Home Cooking: A Writer in the Kitchen
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Published for the first time in the UK, Laurie Colwin's much loved kitchen essays are perfect for...
Modernity Britain: Book Two: A Shake of the Dice, 1959-62: Book 2
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David Kynaston's history of post-war Britain has so far taken us from the radically reforming Labour...
The Surreal Life of Leonora Carrington
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In 2006 journalist Joanna Moorhead discovered that her father's cousin, Prim, who had disappeared...
The Mezcal Experience: A Guide to Mezcal and Tequila
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'Before mezcal I knew tequila. We danced together and had a good time. Then I found mezcal and we...
A Work in Progress: The Untold Story of the Crawley Writers’ Group
Alex Woolf, Martin Jenkins and Dan Brotzel
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They've all got a book in them, unfortunately. In December 2016, Julia Greengage, aspiring writer...
Marylegs (44 KP) rated The Name of the Wind in Books
Aug 14, 2019
The main character Kvothe is likeable and I was really routing for him. The bulk of the story is told from his perspective as he endeavours to tell his story to a scribe who had come seeking the truth about his extraordinary life. We follow his story from his unlikely beginnings as part of traveling troupe to him becoming nothing short of a hero.
As a sucker for love, I have to say some of the most enjoyable sections of the book involved Denna, as soon and the two meet I could feel the glimmerings of hopefully first love. Without giving anything away, this love doesn’t go the traditional way that most stories would travel. But it is obviously there and knowing that there are more books to read I am sure there is more to Kvothe and Denna story together.
My least liked character has to Ambrose (what a silly girly name to begin with). He is petty and unlikeable from the on start. I feel the dislike between Kvothe and Ambrose will culminate into something sinister which no doubt will be an integral part of the tale…. But I really wish he would get his comeuppance…. Soon.
If like me you want to read a fantasy book that has all the elements you would want; love, conflict, revenge, magic, friendship and injustice. But doesn’t play by all the rules and is obviously building strong foundations towards what hopefully will be an impressive ending, then I believe this book is for you.
ClareR (5726 KP) rated Frankissstein in Books
Aug 6, 2019
It is set in two different timelines. The first begins in 1816 with Mary Shelley, Percy Shelley (actually, before they were married), Lord Byron, Mary’s stepsister and Byron’s lover, Claire Clairmont and Polidori, Byron’s doctor. During a particularly wet two weeks on Lake Geneva, Byron sets them all the task of writing a horror story. And so Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus is born.
In the modern day, we follow Ry Shelley, a transgender doctor, Victor Stein (a ‘mad’ scientist), Ron Lord (a very successful sexbot producer), Clare (a staunch Christian, who seems to be working undercover in the most unlikely places!) and Polly Dory (a journalist for Vanity Fair. Do you see what she did here? It took me a couple of ‘chapters’, sadly! This is the Frankenstein of the modern age. Where Mary Shelley was terrified at the idea of creating a living man from parts of the dead, Victor Stein in the present day wants to preserve the brains and thoughts of the dead - and it’s equally terrifying.
Mary Shelley and Ry Shelley are very similar (the same, but in different times?) characters, even though they are in two very different times. Mary is at the mercy of her female body - she falls pregnant and loses two babies before she has the third who survives. Ry is trying to change his body from female to male so that he has control over it. But society has very fixed ideas about these characters in both timelines.
It’s a very current book with mention of Brexit and Trump, but I think it will hold up well in the future because it is so well written, and it has a lot to say about society and gender.
I thoroughly enjoyed it - and now I’m going to go and find more books in Jeanette Wintersons back catalogue!
Many thanks to Penguin Random House/ Jonathan Cape and NetGalley for a copy of this book (which I actually went and bought as well - it needs to be sat on my bookshelf!)
101 Orchids - Secrets of Cultivation
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They were made to flourish. Nothing else matters to an orchid. The leaves are of little interest,...
Zola and the Victorians: Censorship in the Age of Hypocrisy
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London, 1888: Jack the Ripper stalks the streets of Whitechapel; national strikes and social unrest...
The New Encyclopedia of Orchids: 1500 Species in Cultivation
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In this authoritative, detailed and carefully researched encyclopedia, more than 350 genera of...