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Recent Posts
Category Archives: 101greatreads
Salt Creek by Lucy Treloar (Gallic)
“Mama often talked of this house when I was a child, and of its squirrels with particular fondness.” WE are in the grand manner of the novel as literary artifice, a swell of sentences, characters in the rough, an anchored … Continue reading
Posted in 101greatreads, Biography, fiction
Tagged adelaide, australia, history, immigrants, settlers
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Nagasaki by Eric Faye (Gallic)
“Imagine a man in his fifties disappointed to have reached middle age so quickly…” SCANT as a haiku, we open with all the usual everyday details of life scrubbed out by the obsession. S reads a magazine to which he … Continue reading
Posted in 101greatreads, fiction
Tagged academie francaise grand prix, eric faye, japan, nagasaki, stalking
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Black Sugar by Miguel Bonnefoy (Gallic)
“The dawn light revealed a ship marooned in the canopy of a vast forest”. I IMAGINE a publisher might throw a party for Miguel Bonnefoy’s lesser characters who only get a walk on part in the novels, somewhere Miss Venezuela … Continue reading
Posted in 101greatreads, fiction
Tagged black sugar, captain henry morgan, Miguel Bonnefoy, pirates, south american writing, Venezuela
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Octavio’s Journey by Miguel Bonnefoy (Gallic)
“At the port of La Guaira on 20 August 1908, a ship from Trinidad dropped anchor off the Venezuelan coast, unaware that it was offloading a plague which would trouble the country for half a century.” I abandoned two … Continue reading
Posted in 101greatreads, fiction
Tagged French writing, Miguel Bonnefoy, Octavio's Journey, Venezuela
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The Keeper of Lost things by Ruth Hogan (Two Roads)
“Charles Bramewell Brockley was travelling alone and without a ticket on the 14.42 from London Bridge to Brighton.” There are different strands to this well received tale. It is a Richard and Judy book of the autumn and a Sunday … Continue reading
A short book about painting by Andrew Marr (Quadrille)
“What is painting for?” THE painter Patrick Heron said it takes 20 times longer to explain his paintings than a cursory glance can reveal. Words just don’t do it. At heart this is where Marr is taking us in this … Continue reading
Life of Pi by Yann Martel (Canongate)
“My suffering left me sad and gloomy” THE problem with coming to this book after the film event is that the image of the boy and the tiger marooned on a boat has already passed into popular culture, an indelible, … Continue reading
Posted in 101greatreads, fiction
Tagged booker prize winner, life of pi, philosophy, religious writing, tigers, yann martel
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Dirt Music by Tim Winton (Penguin)
“One night in November, another that had somehow become morning while she sat there, Georgie Jutland looked up to see her pale and furious face reflected in the window.” THE best place to read this might be on the new … Continue reading
Winter by Ali Smith (Hamish Hamilton)
“God was dead, to begin with. Romance was dead. Chivalry was dead.” WHEN, finally, we get everyone into the same room, the intimacy starts to crackle. Ali Smith is at her best when she has people talking to each other. … Continue reading