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Alison Booth (2) ist ein Alias für Alison L. Booth.

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Slightly didactic and unrealistic, but with an interesting story. The author tried a bit too hard to tie the subplots together in some sort of morality tale. It didn't make me want to read the first book in the trilogy - or the next.
 
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oldblack | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 14, 2022 |
Last year I had the great pleasure of reading Alison Booth’s The Philosopher’s Daughters; thought-provoking historical fiction in a writing style I found captivating. For this reason, I was already inclined to read whatever she published next. That her latest release couples an art mystery with an exploration of the migrant experience, both topics I am particularly drawn to, was just an added bonus.

From the opening lines of The Painting readers are treated to Booth’s trademark evocative literary style:
"Aunt Tabilla was banging about downstairs, rattling crockery and crashing saucepan lids like cymbals, an early morning concerto that only Anika could hear."
Booth has a real knack of drawing out the musicality of the everyday and bringing an artist’s eye to the most mundane aspects of urban living. Continue reading >> https://www.bookloverbookreviews.com/2021/09/the-painting-by-alison-booth-review...
 
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BookloverBookReviews | Sep 20, 2021 |
4.25 Stars. My first experience with Alison Booth’s writing, I was enthralled by The Philosopher’s Daughters literary narrative. The sisters’ free-thinking upbringing cultivates a simmering tension as they embark on their adult lives within an 1890s English society shackled by strict conventions, particularly for women. This tension is enhanced when they separately travel to Australia, and readers see through their inquiring eyes (and suffragist beliefs) the rampant racial discrimination.

The leading women are very well characterised, despite (I think ironically) being referred to by way of the patriarchy in the novel title. Each of the philosopher’s daughters are independent, but they view and respond to the world in distinctly different ways. Harriet’s interpretation is that of a painter (brush strokes, planes of light) while keen pianist Sarah interprets the world through music. Continue reading review >> https://www.bookloverbookreviews.com/2020/04/the-philosophers-daughters-alison-b...
 
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BookloverBookReviews | 1 weitere Rezension | May 4, 2020 |
A couple of years ago I read Alison Booth's previous novel, A Perfect Marriage, which I really enjoyed. I therefore jumped at the chance to read this, her latest book. They are very different though, with this being historical rather than contemporary.

The Philosopher's Daughters begins in London in 1890 and concentrates on Sarah and Harriet, sisters in their early 20s. They're a very progressive pair for the era, indeed the first scenes see Sarah at a Women's Franchise League meeting. Somewhat surprisingly, it's their father who encourages this independence in them. Sarah later travels with her husband to Australia, first to Sydney and then into the outback. When tragedy strikes at home, Harriet decides to follow her sister out there. I think both of them are surprised to find that they adapt to life there quite well.

I liked both of the sisters. I loved that Sarah didn't just bow down to her husband, and I loved that Harriet was determined to be an independent woman. Both showed incredible bravery whilst in Australia too. I can't imagine how hard it must have been to travel so far at that time. Now we have access to so much information about other countries but they must have been travelling into a certain level of the unknown.

It's an atmospheric read with a strong sense of setting. I thought it was fascinating to read about the outback and the Aborigines. They were treated appallingly and yet still managed to be courageous and good.

I liked how the chapter headings were made up of a snippet of the chapter ahead. It meant I spent a bit of time flicking backwards and forwards but it made a change from chapters just being numbered. The ending made me smile too. One for the historical fiction fans, especially if you want to be transported to a remote backdrop.
 
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nicx27 | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 8, 2020 |
A Perfect Marriage is a book that appealed to me straightaway. The cover imagery of a broken rose suggests all in the marriage contained within is not perfect at all.

The book begins with Sally Lachlan on a plane on her way to a conference. Whilst en route she meets Anthony Blake, a fellow scientist and there is an instant connection. This whole thing with Anthony was something I found fascinating to see develop but, despite this being the opening to the book, it's not really the main strand of the story. That belongs to Sally's marriage to Jeff, something she needs to get over before her relationship with Anthony can progress.

The story is divided into sections entitled 'Then' and 'Now'. The reader is thrown back and forth between the two and the 'Then' sections are not in linear order. I loved the way the story of what had happened in the past unfolded and titbits were thrown at me, the reader, to enable me to put it all together like a patchwork quilt. I like being challenged this way, putting the puzzle pieces together to make a whole at the end. That's not to say that any of it was confusing as key events were used as signposts to make it clear which bit of the story was being referred to.

This is not a book with a huge twist. More, it is a slice of life story of a woman looking back at her marriage, or maybe you could call it a psychological drama. I'd call it interesting and I know that that sounds like a bit of a 'meh' way of describing it. But it truly is interesting to read. It's the anatomy of a marriage, a life, a family. It's like being a fly on the wall - something that nosy people like me would love to be!

I found it immensely readable and really liked the author's writing style. I think it showcases the fact that massive plot twists are not necessary when the writing is of good quality and the plotting is tight and clever. I shall look forward to Booth's next book.
 
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nicx27 | Mar 14, 2018 |
A Distant Land is a fast-paced, moving and beautifully-written read. Great plot, characterization, and background in a captivating story of romance, intrigue and adventure.
The novel is set in the early 1970s and follows three main characters, all from the village of Jingera on the south coast of New South Wales. In Sydney, Zidra and Lorna get involved with moratorium marches and ASIO, while Jim, a war correspondent in Cambodia, experiences some unexpected action.
The characters each face moral challenges in a beautifully written story with a satisfying Jingera-based conclusion.
“The enchanting Jingera trilogy concludes with a heart-rending story of love and the callous twists of fate.”
 
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James999 | Mar 30, 2013 |
I loved The Indigo Sky. Two young people—one dispossessed and impoverished, the other wealthy and privileged—are both on a journey they can't control in this moving novel about family, friendship, and personal freedom.
This is the second novel in the Jingera Trilogy (set in the village of Jingera, on the south coast NSW), and again it has a wonderful collection of characters. The characters, plotting and descriptive writing are again brilliant, and the story has a deeply satisfying conclusion.
 
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James999 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 30, 2013 |
“Dazzling debut novel.” The first of Booth’s series of novels is set in 1957 in the village of Jingera, on the south coast, and is story of redemption, the legacy of war, and the ties that hold families together.
It begins with the arrival in town of the Latvian refugee Ilona Talivaldis and her young daughter Zidra. Stillwater Creek is told from their viewpoints as well as those of Cherry Bates the publican’s wife, George Cadwaller the butcher, Jim Cadwaller his son, and Peter Vincent, a local farmer.
Ilona has survived both the horrors of a concentration camp and the trauma of losing her husband. Peter was a fighter pilot during the war and was interned in a PoW camp. Cherry has escaped an unhappy childhood only to find herself in an unhappy marriage. Although she’s found a new love, she is unable to act through fear of the terrifying consequences should the nature of her love become public. But soon she discovers something so horrifying that her own concerns fade into insignificance, and she decides she will have to take matters into her own hands.
The novel would make a great film. The characters, plotting and descriptive writing are brilliant, and the story has a deeply satisfying conclusion.
 
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James999 | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 30, 2013 |
This novels follows on from Stillwater Creek which was a book I thoroughly enjoyed. Indigo Sky, although very readable, was not as interesting as the previous novel with fewer issues being covered. There were resoulutions to some of the dilemmas facing the characters but the novel felt that little bit lack luster in comparison to Stillwater Creek.
 
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vietnambutterfly | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 22, 2011 |
This was just too incredible. Lightweight. Set in small town Australia during the 1950's, it features a closet lesbian relationship, a paedophile, a refugee mother and daughter, the removal of aboriginal children from their parents, a traumatised returned war pilot and also a bush fire. This first time novelist tried to cover too many issues.
 
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HelenBaker | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 24, 2010 |
Set in the 1950s in a small town on the south coast of NSW. Ilona is a survivor of the war in Europe, and has found herself and her daughter, a nice safe place to live. But is all as it seems? People everywhere have secrets, some in the past and some in the present. I really enjoyed this book, and the pacing of the story was very well done.
 
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nellista | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 16, 2010 |
Stillwater Creek explores a small town setting in the 1950s and the intricacies of the people who live there. The setting is strongly grounded in the Australia of the period. The description of the people and their attitudes resonates; and the depiction of the coastal landscape of southern NSW is vivid.

Ilona Talivaldis is a Latvian concentration camp survivor who migrated with her husband to Australia in the early 1950s. Oleskii, her husband, is an accomplished musician but can only find work in a factory in Sydney. He is resentful when Ilona decides to augment their meagre income by teaching music. After Oleskii's death in 1957, Ilona and her young daughter Zidra travel to the remote coastal town of Stillwater Creek, searching for peace and an opportunity to start anew.

But this Australian small town is not quite the utopia it seems.

Zidra finds this new environment daunting. She is embarrassed by her mother's accent and her difference. She responds to taunts about being a “reffo” by hiding her exotic sandwiches in her bloomers so she doesn't look out of place. Zidra is befriended by a local Aboriginal girl, Lorna, who teaches her much about surviving difference in this small town. Zidra is devastated when Lorna is taken from her family by the welfare and sent to the Gudgiegalah Girls’ Home because she is a half-caste. Then there is Bill Bates, the publican, whose wife, Cherry, is having an affair with the apparently straightlaced school mistress, Pat Nesbitt. But Bill is not the affable man he seems. When Cherry discovers his interest in child pornography, she tries to conceal it. George Cadwallader, the local butcher, is a kind hearted man whose wife treats him with contempt. He sublimates his feelings of rejection and disappointment into his shop front window display and time spent alone at night contemplating the stars. His sons, Jim and Andy, are chalk and cheese. Jim is smart boy who could fulfil George's dream of escape through education if he wins a scholarship to a school in the city. Eileen, his wife, is a bitter and twisted woman who thinks education is pointless, and objects to any chance of advancement for Jim over her favoured son, Andy. Jim's observant views of life are sometimes more adult than those of the people around him. He befriends Zidra and becomes her protector. Peter Vincent is a loner, holed up on a nearby farming property since his return from a POW camp in WW2. He is initially drawn to Ilona because of their experiences during the war.

As these disparate lives entwine, a rich and powerful tale unfolds. The blurb compares this with The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society – and there are many similarities. It is ultimately a tale of redemption and hope written with tenderness and sharp insight.
 
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Jawin | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 31, 2009 |
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