ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Only Story in Books
Mar 7, 2018
This is a book to be savoured and to have time taken over it. It just seems so personal and private, and frankly, I felt nosey reading it. It illustrates a 19 year old boys great love - a 48 year old woman who he meets at a tennis club during his holidays from University. This love endures through disapproval of both families and many hardships before the end.
It was interesting that the book moved through the use of first person when the love was new and exciting, second person when the relationship began to encounter problems and third person at the end when he is more detached from his lover, Joan. Watching the slide of someone in to addiction and eventually, dementia, was a particularly sad part of the novel, with his personal guilt and inaction increasing the melancholy and sadness of the whole situation. At the end of this book, I finished the last page and found myself sitting and thinking about it for a while. It really is a very affecting book.
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Book of M in Books
Dec 21, 2018
We follow Ory and his quest to find his wife, Max, after her shadow disappears. She leaves to protect him. There are also two other main characters whose stories we follow - an olympic trained archer and the Amnesiac.
I loved this. The narrators were excellent, and for such an implausible concept, it just seemed so likely! For a book with magic, it didn't seem wildly fantastical. Why SHOULDN'T this happen? It makes a change from a killer virus (for the record, I like those kinds of stories too, by the way). I really liked the descriptions of those who lost their memories - the way in which it happened sounded a bit like I would imagine those with Alzheimers or dementia lose their memories. This book is about how important our memories actually are, how they shape the way we live our lives.
A very good book/ listen (I listened to this on Audible)!
Thank You Lady
Book
Could you settle down and make good in a country that was your country's enemy in the last war?...
Monte Hellman: His Life and Films
Book
In 1970, an LA Times headline called Monte Hellman "Hollywood's Best Kept Secret." More than thirty...
Lowri Catryn (229 KP) rated After Life - Season 2 in TV
Jul 3, 2020
Ending Ageism or, How Not to Shoot Old People
Book
When the term "ageism" was coined in 1969, many problems of exclusion seemed resolved by government...
Fred Durst recommended Taxi Driver (1976) in Movies (curated)
Hazel (2934 KP) rated The Rainbow in Books
Aug 1, 2021
I am not normally a fan of historical fiction but the cover and then the blurb had me interested and I am so pleased I didn't let this pass me by. Although this is a work of fiction, it is inspired by a true story but it feels like a "real" story and I was totally and utterly absorbed and invested in the lives of all the characters.
The story starts off in the present when Isla finds a photograph of her grandad in a German uniform, this raised questions and caused confusion as the story always told was how her grandad fought against the German's in World War II. Unable to find answers from her grandad, who has dementia, she begins a quest to uncover the truth and so begins this brilliantly written story of war, adversity, strength, courage, love, loss and friendship.
I am unable to give this book the review it deserves, I can't find the right words to put across how much I enjoyed it for which I apologise but a massive thank you to Bookouture and NetGalley for my copy in return for an honest, unbiased and unedited review.
The Shadows
Book
You knew a teenager like Charlie Crabtree. A dark imagination, a sinister smile--always on the...
Science, Culture and Society: Understanding Science in the 21st Century
Book
Science occupies an ambiguous space in contemporary society. Scientific research is championed in...