First off, this book does not compare to the Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, other that the main character is a loser. It's a more pleasant read with a nicer ending.
My initial comment was that it is a love story about Frank and Ilse. Frank has a record shop in a run down area of Stockton, and Ilse collapses in front of it. She says she wants to learn about music and has weekly meetings with him, where she falls in love with him. Then they learn that she is actually a musician but can't play any more and they fall out and she returns to Germany while he goes downhill and his shop collapses. 20 Years on Ilse returns from Germany and finds his friends and then him and Love blossoms again.
Different people liked different characters in the book, basically Peg and Kit.
Frank didn't have the nerve to be positive in life, basically due to the overpowering upbringing by Peg. Philip Larkins poem about parents was referenced.
The waitress in the cafe where Frank and Ilse met sort of reminded you of Julie Walters in the Acorn Antiques skits.
No one guessed that Ilse was a musician. We thought that Frank would be humiliated by finding out that he had been tutoring a musician who probably knew more than he did.
Pegs information about the composers was interesting.
It was pointed out the interesting commentary about racism in the daubings on the walls.
There was not much plot or story in it. It was somewhat like a Nick Hornby story with some Mills & Boon thrown in. A bit sacharine. The gap of 20 years was just a convenient fiction element. Could Ilse with the arthritic hands pick up an unknown, untuned violin and play the Messiah?
Carrie and I both thought that it was a pleasant read in half-hour sections. But we kept reading! Other comments were that it spent a pleasant hour and had a few laughs. But we wouldn't bother reading another by her.
Marks came out at 6 1/2.
Saturday, 28 September 2019
Saturday, 31 August 2019
2019-July - The Whistler - John Grisham
The Whistler - John
Grisham - July 2019
High Peter, thought
you could perhaps copy or print out my notes on the book, for the
folder.
Judge Claudia
McDover has pushed through legislation to build a Casino on an Indian
reservation, backed by Vonn Dubose, a rich property
building giant and the Chief of the Indians. It turns out to be a
huge success, and is added to by building condos on the land.
All the Indians
benefit by receiving payments from the proceeds of the Casino. Dubose
and Claudia and their staff cream off the proceeds of gambling to
line their own pockets.
An unknown 'Mole'
is aware of the goings on and via Greg Meyers, tells Lucy and
Hugo who's job is to ensure that all Judges are Clean and beyond
corruption. They endeavour to find the truth of what is going on.
Lucy and Hugo are
asked to meet someone on the reservation late one night. They drive
into a trap where their vehicle is hit head on and Hugo is so badly
injured when his seat belt doesn't work, and he dies. Lucy is also
badly injured and their boss ask the FBI to investigate the crime.
They have video
footage from a store
where the criminals parked waiting for the arrival of Lucy and Hugo.
The end result is
the end of judge McDover and the breakup of the ‘Coast Mafia’
gang.
Margaret
This one got marks of 8 from those present.
Monday, 12 August 2019
2019-August - No Book Chosen
We discovered that there was not a book on our book list for August, so after an email discussion suggesting we choose a classic, with the suggestions of 'Jude the Obscure' and 'Siddhartha', we wait to see what people have read. Both these books are available as free ebooks from Gutenberg.org.
Jude the Obscure:
This could be made into a modern film I think, witha pregnant girl, in a shabby run down council flat, leaving the boy who has pretensions of getting an education. Well, maybe that last bit differs.
I am up to page 62 on the ebook and he is making his way to Christminster, which is at the north of Wessex, where the leisurely Thames strokes the fields. This can only be Oxford to my mind.
Jude the Obscure:
This could be made into a modern film I think, witha pregnant girl, in a shabby run down council flat, leaving the boy who has pretensions of getting an education. Well, maybe that last bit differs.
I am up to page 62 on the ebook and he is making his way to Christminster, which is at the north of Wessex, where the leisurely Thames strokes the fields. This can only be Oxford to my mind.
Friday, 31 May 2019
2019- May Coffin Road by Peter May
We passed around another book by him last year. It was about crimes in a vinyard, where the body was discovered in a vat of wine. The book was 'the Critic'
Reclusive scientist washes ashore with no memory. In trying to find out who he is, and simultaneously his daughter looking for him, he awakens the big business forces against him. It ends with an Agatha Chrisitie everybody gathered together in one room scenario, then a shootout at the OK corrall, then the Cavalry arrives, and Nature rises up to wash away two baddies. Some unexplained things- Who killed the godfather, where did the suitcase of money in the loft come from?
A good concept - a serious message about the bee problem.
Reminiscent of Jason Bourne from the Robert Ludlum stories, an Amnesiac who keeps finding a bit about himself and his powers.
Mysterious wathcer, who is revealed at the end as the statistician member of the team. good one!
Second partner who is the bad guy suborned by money from the big bad business. What was Billy's motivation?
Why did third partner go to the remote lighthouse island to be killed by Billy?
A lovely big red herring in that he beleives himself to be the person whose ID he has found (who happens to be a colleague who died) and the daughter of this colleague doesn't recognize him. The Author deliberately set out to trick us with that?
Was Karen's godfather who gave her the letter early and was killed in a car crash accidentally killed or was it deliberate?
An enjoyable but irritating book was one comment. Not a deep read (Thank goodness for once)
Marks 7 and just a bit
Reclusive scientist washes ashore with no memory. In trying to find out who he is, and simultaneously his daughter looking for him, he awakens the big business forces against him. It ends with an Agatha Chrisitie everybody gathered together in one room scenario, then a shootout at the OK corrall, then the Cavalry arrives, and Nature rises up to wash away two baddies. Some unexplained things- Who killed the godfather, where did the suitcase of money in the loft come from?
A good concept - a serious message about the bee problem.
Reminiscent of Jason Bourne from the Robert Ludlum stories, an Amnesiac who keeps finding a bit about himself and his powers.
Mysterious wathcer, who is revealed at the end as the statistician member of the team. good one!
Second partner who is the bad guy suborned by money from the big bad business. What was Billy's motivation?
Why did third partner go to the remote lighthouse island to be killed by Billy?
A lovely big red herring in that he beleives himself to be the person whose ID he has found (who happens to be a colleague who died) and the daughter of this colleague doesn't recognize him. The Author deliberately set out to trick us with that?
Was Karen's godfather who gave her the letter early and was killed in a car crash accidentally killed or was it deliberate?
An enjoyable but irritating book was one comment. Not a deep read (Thank goodness for once)
Marks 7 and just a bit
Thursday, 30 May 2019
2019-April Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
This month we had a new thing for us as we had a WhatsApp conference with Chris and Ali who were away on holiday.
Here are the comments that I noted as we talked:
- Too many Pages
- Too much talking about race
Interesting perspective about being non-american black in US of A.
- Lots of explanations needed about how she got to US of A.
- Discussion about difficulty of pronouncing names when we have never seen them before, leading into the complexities of the English language. Not just us but also in the media too.
- Did enjoy it very much, though contrived at times. Fascinating about the class system in Nigeria.
- Learnt a lot about African hair. - Lots of discussion about hair
Other african things we have watched/read
TV - The Widow (March-April 2019)
Heart of Darkness
Blood River
- Interesting take on B. Obama - too light/too dark for either camp
- Relationship with Aunt
- Threads keep comng back - echos of other relationships
Marks: 8-7-6-7-9 --> 7 Peter did not get on with the book, though the writing was easy to read,
Peter & Ali - no score.
Here are the comments that I noted as we talked:
- Too many Pages
- Too much talking about race
Interesting perspective about being non-american black in US of A.
- Lots of explanations needed about how she got to US of A.
- Discussion about difficulty of pronouncing names when we have never seen them before, leading into the complexities of the English language. Not just us but also in the media too.
- Did enjoy it very much, though contrived at times. Fascinating about the class system in Nigeria.
- Learnt a lot about African hair. - Lots of discussion about hair
Other african things we have watched/read
TV - The Widow (March-April 2019)
Heart of Darkness
Blood River
- Interesting take on B. Obama - too light/too dark for either camp
- Relationship with Aunt
- Threads keep comng back - echos of other relationships
Marks: 8-7-6-7-9 --> 7 Peter did not get on with the book, though the writing was easy to read,
Peter & Ali - no score.
Thursday, 2 May 2019
2019- March - Rebels and Traitors, a Epic Novel of the English Civil war by Lindsey Davis
A long book, but it kept me reading. It was very detailed about the battles of the English Civil war, but didn't really tell how Cromwell came to be the Protector. It showed what a difficult task he had trying to put Britain together after the war.
The story is the entwinement of four major characters from their upbringing through to adulthood and making their lives. There is Gideon Jukes, apprenticed to a printer, who joins the Parliamentary army and fights all over England, Orlando Lovell, a Royalist, and his plotting and scheming who somehow stays alive through it all, Juliana who marries Him and has to put up with never knowing where he is, and the tyke Kinchin Tew from Birmingham who shows the very poor side of things and is a thief, nearly a prostitute and eventually a brewer.
After the war, with Gideon and Juliana trying to settle down together and Lovell thought dead, but still plotting against Parliament, it all comes to a head with perhaps a weak ending. But I give it a mark of 9. It could have used more maps, not so much of the country, but of London.
The story is the entwinement of four major characters from their upbringing through to adulthood and making their lives. There is Gideon Jukes, apprenticed to a printer, who joins the Parliamentary army and fights all over England, Orlando Lovell, a Royalist, and his plotting and scheming who somehow stays alive through it all, Juliana who marries Him and has to put up with never knowing where he is, and the tyke Kinchin Tew from Birmingham who shows the very poor side of things and is a thief, nearly a prostitute and eventually a brewer.
After the war, with Gideon and Juliana trying to settle down together and Lovell thought dead, but still plotting against Parliament, it all comes to a head with perhaps a weak ending. But I give it a mark of 9. It could have used more maps, not so much of the country, but of London.
Wednesday, 27 March 2019
2019-February - The Blood Of Flowers by Anita Amirrezvani.
The Blood of flowers
At first I thought that I would not enjoy this book about a young uneducated village girl who has fallen on hard times. Once she got to the big city I was interested in the life she was forced to lead, both within the household and later when she was thrown out. I now see it as a story of emancipation brought about by having a talent and using it and building it. She had a talent for learning, drawing and carpet making and learnt quickly from her uncle. It was placed in 17th Century Iran city of Isfahan. She also enjoyed her sex after a poor start, but wasn't going to let that rule her life. The book kept me reading, despite the fictional stories that kept interrupting it.
At first I thought that I would not enjoy this book about a young uneducated village girl who has fallen on hard times. Once she got to the big city I was interested in the life she was forced to lead, both within the household and later when she was thrown out. I now see it as a story of emancipation brought about by having a talent and using it and building it. She had a talent for learning, drawing and carpet making and learnt quickly from her uncle. It was placed in 17th Century Iran city of Isfahan. She also enjoyed her sex after a poor start, but wasn't going to let that rule her life. The book kept me reading, despite the fictional stories that kept interrupting it.
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