Wednesday, May 1, 2013

BOOKS: April Reads




Without meaning to, I took quite the tour of England this month. Life After Life was the last book I read in March, where the same (British) life was relived over and over. I then proceeded to read about England over and over in April, through different time periods and cities, but mostly London. I even consciously tried to change settings for my last book, but ended up reading about a creepy serial killer. Some months I manage great reviews for every book I read; some months get recaps.



25. Speaking From Among the Bones by Alan Bradley, 358 pages

book 5 of 6 in the Flavia de Luce series
1950s England, and our heroine, the crime-solving teenage Flavia is enmeshed in crimes again. I read this at the first of the month, and can't remember the mystery! No wait, they are digging up the church relics, and the missing organist is found under the church. Really, the mystery is only a small part of these books - Flavia, her sisters, her father, the local police, are the main attraction. And all anyone will remember after reading this book is the final, cliff-hanging sentence! Bradley hasn't ended a book like that before. Can't wait for the next book! (though not completely surprised at the revelation)

26. The Forrests - Emily Perkins reviewed here

27. Where'd You Go, Bernadette? by Maria Semple, 326 pages

Orange Shortlist 2013 (Women's Prize for Fiction)

This was a wonderful change of pace book. Fast action (epistolary books are low on description, high on action) as the disappearance of Bernadette is investigated. A Seattle mother is hiding out somewhat after an early in life, brief success as an architect. I liked Bernadette; I liked how the minor characters (the gnats, mothers at the private school)  also played big parts, and didn't stay stereotypes, but showed growth as well as providing humour. Add in a cruise to Antarctica and it was a fun week-end read.


28. N-W by Zadie Smith, 304 pages

 Orange Shortlist 2013 (Women's Prize for Fiction)

Modern Northwest London. Four characters from the same neighbourhood whose live somewhat intersect. Each gets a very different style (from stream of consciousness, no quotations to regular quotation style narrative) and it all came together quite nicely. We get to see each character from different points of view, from how they appear to be successfully living compared to the reality. The first section is the hardest to read, but I recommend persevering through it. It made sense after the fact, and added to the book in retrospect. I'd try another Smith.


29. Pardonable Lies by Jacqueline Winspear, 384 pages (book 3 of 10)

 Here's a series that got ahead of me. I bought this third book a number of years ago, and for some reason, I was remembering these books as slow going. Instead, I raced through Maisie's adventure as she explored the psychic world to prove to a widower, who promised his dying wife, that he'd find out if their son truly died in France in the war. Although it is 1930, the effects of the first war are still strongly felt in England and France. Maisie is getting close to facing some dilemmas regarding her love life, and is discovering there is more to her mentor, Maurice, than she originally knew.

I'll be reading the next book sooner rather than later.


30. Birdman by Mo Hayder, 448 pages (book 1 of 5)

I have to watch Criminal Minds with just one eye on the television. Half my brain can only pay attention because of how disturbing the serial killers the team chases are. Birdman could easily be on Criminal Minds, he's that creepy. This first book in the Jack Caffrey series may be my limit of how far I can read the creepy. I plan to read another one for sure, as there are only 5 in the series as of now, which feels like I can catch up with this one. I liked the main detective. It's another cop whose brother disappeared as a child.
And I spent more time in a London setting.

Cheer-ee-o London, I'm sure I'll be back!

Comments (8)

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Loved this! I spend much of my reading (and tv) life in England. I think I should have been born there. :<)
I like your description of Bernadette so will read it.
N-W stymied me in the first few pages, so hearing you say that was difficult but to 'persevere' gives me hope, and makes me want to try again. Thank you.
I'm a big Maisie fan, and have two ahead of me.
I cannot watch Criminal Minds at all, even with one eye, and the mute button on. :<)
Oh, and I didn't like the first Flavia so never went on. Couldn't take the sibling stuff, and I found her unbelievable as an 11 yo, much the way Bertie in the Scotland series is unreal and a 6 and then 7 yo to me.
A great post!
1 reply · active 622 weeks ago
thanks Nan! The fact is a lot of the books I had here were British, because I do like them. I forgot to mention I have also been watching Call the Midwife on PBS. I'm guessing you are also watching? It's wonderful, late 1950s London, based on a book. We get the Boston PBS station, so we are probably watching the same thing.
My mom and 10 yo daughter are in Boston right now on a little vacation. I hear my daughter is amazed by the tall buildings; I think they are going to the Prudential Building tomorrow. They are also going to see the ducks from Make Way for Ducklings.
I've just begun CTM, and am loving it so far. I'd like to read the book too.
How very wonderful that tourists are going to Boston. It's where we went to college, and lived for five years. We took the kids a lot when they were little. How very dear they are going together.
I'm back again to tell you where my organic potatoes come from that I bought today. Vanco Farms - Mount Albion, PEI! There's a website: http://www.vancofarms.com/
Today I bought russets (for homemade FF) but I've bought others too. Are you near MA??
1 reply · active 621 weeks ago
Everything is close on PEI! But yes, Mount Albion is about 15 minutes outside of Charlottetown. I've heard of their tulips as well.
I still can't believe that I haven't read anything by Smith despite all the praise she's received from bloggers over the years. I have White Teeth on my shelf but completely forgot about N-W and the praise it received last year.

I'm hoping I can talk my book club into reading Life After Life. Keep hearing such good things about it! Looks like March was a pretty good month for you!
1 reply · active 618 weeks ago
Hi Trish,
I must have missed this comment. I'm not sure about Zadie Smith. Her book was good, but a little harder to read than I'm used to . Literature - like.
I hope your book club picks LIfe After Life. It would be fun to discuss after reading, because there are some discussable parts for sure. My book club never picks new books - just what ever is available as a book club set from the library. It's pretty cool that the library does this, but all the really good books have waiting lists.
I think I want to read Where'd you Go, Bernadette, that sounds fun and light for the summer. I just picked up Pardonable LIes at a sale, and I think I own Birdman, though even the premise sounds scary for me. I want to read the Birdman books, but they are terrifying at the same time. Like the John Connelly series, which I own several of, but can't get past the murder scene in the beginning of the first book! I keep hoping to, as a mystery reader I should be tougher! but happily, books can still scare me :-)

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