Friday, April 26, 2019

more april 2019 books…

Red Bones (Ann Cleeves): This is the third of my ‘Shetland’ books (I’ve just ordered my fourth!) and I just love them. I loved the television series (especially Douglas Henshall’s Perez character) and the books echo the same ‘feel’ of island life and the lives of it communities (albeit with the occasional murder thrown in). Once again, Cleeves comes across as a talented and assured storyteller. An elegant ‘plot’ involving archaeological digs and mysterious human remains in a location where the daily ‘rhythm of life’ affords time for thinking and reflection. Some might regard me reading the ‘Shetland’ novels as escapism… and I think that, in many ways, they might be right… but I’m very happy to make the journey! Excellent.
To Throw Away Unopened (Viv Albertine): I was vaguely familiar with the punk band “The Slits” and, by association, knew that Viv Albertine had been a guitarist in the band. But that was about it. Then, about a month ago, my great mate Si Smith messaged me to say that Albertine was appearing somewhere in Bristol to launch her second book. He and his wife Sue had heard her talk at a similar recent event in Leeds and had been duly impressed… and thought I might like to hear her too. So I attended the book launch at Waterstone’s (I bought the last concessionary ticket!)(but I bought the book from our lovely local Storysmith Books!)… and found her story absolutely fascinating. From a poor, working-class background and largely brought up by her strong-willed mother (whom she worshipped), this profoundly feminist book is a breathtakingly honest, uncompromising (and frequently very funny) memoir about family (including a startling account of Albertine and her sister, both in their early fifties, literally fighting next to their 93 year-old mother, who lay dying!), human dysfunctionality, divorce, loneliness and much more. After her ‘colourful’ life working in music and film, it wasn’t until Albertine was 60 (in 2014) that she had her first book published… and revealed her to be a really wonderful writer.
The Salt Path (Raynor Winn): This is a remarkable true story and a very special book. In 2013, in the space of a week, Raynor Winn and her husband Moth (aged 50 and 53 respectively and married for 32 years) lost their farmhouse home and their livelihood… and Moth was diagnosed with a rare and incurable degenerative brain disease. They were utterly broke and broken… and homeless. As they hid under the stairs from bailiffs, Winn spotted an old book she’d read 30 years before, about a man who walked the South West Coastal Path with his dog… and, then and there, she resolved that THAT was what they were going to do! This is their story of their experiences of walking the 630 miles (which they split over two summers) from Minehead to Poole. A truly inspirational, humbling (and frequently very funny) book about a husband+wife’s determination to drag themselves from the depths of despair to live ‘wild and free’ on a pittance and, in doing so, came to discover a new liberating part of themselves. Winn is an exceptional writer and her book is a testament to the power of the human spirit. I highly recommend it!
Rich People Problems (Kevin Kwan): I read ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ a couple of months ago and this is the third book in the trilogy… and, somewhat typically, I haven’t read the second! Reading it immediately after a book featuring homelessness (‘The Salt Path’) and at a time when Climate Change is so much in the news (Extinction Rebellion, Greta Thunberg etc) made me feel quite ‘sick’. This novel is almost obscene in terms of privilege, jealousy, opulent lifestyles, ridiculous wealth (you only ‘count’ if you’re a billionaire - millionaires are so ‘yesterday’!), flaunting money and wanting even more. But, once again, I freely admit that I found this 550 page book extremely readable and very entertaining! Apparently, there’s also a ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ film… but I’m not interested in seeing it! The perfect summer holiday read perhaps?
Eats, Shoots and Leaves (Lynne Truss): This is a wonderfully-informative, well-researched, surprisingly readable and VERY funny book about punctuation (really!)… and quite beautifully written (you can you imagine publishing a book on this subject will have meant her spending painstaking hours checking to ensure that everything was ‘correct’!). Her motto is “sticklers unite” – or it should be! One passage which made me laugh out loud was when she referred to 15th century Italian printer (who first used colon or full stops to end sentences) in the following manner: “I will happily admit I hadn’t heard of him until a year ago, but am now absolutely kicking myself that I never volunteered to have his babies”. A very lovely book.

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