of Three Pines in Quebec. He brings along his team; 2nd in command Beauvoir, trouble - making Investigator Nicholl, new man Lemieux and Lacoste.
They are investigating the death of a woman who seems to have died of fright during a seance at the Hadley Estate, the place that played such an integral role in the first book in the series. The usual cast appear, Peter and Clara, Olivier and Gabri, Myrna, Ruth, etc to add colour and keep the story moving.
Was it murder? That's to be determined. Complicating the matters is the continuing troubles being caused by Gamache's old enemy, Arnot another Sureté commander who Gamache brought charges of murder against many years ago. People are now rehashing this case, making life dangerous for Gamache and his family. Does he have spies in his team?
It's a wonderfully rich story, with many subplots, many suspects and a fascinating resolution. I like Gamache, he's a class guy and I like his team for the most part. I kind of wish that Clara would divorce Peter, but that's just a personal wish; he's holding her back! Great story and I look forward to moving on to the fourth book, The Murder Stone. (4 stars)"

I've started the following books in their place.

Currently Reading

1. The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux.

The synopsis is below.










"The story of the Phantom of he Opera, a half-crazed musician hiding in the labyrinth of the famous Paris Opera House and creating a number of strange and mysterious events to further the career of a beautiful young singer, is today regarded as one of the most famous of all horror stories: widely mentioned in the same breath as Frankenstein and Dracula. Yet the fame of this novel, first written by the French journalist turned novelist Gaston Leroux, in 1911, ,is based almost entirely on the various film versions which have been made over the years. Remarkable performances by two actors, Lon Chaney and Claude Rains, helped to make the Phantom an immortal figure" 

2. The Crossword Murder by Nero Blanc. This is a new series for me.
















"Playboy Thompson C. Briephs has just been found strangled in his bed. The police believe the Newcastle Herald crossword editor, a scion of a blue-blooded New England family, died from kinky sex gone wrong. But cop-turned–private investigator Rosco Polycrates thinks there’s a six-letter word for what happened. Enlisting the help of Annabelle Graham, the crossword editor for a rival paper, Rosco unearths a crazy quilt of suspects who had it in for the victim - and one of them was blackmailing him. Belle is certain the answers lie in Briephs’ twisty puzzlers. Now she and Rosco will have to employ some dazzling wordplay of their own to stop a cunning killer from crossing paths with another victim."

September 2017 Reading Summary

General Info

                                         September               2017 Total
Books Read                           9                               89
Pages Read                        3,300                         24,900

Pages Breakdown
      < 250                               3                               42
250 - 350                               3                               28
351 - 450                               0                               12
      > 450                               3                                7

Ratings
5 - star                                  3                                10
4 - star                                  3                                45
3 - star                                  3                                31
2 - star                                                                     3

Author Gender
Female                                3                                 23
Male                                   6                                  66

Genre
Fiction                                4                                 21
Mystery                              3                                 42
SciFi                                   1                                 23
Non-Fic                                                                   1
Classics                              1                                   2

2017 Reading Challenges

12 + 4 Challenge (1900 - 1950) (completed)
1. C.S. Forester - The African Queen (5 stars)

Canadian Literature (3 of 5)
Technically I've read 4 as The Cruellest Month was by Canadian author Louise Penny but I've included it in the Mystery genre. None read in September.

The Classics (pre-1900) (2 of 4)
2. Charles Dickens - Nicholas Nickleby (5 stars)

Mysteries (Cops) (17 of 25)
3. Louise Penny - The Cruellest Month (4 stars)

Mysteries (Sleuths) (16 of 25)
4. Jacqueline Winspear - Birds of a Feather (4 stars)

Fantasy (4 of 5)
5. Neil Gaiman - American Gods (4 stars)

Horror (3 of 5)
(None finished in September)

Fiction (Post 1900) (5 of 10)
6. Mai Zetterling - Night Games (3 stars)
7. Nevil Shute - A Town Like Alice (5 stars)

SciFi (2 of 5)
None completed in September.

Spies / Thriller / War (4 of 10)
8. John P. Marquand - Last Laugh, Mr. Moto (3 stars)
9. Sax Rohmer - The Return of Dr. Fu-Manchu (3 stars) 

Non-Fiction (1 of 5)
None completed in September.

Top Three books of September

1. Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens.

















"Back during my high school days, and I shudder to think it was 50 years ago, I read The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens and I recall enjoying it very much. However such is my memory I may be wrong. ;0) Anyway, it took me that long to try another book by Dickens. Over the past couple of years I've been exploring the Classics more and in July, decided to try Nicholas Nickleby. I had an old book of this story. Not sure when it was published but the illustrations by W.H.C. Groome lead me to believe it was published in 1907.
Anyway, enough administrative details, what about the story? Simply put, I loved it. Dickens' writing style is so accessible and entertaining. He creates wonderful characters who you find yourself becoming very invested in. The story starts off with Nicholas and his mother and sister, Kate, being placed in dire circumstances. Their father has died recently, leaving the family without income. Uncle Ralph, not a nice man, sends Nicholas off to be a teacher at a boys school in Yorkshire and then provides poor lodgings for Kate and her mother, also getting Kate a job as a dressmaker. In both instances, both Nicholas and Kate are treated horribly. Things look so very grim. Nicholas finds the treatment of the boys at the school to be abominable, especially that of Smike, a boy or more rather a young man, who has been at the school for years and is the special punching bag of Squeers and his wife. Nicholas finally can take it anymore and after thrashing Squeers leaves with Smike to return to London.
This is the barest introduction to Nicholas Nickleby, so much more is to happen. You meet such wonderful characters as Newman Noggs, hard worked clerk for Ralph Nickleby, who does everything in his power to help the family, Vincent Crummles, leader of a roving band of actors, who takes in Nicholas and Smike, the Cheeryble brothers who provide so much generous assistance to the Nickleby family, even Miss La Creevy, the lovely lady who is such a good friend. And then the villains, the Squeers, Ralph Nickleby, Mulberry Hawk, who wants to abuse Kate, etc.
Getting to know these characters as the story develops makes it such fascinating reading. Wanting to find out how everything will resolve makes you turn page after page. It's a very long story but it doesn't seem so. I won't say how everything turns out. There are so many varied possibilities. Ultimately I was so satisfied. Dickens is a great writer and story teller. I will have to now try another of his books, and I'll ensure it doesn't take me 50 years to try another. (5 stars)"


2. Nevil Shute by A Town Like Alice.













"As Joe says and most Queenslanders say throughout this book, 'Oh my word!'. What a great book A Town Like Alice by English author Nevil Shute is. Shute is one of my favourite authors. I've enjoyed so many of his books and I will keep searching for others of his stories.
A Town Like Alice (which I've always wanted to name A Town Called Alice; I know now why the title as it is) is the story of Jean Paget, a young English woman, whose journey carries her from Malaysia in WWII, back to England and on to Australia. She is a normal girl, who finds herself in unique situations and finds a strength of character common to the heroes and heroines who people Shute's novels. Shute has said this story is based on a true story of a Dutch woman who kept many women prisoners of the Japanese alive with her efforts. In Shute's story, the Japanese invade Malaysia and capture a group of English women and their children. Not wanting to have anything to do with them, the women begin a march around Malaysia, from Japanese camp to camp, suffering privations. Jean, unmarried, becomes a rational, smart leader of the group.
They are helped by an Australian prisoner, Joe, who risks his life to provide food and medicine to the women. After the war, Jean returns to England and discovers she has inherited a fair bit of money. The story teller, her solicitor Noel, helps her sort out this inheritance, which Jean wants to use to help the Malaysian village that kept the women safe.
She also decides to go to Australia to find out more about Joe, where he was from and when she arrives decides to use her money once again to help the town he was from, to make it 'a town like Alice'.
I don't want to discuss the plot much more as it is a book that needs to be enjoyed and savoured. I love the characters, I love the spirit of nation building, the positiveness of the people. There are outstanding events that take place in this story, but they are told in such a gentle, matter of fact way that it makes them even more impressive. There are many highlights for me. I especially enjoyed discovering how the Australian outback radio communication system worked and how much of a key it was to saving a lost man. The story reminds me of The Far Country, another story that features Australia. Shute is a great author that should be explored. (5 stars)"


3. C.S. Forester by The African Queen.

















"The African Queen by C.S. Forester might be better known for the movie based on this excellent book. I've seen this movie, starring Kate Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart many times and I'm glad to finally have finally sat down to enjoy the book.
The book was originally published in 1935 and is set during the First World War in Central Africa. I've read a fair bit about WWI but generally it's been focused on the European theater. It was interesting to read a book set in this location. Rose Sayer and her brother Samuel have been many years in Tanzania, her brother a missionary and she his assistant and house keeper. The war has come to home as they are located in German South Africa and their workers and their goods have been taken by the German Army. This has broken her brother and Kate is now on her own. She joins Charlie Allnutt, a Cockney sailor who plies the Ulanga river for a Belgian mine. Allnutt is also on his own and he allows Kate to take control and agrees to head downriver to try and sink a German cruiser that plies the Lake, hindering British efforts to push the Germans out of Africa.
There are many excellent features to this story; the journey and all its trials and tribulations, the growing of Kate as a person, one who had been under the thumb of her family and brother for the first 30+ years of her life; the budding relationship between Allnutt and Kate, etc. It's a fascinating story, made more interesting because it basically features two people in close quarters. The adventure is tense, their ingenuity at solving their issues as the sail downriver.
There are key differences to the movie, especially the ending, but the book is every bit as interesting and entertaining. The development of the characters and the challenges they face and work together to resolve make it all the more interesting. I've enjoyed so many of Forester's books; he writes such varied stories, the Hornblower tales, interesting mysteries, excellent war stories and of course, this. (5 stars)"


So there you go. Three months to go now. I'll continue with my future reading threads in the next couple of days and then get back to my other ideas that have been neglected a bit in the past couple of weeks. Have a great week!
Related Posts with Thumbnails