Funny Farm by Laurie Zaleski
Funny Farm
The Giver of Stars and Eruption
The Giver of Stars by JoJo Moyes
This book got very good reviews that I find a little baffling.
The story is about the women of Appalachia who went on horseback into remote areas taking books to people with otherwise no access to them. I've read about these determined librarians before and they have my deepest admiration for the difficult and dangerous job they took on, but in this book the story goes on too long and so becomes tedious. Several pages of a drawn out - and repetitive - courtroom scene left me yawning and wanting to get to the end as quickly as possible.
The main characters were mostly likeable if somewhat flat and predictable, either all good or all bad, and a little over-dramatic.
The dialogue tended toward cliches and the occasional inclusion of modern phrasing felt out of place in the 1930's setting. It went on too long and tried to tackle too many issues, but that's only one opinion. Many, many, others love it so don't let my complaints dissuade you.
Much depends on personal taste and as French author Andre Maurois said: "In literature, as in love, we are astonished at what is chosen by others."
Eruption by Michael Crichton and James Patterson
I was in the mood for a novel that was all plot, something to get lost in for a while and not have to think about deeper meanings and I certainly got that in Eruption. It doesn't say any more than the words you find on the page but it surely does keep you turning those pages.
On the island of Hawaii sits the world's largest volcano and it is about to blow. There are people who take the threat seriously and, of course, those who want to cash in and make a spectacle of it. Small eruptions start things rolling as the scientists and the military look for ways to prevent "the big one" or at least limit the damage it will do.
Nothing goes as planned, and then there's more bad news: sitting in the path of the impending lava flow is a cave filled with hundreds of barrels of deadly toxic waste. If the contents are released, humanity will be faced with what could be an extinction level event.
Tense, for sure, and maybe a little unrealistic at times. On the other hand there probably are people who would pull some of the stupid stunts they get up to here, for which they are always very, very sorry a little too late. My one complaint is that they killed off my favourite character, something that happens to me a lot lately in books, movies and tv shows. Why am I always drawn to the characters who won't make it through the story?
It delivers what it promises - a tense few hours of escapism - and along the way you learn a bit about how volcanoes work. Exactly what I was looking for at the time.
The Jane Austen Recipe Book
The Jane Austen Recipe Book by Robert Tuesley Anderson
Past Imperfect
Past Imperfect by Julian Fellowes
The story's narrator, a middle-aged writer of moderate success, is contacted by Damien Baxter, a friend from youth, to help locate his heir. Immensely wealthy, bed-ridden and dying, Damien wants to know if any of his old flames may have had a child by him, someone to whom he can leave all that he's accumulated.
The narrator, who remains unnamed - I will call him N - visits each of the women in their old crowd to learn who has children and when they were born. It seems the outwardly charming Damien had been intimate with a number of them dispite his dislike of most people and their dislike of him. He's a complicated character whose treatment of others kept me from any real sympathy for him even as his condition worsened, though his final act just before dying tempered my opinion somewhat.
N's conversations with Serena, Candida, Dagmar, Joanna, Lucy, and Terry take us back to the 1960's world of debutante balls and high society parents who hold very firm opinions about who their daughters should be befriending. Now, years later, most are settled into lives that, falling short of their youthful dreams, nevertheless provide a certain stability they don't want upended by old secrets coming to light.
Unlike Damien, N developed into a sympathetic character I liked better and better as the book went on. The others we come to know in succession as they talk with N about their shared history - especially one ghastly night they all refer to - and what they've done with their lives since. You don't find out exactly what took place until all their stories finally merge in a climactic scene that forever blows apart this group of friends, though I'm not sure 'friends' is quite the right word for this group.
What kept me going through the first part of the audio book, which I didn't find particularly interesting, was the reading by Richard Morant. His easy-on-the-ears voice, kindly with a lovely English accent, perfectly created the refined, but down-to-earth, world of this story.
I had my doubts in the beginning, but now, having finished it, I wish there was more.
The Candy House
The Candy House by Jennifer Egan
What an unusual and interesting novel.
It's told in interconnecting stories narrated by different characters in different times. I got a bit lost trying to figure out who was talking and how they were connected to the person in the previous chapter, so I made a sort of character map to help keep them all straight. It wasn't pretty with criss-crossing lines and arrows showing who each one was to the other, but it helped me see the overall picture so I could concentrate on the story.
The setting is the near future, when a new development in software enables people to upload their consciousness to an online server, then download it onto a piece of personal hardware called a cube. You could use it to regain lost memories, to re-live your best - or worst - days. Everything you've ever done, said, or thought, the good and the bad, all readily available.
With further development came the opportunity to upload the contents of your cube to a collective consciousness that everyone would have access to. As ominous as that sounds there were some benefits in areas like law enforcement and medicine. No one was required to join the collective, but if you didn't you wouldn't have access to those of others. People in favour of this data sharing were called counters, those opposed, eluders.
The stories, some narrated in the first person, some in the third person, one in the second person "you", and one that's simply a list of text messages, examine how the technology affected different people at different times. It looks at connection and what we give up when we trade privacy for information.
The software program - called Own Your Own Conscious - provides the basis for the story, but the book is much more about the people who designed and used it than it is about the tech itself, and that's what makes this such a compelling story. These characters came to life in a way that made me forget they're words on a page and that none of this really happened.
Once I figured out who was who and where it was going, I loved it.
News From Thrush Green/The Silmarillion
News From Thrush Green by Miss Read
This third book in the lovely Thrush Green series takes us into the schoolroom of the infinitely patient Miss Watson and Miss Fogarty; the welcoming kitchen of kind Winnie Bailey, retired Dr. Bailey's wife; the parsonage of vicar Charles Henstock and his wife, Dimity; and Tulliver's, a house that long sat empty, now being being enlivened again by Phil (Phyllida), a writer of stories, and her young son.
The arrival of an attractive young woman in the village is a topic for much speculation, more so as Phil's husband does not arrive with her. Is she married? Where is this husband she speaks of? Separated? Divorced? Her neighbour, Harold, who becomes her good friend, is particularly interested to know.
The daily doings of gentle people in a small Cotswold village make up the story and create a world that is always comfortable to fall back into. They are a gift I give myself when I grow weary of the world we're living in today.







