-
Join 361 other subscribers
Categories
Tags
- ali smith
- alsace
- antoine laurain
- art
- australia
- australian fiction
- australian outback
- book-review
- book-reviews
- Booker long list
- booker prize
- booker prize winner
- booker winner
- books
- Brooklyn
- Budhist
- Colm Toibin
- cooking
- cornwall
- detective strike cormoran
- elena ferrante
- Enniscorthy
- faber
- fiction
- gilhead
- Graeme Macrae Burnet
- great irish writing
- history
- horse racing
- how to write well
- Humour
- inspector gorski
- Irish history
- irish writers
- irish writing
- japan
- jk rowling
- john le carre
- joseph o'connor
- laurent binet
- lockdown reading
- london
- love story
- maclehose press
- Man Booker long list
- Man Booker short list
- Michael Connelly
- Miguel Bonnefoy
- naples
- nazi
- painting
- paris
- pascal garnier
- patrick modiano
- psycho-intellectual
- psychology
- recipes
- reviews
- robert galbraith
- romance
- sebastian barry
- st louis
- thriller
- tim winton
- travel
- troubled blood
- unbound
- van gogh
- vegetarian
- Venezuela
- whodunnit
- winter
- world war 2
- writing
- Yuval Noah Harari
-
Recent Posts
Category Archives: Biography
Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann (Vintage)
“In April, millions of tiny flowers spread over the blackjack hills and vast prairies in the Osage territory of Oklahoma“. THE opening paragraphs are an exemplar set up for any work of fiction/faction/reportage. The film version is slated for 2023 … Continue reading
Spring Cannot Be Cancelled by David Hockney with Martin Gayford (Thames and Hudson)
“I have known David Hockney for a quarter of a century now…” WHEN you look at the fabulous new paintings from David Hockney in a Normandy farmhouse, there is often a tiny detail – a ladder, a bird, a van, … Continue reading
Silverview by John Le Carre (Penguin/Viking)
“At ten o’clock of a rainswept morning in London’s West End, a young woman in a baggy anorak, a wooden scarf pulled up around her head, strode resolutely into the storm that was roaring down South Audley street”. THE imagery … Continue reading
Posted in Biography
Leave a comment
Case Study by Graeme Macrae Burnet (Saraband)
“Before the end of 2019, I received an email from a Mr Martin Grey of Clacton-on-Sea.” Graeme Macrae Burnet’s published books split into two – on the one hand we have the quasi French detecto entertainments of M. Gorski, here … Continue reading
Posted in Biography
Tagged Graeme Macrae Burnet, primrose hill, psychology, swinging sixties
Leave a comment
The Sleeping Car Murders by Sebastien Japrisot (Gallic)
IN translation we get a cottage garden style of English not the sprawling, homogenizing white sauce of the ruined mansions of quasi English language. The cathedral once constructed by Dickens is reduced to a semi in suburbia, a bungalow on … Continue reading
Posted in Biography
Leave a comment
Bleak House by Charles Dickens, part three (Penguin)
BY page 593 this gargantuan torture wheel of a plot is starting to turn. The perimeter is on the horizon. We have a literary variation on a Swiss watch with all the little interlocking wheels starting to spin. Beyond the … Continue reading
Bleak House by Charles Dickens (part two) Penguin
IN the hands of a more radical director than the BBC employ, say someone Asian, Bleak House might have been less boisterous and bleaker still. Grandpa Smallweed, Guppy and Tulkinghorn might be even more mendacious, the latent sexuality as headed … Continue reading
Posted in Biography
Leave a comment
Bleak House by Charles Dickens (Penguin) part one
“LONDON. Michaelmas Term lately over, and the Lord Chancellor sitting in Lincoln’s Inn Hall. Implacable November weather.” EVEN in the opening lines above, the style is strikingly modern, almost casual, just taking aim as it were, Hemingway might have approved. … Continue reading
Posted in Biography
2 Comments
Coming soon…a masterpiece
Been quiet for a while; re-discovering a masterpiece, review coming soon…watch this space…
Posted in Biography
Leave a comment
Summer by Ali Smith (Hamish Hamilton)
SO, we have the younger genius brother from hell, the father’s mistress who is struck dumb. This is the fourth in the quartet (I presume) and like the other volumes the opening salvo takes no prisoners. “As in, so what?” … Continue reading
Posted in 101greatreads, Biography, fiction
Tagged ali smith, hamish hamilton, summer
Leave a comment