Sunday, 30 July 2017

When Will There Be Good News? - soon I hope!

In this third outing for Jackson Brodie, fate seems to have turned against the former soldier, policeman and private detective. Having inherited a great deal of money from a former client, he had previously "retired" to France, but got a bit bored. Now back in the UK, and still in the honeymoon phase of a brand new marriage following a whirlwind romance, Jackson hops on a train heading for London. However, he is on the wrong train and just as he realises he is heading for Edinburgh, the train crashes. His life is saved by local girl, Reggie, who is wise beyond her 16 years. She has no family, except for a wild brother, but has found happiness in the home of Dr Hunter, whose baby she looks after. When Dr Hunter and the baby disappear without a word to Reggie, she does not believe the story told by Mr Hunter that his wife has gone to visit a sick aunt. She tries to involve the police in the form of Detective Chief Inspector Louise Monroe, a former colleague of Brodie, who starts to investigate. When Monroe realises that Jackson is back in Edinburgh, unresolved feelings begin to surface. Despite his injuries, Jackson becomes embroiled in the case, and he and Reggie head off to find Dr Hunter. And can it be a coincidence that she disappears at the same time as a newly released convict, whose heinous crime 30 years ago left a mother and two of her three children dead, with the third, a six year old girl, traumatised for life after what she witnessed that day? There are so many threads to this novel, with lots of characters to keep track of, that you may find yourself flicking back a few pages just to make sure you've got things straight! The writing of Kate Atkinson flows easily and there is a rhythm to the story that, once you are on board, will take you for a most enjoyable ride. It is messy, and things are not necessarily tidied up in a nice neat bow by the end of it, but it feels more real for that. This is not your typical investigative crime story, as there isn't much investigating going on. It's more about the human condition, and how we all continually get things wrong, but just have to keep going. The title is one of the most appropriate ones I know, as so much happens to poor Mr Brodie that you do really wonder When Will There Be Good News? That's not say that there aren't funny moments too! I really hope, for his sake, that in the last book (to date) in the series, Jackson's luck might turn just a little bit in his favour. An enjoyable read with great characters who seem to come out fully formed almost as soon as they hit the page - no mean feat!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 480 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from library.
Formats available: print, abridged audio CD, unabridged audio download, ebook.

Wednesday, 26 July 2017

The God Of Small Things - dreamlike but unfulfilling

Winner of the 1997 Booker Prize, The God Of Small Things is a book that has been hanging around on the bookshelf at home for some time. After picking it up and putting it back on the shelf a few times, I decided it was finally time to read it. I found this a difficult book to get into, with much flipping backward and forward in time, which, combined with unusual (to me) names and lots of internalising by the main characters, left me feeling a tad confused and nonplussed. Set in Kerala, this is the story of Rahel and Estha, twins who are growing up in the midst of familial and political turbulence. There is a constant feeling of unease within what appears, from the outside, to be very strict rules about how one should live, and who one should love. There are beautiful passages which transport you into an almost ethereal world, followed by harrowing passages of abuse and violence that bring you right back down to earth with a bump. It is all very unsettling, and I found there to be a distinct lack of happiness within any of the characters, which left me feeling glum. There were tiny, desperate glimpses of love, which provided a little hope and brightness, but these were quickly snatched away again. I think I found this a challenging book because of the subject matter, but also, it wasn't until I "got a good run" at the book one morning where I read for at least an hour, that it started to make a bit more sense and I warmed to it. I kind of wish I'd done that from the start - with books of this ilk, I must make a more concerted effort to do so. The quality of the writing by author Arundhati Roy is not in doubt, particularly in the last third of the book, but I found the story just too sad for my own personal taste. Time for something a little lighter maybe?

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 340 print pages
Price I paid: free, borrowed from my husband.
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, unabridged audio cassette, ebook.