torontoc's books in 2011

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torontoc's books in 2011

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1torontoc
Dez. 17, 2010, 11:19 am

Just setting up my thread!

2wookiebender
Dez. 17, 2010, 8:54 pm

Welcome back!

3judylou
Dez. 31, 2010, 12:26 am

Good to see you back!

4torontoc
Jan. 1, 2011, 12:01 pm

Happy New Year!
well- here is my first book-
1. Fludd by Hilary Mantel. I really like Hilary Mantel's writing. Every book that I have read has a different "voice". This slim volume is a satire on the Roman Catholic Church and England in the 1950's. The fictitious village of Fetherhoughton is hysterical. The priest, Father Angwin, has lost his faith but in a good way although he does see devils. The bishop wants him to become more modern. A curate arrives to help the priest but who is he? Wayward nuns, buried saints, and more enliven this story. A good read to start the year.

5torontoc
Jan. 1, 2011, 10:07 pm

2. The Rehearsal by Eleanor Catton.I just finished this book- hmm- interesting-but puzzling. I have read that it is postmodern. What I do think is that the structure and plot are obscure and the characterizations are right on the mark. That observation is based on 30 years of teaching and seeing everything! Two stories are linked. A music teacher was having a relationship with a student in a girls' high school. First year students at a drama school use this incident as the subject for their year end project. The casual cruelty of the students and the narration of a saxophone teacher tie both stories together. The author certainly gets the insecurities of adolescents. I found the ending a little obscure.

6torontoc
Bearbeitet: Jan. 3, 2011, 9:16 am

3. The Bolter by Frances Osborne-"The Story of Idina Sackville who ran away to become the chief seductrsss of Kenya's scandalous Happy Valley Set". I had to print part of the blurb for this book. It is a lot more lurid than the story told by Idina's great granddaughter, Frances Osborne. Idina's story is about her five husbands and life in Kenya. The rules of the society that she was born into and lived by seem so quaint to observers today. idina's first husband was no saint. preferring to spend his time with other women and really abandon his wife and sons. However, when they divorced just after the first world war, he got the children and Idina went away with her second husband. To escape from a bad marital situation, she found another man. Idina's life was scandalous and sad. The author had access to people and papers that she has used well to relate the story of her great grandmother.( Spoiler!) Both of Idina's sons died during World War II.She barely had time to begin a relationship with them ,after no contact for the majority of their lives. In fact, members of Idina's family had no contact with each other for many years. I did enjoy this biography for the description of an obsolete society

7torontoc
Jan. 5, 2011, 5:38 pm

4. Salmon Fishing in the Yemen by Paul Torday. This first novel is a satire and has nice character studies. The story is about a Sheikh from Yemen who wants to create a salmon river and fly fishing in his country . He asks an agency that connects with the National Centre for Fisheries Excellence and eventually the Prime Minister's office. A scientist, Alfred Jones is really forced to consider this task. He eventually takes it seriously as a result of talking to the Sheikh about belief. The story is told through memos, diary entries and interviews. The novel is about politics, and also the power of faith. Nicely told and entertaining.

8judylou
Jan. 5, 2011, 6:57 pm

I have had that book on the tower for years now. I really should try to read it this year. I have enjoyed others by Torday.

9torontoc
Jan. 8, 2011, 11:25 am

5. Moscow Rules by Daniel Silva. Every once and a while, I need a mystery to read. This one I had started a month ago and just picked up to finish- ( I had a minor tantrum over my disappointment with reading The Lacuna and had to read a mystery-more on that The Lacuna later this week). The author is a good writer-very clear and usually has good plot development in his work. I found that this paricular book's plot was a little weak in that the solution or rescue depended on a character who seemed to come out of the blue at the end of the book. However when I need a mystery, I will continue to read this spy series.

10wookiebender
Jan. 8, 2011, 6:25 pm

Oh dear, I was looking forward to The Lacuna too! I await your comments with bated breath...

11torontoc
Bearbeitet: Jan. 9, 2011, 9:31 am

I think that I would have to say that I enjoyed The Poisonwood Bible much better than The Lacuna.
I have been reading a lot more in the past four years and I think that I have been spoiled. I have noticed that I don't have much patience with narrators who don't have a defined personality. I think that because I have read books with outstanding character development , I look for it in new books.So
6.The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver. This book gives the reader a mini-lesson in the past history of the peoples of Mexico and an overview of some of the most colourful people who lived there- the painters Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo and the exiled Russian Revolutionary Lev Trotsky. Kingsolver puts the reader into the homes of these people. She uses her narrator, Harrison Shepherd, a young man whose Mexican mother took him from the United
States when she left her American husband. Shepherd lived a very hand to mouth existence as his mother went from lover to lover. He really educated himself learning about history from the library of his mother's first protector and cooking from the servants in the kitchen. Eventually he ends up helping Diego Rivera mix plaster for his murals. then cooking for Rivera and Frida Kahlo. When Trotsky and his wife came to live in Mexico, Shepherd become his secretary and a witness to the events that led to Trotsky's assassination. In the second part of the book-Shepherd leaves Mexico, settles in Asheville, North Carolina and becomes a popular novelist.He does have an experience with the Communist hunting Committee of Un-American Activities that changes the course of his life again. So why was I dissatisfied with this book? It did get better in the second half with the introduction of Mrs. Brown, Shepherd's able assistant. I did like the information about the culture of Mexico and the activities of the Trotsky family. Shepherd's mother was a great character. But - and here is the but. I found that the personality of the narrator, Shepherd lacking in perception and foresight. The reader can forgive this in some cases but Shepherd was a real cipher to me. He was too colourless to be the focus until the last pages of the novel. The power of Kingsolver's descriptions of the FBI and the Communist scare of the late 1940' and early 1950's is an important focus of the later half of the book. I was disappointed with this book but can see the aspects that work.

12torontoc
Jan. 10, 2011, 5:31 pm


7. Sweetness in the Belly by Camilla Gibb. I really enjoyed this book.Gibb writes about an unusual young woman. Abandoned after by her wanderlust English parents were killed in Morocco,Lilly was raised as a devout Muslim at the shrine of a Ethiopian saint. Finding herself in Ethiopia as a result of turmoil in Morocco, she becomes part of a family and embraces Ethiopian culture. Eventually she becomes involved with a doctor who sends her out of the country just after the fall of Haile Selassie. The novel switches back and forth from Lilly's story as a nurse in London in the 1980's and 90's and her life in Ethiopia in the 1970's. i learned a great about the politics and culture of Ethiopia and the nature of suffering by the exiles. Gibb had been named one of 21 writers to watch by the jury of the Orange Prize. I have to agree and will be reading more of her work.

13torontoc
Jan. 11, 2011, 6:46 pm

8. The Fahrenheit Twins by Michel Faber. This is an accomplished book of short stories about bizarre people and circumstances, ordinary souls in stressful situations and some violent episodes. I can admire the skill of the stories but not particularly like them.

14torontoc
Bearbeitet: Jan. 13, 2011, 10:15 pm

9. A Dead Man in Deptfordby Anthony Burgess What an amazing book! The dizzying flow of language and the chaotic atmosphere of Elizabethan England provides the background of this novel about the playwright and spy, Christopher Marlowe. Burgess really brings to life the murky plots by the Queen's spy master Walsingham, the theatres and actors,and the messy loves and disputes of Marlowe-no angel himself. Burgess describes a London and Cambridge where arguments about literature, heresy, politics and theology are held in disreputable and filthy taverns and lodgings. This is a masterwork that the reader has to navigate carefully to appreciate the language. Not for everyone I think.

15iansales
Jan. 14, 2011, 6:33 am

#14 That's one of my favourite Burgess novels.

16Aerrin99
Jan. 14, 2011, 8:53 am

That sounds very interesting! I think I'll add it to the wishlist.

17torontoc
Jan. 21, 2011, 4:59 pm

10. Cleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff. I so enjoyed this biography about Cleopatra. The author used many sources to relate the story of Cleopatra's life.Schiff takes care to inform the reader about reliable and unreliable ancient historians. She shows us a woman who was the richest in the Mediterranean area and who was, for the most part, clever and adept politically. Cleopatra's dealings with first Julius Caesar and later Mark Anthony are set out in a way that educates the reader in the realities of a Roman dominated era. However, we see that the city of Alexandria was a major cultural oasis compared with Rome at that time. Schiff provides a convincing argument about the more independent role of women in Egypt compared to the life of Roman women. Where there are gaps in our knowledge of the time, Schiff acknowledges the lack of information and provides a number of possibilities. An excellent read!

18Aerrin99
Jan. 22, 2011, 9:28 am

I've been hearing such good things about this book that I finally ordered it last month for our library's popular reading collection (we rent about 200 books that cycle and maintain them near the door of our academic library for browsing). I hope my students and faculty enjoy it as much as you did!

19torontoc
Jan. 23, 2011, 11:53 am

I really liked the way Schiff wrote about her sources as well.
11.Peeling the Onion a memoir by Gunter Grass.
I gather that this memoir of Grass's early life from childhood to his early writing days in the 1950's provoked some controversy. Grass's prose seems to blend his life with some of the incidents in his novels. He pleads bad memory as he describes some of the events that shaped his growth. Grass was born in Danzig and did join the Waffen-SS as a teenager. His experiences as a soldier at the end of the war and his internment as a POW in an American camp are followed by his work as a stone cutter, and then his life as an art student. I found that the beginning of the book was a little hard to follow as Grass used his experiences as a source for his novels or was it other way round? The later sections of the book work better for me. The last chapters really speed up his description of his life up to the publishing of The Tin Drum. I get the impression that more is to follow. An interesting read. Probably the shocking part for the reader is his disinterest at the end of the war of the facts of the Holocaust. He was being honest about his feelings as a young man and I think that this is what made this book controversial.

20torontoc
Jan. 27, 2011, 9:53 pm

12. Luncheon of the Boating Party by Susan Vreeland. The author has written some outstanding books about artists. I really enjoyed The Forest Lover-about Emily Carr and her first that I read Girl in Hyacinth Blue. This book concentrates on the people and the circumstances behind the creation of Renoir's masterpiece, ( I have seen it in Washington and it is fabulous) Luncheon of the Boating Party. The artist paints 14 distinct personalities who are just finishing lunch at the restaurant La Maison Fournaise. The sitters were all friends and supporters of Renoir. Vreeland uses the voices of many of these people to narrate the chapters in the book. The reader learns about the politics, the role of women and life in the theatre. I found the details of this history very interesting. At first I thought that the dialogue was a little stilted. But as I continued to read,I enjoyed the descriptions of painting. I think that the reader would best have a little knowledge of the history of the Impressionist painters in order to appreciate most of the references to paintings and artists. At the end of the book I realized that I enjoyed it more than I did at the beginning. I do think that Vreeland's dialogues were better in The Forest Lover but I have to say, this novel adds to the reader's knowledge of this very important time in the history of art.

21torontoc
Jan. 31, 2011, 10:33 pm

13. Shah of Shahs by Ryszard Kapuscinski. This slim volume by one of my favourite travel/political writers seems to be very current in light of the events happening in Tunisia and Egypt. Kapuscinski was in Iran just after the revolution and writes about interviews with some Persians, as well as interpreting the history of some selected photographs. He explains the reasons for the Shah's fall and the effect of his regime on the Persians. Kapuscinski presents a primer of the why of revolution and after reading it, I felt that he was describing what is happening today.Sadly he died in 2007. It would have been interesting to hear his opinion on current events.

22wookiebender
Jan. 31, 2011, 10:41 pm

You always read such interesting books!

I read Shah of Shahs last year (or maybe 2009, time does get away from me sometimes...) and thought it was quite fascinating.

23torontoc
Feb. 2, 2011, 9:07 am

Thank you! My best reads occur when I am " curious" about an author or title.

14. You Suck a love story by Christopher Moore. This book about vampires is hilarious. So rarely do I find a book that make me laugh out loud. This one does. Nineteen year old Tommy Flood wakes up to find that his vampire girl friend, Jody has made him one, too. Aside from issues of hunger, and escaping from Tommy's friends who are after him( when they are not stocking the shelves of the Marina Safeway or frozen turkey bowling) the two lovers have to hide from the police. Jody had made a deal with two detectives to leave town. The story of why, as well as the musings of Abby Normal, the teenage minion who is supposed to look after any day activities, and the many chases and close calls make this book fun to read. Recommended for those who like scatterbrain comedy.

24SouthernBluestocking
Feb. 2, 2011, 10:16 am

Oh, I so liked that book- and I'm vaguely remembering a sequel? I read it a year or so ago during a Christopher Moore marathon. (Have you read Fool? It was definitely my favorite.) Glad you enjoyed it!

25torontoc
Feb. 2, 2011, 11:09 am

Really! A sequel? I must look it up. I did read Fool- it was great!

26torontoc
Feb. 2, 2011, 1:07 pm

I just discovered that not only is there a sequel( something about Bloodletting Fiends) I think but there is also a first book-Bite Me. There are no touchstones today!
I have put both books on my wishlists.

27torontoc
Feb. 5, 2011, 8:48 am

15. Sovereign by C.J. Sansom. This is the third in the series of historical mystery novels featuring the lawyer Matthew Shardlake. Matthew goes to the city of York to take part in the " Progress" of King Henry VIII. He is also charged by Archbishop Cranmer to watch over a very important prisoner. The plot revolves around a conspiracy to unseat the King past and present, the true succession to the throne and the events in York during the King's visit. Shardlake avoid attempts on his life and a session in the Tower of London. Sansom writes well about this era and I look forward to reading more in this series.

28wookiebender
Feb. 5, 2011, 7:25 pm

I've only read one Christopher Moore (Lamb) and I keep on wondering why I've never got around to reading others....

And I must get back to Shardlake!

29jfetting
Feb. 6, 2011, 12:37 pm

I have Luncheon of the Boating Party on my TBR pile - I'll have to shift it a bit higher now since it sounds really good. And is the Shah of Shahs author the same guy who wrote Travels with Herodotus?

30torontoc
Feb. 6, 2011, 2:44 pm

Yes! That is the same author. I think that I have almost all of his books.

31torontoc
Bearbeitet: Feb. 9, 2011, 3:47 pm

16. Mordecai: The Life & Times by Charles Foran. Charles Foran has tackled the biography of a very controversial Canadian author- Mordecai Richler. The author is successful in letting the reader understand the background and life of this writer. Richler's traumatic relationship with his mother and his father's relatives as well as his life on St. Urbain St. give him the material for his novels. His life, friends and loves in Spain,. France and London add new layers to his work. Richler started writing novels as a very young man and worked until he got it right. It is interesting to read Foran's comments how some extremely important fiction that helped define new Canadian writing was written in Europe. Richler was protective and loving to his wife, Florence, his children and his close circle of friends. He really supported his family of five children on his writing , be it lucrative films and TV scripts, magazine articles and his novels. His humour and point of view on the Montreal Jewish community, Quebec nationalism and other subjects always got him into trouble. Foran's writes well about Richler's life. He was able to use material from Richler's archives as well as personal papers from Florence Richler. Some of the material was surprising- Foran devotes one chapter to a letter that Richler wrote to his mother. This letter explains why he never spoke to her after 1976. Foran doesn't analyse Richler's novels but does wonder why there has not been any extensive study of his work.( In fact after the biography was released in Canada ,there was a debate in the press about why Richler's works were not really studied in Canadian literature courses in universities). There are issues that future critics will look at- the role of women in Richler's books is probably a major one as well as his satire on various communities-Jewish, Canadian, native peoples and more. This biography made me want to do some rereading of Richler's books. This work is so good,- I enjoyed reading it.

32torontoc
Bearbeitet: Feb. 10, 2011, 9:27 pm

17. A Wall of Light by Edeet Ravel. This novel completes a trilogy written by this Israeli/Canadian writer. The book was a finalist for the Giller Prize sometime in 2005-6. Ravel is a writer of engaging characters. The setting is Israel where each chapter reveals a diary or story of one of three characters- Anna, an actress writing to her married lover in Russia from her new home in Tel Aviv in 1957, Sonya, her daughter writing in the present about her relationship with her brother Kostya, Anna's older son and a duel search for her lover and her father,, and Noah, Kostya's son writing at various stages of his life. The story of Sonya, a deaf mathematics professor gives Ravel an opportunity to describe the complexity of Israeli life. I liked the first two books that she wrote and have one more on my book pile or tower.

33torontoc
Feb. 12, 2011, 9:59 am

18. A Journeyman to Grief by Maureen Jennings. This latest Inspector Murdoch mystery set in 1896 Toronto continues the stories of life and murder at the end of the 19th century. Jennings also make sure that the reader learns of a number of issues of the time- the use of cocaine in " cures" for alcoholism and the interest in the "physiology of fear" by some medical experts. This story concerns two murders committed as revenge. A former slave comes back to Toronto to find those who sold her into slavery thirty-eight years ago. This is a fast paced story that I enjoyed.

19. Annabel by Kathleen Winter.Very few books make me cry at the end This one did. Winter is an amazing writer who uses wonderful descriptive prose. She writes about Jacinta and Treadway, parents of Wayne/Annabel. Their baby is born with the characteristics of male and female. A decision is made to raise this child as a boy. Their neighbour, Thomasina is the only one besides the doctors who know about Wayne's physical condition. Both the women try to help Wayne -who is different in his thoughts and personality from the boys in their isolated town in Labrador. Thomasina did try to call Wayne by her dead daughter's name of Annabel when he was a baby. Treadway wants his child to learn and like the skills that he has used to make a living. As Wayne grows up, there is tension between his parents. Wayne eventually moves away and goes to live in St. Johns, Newfoundland and makes some decisions about identity. The final part of the novel demonstrates the love of Treadway for his child and shows the importance of true friendship and faith in oneself. I think that the book, aside from great writing, has one of the best examples of the love of a father. I was so touched by this book. I know why it was on the shortlist for many literary prizes last fall.

34torontoc
Feb. 12, 2011, 11:53 am

20. The Film Club by David Gilmour. David Gilmour's teenage son was doing so badly in school that he made an interesting deal with him.Jesse could drop out of school, live with him no questions asked about work, if he watched three films a week with his father. This is the story of the time Gilmour and his son watched films ( the list is at the back of the book) and their relationship. The dialogue that the two had with each other reveals growth, understanding and love. A really nice memoir about growing up and a parent's perception.

35torontoc
Bearbeitet: Feb. 14, 2011, 5:06 pm

21.The Book of Spies :an Anthology of Literary Espionage edited by Alan Furst. I like a good spy story.This collection edited by one of my favourite spy authors serves to remind me of some really good novels.The excerpts from books by Somerset Maughm. Eric Ambler, Anthony Burgess Graham Greene and more are very different in style. I now want to reread some books and look at one that I haven't read. (Reread Ashenden by Maugham and read John le Carre and Eric Ambler)

36torontoc
Feb. 14, 2011, 8:49 pm

22.Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska. I reread this book that was originally published in 1925. Yezierska was an immigrant to the United States in the 1890's.She lived with her family on the Lower East Side but left home when she was seventeen. Not willing to live by her family's rules, Yezierska went to night school and later college.She wrote a number of books about immigrant experiences. This book is a thinly disguised story of her life. The first thought that I had after reading this novel was the anger and passion that Yezierska had her heroine express about her role. The beginning of the book does read like a melodrama. The injustice experienced by women is a major theme. Yerierska wanted to live the life of an American and not that of a daughter in the old world. The details of life in the slums of the Lower East side are raw but believable. I read this book because I am leading a discussion of another book about the same era written by a present day author. I found that work while interesting was missing something and seemed too romantic about the Lower East Side life. I decided to read some authors " who were there" to compare. I have read most of Yerierska's short stories. She is a strong and passionate writer.

37torontoc
Feb. 18, 2011, 3:08 pm

23. Dark Fire by C.J. Sansom. This novel is the second in the series featuring the Tudor lawyer Matthew Shardlake. Shardlake is asked by Cromwell to find the "Greek Fire" - a destructive weapon that is needed for a demonstration to King Henry. Shardlake has to sort out a real mess- the alchemist and his brother who promised it to Cromwell have been murdered, and there are a number of people implicated in this search. At the same time Shardlake is defending a young woman who is accused of killing her cousin. She has refused to say anything and could be tortured to death. Needless to say the solution is found amid the problems of Henry's annulment from Anne of Cleves. This series is still interesting and I look forward to the next novel.

38judylou
Feb. 18, 2011, 7:53 pm

Have just wishlisted Annabel.

39wookiebender
Feb. 19, 2011, 8:42 pm

Annabel does sound fascinating. So does The Book of Spies - I've been thinking of reading some W. Somerset Maugham, I must keep my eye open for a copy of Ashenden. I've read one book by Eric Ambler, The Mask of Dimitrios (aka A Coffin for Dimitrios) and thought it was excellent.

40torontoc
Feb. 20, 2011, 8:19 pm

The Book of Spies added more books to my wishlist!

24. Bite Me: a love story by Christopher Moore. I must admit that I was disappointed in this third in a series of vampire novels by Moore. That is not to say that wasn't funny- the situations were absurd. I think that I thought that the main narrator, Abby Normal was somewhat irritating. The humour of an off the wall group of assorted characters chasing vampire cats, rats, parrots and three ancient vampires was like an old " cops and robbers" film. I just thought that the second novel- You Suck was better.

41torontoc
Feb. 21, 2011, 11:26 pm

25. The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman. This first novel takes the form of chapters relating the stories of various writers and editors of a failing English language newspaper based on Rome. Rachman captures the personalities of a variety of characters who work for or who have some relation to the newspaper. The personality studies are really good. I enjoyed this book.

42torontoc
Feb. 26, 2011, 8:19 pm

26. Elizabeth 1 by Margaret George.
(touchstones aren't working with this title) This author wrote one of my favourite novels about the Tudor era and Henry VIII. This book on the life of Elizabeth 1 centres on the last part of her reign. George tells that story from two points of view-that of Elizabeth and of Lettice Knollys. Knollys was one of Elizabeth's ladies in waiting as well as her cousin. However, she eloped and married Elizabeth's favourite, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. Although the queen forgave Dudley, she sent Lettice away from court. This book begins with the threat of the Armada and the queen having ruled England for thirty years. The earlier events of Elizabeth's life and the threat of Mary Queen of Scots have been dealt with by many other authors. George was wise to look at the latter part of Elizabeth's rule and her relationship with Lettice's son from her first marriage, the Earl of Essex. George convincingly writes about the conflicts with Spain and Ireland and the exploits of Raleigh, Drake, John Dee, Shakespeare, and even John Donne. The aging of Elizabeth's able advisors, her own innate intelligence, and the politics of her opponents are all worked in to a compelling read. I enjoyed and appreciated George's prose with her explanations and descriptions of a very exciting era in British history.

43torontoc
Bearbeitet: Mrz. 9, 2011, 10:37 pm

27. Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson. I thought when I started to read this novel that it would follow a typical situation comedy of manners. However I was greatly mistaken. This remarkable first novel introduces a number of interesting people who live in the small English village of Edgecombe St. Mary. Major Pettigrew is the center of attention with his growing attraction to Mrs. Ali, the owner of the village convenience store. The story of Mrs. Ali's nephew, the Major's son Roger, and the saga of the Churchill guns are just some of the threads that work through this story. The author creates characters that are humorous, and not always totally good or bad. A good book to read if you need some uplifting!

44torontoc
Bearbeitet: Mrz. 10, 2011, 8:36 am

28. March Violets by Philip Kerr- part of the Berlin Noir trilogy. Kerr has written a series of excellent detective stories featuring the detective Bernie Gunther. A former policeman who is now a private detective in 1933 Berlin, this story has him looking for a stolen necklace that turns into a more sinister plot. Burned bodies, corrupt industrialists and important papers lead Gunther through the underbelly of Berlin and the rising power of the Nazis. A great read.

29. The Pale Criminal by Philip Kerr. The second in this series has Gunther joining the police again to lead an investigation into the murders of school girls and the influence of some members of a Nazi subculture. This time the year is 1938. Gunther has been a private detective looking into a blackmailing when his partner is killed. The tow plots do merge as the killings are part of a larger plan to discredit Jews. Very well written.

45torontoc
Mrz. 10, 2011, 8:44 am

30. A German Requiem by Philip Kerr. This third book in the series of mystery thrillers takes place in 1948 Vienna. The private detective, Bernie Gunther has survived the war and is trying to make a living in Berlin. He is asked by a Russian officer to locate someone who might help a German who has been charged with killing an American officer. Gunther finds that his case leads him to a German Nazi organization who are giving information to the Americans- although they are also whitewashing the backgrounds of certain prominent Nazis. Gunther eventually finds an elusive officer -Heinrich Muller-who was supposed to have died at the end of the war. There are double crosses, much killing and an interesting ending. I have enjoyed this series and am looking for the next books.

46iansales
Mrz. 10, 2011, 9:42 am

You have much to look forward to, then. A 7th book was published only last year and there's a 8th due this year. The titles are:

The One From the Other
A Quiet Flame
If The Dead Rise Not
Field Grey
The Man With the Iron Heart

47clif_hiker
Mrz. 10, 2011, 9:45 am

I read the Berlin Noir trilogy several years and enjoyed them very much. It's odd that a guy who can write stories like these (and also the disturbing Hitler's Peace) can also write very good young adult stories like the Children of the Lamp series. I guess it's not so unusual given guys like James Patterson and Ridley Pearson.

48iansales
Mrz. 10, 2011, 10:32 am

Patterson doesn't write his books. He farms them out to starving hacks. Kerr is a much better writer than Patterson or Pearson will ever be, altho he's written a couple of clunkers. But The Second Angel is especially excellent. His YA One Small Step isn't bad, altho a bit clichéd in parts - see here.

49torontoc
Mrz. 10, 2011, 12:05 pm

Thanks for the list!
31. The Accidental Billionaires The Founding of Facebook by Ben Mezrich I must admit that I liked the movie about the Facebook founders-The Social Network- better. Mezrich takes on the persona of some of the founders to explain the story- it does seem fantastic that some undergraduate students create a social network that reaches so many people so quickly. ( and is worth so much)This was a quick read and some what interesting -but really- see the movie and hear Aaron Sorkin's great dialogue.

50clif_hiker
Mrz. 10, 2011, 12:33 pm

>#48 I don't disagree Ian, I've only dipped a toe in both Patterson and Pearson's stuff... didn't really like any of it.

Kerr, both his crime fiction and his YA stuff, I did like quite a lot.

51torontoc
Bearbeitet: Mrz. 10, 2011, 3:45 pm

32. Your Sad Eyes and Unforgettable Mouth by Edeet Ravel. This is the fourth book by Ravel that I have read. I do like her style. Ravel handles the subject of the children of Holocaust survivors in this novel. It is the story of Maya and her friendship with Rosie, Patrick and Anthony. All have parents who survived the Holocaust and the resulting damage shapes the lives of the these young people. Ravel's story of how these teenagers coped in the late 1960's and early 70's in Montreal is well told. A sad but excellent read.

52torontoc
Mrz. 14, 2011, 11:26 pm

33. The Man Who Loved Books Too Much by Alison Hoover Bartlett. The author tracks the story of a man who is obsessed with collecting books-although he steals them. Bartlett interviews convicted book thief John Gilkey. She really wants to find out why and how he stole books. Gilkey actually is proud of his thefts. The author also talks to a rare book store owner, Ken Sanders, who is responsible for tracking down Gilkey. I thought that the author stretched out the story and while it was interesting, I thought that she could have extended her research.

53torontoc
Bearbeitet: Mrz. 18, 2011, 11:29 am

34. Shadow Maker The Life of Gwendolyn MacEwen by Rosemary Sullivan. I really enjoyed this biography of MacEwen . The author was able to interview the poet's contemporaries and knew her as well. Gwendolyn MacEwen really survived a difficult childhood.( mother who was in hospitals with mental illness, a doting father who had an alcohol problem) She set out at age nineteen to be a writer and poet and she did. Teaching herself Hebrew, Arabic and Greek, MacEwen explored her many interests in mythology and a number of cultures. She wrote about 20 books and did survive as a writer although Sullivan tried to find out what early trauma led MacEwen to destructive tendencies in her life. MacEwen's disastrous marriage to poet Milton Acorn and her later relationships and travels all find a place in her work. Sullivan integrates information and analysis of MacEwen's wonderful poetry into the story of her life. Margaret Atwood was a good friend of MacEwen and lent her collection of letters and recollections to the author. This book was hard to put down.

54torontoc
Mrz. 23, 2011, 9:14 am

35. Building the Pauson House: The Letters of Frank Lloyd Wright and Rose Pauson edited by Allan Wright Green. This very attractive book is a compendium of the correspondence between the celebrated architect and one of his clients , an artist from California. Rose Pauson hired Wright to build her a house in Arizona. The drawings and plans are beautiful and reflect Wright's design aesthetic. The structure combines both elegant horizontal lines in wood and rough stone underpinnings. The letters of Pauson and the responses of Wright are not outstanding pieces of writing. They are just the back and forth comments about plans and finances. Unfortunately a year after the building was finished, it did burn down in a fire. This book serves as a memorial to the house and to the working relationship of a very noted architect to his client. An interesting book.

55torontoc
Mrz. 28, 2011, 2:55 pm

36. Irving Layton A Portrait by Elspeth Cameron. Working with an author on their biography must be like walking on a tightrope. You have to balance the trust that the subject gives you andaccess to papers, interviews and friends with your own judgement. I wonder what went through the mind of biographer Elspeth Cameron who was asked by Irving Layton to write his biography.Cameron has written a very critical volume. She knew a number of Layton's colleagues She acknowledges Layton's importance to the development of Canadian poetry in the 20th century and the poems that she feels are landmarks. Cameron does not spare the reader with the accounts of Layton's ego, bad behaviour, and treatment of fellow poets, his five wives and his children. Cameron states that Layton did not edit his work well and published matarial that should never have seen the light of day. At the same time, Layton did work very hard supporting three households with work as a teacher in a Jewish school in Montreal and as a lecturer at Sir George Williams University. He was a tenured professor at York University in Toronto for over 10 years. Yet the contradictions pile up- admired by his students as an excellent teacher, criticized by his friends for seducing female students and having bad judgement in encouraging some younger poets, and supported by people like Leonard Cohen. Layton was all passion and bombast and yet he was the pre-eminent poet in the 1950's and early 60's in Canada. Apparently he hated this book and wrote the author many insulting letters. Cameron uses this book to give an overview of poetry in Canada and Montreal in the years of Layton's writings. The books ends in 1995. Later Layton was diagnosed with Alzheimers and died in his early 90's. In a way, his life was as he wanted to live it ,with the excess and opinions that were not popular. I did like the book . Was Cameron fair to her subject? I don't know. The questions that I think of relate to artists behaving badly. Do we put up with outrageous behavior because of theri talent? ( Think of Picasso) Or should we be more critical of their day to day life? Apparently Layton wrote his own book- I must look out for it.

56torontoc
Apr. 3, 2011, 10:27 am

37. The Mitfords Letters Between Six Sisters edited by Charlotte Mosley. I had read most of Jessica Mitfords books-including her Hons and Rebels and A Fine Old Conflict. The book of letters by and to the fascinating six Mitford sisters reveals their love for each other ( mostly) inspite of widely differing political opinions. The book was edited by Diana Mosley's daughter-in-law Charlotte. She does try to interpret the reasons for some of the actions of her mother in law and her sisters. Whether that opinion is justified is up to the reader to decide. Some of the letters are about day to day activities and some about thoughts on previous actions that caused some grief. Nancy was the novelist who lived in France. Diana had left her first husband and married Sir Oswald Mosely, the English Fascist leader. Deborah, who did become the " centre" for all the sisters, was the Duchess of Devonshire and responsible for remaking Chatsworth. Jessica eloped and went to live in the United States. She was a Communist
( eventually gave it up) and wrote a landmark expose of the American funeral industry. Unity, probably one most controversial sister, went to live in Germany and met and admired Hitler. When England and Germany declared war, she shot herself. Unity did survive but lived a limited life with her mother until she died in 1948. Pamela the sister who did not write many letters in this collection , was a true eccentric and lived in Switzerland for a few years before returning to England. Today, reading the letters of women who were not schooled by their equalling unusual parents, the contemporary reader may be shocked by the casually held opinions on various people.They knew world leaders and literary giants of their time. Certainly, Diana's defence of her husband and his political party,and her thoughts on Hitler ( she was a supporter of Hitler and brushed off most of his actions in the war) seem very objectionable today. Charlotte Mosely explains that most of the sisters, with their contradictions and feuds, hid their vulnerability under humour. Mosely's commentary throughout the book provides a focus and explanations for some of the sisters' actions. A very interesting read of a very different world.

57torontoc
Apr. 5, 2011, 8:35 am

38. Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls. The author calls this book a "true-life novel". She writes as if it was a novel but the story is about Walls' grandmother, Lila Casey Smith. Walls was going to write about her mother but realized that Lila had a wonderful story. This book is a testament to gutsy women. Lila Casey Smith was raised on farms in Texas and later lived briefly Chicago and then in Arizona.She was a schoolteacher, put herself through college, " broke" wild horses, learned to drive a car and fly a plane. With her husband , she managed large ranches. Lila Casey Smith was a survivor. This well written book is a tribute to her.

58wookiebender
Apr. 5, 2011, 8:53 pm

The Mitford sisters are a fascinating bunch, aren't they? I'd never heard of Pamela before though!

59jfetting
Apr. 6, 2011, 10:08 am

I LOVED the Mitford letters book! But I agree that Charlotte does try to clean up some of the more not-ok opinions of Diana Mosley, and not quite successfully. Diana doesn't sound like someone I'd like to spend much time with, in general. Unlike Deborah! Who sounds awesome.

60torontoc
Bearbeitet: Apr. 7, 2011, 10:23 pm

Deborah wrote her own memoir-Wait for Me I have to find it.

39. The One From the Other by Philip Kerr. This is the fourth book in the series about detective Bernie Gunther. And what a mystery it is! The reader can forgive the plot lines that all come together at the end. Why? Well, what other book takes you to Pre World War II Palestine and Egypt, post war Vienna and and Munich in the company of Eichmann,escaping Naz concentration camp doctors, priests who rescued Jews and now do the same for escaping Nazis, murderous CIA agents, and Jewish Vengance squads? This was quite an adventure and I have to find the next book in this series.

61iansales
Apr. 8, 2011, 3:38 am

The next book is A Quiet Flame. That's followed by If The Dead Rise not. And a few months ago, the next one, Field Grey, was published.

62torontoc
Apr. 8, 2011, 9:13 am

Thanks! There was a chapter from A Quiet Flame in my copy of The One From the Other.

63torontoc
Apr. 9, 2011, 10:43 am

40. Essex County by Jeff Lemire. This graphic novel collection consists of three connecting novels about people who live in Essex County, Ontario near Windsor. The stories follow one specific family through much heartbreak and troubled relationships. The first story, Tales from the Farm follows a young boy living with his uncle after his mother dies. The boy strikes up a friendship with a man who runs the gas bar and was known for his brief time in professional hockey. The readers learns more than the boy about this man. It is interesting that the graphic format is used very effectively here to express the silences and lack of communication between the characters.Ghost Stories goes back a generation to relate the story of two young men who go to Toronto from Essex County to play on a hockey team. The estrangement of the men and their later histories lead to the next novel The Country Nurse. A nurse takes care of an old man who daydreams about his past. Her history, about a nun leading orphans out of danger to Essex County is told as well. The artist/writer provides the reader with added stories and a family tree at the end of the book -this material adds to the effect of the "total" book. Essex County was one of the books nominated for the CBC "Canada Reads" series. I can see why ti was chosen and the author communicates emotion and character wrapped up in a good story.

64wookiebender
Apr. 10, 2011, 5:18 am

Going back a few messages - I was at the library today and my eye was caught by several Philip Kerr novels. But I didn't know which one to start with! (And I was already carrying a large stack of good books to read, too.) Looking through the online catalogue, they don't have the second book. I might just buy them, instead. (I think Dad'll also like them, too.)

65iansales
Apr. 10, 2011, 6:21 am

The Bernie Gunther novels go in the order:

March Violets (1989)
The Pale Criminal (1990)
A German Requiem (1991)
One from the Other (2006)
A Quiet Flame (2008)
If The Dead Rise Not (2009)
Field Grey (2010)

The first three can also be found in an omnibus edition, Berlin Noir.

66torontoc
Apr. 10, 2011, 9:05 am

Thanks!, this list will help me find the books in their publishing order!

67wookiebender
Apr. 10, 2011, 9:09 am

Thanks Ian, I've got Berlin Noir on my wishlist over at the Book Depository now.

68clif_hiker
Apr. 10, 2011, 9:39 am

I read the first three Bernie Gunther mysteries many years ago, enjoyed them very much. I'm looking forward to picking up his more recent stories... Kerr has also written several YA fantasy stories that are pretty good The Blue Djinn of Babylon is the first... but I've read that those may be written by his wife (maybe Ian knows), but they are published under P B Kerr instead of Philip.

69iansales
Bearbeitet: Apr. 10, 2011, 9:56 am

AFAIK, PB Kerr is just the pseudonym he uses for his kids' books. I've read One Small Step, and reviewed it here. I much prefer his adult fiction.

70torontoc
Apr. 11, 2011, 8:45 pm

41. Lamb by Christopher Moore. Moore is a very funny writer. This book was fun to read, although the subject is one that is rarely satirized. The subtitle is " The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal." The narrator is one Levi, better known as Biff. He was raised from the dead in modern times by an angel who wants him to write about his times with Jesus. Biff fills in the blanks of Jesus' life between the ages of 10 to 30. Moore imagines travels to Asia to talk to the three wise men , who happen to be leaders and founders of sects of Buddhism. The story is funny and irreverent, while making some good points about religion.

71torontoc
Apr. 12, 2011, 11:31 pm

42. The Good Daughter a Memoir of My Mother's Hidden Life by Jasmin Darznik This ER book is about the author's mother and her life in Iran and later the US. While helping her mother pack after the death of her father, Darznik comes across an old photo. She realizes that the photograph shows the marriage of her mother to an unknown man. Lili, Darznik's mother finally gives her tapes that reveal the history of her grandmother and mother in Iran. The story of her mother's early life is one of abandonment by her father, early arranged marriage at the age of fourteen, abuse by her disturbed husband and the birth of a child, Sara. Darznik is at first shocked to learn of this step sister. Lili's story is extraordinary as she is able to leave this first marriage, go to school in Germany, and come back to Iran with a German husband. Her later life in the US is one of incredible sacrifice as she works to give her daughter, Jasmine, a life that she herself was denied and that she could not give Sara. Jasmine never meets Sara although she does have a relationship with her grandmother who does visit the US. The memoir is dependent on the tapes of her mother. I did find the story a bit disappointing at the end as there does not seem to be a satisfactory conclusion. The reader knows that the "Good Daughter" , Sara had to be let go by her mother in order to survive. There was never any new relationship. What does come across in this book is the extraordinary things that women had to do in order to live in a male dominated world in Iran.

72torontoc
Apr. 15, 2011, 10:51 pm

43. The Man in the Wooden Hat by Jane Gardam. This novel tells the story of Edward Feathers and his wife Elizabeth, but from her point of view. Gardam initially wrote about Edward's story in the book Old Filth. I was eager to read this book since I really liked Old Filth. The story of betrayal and loyalty covered Edward's career in Hong Kong and his old age in England. The characters were complex but I was a little disappointed with the belated revelation that Edward makes at the end of the book. As well, Elizabeth's life in a Japanese prison camp and her later work at Bletchley Park do not figure in the story as much as they should.( in fact , how is that remotely possible?) I was happy to fill in the blanks of the Feathers' story but do think that Old Filth is a better book.

73torontoc
Apr. 19, 2011, 5:54 pm

44. Apocalypse for Beginners by Nicholas Dickner. I thought that the characters were engaging but the story ended without an ending. I was disappointed as I liked his first book, Nikolski. Dickner created Ann and Hope Randall, mother and daughter from the Maritimes who end up in a small Quebec town. Ann was trying to avoid the apocalypse as her inheritance from her family was the curse of looking for the last day on earth and then dying. Hope made friends with Mickey Bauermann and spent most of her time with him trying to find the solution to this end of days mission. The book's narration alternates between Mickey and Hope. The charm of the story and the likeable characters is lost to me by an " non"ending. I appreciated the writing but ultimately was dissatisfied with ending.

74torontoc
Apr. 26, 2011, 9:19 pm

45. The Balkan Trilogy by Olivia Manning. I have to thank rebeccanyc for reading and reviewing this book- last year? I think that although the trilogy is made of three connecting novels, it read well as one continuing story. I loved the history of Rumania and the run-up to World War II. Manning's description of the characters of British men and women living and working in cities about to be taken over by the Germans and her astute portrayal of the marriage of Guy and Harriet Pringle made this book a great read for me. ( all over 1000 plus pages!)

75jfetting
Apr. 26, 2011, 9:47 pm

I have The Balkan Trilogy on my shelves too, also because of rebeccanyc's review from last year (her threads are dangerous). It sounds fantastic - glad to hear you liked it too! (Your threads are also dangerous)

76torontoc
Mai 2, 2011, 7:08 pm

I really enjoyed The Balkan Trilogy and have The Levant Trilogy is on the top of the "read next " pile.

46. Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life by Frances Mayes. This is a lovely book but I think that the reader should look at Mayes' previous books on her Tuscan life in order to understand the story. An added bonus is the inclusion of recipes at the end of many chapters. The book makes me want to go to Italy soon.

47. The Better Mother by Jen Sookfong Lee ( the touchstones are all wrong but this is an ARC). Jen Soonfong Lee has written a very touching story about a young man, Danny who is a photographer in Vancouver in the early 1980's. His estrangement from his parents and his friendship with a stripper by the name of Miss Val are the main themes of the novel. Hiding secrets, be it Danny's sexual orientation and love for a former lover dying of AIDS or Miss Val's disclosure of her identity to her child lead the characters to make choices in their lives. The author tells the story with very descriptive and wonderful prose. Highly Recommended.

77torontoc
Mai 2, 2011, 7:08 pm

I really enjoyed The Balkan Trilogy and have The Levant Trilogy is on the top of the "read next " pile.

46. Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life by Frances Mayes. This is a lovely book but I think that the reader should look at Mayes' previous books on her Tuscan life in order to understand the story. An added bonus is the inclusion of recipes at the end of many chapters. The book makes me want to go to Italy soon.

47. The Better Mother by Jen Sookfong Lee ( the touchstones are all wrong but this is an ARC). Jen Soonfong Lee has written a very touching story about a young man, Danny who is a photographer in Vancouver in the early 1980's. His estrangement from his parents and his friendship with a stripper by the name of Miss Val are the main themes of the novel. Hiding secrets, be it Danny's sexual orientation and love for a former lover dying of AIDS or Miss Val's disclosure of her identity to her child lead the characters to make choices in their lives. The author tells the story with very descriptive and wonderful prose. Highly Recommended.

78torontoc
Mai 3, 2011, 2:39 pm

48. The Good German by Joseph Kanon. ( touchstones not working today) I liked this spy mystery when I read the first few chapters. An American newspaperman in Berlin just after World War II, a missing lost love, a scientist about to be taken to the US to work on rockets and a few murders. The author also pays homage to the Philip Kerr's main character from Berlin Noir. However, although the action is fast paced, I did feel that the story got a little convoluted in the last half of the book. A fast read.

79torontoc
Mai 7, 2011, 8:07 am

49.A Quiet Flame by Philip Kerr. I have really enjoyed this series featuring detective Bernie Gunther. In this novel Kerr contrasts gruesome killings in Berlin in 1932 with Gunther's time in Argentina in 1950. Gunther works for a Colonel in Peron's government to look for a missing girl. However, he discovers the real story that involves transferring money from Swiss Bank accounts and hidden Nazis. Kerr mixes fact with " what would happen if" to create a compelling story of a very unsavoury time in Argentina.

80torontoc
Mai 13, 2011, 10:44 am

50. The Levant Trilogy by Olivia Manning. ( made up of the following novels that really work together as one book and story-The Danger Tree, The Battle Lost and Won, and The Sum of Things.) I really enjoyed reading The Balkan Trilogy and was eager to read the next set of novel that comprised the sequel. Harriet and Guy Pringle have been evacuated to Egypt during the early years of World War II. The author not only relates their story but introduces a new character, Simon Boulderstone, In alternating chapters, the reader learns about Simon's role in the war and his adventures in the desert. Harriet is really the focus in Egypt and her disillusionment with her husband. I did enjoy this book for the characters and the history of the war in this area of the world.

81iansales
Mai 13, 2011, 11:30 am

There's a new Bernie Gunther novel due in October, Prague Fatale.

82torontoc
Mai 13, 2011, 2:30 pm

Oh, thank you!

51. Tinkers by Paul Harding. I read this book for my book club meeting. I must admit that while I can appreciate the artistry of the writing style and the imagery, this was not my favourite book. I don't mind sentences that go on forever- in fact W.G Sebald used them very effectively. This is a very " impressionistic' story of a man dying and his memories of his life and his father as well as his father's recounting of his life. The two stories do meet at points.

83torontoc
Mai 13, 2011, 9:12 pm

52. The Road: Stories, Journalism and Essays by Vasily Grossman and edited by Robert Chandler. ( touchstones not working well tonight)
This book of Grossman's short stories and reporting is very good.I liked the commentary and history by the editors as well. The stories in some cases refer to real events. Grossman's report on Treblinka is included in this collection as well

84torontoc
Mai 16, 2011, 12:08 pm

53.The Samurai's Garden by Gail Tsukiyama. This is a wonderful story set in Japan in the late 1930's. A young Chinese man is sent by his family to his grandfather's beach house in the Japanese village of Tarumi. Stephen has TB and his father, who lives in Kobe asks that he leave Hong Kong and recuperate in Japan. During his time at the small house, Stephen meets Matsu a servant who takes care of him and later Sachi, Kenzo and Keiko. Stephen learns of their relationships and history and becomes a more mature person as a result. Tsukiyama's prose is accomplished and her insights into the human psyche are worth reading in this book.

85torontoc
Mai 19, 2011, 6:34 pm

54. If The Dead Rise Not by Philip Kerr. This is another spy/mystery/ historical fiction novel featuring Bernie Gunther. The book is divided between Berlin in 1934 and Havana 1954. In 1934, Gunther is working for the Adlon Hotel and involved in a number of cases that lead to accusations of graft and murder. American gangsters and support of the Berlin Olympics are the main focus. In 1954, Gunther is in Havana, having been kicked out of Argentina. He meets important people from his past and several mysteries are solved. I must admit that I have liked the earlier books better but still look forward to the next.

86torontoc
Mai 21, 2011, 8:41 am

55. The Puttermesser Papersby Cynthia Ozick. This satire is well written. However, it is really a book of short stories centering on Ruth Puttermesser. I found that the individual stories linked better at the beginning of the novel. The first series of events concerned Puttermesser who is demoted from her job with the city ( New York) as a new mayor takes over. Concerned with corruption, Puttermesser constructs ( although she does not have a memory of doing so) a female Golem. The Golem, self named Xanthippe, helps Ruth become mayor and reform the city. The later downfall and Ruth's relationships with a suitor and later a newly found relative from the old Soviet Union form the rest of the collection. Beautiful writing but the stories do stand on their own. l.

87torontoc
Mai 23, 2011, 7:47 pm

56. A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan. I read this book about a record executive, his assistant and various other characters whose lives intersect just after a good friend of mine died from a brain aneurysm. So although the incidents in this story have no resemblance to my friend's life -the music business was the focus of his life and this novel. Egan uses each chapter to describe one personality and shifts time so that you see the older and younger versions at various points of the story. This is a very impressive book and helped me reflect on a life lost that I really knew.

88wookiebender
Mai 23, 2011, 7:49 pm

I'm sorry to hear about your friend, that must have been a shock to you.

I believe I requested A Visit from the Goon Squad from the library the other day - I did borrow it once, but didn't get a chance to read it! Hopefully it'll turn up at a more auspicious reading time this time around.

89torontoc
Mai 26, 2011, 2:12 pm

57. Netherland by Joseph O'Neill. I really enjoyed the style of this excellent novel by O'Neill. Time past and present merges into the narrative by main character, Hans van den Broek. It is as if the reader were sitting down with this man and listening to the story of his life in New York and London. Van den Broek, a transplanted Dutchman lives at the Chelsea Hotel just after the World Trade buildings destruction. His wife has returned to England with their son and Hans has met Chuck Ramkissoon through his interest in cricket. The stories of both men and the difficult relationship with Hans's wife, Rachel are woven into the narrative of dreams lost and the settlements that people make. A truly engrossing book.

90torontoc
Mai 27, 2011, 9:13 am

58. The Naive and Sentimental Novelist by Orhan Pamuk. This book contains the essay(s) that made up the 2009 Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard. Pamuk writes about the two approaches to novel writing. He has adapted the ideas from Friedrich Schiller's work on " Naive" and "Sentimental" poets. Orhan discusses novels that influenced him and his style of writing. A nice work on the structure of the novel.

91torontoc
Mai 27, 2011, 11:13 pm

59. The Collected Stories of Joseph Roth translated by Michael Hofman This collection of Roth's stories are in a way a history of the era. Roth's concerns are with people and villages in forgotten corners of the old Austrian -Hungarian empire. The ideas and lives of women and men and the problems of life seem dated to the present day reader. The well crafted stories and fragments are a vital record of a past life in Europe.

92torontoc
Mai 29, 2011, 9:49 am

60. The Impressionist by Hari Kunzru. I was overwhelmed by the nature of this book and the theme of identity, the satire , and the accurate and deadly views of empire, colonization and class. Wow! What a book! Pran Nath is half Indian and British. When the identity of his white father is made known to his family, he is thrown out of his house in Agra. Eventually Pran is taken Fatehpour, when he is to seduce a British major. However, he makes his way to Bombay, escapes and eventually takes on the identity of an Englishman. Pran becomes Jonathan, goes to Oxford and does become the white man that he had hoped to be. However, Jonathan is really not very perceptive. A major crisis leads him to examine who he is although the reader is not very clear as to Pran/Jonathan's fate. We do know that above all else, he is a survivor. Definitely a good read.

93torontoc
Jun. 1, 2011, 8:16 am

61. Too Much Tuscan Sun by Dario Castagno. Charming account of the author's life in Tuscany and his work as a tour guide with good and not so bright clients. I like the description of the Palio.

94torontoc
Jun. 6, 2011, 9:50 am

62. A Rage to Live A Biography of Richard and Isabel Burton by Mary S. Lovell. This biography was really interesting. i like the author's approach to her subjects. i think that this is the fourth book of hers that I have read. Certainly the explorer Richard Burton and his travels in Africa, India, the Middle East and South America make for interesting reading. Burton's problems with authorities are documented as well as his relationship with his wife , Isabel. Using archival material that was not seen by other biographers of the couple, Lovell refutes a number of opinions on the nature of the marriage and the support that Isabel gave to her husband. A good read for those interested in the history of exploration during the Victorian times.

95torontoc
Jun. 6, 2011, 10:27 pm

63. A Girl of the Limberlost by Gene Stratton Porter. Every once and a while, I think about books that I read many years ago. This is one of them. I found this book at a church booksale up in the Muskoka region last summer. Written in 1909, the plot and thoughts of the author are very dated by today's standards. However, the idea of an independent woman and interests in nature were probably very forward thinking at the time. The story is sentimental and the characters all redeem themselves at the end. In a way, it is an optimistic view of life and I enjoyed reading the book and knew of the context and innocence of the early twentieth century.

96torontoc
Jun. 8, 2011, 8:11 am

64. Heartstone by C.J. Sansom. Ah- another chapter in the adventures of Tudor lawyer Matthew Shardlake. This story leads Matthew to Portsmouth and the war between the French and English. Two mysteries are presented. The story of Ellen Fettiplace and why she is in Bedlam and the dealings of a man and his wards are the main focus. Shardlake has been asked to investigate the case of two orphans- one now dead- by Queen Catherine Parr. Shardlake's persistence will lead to many secrets being revealed. Not only is this series interesting for the history, but the complicated plots are all well thought out.

97torontoc
Jun. 9, 2011, 1:55 pm

65. Red Azalea by Anchee Min. This memoir is interesting for the voice of the author. Many times the reader hears only the indoctrination that Min has grown up with in of her life-the ideas and rhetoric creeping into her thoughts and conversation. Min's experiences on the farm and then her life as a maybe film star show her growth as an individual. A good book to read for understanding the life of the Chinese people under Mao's rule.

98torontoc
Jun. 12, 2011, 8:57 am

66. Brooklyn by Colm Toibin. This is a very " lyrical" book about a young Irish woman who leaves Ireland and goes to the United States in the early 1950's. The author captures the atmosphere of both the small Irish town that the heroine , Eilis comes from and the Irish community in Brooklyn. The only point of contention that I have is with the character of Eilis, who seems to be persuaded by others to do everything that changes her life. It is beautifully written.

99torontoc
Jun. 13, 2011, 9:21 am

67. In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin by Erik Larson. I like reading books by Erik Larson. He depicts the most unlikely group to have represented the United States in Germany during the 1930's. The ambassador, William E. Dodd, is not like the other members of the foreign service. He is not rich and and his opinions are at odds with most of the members of his staff. Dodd seems to be an innocent in his comprehension of the political situation. At the end of his term, his warnings about the Nazis and their plans go unheeded. Dodd's daughter, Martha has affairs with Nazis, Soviet spies and more it seems. Her recklessness and attitudes are alarming. I would have liked to know more about Martha's political adventures with Russia but do appreciate Larson's book.

100torontoc
Jun. 14, 2011, 9:35 am

68. Bloodsucking Fiends by Christopher Moore. This is the first in the series of three books on Jody-the new vampire, her boyfriend Tommy and the host of wonderful characters living in San Francisco. Part screw ball comedy and satire, this story was fun to read. I think that of the three books, this one ranks second- ( with the second book the best and the last-the last.)

101torontoc
Jun. 15, 2011, 9:49 am

69. Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart. I think that this is the best of the author's three novels that I have read. Set in a terrifying and weakened America of the future, Lenny Abramov writes about his loves and life in a diary. His love, Eunice Park texts friends and family about her struggles as well. Shteyngart imagines a future society where everyone is judged constantly on appearance, health, and net worth with their portable "apparats" or computer/smartphones. Chinese, and Norwegian companies will soon own the United States. Revolutions are crushed, and people are moved out of New York in order to make room for " high net worth" tourists. An engrossing satire and good read.

102torontoc
Jun. 16, 2011, 10:04 pm

70. Still Here by Linda Grant. I really enjoyed this book by Linda Grant. She takes on the voices of two people- Joseph, an architect building a hotel in Liverpool and Alix, returning to Liverpool when her mother is near death. Grant uses the opportunity in her story of these two people to work in histories of Jews in Liverpool, the Yom Kippur War, Jews in pre and post war England and the firebombing of Dresden. What people keep secret in their lives is an important theme. Grant writes a good story. Her description of personalities is acute.

103jfetting
Jun. 17, 2011, 8:52 am

Is Still Here her new one?

104torontoc
Jun. 17, 2011, 9:46 pm

No- it is an older book- about 6-7 years old. I also liked the fact that both main characters were anything but perfect and had some misguided perceptions about each other.

71. The Guilty Plea by Robert Rotenberg. This is the second murder mystery by the author- a lawyer in Toronto. So besides being a really good story, this novel uses the city and familiar spots as the backdrop. Rotenberg has developed a group of interesting characters and uses them in both mystery books that he has written. The detective Art Greene and policeman Daniel Kennicott are paired again. This time a man has been killed in his kitchen and his estranged wife is the suspect. The ensuing trial and investigation are described so that the reader learns about the plot twists as the lawyers and police try to solve this crime. A very fast and engrossing read.

105torontoc
Jun. 22, 2011, 11:44 am

72. The Paris Wife by Paula McLain. The author imagines the life of Ernest Hemingway and his first wife, Hadley Richardson. Narrated by Hadley as her story, the novel starts in Chicago and moves to Paris, Toronto, Spain and the south of France. Those who are familiar with the saga of the " lost generation" of the 1920's will recognize the characters in this very good novel. A really nice read about the relationship of Hadley and Ernest Hemingway.

106torontoc
Jun. 23, 2011, 1:11 pm

73. One of Our Thursdays is Missing by Jasper Fforde. This is the latest in the Thursday Next series. The key figure is Book World's written Thursday while the real Thursday is missing. The story is a mix of satire on books and writing genres and a "cute" plot. This is a very light weight book but entertaining.

107torontoc
Jun. 25, 2011, 11:32 am

74.Spies of the Balkans by Alan Furst. I am a fan of the author's series on spies in World War 2. This latest book take place primarily in Salonika, Greece. The protagonist, Costa Zannis is a police official who becomes a key player in a group that helps German Jews escape from Berlin to Turkey. He also travels to Paris to help the British with a valuable escaped flyer and ends up in the brasserie that figures in all the books. I think that I like Furst's writing so much because I learn so much about the specific history of the places that he uses in each novel.

108torontoc
Jun. 25, 2011, 8:58 pm

75. Grace Williams Says It Loud by Emma Henderson This is an amazing book and has a wonderful main character. Henderson writes about the treatment of the disabled in an institution in England. Sexual, physical and emotional abuse are described very matter of factly by Grace Williams. She is brought to the "Briar" when she is 10 years old. Unable to speak and with multiple physical problems, nevertheless, Grace makes a lasting friend of Daniel. The two have many adventures as they grow to adulthood at the institution. The abandonment by family and Grace's resilience are two threads that run through this book. The love story of Grace and Daniel is memorable, I can understand why this book was on the Orange Prize shortlist.

109wookiebender
Jun. 26, 2011, 11:52 pm

Oh, I'm glad you liked Grace Williams Says it Loud too! I'm yet to write my review (what's new), but I agree with what you said. I was also shocked by a throwaway statement at one stage that there were 2000 inmates at the Briar. How huge (or, rather, overcrowded) was this place??

110torontoc
Jun. 28, 2011, 9:18 am

I also read the interview that the author gave about her sister- who was in one of those large institutions. The book is dedicated to her.

76. Cross Bones by Kathy Reichs. I read this mystery as I was curious to see whether I wanted to continue reading this series. I must admit that I was entertained by the fast moving plot and interesting information. However I found the ending a little disappointing. I might continue with the rest of the books at another time.

111wookiebender
Jun. 28, 2011, 7:32 pm

Oh, I'll have to search out that interview! I thought it was all too *real*, having a sister involved in such a place would definitely heighten the reality of the book.

My partner works with adults with intellectual disabilities, so it all rang very true for me.

112torontoc
Jun. 28, 2011, 8:25 pm

just google the author- Emma Henderson- and you will find the interview

113torontoc
Jun. 29, 2011, 10:20 pm

77. Bones to Ashes by Kathy Reichs. So this book was sitting on the TBR Pile for ages. I had just finished another by Reichs. This adventure/murder/mystery was a fast read and loaded with gruesome facts about forensic science.

114torontoc
Jul. 3, 2011, 4:26 pm

78. The Boy in the Moon A Father's Search for His Disabled Son by Ian Brown. I read the series in the Globe and Mail Newspaper that Brown wrote about his son. This book relates not only the history of the author's search for answers about his son's disabilities but is also an intensely personal memoir of Brown and his family. Walker Brown was born with a genetic mutation that has been called CFC. He cannot speak,and has developed a tendency to constantly hurt himself. His father , Ian Brown is a journalist and this very moving book is the story of the father's journey. Besides telling the story of Walker's life at home and then at a group home that the family found after seven years of searching, Brown travels across the United States and to France. He interviews families with CFC children and explores the organization of L'Arche in France and Canada. Brown looks at the quality of life that his son has and the role of the disabled in our society. An excellent book.

79. The Third Teacher: 79 Ways You Can Use Design to Transform Teaching & Learning by OWP/P Architects, VS Furniture and Bruce Mau Design. This book has a number of contradictions. As a compendium of ideas on how to improve teaching, it is a good guide for educators and administrators. Since it was compiled by a group of architects and designers who do build furniture and schools, the examples show the best of the best. However, the irony is that there are faults with the design of the physical book itself. The pages are so heavy that the binding is not strong enough. ( My book fell apart). There is too much use of black ink ( problems with dyes that are not that good for the environment) in a book that lists environmentally aware programmes as a transforming way to enhance teaching.

115torontoc
Jul. 10, 2011, 10:14 am

80. The Tiger's Wife by Tea Obreht. What can I say that has not already been written? This 2011 Orange Prize winner is a great story. For a first novel, the author has created a very accomplished story. The story of Natalia, a doctor in an un-named Balkan country and her grandfather is told in a series of memories. Natalia is on a mission to innoculate children at an orphanage in the neighboring country. She is anxious to learn about the details of her grandfather's death in a small village nearby. Interspersed with her story are the stories and legends that her grandfather told her about his early life and the people that he met- the tiger's wife, the deathless man and the fate of the tiger in the zoo. The legends and the events of war and conflict figure in the lives of both Natalia and her grandfather. A really brilliant story.

81. A Great Deliverance by Elizabeth George. I had not read any of the Inspector Lynley and Detective Havers mysteries although I enjoyed the TV series. This is a good mystery and with a gripping plot and great characters. I will look out for more of the series.

116torontoc
Jul. 11, 2011, 8:20 pm

82. Astonishing Splashes of Colour by Clare Morrall I heard about this book on LT and had it sitting on a book pile for a while. It is a beautifully written story narrated by an interesting yet unstable young woman. Kitty is the daughter of an eccentric artist. She has four older brothers who live very different lives. Her older sister disappeared when she was very little and her mother was killed in an accident. Kitty is married but lost a child late in her pregnancy. She lives in a separate apartment from her husband. The book relates the story of her life during a period when she makes some very bad choices probably as a result of losing her baby. As well, her family gives her some jarring news as well. Morrall writes about damaged souls and their effect on the people around them. Very good book.

117torontoc
Jul. 22, 2011, 9:42 am

83. The Tiger A True Story of Vengeance and Survival by John Vaillant. I really enjoyed this account of a murderous tiger in Russia's Far East. The wounded tiger had eaten two men and the local authorities in charge of managing the animal population had to hunt it down.This detailed story is about more than the tiger - it is about the state of the environment and the story of predators-man and animal. In a way although the book is about how the lead tracker goes about investigating how the men were killed, it is also about situation of an endangered species. Highly recommended

118torontoc
Jul. 24, 2011, 8:33 pm

84. Indigo In Search of The Color that Seduced the World by Catherine E. McKinley. This ER book is more than a story of indigo- it is the memoir of the author and her own personal journey. McKinley goes to Ghana on a Fullbright Scholarship to research indigo and the materials or prints made with wax and cotton with this precious dye. She makes a number of important friendships with people who live in West Africa and she tracks down the earliest adire prints that she can find in Nigeria, Ghana, Niger and the ivory Coast. The book becomes a compendium of legends, history of trade and cloth and the lessons that the author learns about the important things in life. I must admit that I knew one of the authors in McKinley's bibliography list and have an out of print book that she should have consulted ( Adire Cloth in Nigeria edited by Jane Barbour and Doig Simmonds. The University of Ibadan, Nigeria 1971).
In fact while I enjoyed the stories, I was able to appreciate the significance of indigo because I had studied the process and the cloths produced in Africa and Japan in art courses. I think that a straight forward explanation of indigo, the dye, and the resist processes used to make the cloths is found in other sources. This book is about the author's encounters with African culture and what she takes from it to her own life.

119wookiebender
Jul. 24, 2011, 9:32 pm

#115> The Tiger's Wife is the next book I'll be reading - I'm looking forward to it!

120torontoc
Jul. 25, 2011, 6:24 pm

The book is one of my best reads of 2011.

85. Sorry by Gail Jones. This Australian writer has created a very sensitive story of a very disfunctional family living in the outback of Western Australia. Perdita is the neglected child of two mismatched parents. Her father is a failed anthropologist who dreams of great work. He married a woman , Stella who retreats from life by reciting Shakespeare and ignoring her daughter. Stella spends time in a mental health facility at various points of the story. The reader learns quite early that the father sexually abuses Aboriginal women. As well, he seems to have been killed by Mary, the young woman who comes to care for Perdita when her mother is sent away to an institution.. At that point Perdita begins to stutter. She may have been a witness to the murder. We do find out the true story and the sacrifice made by Mary. In fact the title "Sorry" has a double meaning not only in the story but in real life as the author points out in a note . A very complex set of relationships are skillfully handled by the author in this excellent novel.

121wookiebender
Jul. 25, 2011, 7:20 pm

Oh, I'm glad you liked Sorry! The title of the book is very politically charged for Australians, since it took a ridiculously long time for the government to apologise to the aboriginals for the Stolen Generation (aboriginal children were forcibly removed from their communities and given to white families to raise). It became a very heated issue because the previous Liberal government refused to apologise. One of the first things the Labor government did when they got in in 2007 was to apologise, here's the full text of the speech: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/02/13/1202760379056.html?page=fullpage

The kids' school still celebrates Sorry Day, and I hope it sticks around for some time to come.

But anyhow, I digress, and I'm sure the above was all explained in the book as well. :) What I meant to say is the title just screamed "POLITICAL!!!!" to me (and several other readers I know) so it took a bit of nerve to start reading it. But it was a great book, and wasn't the polemic I'd feared.

122torontoc
Jul. 26, 2011, 9:34 pm

Yes- it is a good book. And I can see why the title is a bit provocative and rightly so.

The Canadian government has apologized to a number of groups that have been treated badly in the past.

123clif_hiker
Jul. 27, 2011, 7:41 am

some great reviews, thanks! Three new books for my wish list... Indigo In Search of The Color that Seduced the World (I'm always interested in the history of colors and dyes) , Sorry (a story that needs to be told I think), and The Tiger's Wife (I saw some negative reviews on this one...)

124torontoc
Jul. 31, 2011, 9:02 am

You are welcome!

86. A Man in Uniform by Kate TaylorThis historical fiction novel is about the Dreyfus case in France. A lawyer, Francois Dubon, manages his daily life with work, meals with his wife and son and a daily meeting with his mistress. Everything changes when he is asked by a mysterious woman to look into the charges against Captain Dreyfus, now imprisoned on Devil's Island. Dubon manages to borrow a uniform from his brother-in-law and walk into the Counter-spy section of the French army( The Statistical Section) and masquerade as a newly arrived clerk. The story of how he finds out information to prove the innocence of Dreyfus, the sinister behaviour and coverups by a former friend and the French government and the upheaval in his household make great reading.

125torontoc
Aug. 1, 2011, 9:54 am

87.The Rose of Sebastopol by Katharine McMahon. I do like good historical fiction. When I started to read this story about Victorian England and the Crimean War, I thought- on no- another melodrama. But as I read more, I realized that this novel was different- the author had a viewpoint on the suffering in war and the senseless destruction because of bad leaders. The main characters, Mariella, her cousin Rosa, and their respective families, seem to be based on stereotypes at first. Then as the story progressed, there was more than the typical historical romance headstrong women and stubborn men. I was glad that I finished the book as I learned more about the conditions of nursing and the hospitals in the Crimean war. The ending was a little unsatisfactory for me

126torontoc
Aug. 2, 2011, 5:23 pm

88. Cod: A biography of the Fish that Changed the World by Mark Kurlansky. I previously read the author's book on Salt. This informative book gives the history of not only this fish but the catching methods, explorers who discovered fishing areas in North America, and of course the politics. Cod have been fished out of many areas and whether they " will come back" is an unanswered question. The book also includes recipes old and new and interesting quotes. The design and illustrations are quite nice as well.

127torontoc
Aug. 5, 2011, 8:19 am

89. The Meaning of Night by Michael Cox. What a wonderful melodramatic read! Cox created a proper Victorian plot with hidden heirs, unattainable inheritances, revenge plans, and more. Edward Glyver, the narrator, searches for his true identity. He finds out that his supposed mother was part of a plan to hide the child of her good friend, Lady Tansor. Glyver is really the son of Lord Tansor who in turn is trying to make Phoebus Daunt, his heir. Of course Daunt is Edward's enemy. For a story full of revelations of crime, unrequited loves and betrayals, Cox's style is clear and a pleasure to read. I look forward to the sequel.( which I have in my book pile.)

128torontoc
Aug. 6, 2011, 11:29 am

90. The Glass of Time by Michael Cox. I had this sequel to Cox's The Meaning of Night and was curious -so I read it next. Again -wonderful Victorian Melodrama. This novel is about the mysterious young woman, Esperanza Gorst, who is placed as the personal maid to the Baroness Tansor. Esperanza, or Alice as she is known to the inhabitants of Everwood is an orphan brought up in Paris by her guardian. She is to spy on her mistress- the love and betrayer of Edward Glyver (see the last book). This well told story of secrets, more killings,and sinister characters ties up the plot from the last novel and introduces more letters,and explanations of past behaviours. I knew what the revelations would be way before the plot got around to solving the mysteries. That is the only fault. However, the reader should want to appreciate the style. I do like the title of the academic who supposedly introduce both books as manuscripts from the university's library-Professor of Post-Authentic Victorian Fiction. That says it all!

129torontoc
Aug. 8, 2011, 10:14 am

91. The Sisters of Sinai: How Two Lady Adventurers Discovered the Hidden Gospels by Janet Soskice. This biographyof two Scottish twin sisters and their adventures and scholarship in discovering a very early version of the Gospels is well written. Agnes and Margaret Smith are brought up to be physically fit and academicly knowledgeable by their wealthy father. Although both sisters marry late and are widowed, they travel widely in Egypt , Greece, Cyprus and the Sinai in the late 1880's and 90's. Able to speak many languages, including Greek and Arabic, they are able to travel to St. Catherine's Monastery in the Sinai, befriend the monks and photography a very old manuscript that proves to be very important in Bible scholarship. They were also friends of Soloman Schechter and saw the Cairo Genizah with him.The author's style is clear and very informative-I certainly enjoyed reading it.

130torontoc
Aug. 9, 2011, 8:47 am

92.The Memory Chalet by Tony Judt. This slim volume of memoirs was written under very unusual circumstances. The author had ALS and would die in August 2010. These memoirs of Judt's life and ideas are dated in the text as May 2010. In a way it is hard to find fault with the author's ideas as this book is a farewell with the important milestones in Judt's life remembered and imagined as "arranged" in a Swiss chalet of memory. ( as Judt recalls in The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci by Jonathan Spence, a book that I read a number of years ago) Definitely worth reading as a memorial to an important historian.

131torontoc
Aug. 10, 2011, 6:26 pm

93. The Unquiet Bones: The first chronicle of Hugh de Singleton, surgeon by melvin Starr. This mystery is the first in the series about a young surgeon and solver of murders in 14th century Britain. I did think that the story started off too slowly but I did enjoy it in the end. It is not a great book but one that is satisfying as a historical fiction mystery.

132torontoc
Aug. 12, 2011, 2:55 pm

94. Where the God of Love Hangs Out by Amy Bloom I like this author's short stories better than her last novel. The book's selections are mainly grouped around two couples- William and Clare and then Lionel and Julia.William and Clare are married to other people but are friendsThey eventually leave their spouses and marry. The fall out from their relationship forms the theme of many of the stories. Julia is Lionel's stepmother and their relationship is traced over the years. No one in these stories is perfect but the writing and personalities created are striking. I enjoyed the insights that Bloom gives the reader in her work.

133torontoc
Aug. 13, 2011, 1:04 pm

95. Tales of the Lost Ten Tribes by Tamar Yellin. I had mixed feelings about this book of short stories. The theme is based on the ten lost tribes of Israel although the stories are about nameless narrators who are rootless. The first story is the best- a young person( male? female? ) is entranced with a visiting uncle who styles himself as a traveller and adventurer. He creates much tension in his brother's house. The rest of the book relate the stories of the narrator and the people met- themselves " displaced" to quote the back of the book. The prose is accomplished but the atmosphere is always grim. I didn't get the idea that the narraor was supposed to be the same person until the last story. I'm on the fence about this book.

134torontoc
Aug. 14, 2011, 10:21 am

96. Silk by Alessandro Baricco. This very slim novel is really a fable about obsession. Many phrases describing the travels of the main character,Herve Joncour, are repeated in the story. Joncour travels to Japan to buy silk worms for the industry in a town in France.He encounters a mysterious woman who does not look Japanese at the home of a powerful nobleman in Japan. He nevers speaks to her but is compelled to return to Japan to see her although the only communication is a note in Japanese that she passes to him that he must have translated in France. The conclusion of the book is shocking and somewhat unexpected. Interesting very brief read.

135torontoc
Aug. 19, 2011, 10:32 am

97. The French Father by Alain Elkann. This very brief but interesting fiction/memoir is about the imagined conversation that the author's father has with the man in the next burial plot in Montparasse Cemetery. The story is also about the interviews that Elkann has with the relatives, friends and lovers of Roland Topoc. the dead artist buried next to his father. Throughout the book, the memoirs of the estranged father and son, and the information about the very different person who is buried next to him merge with the memories of the author. The reader is not sure what is fact and what is fiction. Very accomplished work by the author and his translator.

136torontoc
Aug. 19, 2011, 10:41 am

oops- can't edit on my computer- so Montparnasse is the cemetery

137torontoc
Aug. 23, 2011, 9:26 am

98.Waiting by Ha Jin. This novel gives the reader a sense of life in China under Mao. An army doctor has waited about 17 years before he can divorce his wife. Never really living together, Lin really married Shuyu so that she would take care of his mother and father while he was away at his hospital assignment. Lin became involved with a nurse, Manna Wu, who did wait for him. The story of their relationship and the boundaries that determined what they could and could do, reveals a world that western readers might have very little understanding. The end is not quite satisfying to me, but the story is very powerful.

138wookiebender
Aug. 25, 2011, 3:43 am

Oooh, finally, you read a book I already own, so I don't have to add it to my wishlist! :)

139torontoc
Aug. 31, 2011, 5:11 pm

It was very good!
99. My Animal Life by Maggie Gee. This memoir was a little unusual for me to read.The author uses the image of animal life to explain her own behaviours, and emotions. Gee related some very painful accounts of her mother and father's marriage. Gee decided to not expose all about her brothers, husband and daughter, so the view that the reader gets is about her inner life as a writer. Gee gives advice and talks about the writing process and her own personal growth. We learn about her mother and father's families, her father's abuse of her mother and herself and her thoughts on class. As a North American, reading Gee's writing on rising from a "lower class" through an excellent education to the middle class, I was not able to empathize with her triumph. This sensitivity to class is really foreign to me. Otherwise, Gee's account of her writing history,and her understanding of the good and bad in her relationship to her family was very interesting. This book is about a writer's progress.

100.Sister Pelagia and the Black Monk by Boris Akunin. Book number 100 is a mystery featuring one of Akunin's heroines-the nun Sister Pelagia. The Bishop Mitrofanii hears about a ghost at a famous monastary, New Ararat. He send two spies to find out what is happening and both meet terrible fates. Sister Pelagia decides to disguise herself and solve the mystery. There are more killings, kidnappings and wierd characters. Akunin tends to get a little wordy at the beginning but the plot is fun to read and guess the ending. A fun read.

140wookiebender
Sept. 1, 2011, 1:36 am

100 already! Congratulations! Bring on the dancing books!

I've been meaning to track down some Akunin, but every time I see them in a shop, I remind myself of how many UNREAD books I already have at home. *sigh*

141clfisha
Sept. 1, 2011, 6:29 am

Hey congrats from me too!

142torontoc
Sept. 1, 2011, 3:44 pm

Thank you- when I looked back at my 2010 reading diary, I reached `100 books at the same time- the end of August.

101. Stamboul Train by Graham Greene. I forgot how much I liked reading Graham Greene.This book published in 1932, is about a number of people travelling on the Orient Express from Ostend to Istanbul. The rich merchant, the dancer, the exiled political leader, the killer, the muckraking journalist- it was all a great read about plots and fleeting relationships.

143torontoc
Sept. 5, 2011, 8:51 am

102. The Horse Boy: A Memoir of Healing by Rupert Isaacson I saw the documentary of Isaacson's trip to Mongolia to heal his son and saw the author speak. I found the book about a year later. Both book and film were very moving. Isaacson and his wife Kristen had a autistic son, Rowan who seemed to respond more positively when he rode a horse near their home. He also had a good reaction when confronted with "shamans" from Africa who Isaacson was helping. The author decided to take his family to Mongolia toride horses and see shamans there. He arranged for the trip to be filmed. The trip was quite an undertaking- with healing cermonies by groups of shamans,and arduous trips on horseback over mountain ranges to meet a specific shaman.Rowan also had the experice of riding a reindeer who belonged to one of the remote groups that the family met. During this trip, Rowan made his first friend, a little boy who was the son of the guide. Isaacson's narration of this experience was very interesting and very honest as he wrote of his doubts and then belief in the work of the healers. Rowan did improve and shed his destructive behaviours gradually. The author writes of his work in establishing a ranch for autistic children in Texas to help them relate to the world. Certainly this story is inspiring.

144jfetting
Sept. 5, 2011, 6:29 pm

Congrats on hitting 100!

145clfisha
Sept. 6, 2011, 4:48 am

Yes Congrats!

146torontoc
Sept. 8, 2011, 3:57 pm

Thank you!
103. A World Elsewhere by Wayne Johnson. I was really looking forward to reading the latest novel by Johnson. I enjoyed his previous works for their characterization and imaginative plots. His memoir Baltimore's Mansion was excellent. But I am disappointed by this book. The names and plays on words are good. The idea that a Newfoundland native, Landish Druken and a wealthy American, "Van" Vanderluyden become friends at Princeton and that their fates are drawn together is interesting. However, the life of Druken, disowned by his father for not following his career as a ship's captain is curiously not as compelling. Druken suffers poverty as he adopts a little boy and is only relieved when the two go to live with Van at his mansion in North Carolina. The character of Druken does not lead to empathy as much as annoyance at his stupidity. His love of his young charge, Deacon is the only redeeming feature.The prose is very good but I am left curiously unmoved by the plot.

147torontoc
Sept. 9, 2011, 9:09 am

I can't edit on my computer- so would like to point out that I spelled Wayne Johnston's name incorrectly on the last posting.

104. The Last Rain byEdeet Ravel. Ravel uses a six year old as one of her main narrators in this story about life on a kibbutz in Israel in the the early 1960's. Ravel also uses real life sources from the experiences of her own family at Kibbutz Susa in this multi-layered novel. The contradictions of creating a new way of living based on ideology are exposed in the narration of Dori and her life in the Children's House on the kibbutz. Ravel writes in a fragmented style, with accounts of the early days of the kibbutz in1949 and the earlier attempts to cultivate the land in 1922. The narration works although the reader has to get used to the sections of dialogue from many different sources. I did like this work and the information about what was real at the end of the book was fascinating.

148torontoc
Sept. 10, 2011, 9:08 pm

105. Alone in the Classroom by Elizabeth Hay. I really like Hay's writing style. Her descriptions are elegant and her plot lines complex. There are two stories in this novel -those of Connie , a teacher in a small Prairie school in1929 and her niece, Anne , living in the Ottawa valley in the present.Connie struggles to help a student, Michael, to learn how to read. She is suspicious of the motives of her principal, Parley Burns, when he pays special attention to a young girl who takes the lead in a school play based Hardy's Tess D'Urberville. After a stunning tragedy that affects one family, Connie moves back east and becomes a newspaper reporter. The second part of the story involves the murder of girl near Ottawa and Connie's reporting and thoughts on the killer. The section on Anne and her relationships with Connie and Michael complete the story. There are no neat resolutions and although I thought that the last part didn't have the strength of the first part of the book, I did enjoy Hay's work.

149judylou
Sept. 11, 2011, 2:56 am

I shouldn't leave it so long between visits to your thread. Now I am forced to add way too many books to my wishlist all at once!

I very much enjoy your reviews and comments and want to add my congratulations for passing the 100 mark!

150clif_hiker
Bearbeitet: Sept. 11, 2011, 7:30 am

I agree with Judy! You read a lot of interesting books... I too have added several to my list (The Horse Boy sounds fabulous... and is timely as I have an autistic young man in my classes this fall). And I echo the congratulations on reaching 100 books!

151torontoc
Sept. 11, 2011, 8:28 am

Thank you very much!
Try to see the film based on "The Horse Boy" if you can get a copy- the author is also a very good speaker. (

152torontoc
Sept. 15, 2011, 10:21 pm

106. The Cat's Table by Michael Ondaatje. This latest book by Ondaatje is fiction but the author does say that he took a similar trip when he was young. An eleven year boy old is sent by ship from then Ceylon to England to meet his mother. He is seated at the "Cat's table" for dinner along with two other boys, Cassius and Ramadhin and some interesting adults. The boys have a number of adventures and meet some very eccentric people. Ondaatje writes about the trip and the boy's reflections years later when he is an adult. Some of the hijinks are quite serious and have repercussions later on for some of the characters. The book is well written and skillfully moves from one era to another during the course of the story. I really liked this book and the mood that Ondaatje establishes,

153torontoc
Sept. 18, 2011, 11:30 am

107. The Sisters Brothers by Patrick DeWitt. Dewitt has written a very entertaining story about two brothers who are hired killers in the west in 1851. Their present task is to ride to San Francisco and kill a man who has angered their boss, the Commodore. Narrated by Eli, the story relates the casual killing of anyone who gets in the way of Eli and his more bloodthirsty brother, Charlie. The language is wonderful ( although there is a lot of blood and mayhem) and the plot surprising. This is a wonderful read and I see why it is on the Booker shortlist and the Giller longlist.

154wookiebender
Sept. 18, 2011, 8:09 pm

Oh, I'm glad you liked The Sisters Brothers too! One of my favourite reads this year. (Although I will be surprised if it wins the Booker.)

155torontoc
Sept. 25, 2011, 5:24 pm

108. The Song is You by Arthur Phillips. Phillips has a wonderful way with words and phrases. His story of a man's obsession with a young singer is expertly told. Julian Donahue is a successful commercial director who hears an up and coming singer Cait O' Dwyer. They begin to communicate through email and songs that she writes. Julian's background of relationships from his estranged wife, Rachel, his mourning of his young son,his memories of his father's love of jazz and his disfunctional brother all contribute to his actions as he tries to court Cait. The singer encourages her mysterious admirer but missed opportunities lead to surprising ( or maybe not) choices. The use of words and the way Phillips write about the profound influence that music has on the lives of his characters is worth the read of this book.

109. Mr. Shakespeare's Bastard by Richard B. Wright Wright is a skillful writer. I previously read his Clara Callan-winner of a Giller prize. In this novel about the life of a young woman and her mother during the times of Shakespeare, Wright imagines that the playwright had an illegitimate daughter. The story is really about the small towns of England and the city of London during the years of the 17th century. The two women who are the subjects of the plot are dependent on their relatives for their livelihood and uncommonly know how to read. The historical aspect is interesting but
Shakespeare does not figure largely in the plot. An interesting book.

156torontoc
Sept. 26, 2011, 7:48 pm

110. Dreaming in Chinese: Mandarin Lessons in Life, Love, and Language by Deborah Fallows The author is a linguist who lived in China with her writer husband for three years. Her recollections of her life and growing understanding of the complexity of the Chinese language make for good reading. Each chapter introduces a different concept in the learning of the language accompanied by some of the author's experiences. Fallows realizes that understanding the Chinese personality is linked to the limits and rules of the language. Her journey in language mastery ( or in some case the lack of) is tracked with anecdotes and interesting instruction in the structure of Mandarin Chinese. An informative book.

157torontoc
Bearbeitet: Sept. 27, 2011, 1:31 pm

111.A Student of Weather by Elizabeth Hay. I am a fan of this writer. Her language is superb and her characters are intriguing. Two very different sisters live with their father on a farm in depression era Saskatchewan. Lucinda, the oldest, is beautiful but devoted to keeping house. The younger sister, Norma Joyce is quirky, and selfish. They both are attracted to a handsome student of weather, Maurice, who lives with the family when he comes to do botany research. How both sisters are attracted to Maurice, the outcome of their love and the resulting consequences make up the plot as the family eventually moves to Ottawa. Norma Joyce spends time in New York and ultimately learns about her own talents and what her actions have done to her family. I do like the fact that the object of her affections is portrayed as flawed. The main " action" really take places in the first two thirds of the novel and the last part is really a summing up but I still enjoyed my reading.

158torontoc
Sept. 29, 2011, 8:18 am

112. The Moldavian Pimp by Edgardo Cozarinsky Thank you to
Rebeccanyc for introducing and reviewing this book! The story of a young man who interviews an old man in a nursing home in Argentina and investigates his story is a fascinating read. The story of Yiddish theatre in South America and the almost forgotten history of Jewish pimps and prostitutes is the subject for this book. What makes it unusual is that this group founded their own synagogues and cemeteries. I have read a non fiction book about this subject-Bodies and Souls: The Tragic Plight of Three Jewish Women Forced into Prostitution in the Americas by Isabel Vincent. I knew about the history as I read this novel that has as it's focus a play that might hold truths about a real incident.

159torontoc
Okt. 10, 2011, 12:05 pm

113. The China Lover by Ian Buruma. Sometimes when a respected writer of politics turns to fiction , the results are mixed. Buruma takes the true story of a Japanese woman whose exploits are the stuff of fiction and writes about her life.He uses three narrators from the life of Ri Koran or Yoshiko Yamaguchi or Shirley Yamaguchi. The structure is not very clear from the beginning but improves as the story of this Japanese actress- who makes films for the Japanese when they control most of China and then for Americans when they control post war Japan-progresses. The true story of this woman does seem like a bad soap opera. She marries the respected sculptor Isamu Noguchi at one point and later supports the Palestinian cause as a reporter and later as a politician. Buruma's narration doesn't really give the reader a sense of the real personality of this woman although her story is compelling to read.

160torontoc
Okt. 11, 2011, 9:59 pm

114. Death by Design by Barbara Nadel. I had not heard of this series about a Turkish police inspector,Cetin Ikmen, but enjoyed this book. The inspector and his team find an illegal factory in Istanbul that employs slave labour who make famous label knockoff leather bags. They also find a young man who kills himself with a bomb. Fearing that there is a plot to bomb an unknown place in London, Ikmen is asked to go undercover in London to find out more about the plot and the people behind it.The resulting story is fast and comes to a satisfactory conclusion. A detective series that I think that I would like to read.

161torontoc
Okt. 12, 2011, 11:11 pm

115. When Christ and His Saints Slept by Sharon Kay Penman. This is the first book in a trilogy about the Plantagenets.The war that involved the factions who favoured Stephen or Maude as the ruler of England is the subject of this historical novel. Penman writes well about the endless changing of alliances and the misery of continuous war.

162jfetting
Okt. 13, 2011, 8:05 am

I can't wait to read When Christ and His Saints Slept - it has been on my wishlist forever. Did you like it?

163torontoc
Okt. 13, 2011, 9:41 am

Yes- this is the second book by Sharon Kay Penman that I have read and I like her style.

164torontoc
Okt. 14, 2011, 12:26 pm

116. The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes. This is a beautifully crafted book. Barnes introduces a number of interesting ideas about the unreliable narrator, memories and the real truth about past experiences. Tony, the narrator, relates his history of school, his friends, his first serious girlfriend ( to him) and her eventual betrayal with one of his friends. His memories become important to him when he is left a sum of money and papers by his former girlfriend's mother. Tony's quest to find out why and his learning of part of the story form the bulk of the plot. This book is very brief- the reader would like to hear more about the relationships. Barnes has written a very skilled teaser of a story. Worth of the Man Booker? I think so.

165judylou
Okt. 15, 2011, 5:11 am

That is good to hear Cyrel. I will be reading The Sense of an ending soon. I also have The Sisters Brothers waiting for me too. Sounds like I will be enjoying both of them.

166torontoc
Okt. 20, 2011, 9:16 am

117. The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance by Edmund De Waal. De Waal, a noted potter, writes about the history of his family-The Ephrussis. He follows the purchase of a collection of Japanese carvings-netsuke- from his relative , Charles Ephrussi in nineteenth century Paris who bought the collection, to Victor and Emmy who lived in early 20th century Vienna and then to his uncle , Iggy in Japan. DeWaal traces and discovers the history of his wealthy banking family from Odessa to Paris and Vienna. He records the end of their business in Austria when the Nazis take over. This is a very emotional book as DeWaal looks at the relationships of his family and their accomplishments. A well written memoir and history.

167wookiebender
Okt. 24, 2011, 12:15 am

I've heard good things about The Hare with Amber Eyes, I must see if I can find a copy one day!

168torontoc
Nov. 1, 2011, 10:47 am

118. Cool Water by Dianne Warren I really liked this novel about the inhabitants of a small town( Juliet) in present day Saskatchewan. A young man whose adoptive parents have left him their farm, a bank manager dissatisfied with his present life, a older man who can't express his feelings about his sister-in-law and the ghost of a lost camel are some of the characters and stories that the reader follows in this expertly written book. The history of a hundred mile horse race from years ago provides a thread that links part of the plot line. I can see why Warren won the Governor General of Canada Literary award last year, I believe.

169torontoc
Nov. 2, 2011, 10:01 am

119. Half-Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan. I liked this book. The subject matter- black musicians ( both American and German) caught in the nightmare of Nazi Germany and war time Paris was written using dialect and slang that I did get used to. The narrator, Sid, is asked to go to a festival in present day Berlin to view a film made about the music group he was part of during the 1930's and early 1940. He remembers how the group escaped to Paris. Sid also reviews his troubled relationship with the gifted trumpet player, Hiero- a German citizen and also black. Betrayals and love are important themes in this story. Definitely worth reading.

170torontoc
Nov. 2, 2011, 1:55 pm

120.The Winter Ghosts by Kate Mosse. This novel read like a 1930's movie. A young man ,severely troubled by his brother's death in the"Great War", is driving through the south of France. He has an accident on a winter mountian road and takes refuge in a small village. Invited to a celebration, he believes that he has met a young woman who helps him escape from a fight. At this point reality and dream are mixed as he tries to find out why the young woman and her family were trapped in a mountain cave. The history of the Cathars and their massacre in the late 1300's becomes the focus. An interesting yet light read.

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Nov. 3, 2011, 2:01 pm

121. A Change of Climate by Hilary Mantel. I am always admiring of the different voices that Mantel uses in her novels- Moral and ethical dilemmas are main themes in this story of faith and the lack of it. Ralph and his wife Anna live with their four children in Norfolk. Ralph runs the family trust that manages a half way house in London and other charity concerns. The story of their life of poverty as they sacrifice for others and the hidden secret of the tragedy of their brief sojourn in Africa propel the plot. Discovery and the changes in their children's lives as they grow up are important sections of the story as Ralph and Anna face a crisis in their relationship. A very good read.

172torontoc
Nov. 4, 2011, 10:59 am

122.The Ghost Road by Pat Barker. This novel is one of Barker's trilogy on World War I and it won the 1995 Booker Prize- it gave me a chance to compare with the present day shortlist. I 'd say that the substance and story have much more depth than the present day novels considered for the prize. Barker follows two men-one based on a real life person and the other a fictional character. Lieutenant Billy Prior has recoverd from shell shock and is on his way back to the front in France. His exploits with lovers, both male and female, and his diary provide the half of the novel that deals with the horrors of the war on the front.One of his fellow soldiers is based on the poet, Wilfred Owen. The other major character is a psychologist, William Rivers, who treated Prior in England. Based on a real person, Rivers compares his experiences researching a tribe of former head hunters before the war while he is working in hospital and treating the war wounded. The juxtaposition of war experiences of Prior and Rivers' work in Melanesia give the reader insights into behaviour and reality of the war. A very good book.

173torontoc
Nov. 6, 2011, 9:21 am

123. Lost and Found by Shaun Tan. This new volume contains updated versions of Shaun Tan's three books that were issued in Australia and not available in North America. Tan also contributes commentary on each of his stories. The rich illustration techniques that are an important feature of Tan's work provide each story with a fabulous new world. The Red Tree is about finding hope. The Lost Thing is about respect for the unknown. John Marsden's story about The Rabbits is an allegory about conquering and change. Highly recommended for the dazzling visual work and stories to think about.

174torontoc
Nov. 12, 2011, 10:20 am

124. The Frozen Rabbi by Steve Stern-I thought that Stern's very humerous( at first) take on a Rabbi frozen in 1890 and defrosted in 2001 in Memphis by one of the descendents of his keepers was a good history of the Lower East Side and Yiddish life. The two threads of the story alternate between the present day and the stories of the Karp family who shelter the frozen rabbi. In the present, after young Bernie Karp frees the Rabbi from his ice casket, the Rabbi watches too much television. He begins a new life as a proponent of a cult like study hall and Zen Jewish establishment that proves to be very profitable. The stories of the Karp men and women as they escape from the Old
World to the new and the conflicts that they encounter are entertaining. I hated the ending however. I may have to rant about the preoccupations of some present day male writers using the Lower East Side and Yiddish culture as their source for their fiction -compared with female writers,past and present,but I won't except to say that I found the way that Stern finished his story was very uncomfortable and a little puzzling.

175wookiebender
Nov. 13, 2011, 10:38 pm

Oh, I love Shaun Tan. The Lost Thing is wonderful, I love it when I get to read it to the kids.

176judylou
Nov. 18, 2011, 1:29 am

Another Shaun Tan groupie here!!

177torontoc
Nov. 19, 2011, 9:14 am

Shaun Tan is a terrific illustrator and author!

125. What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell. It is a pleasure to read the essays of Gladwell, previously published in the New Yorker magazine.The author always looks looks at issues from a new point of view. And these essays take on both the seemingly mundane( advertisements on women's hair dye) and the more profound. (the Challenger explosion).Excellent read.

178torontoc
Nov. 20, 2011, 10:12 am


126. The Dirt on Clean : An Unsanitized History byKatherine Ashenburg. This history of what and why people kept clean or not through out history is a fun and fast read. Ashenburg was better on the Greek and Roman and medieval times than the modern day- I kept on wanting more. ( especially after reading Malcolm Gladswell's essay on hair dye and advertising )This is an interesting history on why or why not people bathed and used water to get rid of dirt. Ashenburg's information on the state of cleanliness in the times of Louis XIV makes me wonder on the various movies about the time that don't show the grime!

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Bearbeitet: Nov. 21, 2011, 2:36 pm

127. Both Ways is The Only Way I Want it by Maile Meloy. sigh... This is a well crafted collection of short stories. They are grim- about couples who cheat, awkward young people, deception, and more. I didn't like them although I can appreciate the work.

180torontoc
Nov. 23, 2011, 6:46 pm

128. The Glatstein Chronicles by Jacob Glatstein. This novel has a very interesting background. As part of the New Yiddish Library, the original two books that make up this novel were written in Yiddish in 1937 and then 1940. Ruth Wisse edited the books that were translated by Maier Deshell and Norbert Guterman. The story is based on Glatstein's trip from New York to Lublin, Poland to see his dying mother in 1934. The first book covers the voyage by ship, a stop in Paris and then the rail trip to Poland. This first book really conveys some of the anti-semitism and the unease felt by Jews in Europe. The second book is a little more puzzling as the story is about the narrator's stay in a hotel in Poland after the death of his mother and just before his return to the United States. The second book really shows the various kinds of Jews living in Poland- literate and secular or orthadox and learned. I did not get any sense of the coming destruction- in fact the lives portrayed in the second novel seem to live in a " bubble" of concern with children converting, or lives comfortable or not. The first book really showed the coming war and the various political opinions of the time. According to Ruth Wisse, Glatstein had planned a third novel . An interesting read.

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Bearbeitet: Nov. 25, 2011, 11:56 pm

129.A Sunday at the Pool in Kigali by Gil Courtemanche. The subject of this novel is the massacre that took place in Rwanda. The author, in his preface, states that he did use real people's stories and their names, Very well translated from the French by Patricia Claxton, the reader follows the life of Bertrand Valcourt, a Quebecois film producer working in Kigali, Rwanda. His love for a woman he meets-Gentille , their relationship and his friendship with other Rwandans as they confront the coming disaster ( a better term would be holocaust or planned mass killings) make up the plot. The author/narrator has very critical words for the UN appointed soldiers and their superiors, the Belgian and French governments, and the Rwandan government officials. The descriptions of the torture, rapes and killing are graphic.Threaded through this narrative is the story of AIDS and how so many were infected and dying. This is not an easy book to read. Another theme tied in to the AIDS theme is the role of sex-there is lots of it.
Definitely worth reading although I would also recommend Senator- then General -Romeo Dallaire 's memoir as well. -Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda

182torontoc
Nov. 25, 2011, 11:49 pm

130. Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier. Lovely historical novel about two women in Lyme , England who discover new fossils and bones of unknown creatures. Mary Anning is the one who finds the most important bones and skeletons. Elizabeth Philpot is the middle class woman who champions Mary and does collecting herself. Although Mary provides some of the most important discoveries of the early nineteenth century in natural science, both women are held back by the perceived role of females and their place in society. A very nice read.

183torontoc
Nov. 29, 2011, 4:57 pm

131. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. What a terrific book! I know that many LT readers reviewed this book long ago but I just finished it. Skloot narrated not only the story of the Lacks family but made the science of cells and medical research understandable. The treatment of Henrietta Lacks for her cancer and the aftermath of the work done with her cells ( and without her knowledge) was fascinating. The injustice of her family not knowing is heartbreaking. However, the balance of the advances made in medical discoveries through the use of the HeLa cells was a revelation to me. I hope that Skloot continues to write on these topices.

184torontoc
Dez. 5, 2011, 9:41 am

132. The Book of Fathers by Miklos Vamos The authors follows twelve fathers 1705 to 1999 in Hungary. Ablely translated from the Hungarian by Peter Sherwood, the link from one man to the next is the Book of Fathers that each writes in and passes down to his oldest son, and the ability to see somewhat murkily into the future. The characters are very human and not at all wise in their choices of life partners and life directions. In fact this weakness seems to be a major trait. The acceptance and denial of Jewish faith is another. Vamos writes an interesting afterword that explains Hungarian history, and explains his own history that mirrors one of the stories. Vamos was told that he was Jewish at one point in his life after assuming that he was not. He also did not know much about his own father's history. An interesting novel.

133. Don't Cry for Me, Hot Pastrami by Sharon Kahn. From the sublime to the ridiculous- this mystery that I read very quickly was funny, absurd and somewhat transparent in the solving of the " case". Very entertaining and silly in a good way.

185torontoc
Dez. 5, 2011, 1:39 pm

134. Hold the Cream Cheese, Kill the Lox by Sharon Kahn. In a fit of devouring silly mysteries, this one was cute and really far fetched- really- some of the characters were more like cartoons although I do like the main focus of the novel, Ruby.

186torontoc
Dez. 5, 2011, 11:11 pm

135. Lavinia by Ursula K. Le Guin. Le Guin takes the story of Lavinia from Vergil's Aeneid and gives her a personality and story. In the poem she is just a silent player. Lavinia narrates the story of her life as the daughter of King Latinus and later the wife of Aeneas. She is portrayed as wise and capable of making good decisions. Le Guin has animated a section of the great historic poem and saga of early Latin times and "written the women in".Highly recommended

187torontoc
Dez. 7, 2011, 7:16 pm

136. To Siberia by Per Petterson. ( translated by Anne Born. I have to groan when I write about this book.-dysfunctional; family, intense brother and sister relationship ( the brother is very bold but clumsy in his caring for his sister), gloomy weather in Danish Jutland and the time just before and after World War II. This story of a young woman whose dreams are thwarted by time and circumstance, and her worship of her brother who does fulfill part of his desire was very depressing. I kept on thinking of the Scandinavian detective that Kenneth Branough played in a BBC series- so gloomy and bleak.

188torontoc
Dez. 10, 2011, 9:27 am

137. Losing Nelson by Barry UnsworthThis novel is really about obsession. The narrator is a middle aged man living as a recluse in London. Charles Cleasby's life is taken up with his reenactments of Horatio Nelson's battles and his writing of a book on the life of his hero. He rarely leaves the house except to go to the Nelson Club, and forgets to eat. His only company is a typist, Miss Lily who comes to help him with his book. The reader is given brief clues of why Cleaseby is so obsessed by the idea of Nelson as a true hero. Miss Lily questions about the motives of Nelson and brings Cleasby uncomfortably down to earth in their sessions. The reader learns much about the tactics and details of Nelson's battles. The event of Nelson's life that Cleasby has problems dealing with is the action that led up to a massacre in Naples. Cleasby cannot believe that his hero would be part of a dishonourable event.I was not satisfied with the ending of the book. I can believe the action taken could happen in a metaphorical way but not the way it was written.

189torontoc
Dez. 12, 2011, 8:22 pm

138. Them: a memoir of parents by Francine du Plessix Gray. The author has had a most remarkable life- her mother, Titania du Plessix had been the muse of a noted Russian poet,was born in Russia, lived in France and then the United States and her stepfather, Alexander Liberman was a noted artist and art director for Conde Nast. Francine's father had been shot down while fighting in World War II. Her mother and soon to be stepfather arranged for the family to leave France and be admitted to the United States in 1941. Titania became a noted hat designer for Saks and Alex rose to a top position in the publishing world. The author's life was not really normal- sent off at times to live with various relatives and friends , Francine du Plessix Gray relates the complicated stories of both parents, their strengths and weaknesses, and the famous people who they socialized with. The author writes about the lives of her parents with a painful objectivity. The book won the National Book Critics Circle Award- it was a good read.

139. Chicken with Plums by Marjane Satrapi. This graphic novel is the story of the sad life of the author's uncle ,a noted musician. whose private life problems led him to commit suicide. As with her previous work, Satrapi's style is very stark, with black and white artwork and blunt dialogue.

190torontoc
Dez. 13, 2011, 6:38 pm

140. The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing by Melissa Bank. This is a well written set of short stories that feature a young woman , Jane Rosenal, as she grows up. The stories expertly relate the heartbreak of first loves, unsuitable love and the loss of a parent. Both sad and funny, the author gives us a young woman who learns about relationships. I enjoyed this set of stories.

191wookiebender
Dez. 14, 2011, 12:47 am

Oh, it's been a while since I visited here! Some nice reading going on. It's been some years since I read The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing, but I do remember liking it very much at the time.

192torontoc
Dez. 15, 2011, 4:39 pm

I have to try to find more works by those authors that I like!
this next one is one example

141. School for Love by Olivia Manning. I was interested in reading more of this author's works after I finished Balkan Trilogy and The Levant Triology. This early book is very interesting. Manning is able to give the reader very perceptive character study of the immature young boy, Felix- an orphan boarding at a distant relative's house, Miss Bohun, in World War II Jerusalem. Miss Bohun, herself is described by Jane Smiley, in the good introduction, as " in the English reviews of the novel ...to such great literary monsters as Miss Havisham.." Miss Bohun tries to run the lives of all the inhabitants of the house- she does do some major damage to a number of lives. The writing describing helplessness of the the characters and the growing up of Felix is skilled and accurate. I did enjoy the book and will be on the lookout for more of Manning's early work.

193iansales
Dez. 16, 2011, 5:03 am

I ought to read more of her books since I also loved The Balkan Trilogy and The Levant Trilogy.

194torontoc
Dez. 17, 2011, 4:32 pm

142. A More Perfect Heaven: How Copernicus Revolutionized the Cosmos by Dava Sobel The author has written a most understandable book about the discoveries of Copernicus and the effect his ideas had on the concept of our universe. The format is unusual. Sobel at first gives the reader a well documented biography of the career of Copernicus and his situation when he first met a young mathematician,Rheticus, who would be responsible for the publishing of his theories-On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres.The theory that the earth revolved around the sun would be considered blasphemous for many years. Copernicus refused to publish because of his fear of ridicule. However Rheticus not only helped Copernicus edit his findings- he took the manuscript to a publisher in Germany. Considering that Rheticus was a Lutheran and Copernicus a Roman Catholic official in a time of strife, the collabration was unique. Sobel inserts a play about the meeting of the two men in the center of the novel. This device serves to highlight the dangers that both men faced in working together and the other problems that Copernicus faced with his bishop. The remaining third of the book related the influence that Copernicus's work had on future scientists and th reaction of the Roman Catholic Church. I did enjoy Sobel's style as she makes some very complicated ideas easier to understand. I also appreciated the many illustrations that accompanied the text.

195torontoc
Bearbeitet: Dez. 18, 2011, 8:38 pm

143. Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marisha Pessl. Now I decided to clear out Mount TBR and chose this book. I don't know- From a not bad story of a young teenager confronting cliques and a mysterious teacher/mentor- it turned into a bizarre story of espionage. I also found myself skipping some of the precocious meanderings of the main character in order to get on with the story. In the end a disappointment

196torontoc
Dez. 24, 2011, 10:05 pm


144. Drood by Dan Simmons. Simmonds has perfected the " unreliable narrator". This novel about the friendship and rivalry between the writers Wilkie Collins and Charles Dickens chronicles their last decades. Collins is the narrator who is the friend and co- writer of scripts and some short stories with Dickens. The reader knows that Collins takes a lot of laudanum and later morphine to deal with his pain from gout. Wilkie describes the tragic event when a train carrying Dickens went off the track at Staplehurst and many people were horribly wounded and killed. Dickens met a strange man named Drood helping the dying and went on an odyssey to find this person. Dickens dragged Collins through the worst underground slums of Victorian London. From this initial voyage, Collins also began looking for the supernatural being who haunted Dickens. The story concerns plots against both writers, events and murders which may or may not have taken place, stories about early forms of hypnotism and the unusual living arrangements and relationships that both men had with women. A thriller with plot changes, the author uses many of the real events connected with both writers to construct his complicated plot. A fascinating and satisfying read! ( although it is 771 pages long)

197torontoc
Dez. 26, 2011, 9:38 am

145. The Leper's Return by Michael Jecks. This is one of the medieval mysteries featuring Sir Baldwin Furnshill and Bailiff Simon Puttock. This is a really decent series with plausible plots and interesting details of life in rural England during the 1300'

198torontoc
Dez. 29, 2011, 2:51 pm

146. Me Times Three by Alex Witchel Better than average novel about a young woman working in New York during the 1980's and her loves and friends.

199torontoc
Dez. 30, 2011, 11:15 am

147. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. What can I say about my reread of a wonderful book that is like " comfort food"? I had stopped reading another book that was getting very silly and decided that the best way to get over bad plots was to reread a great novel - and I did! A great way to finish the book reading year.

200torontoc
Dez. 30, 2011, 4:33 pm

148. Granta 114 " Aliens" I used to love reading this book/magazine before I discovered LT. The excerpts from forthcoming books by authors from around the world and thoughtful reports on politics introduced me to new voices in literature. I have not been too happy with the more recent issues. This one is last year's winter issue. I enjoyed most of the stories but still don't use it as my primary source of new discoveries anymore.