skip to main |
skip to sidebar
May I recommend?
I choose a book to read for all sorts of reasons. Usually a title or an author catches my eye on the library shelves. Sometimes I listen to a recommendation. The one I’m reading presently was in a box I sorted left over from the Church FĂȘte – A Shield of Coolest Air by Marion Molteno. It is unusual, a first novel from 1992, by an unknown (to me) author so I’ve no idea what to expect, but it gripped me from the first sentence so I shall continue – I rarely fail to finish something I start, if only because I record the books I’ve read in an exercise book and hate to feel I’ve wasted my time*. And sometimes I enjoy a TV or radio version so much I am inspired to get hold of the original book.
Such was the case with Lionel Shriver whose novel We Need to Talk About Kevin I first heard on Woman’s Hour. I found this black comedy unputdownable. However uncomfortable the story, I had to know what happened next and was genuinely surprised on several occasions (yes, despite having heard the serialisation). Last week I read So Much For That (also heard on the radio) and it too was brilliant. Very black, and only occasionally laugh out loud funny, but humorous just the same. It doesn’t sound amusing I grant you. It is about the American health system and, to illustrate her point, several of the main characters have medical problems: terminal cancer, a terminal degenerative disease and some elective surgery. Well I said it didn’t sound fun! It was not only funny, but true. If someone you know has had any sort of illness you will find scenarios that have the ring of truth. For instance, how many times do you need to remind yourself to ring a sick friend before you actually do it? And when you’re not comfortable about what you might say, or how they might react, how much more likely are you to put it off? But because it’s always on your mind, and on your to do list, you don’t realise how long it is since you called… I loved the commentary on modern life, the arc of the story, and (should I mention?) the happy ending (you probably need to know!). Even for the characters for whom life ended there was a satisfactory conclusion. I loved this!
If nothing else, if you’re a Brit reader, you will thank God for the NHS!
*I recently stopped reading Alan Hollinghurst’s The Line of Beauty; I really wasn’t enjoying the sex or the self harm. I am also struggling to get through A Dance to the Music of Time. I loved the TV series and was leant the novels by a neighbour… I have reached book five of twelve but am losing the will to live… Should I strive to complete either task?
7 comments:
You know my answer to that one - life is too short and bookshelves are too full to waste valuable time reading books we can't get on with no matter how much we think we should or who recommended them. I'm reading 'When God was a Rabbit' by Sarah Winman and love it. Next on the list is 'The Lacuna', Barbara Kingsolver although I should be reading 'Sense and Sensibility' for book group.
I rarely give up on a book but if I really am not getting any pleasure and find I'm looking at it reproachfully or finding excuses not to pick it up, that's my cue to give up.
I'm going through a tele phase at the moment while the boys are away. I rarely get free rein on the tv so I'm taking advantage of it while I can. They come back on Sunday when it'll be every man for himself again. That's when I pick up my Kindle.
Give that thing away! projectforty is absolutely right! Hubby will slog through any book he starts (shudder!)but I've been known to give up after a few pages. That steadfast commitment is fine for marriage, not for books. Thanks for the recommendations!
Don't know the other two, but I loved Sense and Sensibility!
With 3 of you telling me not to bother I consider myself off the hool!
No one seems to think that the film of 'We Need to Talk About Kevin' is much cop. As you say, the book was unputdownable and I bet the film can't come up to that.
I haven't seen the film, Fran: I couldn't see how it would work since the surprise element is so vital to the book's narrative.
(Shame I can't spell 'hook'.)
I haven't read any of the books you mention but some of them sound interesting. The only book I didn't finish was Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder, a novel about the history of philosophy!
Teresa x
Post a Comment