Showing posts with label Literary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Literary. Show all posts

1/21/2010

Review of The Outlandish Companion (Hardcover)

I didn't read the Outlander series. I devoured it.

Normally, I'd rather be strung up and dunked head first into a vat of cold parritch than be forced to read "romance" novels, but Ms. Gabaldon's books wentstraight to my Celtic heart. I bought used copies in paperback to sharewith friends and hard cover editions for my library--that's a wee bit ofchange, but well worth it.

Before ordering the Companion, I spent timeflipping through a copy at the bookstore--and that might be a good idea ifsome of you aren't sure you want to spend the money on this--personally, Iwas laughing out loud and one lady even asked me "Is it good? What areyou reading?" Grinning, I stuck a copy of Outlander in her hands...andyep, she bought it.

I keep running into Outlandish people everywhere, andit's great. Diana--thank you so much for the many, many hours spent in thepleasurable company of the Fraser clan.

Okay, put up your swords andstop hagglin' over the book.<g> Check it out first and buy it or not.Mine is on order right now....

(PS: I KNEW she had to be a Doctor Whofan! I mean "Fraser Hines/Jamie McCrimmon"? Had to be!)



Click Here to see more reviews about: The Outlandish Companion (Hardcover)

1/14/2010

Review of A Fine Balance (Oprah's Book Club) (Paperback)

I walked by the homeless in the streets while growing up in a city by the sea not unlike the one in this book. I was repulsed by their grimy faces, their missing limbs, their tattered and dirty clothes. Fearful I might catch their poor people diseases if I ventured too close, I would cross the street to avoid them. Sometimes throwing coins into their tin cups from a sterile distance-sometimes missing, and walking away praising my own charity.

Thank you Mr. Mistry for showing me the other side of the story. Thank you for putting into plain and powerful words exactly how unfair life in India is to the poor and lower castes. You have taught me more than any text book could about the injustices that daily occur in India. I hate you for your brutal honesty and for making me feel this way. Or perhaps, like you prophesized in the begining of this book, I am only blaming you for my own insensitivity.

For those of you considering reading this book, here is my warning. Mistry will seduce you with his flowing words and his gripping story. He will make you feel for his characters. He will show you a side of life that millions of people bravely struggle through. And soon you will begin to fear turning the page for fear of what might happend to the characters. And rest assured, when you turn the last page, and look for some solace, you will find none. For all is true. I have seen the Shankars and Ishvars and Oms. Go to any Indian city street corner, and you will too.



Click Here to see more reviews about: A Fine Balance (Oprah's Book Club) (Paperback)

12/02/2009

Review of The Road Home: A Novel (Paperback)

"The Road Home" is one of those books that succeeds in making you look at the world around you with new eyes. It's the story of Lev, a widower who immigrates from an unspecified country in Eastern Europe to the UK in the belief that it will be easy to find well-paying work there and thereby support his mother and daughter back home. Instead he finds that London is both considerably more expensive and less welcoming than he anticipates. Eventually he does find work and start to build some friendships, but it's far from an easy journey for him.

Rose Tremain makes us care about Lev and acutely communicates his loneliness and isolation. Occasionally he does things that we don't like, but he still maintains our sympathy and interest throughout the book. In fact, all of the characters are perfectly realized and feel incredibly real. The first two thirds of "The Road Home" are beautifully written: this is one of those books that you carry around with you so that you can read a bit more whenever you get a chance.It made me think about (and care about) the experiences of immigrants in a new way.

My one criticism of the book is the ending, which worked on one level but felt too contrived and too neat on another. It was also telegraphed well in advance, so that when it did eventually wrap up it felt almost like an anti-climax rather than a culmination of all that had gone before. I loved this book very much, but the final third did not grab me as much as what had gone before. Nevertheless, one of my favorite books this year.



Click Here to see more reviews about: The Road Home: A Novel (Paperback)