The Book Whisperer

jottings, musings and recommendations of an incurable bookaholic

I’m off to NYC! December 12, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 1:09 pm

Yippeee! New York here I come! Naturally, I have spent most of my “packing time” deciding which books to take with me (top of the priority list for me) and I will be taking The Hunger Games to read on the plane and its sequel, Catching Fire, and also Mary Higgins Clarks’ Dashing Through the Snow which Simon & Schuster very kindly sent me to read and review (I LOVE her books!). I will be persuading my husband that we will need plenty of pit-stops to get out of the cold which will conveniently take place near a Barnes & Noble (how did that happen?) so I hope to come back with a few armfuls of books too :o )

I will continue updating my blog with reviews when I get back. Bye!

 

Book Review: Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger December 12, 2009

Filed under: Audrey Niffenegger,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 1:00 pm

Throw a huge cemetery, a cold & wintery London, bizzare mirror twins, a ferrel kitten and a recntly dead Aunt into a pot together and the result is a wonderfully quirky, melancholoy, spooky book.

The story is set around Highgate Cemetery in London where a recently dead Elspeth has left her appartment to her twenty year old American nieces, Julia and Valentina, who are mirror twins. When the twins arrive in their new home they soon learn that they are not alone as it appears their Aunt Elspeth has never left. While it’s sometimes difficult to know who to root for in this book, there is a wonderful cast of both primary and secondary characters that kept me glued to the story and there is a sense of such powerful emotions that they almost feel tangible: The twins new neighbour, Robert, was their Aunt’s lover and his feelings of loss for Elspeth are painful to read at times. I felt completely absorbed in this book and I have to admit that I never saw what happened in the last 50 pages coming at all!

It is ultimately a book about love, loss and betrayal with a gothic backdrop of ghosts, cemetaries and enough twists and turns that you never feel completley comfortable.

Highly recommended.

 

Book Review: Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier December 12, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Historical,Tracy Chevalier — The Book Whisperer @ 12:57 pm

I loved this book so much I didn’t want it to end. I met Tracy Chevalier at a book promo in Hawarth, Yorkshire (Bronte country) and she read an excerpt from this book and I knew then that I was in for a treat. The author was great too; really down to earth and answered all questions about her previous work and inspirations etc.

Based on the real-life characters of Mary Anning and Elizabeth Philpot in the early 19th century, Remarkable Creatures is a story of two pioneering women in the coastal town of Lyme Regis who discover some of the most amazing fossils ever found and who influence scientific thinking around the possiblility that extinction may exist and who also discovered the fossils of previously unknown prehistoric animals. So little is known about these characters becuase of the fact that they were women in a time when it was thought that science was a mans game. In fact, Mary is only mentioned briefly in a science paper years later. The relationship between Mary and Elizabeth is such a charming one too due to the fact that there is almost a 20 year age gap and Elizabeth is a well-off spinster and Mary is an uneducated working class girl. What brings them together is their love of the great outdoors, fossil hunting and discovery. Elizabeth is also later instrumental in getting Mary some of the recognition she deserves for her finds.

I am a huge Tracy Chevalier fan and this book just reinforced all the reasons why. This book was a joy to read from start to finish and I could have read on for another 300 pages easily. I highly recommend!

Other books of Chevaliers that I have read and also highly recommend are:

 

Girl with a Pearl Earring
Virgin Blue
 I still have two more of hers to read (Burning Bright and The Lady and the Unicorn) both of which I am looking forward to.
Tracy Chevalier also told us at the reading a brief outline of the next book she will write and it sounds amazing! Hope we don’t have to wait too long.

 

 

 

Book Review: The Suspicions of Mr Whicher by Kate Summerscale December 12, 2009

Filed under: Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Historical,Kate Summerscale,Non-Fiction,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 12:53 pm

What a fascinating book this was. I expected to read about the true story of one of the most shocking crimes in 19th century England but I hadn’t bargained for also getting a fantastically written and hugely interesting social commentary of Victorian times and attitudes and behaviours with regards to the emergence of Police Detectives in this country.

Mr Whicher, the Detective called in to this particular case, was one of the first ever Scotland Yard Detectives which came with its own share of suspicion and mistrust. The case in question was of the murder of a 3 year old boy, one of several children of a well-to-do family in a country house in Wiltshire. In June 1860, the young boy was found to be missing from his cot in the morning and later that day his body was discovered (with his throat slit and a stab wound to his chest) down the servants toilet outside in the grounds. It soon became apparant that the purportrator was one of the people inside the house on that night (which consisted of the boys family, the nursemaid and housemaid). Whicher was called in to find out which one of the family murdered the three year old while the whole of England became obsessed with the drama, writing into the newspapers in their thousands offering their opinion on who committed the crime.

While I found the unravelling of this story fascinating in itself, I was also delighted to see so many references to some great Victorian authors inclduing Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins and Mary Elizabeth Braddon. 1860 was also the year that the first victorian “sensational” novel was published and this appeared to feed the frenzy of the public. This particular case has also been reported to have been the basis for subsequent rather famous novels such as Dickens’ The Mystery of Edwin Drood , Collins’ The Moonstone and Braddon’s Lady Audley’s Secret all of which contain themes from this particular story. Dickens (who was also an aquaintance of Mr Whicher) even wrote letters to Collins offering his theory on what took place that night.

This book is completely non-ficiton to point that only recorded conversations and facts are included (which seems to be the reason there are alot of negative reviews about it – perhaps it seemed too dry for some). And while this is more of a why-dunnit than a who-dunnit , there are still a few surprises along the way that caught me off-guard.

I thoroughtly enjoyed this book; infact I could barely put it down. Summerscale stuck to the facts without trying to sensationalise the story any more than it already was by putting words in peoples mouths and the result was a hugely enjoyable novel about a shocking crime and its repercussions in Victorian society. Highly recommended

 

Book Review: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte December 12, 2009

Filed under: Charlotte Bronte,Comfort Reading,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 12:49 pm
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

Wow! Just wow!

I was a latecomer to Jane Eyre and I often wonder what the hell took me so long. This book is amazing from start to finish and I found myself thinking about it whenever I couldn’t get to it to carry on reading.

Jane Eyre is a fantastic character and I had more than a few laugh-out-loud moments with her. My favourite being when the school governer tell her she is naughty and asks how she can stop being burned in the pits of hell to which she replies “I must keep in good health, and not die.” Genius!

The story of Jane Eyre spans over a decade and we follow her from her first home as an orphan in her rich relatives home where they treat her as an outcast, through boarding school for orphan girls and on to work as a governess where she meets Mr Rochester.

The whole books is beautifully written and engaging and I never once found a dull moment.

This is one book that I will be going back to again and again, I’m sure, and it is in my top 5 of all time.

 

Book Review: Superfreakonomics by Steven D Levitt and Stephen J Dubner December 12, 2009

Filed under: Non-Fiction — The Book Whisperer @ 12:38 pm

From monkey prostitution to raising a terrorist……

I found this book interesting, frustrating, fascinating and infuriating (mostly at the same time). The duo that brought Freakonomics with answers to why drug dealers live with their mothers and how the name that your parents gave you can determine which job you end up getting have now given us Superfreakonomics.

To rogue economists or mad scientists this books meanderings may be make perfect sense, but to the likes of me I had a job trying to fathom how we got from one subject to another and then back to the original one at times. It almost seemed like a couple of kids that get so excited about their school project that they just want to tell you everything all about it all at once. That said, some of the themes and questions posed I found fascinating:

Why should suicide bombers buy life insurance?
Why is May the worst month for a baby in Uganda and Michigan, USA to be born?
How did 9/11 start the trickle down effect of the credit crunch?
Why could eating kangaroo meat help save the planet?
Why did 38 people watch Kitty Genovese be murdered and say nothing?

When I read Freakonomics a few years ago I gave it 2 stars on Amazon. It attempted to tell us that teachers cheat, estate agents lie and black kids are usually given different names to white kids. You don’t say! After having read this second offering I have decided to accept it for what it is – fun and light entertainment. Some of the findings are really fascinating and some are pretty banal and even confusing (the global warming section had my eyes glazing over).

However, to end on a positive note, the epilogue was genius! If you have ever wondered if monkey prostitution exists, wonder no more…..

 

Book Review: The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins December 12, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,The Victorians,Wilkie Collins — The Book Whisperer @ 12:31 pm

Chilling, thrilling, mysterious and very dramatic! A mysterious figure, a woman in white, appears out of nowhere on a London street at midnight – she is running away from someone or something. The only person she meets on that lonely road is Walter Hartright, an Art teacher, and little does he know it but he is about to have his life tured upside down. Mysterious letters, ghostly figures by gravesides, kidnapping and poison all follow through the next 700 pages and not a word is wasted! Narrated by several different characters, all portraying their their own experiences, the reader sees the story unfolding before them.

Written as a serialised stroy in a weekly newspaper in 1860, you can almost hear the curtain falling and the audience gasping at the end of each chapter. I could just imagie myself waiting excitedly for each installment to come out to find out what happens next just as they would have when it was published. For a victorian novel, The Woman in White is incredibly fast paced with some of the best characters I have ever come across.

I just loved this book from start to finish. This is what a book should be – something that makes you think about it when you can’t get to it and excited to pick it up again. Bravo Mr Collins!! I can’t wait to read more of your work.

 

Book Review: Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton December 12, 2009

Filed under: Edith Wharton,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 12:27 pm
Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton

I am completely and utterly in love with Edith Wharton! Looking back through some of the reviews of Ethan Frome there appears to be a love/hate divide going on. I LOVED it! Wharton has the most amazing talent to pull me right into her stories as though I am there right with the characters. Starkfield – brilliant name for such a place; it was just that – freezing, barron, snow-covered, lonely. But this is quite possibly one of the most romantic love-stories I have ever read: it’s so real you can almost touch it. It’s tangible and it’s tragic.

This book, despite the fact that it’s only 100 pages long, took me a couple of days to read. I just had to savour every word and re-read passages over again. It’s so rare that this happens but I just know it’s going to be one I think about often and will re-read again (and again.)

 

 
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