Thursday, March 23, 2023

MARCH:- Canadian Author

 

Rosemary: A Better Man by Louise Penny 

Louise Penny is a very successful Canadian author of mystery novels set in the province of Quebec and centered on the work of Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, head of the homicide squad. There are now 19 books in the series, the most recent published in 2022.

A Better Man is book number 15. Gamache is returning to work albeit having been demoted, after a previous serious incident, but finds that his son-in-law is now his ‘boss’

Catastrophic spring flooding, blistering attacks in the media and a mysterious disappearance of a young pregnant woman greet him on his return.

While there are continuing characters from previous books in the series, but as a first-time reader you are given enough insight into their lives in the town of Three Pines to feel comfortable and understand their quirks and characteristics.

Rosemary enjoyed the murder investigation and all the other little side stories of the various characters in the village.

 

Connie: Louise Penny: The Nature of the Beast  (2015)


The novel is number 11 in the series and revolves around a young boy Laurent, who is known to tell lies and exaggerate about what he has seen in the woods. He tries to explain that while riding in the forest he found a huge gun with a monster on it. No-one believes him, until 3 days later when he is found dead, maybe murdered, on the side of the road. Inspector Gamache leads the investigation.

Connie found the writing very confusing, many characters and details in the plot. She also found the story slow to eventuate.

 

Bev: The Cruellest Month by Louise Penny


This is the third book in the series. In this village of eccentric characters, a woman dies at a séance in the creepy, deserted mansion on the hill and the death is a murder. All the attendees are from the village except the woman who led the séance, so the murderer is among them. Inspector Gamache leads the investigation while also battling with other police trying to bring him down.

Bev found it hard to follow with the French names and the slow build up waiting for something to  happen. She admitted she probably wouldn’t read another by the author.

 

Lesley: The Hangman by Louise Penny


This book is also set in Three Pines, and the investigation led by the wise and worldly Inspector Gamache. A jogger finds  the body of a well-dressed man hanging from a tree. It looks like suicide, but things don’t add up. Inspector Gamache solves the mystery.

This is a stand-alone novella written as part of Goodreads Canada, a literacy programme aimed at adults who are ‘emerging readers’. The plot is there, all the lies, and the same characters but the writing is not as complex as her usual novels.

 

Judy: The Unfinished Child by Theresa Shea


Although born in the USA, the author has lived most of her life in Montreal, Canada.

The title are the words that were used to describe Down Syndrome children in the 1940s and the book looks at how attitudes to these children have changed.

In the 1947, Margaret gives birth to a Down Syndrome child. She and her husband are pressured into sending her to a government institution where she is all but forgotten by the family.

In the present times, Elizabeth and Marie have been friends since childhood.

Elizabeth has never been able to conceive despite years of fertility treatment. Marie already a mother of 2, finds herself unexpectedly pregnant at thirty-nine and feeling very guilty regarding her best friend.

Marie’s dilemma is further complicated when she becomes convinced that something is wrong with her baby. Tests are available now to screen for all sorts of conditions. The results could mean that she and her husband have a very difficult decision to make.

There’s an unexpected twist at the end, which then ties elements of the women’s stories together.

At times, a very difficult book to read, but a valuable overview of the changing attitudes and treatment of these children.

 

Kris: What Strange Paradise by Omar El Akkad


The author, although born in Egypt, raised in Qatar, eventually moved with his family to Canada.

A rickety boat, carrying too many refugees sinks before the migrants can reach a small Greek island. The bodies wash up on the beach and only a nine-year-old boy survives.

He manages to escape into the forest where a teenage girl helps him escape.

Kris really enjoyed the book. Although it is set in alternating chapters “Before” and “After” she thought it still flowed very well.

The sea-voyage of these desperate people was engrossing and raw. Those on the boat are risking everything for a better life, while the people who run these boats care little for their welfare.

 

Pamela: Fifteen Dogs written by Andre Alexis (2015)


These 15 dogs can suddenly talk given human intelligence and consciousness by the gods  Apollo and Hermes. They watch on to see what will happen. The dogs  are a mixture of breeds and sexes. As the pack evolves, they turn on each other as they struggle for power.

By page 29, only 9 dogs were still alive. Following a particularly horrific killing, Pamela stopped reading!

 

Sheila: American War by Omar El Akkad (2015)


The novel is set in the near future in the USA in a country ravaged by climate change and disease at plague proportions. A Second Civil War has broken out over the use of fossil fuels and families are forced to relocate.

Sheila thought that it was very well written, but couldn’t cope with the subject matter, so didn’t finish the book.

 

Judy De la T:  The Lightkeeper’s Daughters by Jean E  Pendziwol


Judy loved this book and couldn’t put it down.

Elizabeth, living in a nursing home, is elderly, her eyesight is failing but her mind is still sharp.

Morgan, a delinquent teen meets Elizabeth because of her rebellious behaviour. She begins to read to Elizabeth from old journals, recently found in a wrecked ship, and written by her father. Mr Livingstone was the lightkeeper for the Porphyry Light Station and it is here that the family lived, loved, worked and kept secrets for so many years.

As each journal entry is read, more is revealed about Elizabeth and her twin sister Emily. As Elizabeth learns more about Morgan an unexpected twist is revealed.

The stories were riveting. Such a beautiful book.

 

Jo: Alone in the Wild: A Rockton Novel by Kelley Armstrong 


This is the author’s fifth book in this series of fantasy stories set in the small town of Rockton in the Yukon. It is an off-grid sanctuary looking for those who want to disappear.

A young holidaying detective hears a baby crying in the woods. On investigation she finds a woman shot dead in the snow. Clutched to her chest is a newborn, dehydrated but alive.

Although minors are not allowed in Rockton, a couple agree to look after the baby.

Investigation proves that the dead woman is not the baby’s mother which complicates the investigation.

Jo thought it was a good read.

 

Joan: The Stone Angel by Margaret Laurence (1964)


This book is one of the author’s best-known novels. It is narrated by 90-year-old fiercely proud Hagar Shipely who reflects/alternates between past and present recollections of her life. Well written but dismal.

 

    All My Puny Sorrows by Miriam Toews (2015)


The novel is based on a vey difficult relationship between 2 sisters. One is a talented concert pianist suffering from deep depression who only wants to suicide, and her sister trying to constantly save her. Depressing.

 

    A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry (1997)


This fictional book is mainly centred in the streets of Bombay in the mid 1970s, a time of trouble with State Emergencies and the era of Indira Ghandi.

Centred around 4 unlikely characters, 2 tailors, a student and a widowed, beautiful woman, and their everyday reality of balancing hope and despair.

This could be a very depressing novel if not for the humour and compassion the author brings to every chapter. Brilliant book, even though 600 pages.

 

Julia: Washington Black by Esi Edugyan


George Washington is an 11-year-old field slave on a Barbados sugar plantation. He is terrified when he is chosen as the manservant of his master’s brother.  However Christopher Wilde turns out to be a naturalist, explorer, inventor and abolitionist. Even though they come from different worlds, a mutual respect develops between them.

This all changed when a man is killed, and a bounty is placed on Washington’s head and they flee together.

 

Val: Warlight by Michael Ondaatjie


During World War 2, London was in a black out during the Blitz. 

Nathaniel is now 28 years old, living Suffolk with his greyhound. He remembers back to life in London after the war. His parents moved to Singapore leaving Nathaniel and his sister, at boarding school, but in the care of a family friend. They suspected he may have been a criminal as too some of his eccentric friends.

Later he finds his mother’s trunk and learns more about her mysterious life.

Val thought it a very unusual book, and really enjoyed his style of writing.

 

Rosemary W: Anil’s Ghost by Michael Ondaatjie


The novel’s protagonist is a forensic pathologist who returns to Sri Lanka after 15 years away. She has come home to identify people missing after the civil war. The author writes about the times and the horrors of war.

There is one skeleton that the story revolves around and its eventual identity .

Rosemary said it was not an easy read, but an amazing book. She couldn’t speak highly enough of it. Although not a page turner, you need to take time to ponder the writing. One of the difficulties she found was the Sri Lankan people’s and place names.

 

Judy A: The Break by Katherine Vermette


The story is set among the Métsi community in the suburb of North End in Winnipeg. The Métsi are one of the 3 major Indigenous peoples recognised by the Canadian Constitution.

The Break gets its name from a stretch of land between two rows of houses outside of the home of Stella, a young Métsi mother. She is witness to a violent assault that occurs late one night on The Break.

The narrative shifts constantly between people who are connected directly and indirectly with the 13year old victim.

Judy said she warmed to the intergenerational interconnections between the extended Métsi

family of the victim, but it wasn’t enough to overcome the depressive aspects of lives centred on crime and drug taking which left her with a feeling of ambivalence about this book.

The writing was beautiful but the story was depressing.

 

 

Thursday, March 2, 2023

February: Mountains and Deserts.

Judy A: Dune by Frank Herbert

This book was published 57 years ago and remains the world’s best selling science fiction book. It’s a sweeping, epic saga of political, religious and familial intrigue and its Judy’s favourite book of all time.

The plot of Dune is almost wholly set on the desert planet of Arrakis (also referred to as Dune), an arid wasteland where water is so scarce that men must wear stillsuits which recycle human moisture for further consumption. The source of the galaxy’s interest in the planet is Melange, a spice which bestows upon one longevity and prescient powers. Everything on the planet is permeated with the spice, the air, the sand, the food. Everybody on the planet is hopelessly addicted to the spice, their only hope for survival being their continued intake of the spice.

The first third of the book is where Part 1 of the latest Dune movie ends. Part 2 is being released at the end of the year.

 

Pat: Two Steps Forward by Anne Buist and Graeme Simion

Two very different characters meet on the Camino, a 2000 kilometre walk from France to  Santiago in Spain. Zoe is an artist from California who is struggling to come to terms with the death of her husband. Martin is an engineer from Yorkshire who has been through a messy divorce. For both it is a spiritual and physical journey. The book is a mature and romantic comedy.

 

Also read by Pat:The Giver of Stars by Jo Jo Moyess

Based on the true story of 5 women, living in the mountains of Kentucky during the Depression. They became travelling librarians, delivering books on horseback, to people in the mountains. Heart-warming.

 

Tam: The Light Between the Oceans by M L Stedman

A lighthouse keeper and his wife, living on an isolated island, face a mountainous moral dilemma when they find a baby and a dead man in a boat washed ashore. Keeping the baby will affect their lives and that of others.

 

Julia: Blue Mountains in New South Wales

Information in the text covered topics such as Climate, Etymology, Geography, Aboriginal Inhabitants and Colonial History.

 

Bev: Two at Daly Waters by Elisabeth George  (published in 1946)

The book is a biography of an English woman who lived in outback Northern Territory in the 1930s and 40s. Daly Waters is 400 miles south of Darwin on the track to Alice Springs.

The young couple arrive in Daly Waters to open a store but first they had to build their house. They lived among the local aboriginals who hadn’t seen many white people before.

The book is the story of their survival, not just the harsh environment, but the changing seasons and the loneliness and isolation. As they lived in the area for many years, the book becomes an historical account of the changes in the outback.

 

Prue: Australia’s Great Western Deserts. The Land - The People - The Explorers by Simon Nevill 

This large format hardback book full of many stunning photographs was published by National Geographic. Each of the 6 deserts are featured as well as information about their geographic features, desert communities, plant life, historical expeditions and the desert people.

The author has spent much of his life photographing the Australian Western Desert region preferring to travel alone. “Solitude is his goal”.

Prue thoroughly enjoyed all aspects of this magnificent book.

 

Rosemary S:  Desert Flower by Waris Dirie

The book recounts the harrowing life of the author who was born in Somalia, one of 12 children and from a family of camel herders. After suffering unspeakable abuses as a child, she runs away to  Mogadishu and eventually gets to London. Her life changes dramatically when she is discovered by a photographer and quickly becomes an international model. She uses her position to speak out about female circumcision and for the rest of her life, she continues this humanitarian work and advocate for women’s rights.

This memoir is fast paced, easy to read and explores the vast cultural differences between a Western international supermodel and a Somali desert nomad.

 

Judy J: Slow Journey South - Walking to Africa – a year in footsteps by Paula Constant

Paula and her husband are living the idyllic life in Broome, waiting to decide on the next big journey. Paula has the desire to cross the Sahara Desert. Various ideas are discarded as impossible or too expensive. Eventually deciding on completing the journey with camels, there are many side stories which lead up to their dream.

These stories, include a trial run with camels in Morocco, living in London, walking across France and Spain and into Morocco to the edge of the Sahara Desert. Eventually Paula completes this momentous feat, but much of this is told in the second book called Sahara!

 

Kris: Into Thin Air (a personal account of the Mt. Everest disaster) by Jon Krakauer

The author is a journalist and part-time climber. The opportunity arose to climb Everest with a guided group and to write an article for a magazine. This excited him. The story would be about the increasing commercialism on the mountain.

The dangers and excitement of climbing are graphically explained with Kris describing the book as ‘very difficult to put down’. Unfortunately, the commercialization of the mountain has led to many deaths including the day when the author eventually reached the summit. One must wonder why people sign themselves up for this kind of challenge. The book had a great impact on Kris.

 

Pamela: Taxi to Tobruk by René Harvard

In 1942 English and French soldiers were assigned to  Rommel troops with a mission of crossing 500 miles of enemy patrolled desert to blow up Rommel's petrol dumps in Tobruk.
 Led by a British officer, they set off in five Dodge trucks. The mission is accomplished, but casualties are heavy. On the return trip four of the Frenchmen must abandon their crippled truck in the desert.
They succeed in capturing a patrolling German half-track, with its sole surviving occupant - a German captain. But the four Frenchmen must now depend on the German's superior knowledge of the desert for them to survive. They begin act as people rather than soldiers.

The characters are very well drawn, the story is short but exciting and well written. The title is sarcastic as it is anything but a taxi ride.

 

 

Val: The Third Pole by Mark Synnott

The title refers to Mt Everest. The British had been beaten to the North and South Poles and so for prestige’s sake, needed to be first to climb Mt Everest.

 In 1924 George Mallory and Sandy Irvine, 2  experienced climbers were chosen to climb the southern side dealing with the Chinese Tibetan Association. They were last seen 2000 feet shy of the summit. Mannery’s body was found in 1999 but Irvine has never been found.

In 2019 the author decided to try to find out what had happened. He summited but was disappointed that he didn’t find the body or prove various theories about what had happened to them.

Val described it as a very interesting book, particularly how many aspects of climbing have changed, especially now that it is so commercialized.

 

Jocelyn: The Piano Tuner by Daniel Mason

Jocelyn loved this book which has recently been republished as well as been made into a film and opera!

Set in 1886  where the mountains and jungles of Burma are a huge character of their own.

A peaceful piano tuner in London is asked to go to Burma to tune a grand piano belonging to the Military Doctor there. This is necessary as he seems to be the only officer capable of making peace with the princes of the Shan States of Upper Burma.

A richly sensuous story of adventure, discovery and the way we confront our most deeply held fears and desires.

Jocelyn, ‘the mountains and jungles of Burma are wonderful’.

 

Rosemary: Tracks by Robyn Davidson

Rosemary thought that most would be familiar with the story of the young woman’s odyssey through the deserts of Australia, with only her dog and four camels.

There has been recent interest in the story with a movie and the 40th anniversary of the trek. Not only was Robyn Davidson an early feminist but she had also lived with Salman Rushdie.

Rosemary thoroughly recommended the book.

 

Joan: Seven Pillars of Wisdom by Thomas Edward Lawrance

Published in 1926, Seven Pillars of Wisdom is the autobiographical account of the experiences of British Army Colonel T. E. Lawrence while serving as a military advisor to Bedouin forces during the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire of 1916 to 1918.

The young Englishman, more interested in archaeology, enlisted in the army. He spoke Arabic, was a crack shot and horseman. He became a liaison officer with the Arabs and taught the Bedouin Army hit and run tactics.

The book is a war diary, travelogue, history and a story of immersion.

Joan described it as an amazing book, difficult in parts but well worth persevering with the 700 pages.

Also read by Joan: Desert Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Gertrude Bell

Turning away from the privileged world of the "eminent Victorians," Gertrude Bell (1868—1926) explored, mapped, and excavated the world of the Arabs. 

 

Jo: Australia’s Mountain and Rock Formation by Frank Gibson

This fascinating book described how most of Australia’s mountains were formed.

For example, Mt Kosciusko is 2228 metres above sea level, and part of the Great Dividing Range. It was formed by geologic uplift when the tectonic plates of the Earth's crust converge together, causing the crust to move upward to form a mountain or mountain range. This would have begun millions of years ago.

 

Diann: Snowy Mountains Daughter by Alissa Callen

This book is a warm Australian rural romance set in the Snowy Mountains.

Diann loved the story and enjoyed it on many levels. The ups and downs of the main characters added interest as did a dog named Bundy.

Diann’s comment was that it’s a good read and the country characters seemed real.

Also read by Diann: Belle of the Desert by Alan Gold

A grand, fictional, historic novel about one of the most influential women of the 20th century, Gertrude Margaret Lowthian Bell (1868-1926)

 

Connie: Climbing Day by Dan Richards

This is the biography of the author’s great-great-aunt, Dorothy Pilley, one of the first climbers in Great Britain. With her husband I.A. Richards she had published her memoir in 1935. When the author discovers this, he begins to travel and climb in Europe using the book as a guide. His book becomes a biography  of this pioneering mountaineer. 

Connie says she didn’t really enjoy it and it made her wonder why people climb mountains.

 

Ed: Call of the Outback: The Remarkable Story of Ernestine Hill, Nomad, Adventurer and Trailblazer by Marianne van Velzen

Throughout the 1930s Ernestine’s hugely popular stories about Australia’s remotest regions appeared in newspapers and journals around the country.

She travelled by truck, camels and boats and lived a very colourful life. 

Unfortunately, there was not much mention of deserts.



March: This month we will be reading Canadian authors.