Monday, 29 August 2016

The Hare With Amber Eyes - a slow burner

Some books grip you from the very first paragraph and others are slow burners. The Hare With Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance definitely sits in the latter category. When the author,  Edmund De Waal, inherits 264 netsuke from his great uncle Iggy, he becomes curious as to how this collection found its way into his life. As he starts to trace their history, his investigations reveal the lives of the owners too ... and so an inheritance of objects becomes an inheritance of his family. And what a family ... his ancestors were the Ephrussi family - who originally came from the Ukraine but found fortune in wheat and later banking in Odessa. They spread out to Paris, Vienna and Tokyo. Their wealth allowed them to indulge in beautiful things, and so the netsuke collection was born. Over the course of a tumultuous century, which saw an explosion of anti-semitism, this Jewish family went from the highest high, to the lowest low, having to up sticks and leave everything behind to escape with their lives. The story of how the netsuke collection was preserved is amazing. As one of the world's leading ceramic artists, the author unsurprisingly imparts the intrinsic beauty of the netsuke to the reader with great skill, a skill which carries over into his descriptions of place and time. We are on the same journey as the author, following each and every discovery which opens the door a little more into the lives, loves and troubles of his ancestors. The reader cannot help but be drawn into the Ephrussi family dramas as they unfold. The story becomes so absorbing that as you go further and further into it, you find it harder and harder to put down. It seemed to take me ages to get going, but once I was a third of the way through, I was hooked. I can heartily recommend this book to anyone who loves history, family or art.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 354 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.20 from a church fete.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

Friday, 19 August 2016

Kafka on the Shore - charmed and bewildered in equal measures

I have been putting off this blog in order to try and decide what I really think about Kafka on the Shore ... and even though it's a week since I finished it, I'm still debating it in my head. This, I suspect, is a good sign, in that the book is certainly staying with me ... unlike some others I could mention! It is certainly a novel that makes the reader work hard, REALLY hard. Set in present day Japan, we think we are journeying with 15-year-old Kafka Tamura, who is in the act of running away from home where he has been miserable and unloved by everyone, especially his father. But then, we come across the reporting of, and investigation into, a school outing during the 2nd World War, where a class of young children fall unconscious in the forest on a field trip. Mysteriously, all of whom wake up unharmed except for one boy whose life will never be the same again. We switch back to the present and follow the progress of Kafka as he tries to find his sister and mother who left when he was four, and about whom his father has made a terrible prophesy. Alongside this, we meet Nakata, an old man who is not very bright but who can speak to cats, and uses this unusual ability to make a little bit of money finding lost cats for their owners. Nakata, it turns out, is the boy from the forest. The lives of these two characters becomes intertwined, although they never actually meet. Will Kafka find his mother and sister, and if so, can he stop the prophesy from coming true ... but more worryingly, does he want to stop it from coming true? Haruki Murakami has created magical passages that are a joy to read - I particularly loved Nakata and all that he did. However, there are also sections that are tough going in terms of both subject matter and style. There are sequences of philosophical meanderings that I sometimes felt were a bit laborious, but then anyone who has been reading these blogs knows I'm an action-oriented girl at heart! And while I wanted to root for Kafka, and I often did, I also wanted to slap him, and slap him hard! I could not quite believe some of the things he did and it left me disappointed on the odd occasion. As the book progresses, it becomes increasingly surreal and if you fight this, you may become both disorientated and disgruntled. I very nearly did, but made a conscious decision to let myself go with the flow to see where we ended up. My personal preference would have been for a more definitive ending ... but maybe that is why the book has stayed with me, as I ponder what happened next to the characters that I had invested such a long time with. Certainly a challenging book, but worth the effort.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 505 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

Friday, 12 August 2016

Child of the Mist - nothing to tax the mind too much

I have been a bit poorly for the last week or so, which has meant that my levels of concentration have been a bit on the low side. And so I found myself plumping for a historical romance that I hoped would be entertaining but which wouldn't require too much energy. I found Child of the Mist, by Kathleen Morgan, to be such a book! Anne is the eldest daughter of the Chief of the MacGregor Clan who have been involved in a bitter feud with the Campbell Clan for many years. Anne is a healer, and as such is in danger of being burned as a witch. She almost comes to grief one day, but is saved by a handsome Campbell and returned to her home. After yet another raid, and in an effort to end the feud and save his Clan, Anne's father comes up with a proposal to handfast his daughter to Niall, the son and named successor of the Campbell Chief. Of course, Naill turns out to be the self-same man who had previously saved her. Things do not go smoothly, as there is a traitor is in the midst of the Campbells, who is determined to take power for himself and keep the feud going. The budding relationship between Anne and Niall is beset with misunderstandings, prejudice and pride. Will they ever get together and will the traitor be discovered and dealt with ... I think we all know the answer to that one! I did, kind of, enjoy this book, which is light and packed with incident. It is incredibly predictable and the characters are ones that we have all seen before, and some of the dialogue is totally unbelievable, as well as wierdly trying to be Scottish ... verra, verra being a prime example. It is the first of a series of books, and I won't be seeking them out, unless maybe I am really ill again and just need something to take my mind off things without having to strain myself in anyway shape or form. There are better historical romances out there - anything by Jean Plaidy for instance - that I'd seek out before diving into the mist once again.

My STaR rating: TWO.

Length: 336 print pages.
Price I paid: free.
Formats available: print; ebook.

Tuesday, 2 August 2016

One Shot - Jack Reacher in fine fettle!

For some reason of late, I have become a bit of a slow reader. I never seem to find the time to have a really good run at a book ... there are always other things to do! Then, at night, snuggled up in bed, I reach for my latest tome, then only manage a couple of pages before I slump into dreamland. So, that explains the blogging gap between my last review and One Shot, by Lee Child. This is the ninth outing for ex-military policeman, Jack Reacher, and this is the book they based the Jack Reacher film on, which starred Tom Cruise. We open with an apparent random shooting which leaves five dead on the street. The sniper leaves behind such a wealth of evidence that he is quickly picked up and charged. He says almost nothing except "Get Jack Reacher for me." Of course, Reacher being Reacher, he is not an easy man to find. However, when he sees a news report about the shooting and recognises the name of the man accused, he heads to the scene and presents himself as a witness for the prosecution. He and the accused man have a past! And so begins an investigation which blows apart what was supposed to be a "slam dunk" of a case. It is not clear who can be trusted and Reacher has to fight against his desire to see this man finally brought to justice for his past crimes and his overriding search for the truth! As usual, the action goes along at breakneck speed leaving plenty of casualties in its wake. This is a book that hits you squarely between the eyes and leaves you a little dazed from start to finish ... but in a totally enjoyable way. It is brutal at times, but Reacher is a compelling character in which intelligence and street smarts are delicately balanced with his basic instinct for survival at almost any cost. It's always best to remember that he never gives up, and that if you cross him, you do so at your peril! There are plenty more Reacher books to dive into, and it won't be long before I don my swimming costume once again and take the plunge.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 496 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, borrowed from local library as an ebook.
Formats available: print; abridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.