
Hawker Fare: Stories & Recipes from a Refugee Chef's Isan Thai & Lao Roots
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From chef James Syhabout of two-Michelin-star restaurant Commis, an Asian-American cookbook like no...
food and drink
David Goldblatt + Nadine Gordimer: On the Mines
David Goldblatt and Nadine Gordimer
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"On the Mines" is a re-designed and expanded version of David Goldblatts influential book of 1973....

Audrey at Home: Memories of My Mother's Kitchen
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New York Times Bestseller Enter Audrey Hepburn's private world in this unique New York Times...

Kodaly in the Second Grade Classroom: Developing the Creative Brain in the 21st Century
Micheal Houlahan and Philip Tacka
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Since the mid-twentieth century, Zoltan Kodaly's child-developmental philosophy for teaching music...

Paper Girls: Volume 1
Cliff Chiang, Brian K. Vaughan, Matthew Wilson and Jared K. Fletcher
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From Brian K. Vaughan, #1 New York Times bestselling writer of SAGA, and Cliff Chiang, legendary...

Grammar School Boy: A Memoir of Personal and Social Development
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This memoir covers the first twenty years of the life of the author, a retired university professor,...

Game of Queens: The Women Who Made Sixteenth-Century Europe
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A BBC History magazine Book of the Year and an amazon.com Best Book of the Month Two childhood...

ClareR (5911 KP) rated Unsettled Ground in Books
Feb 21, 2021
The characters Jeanie and Julius are vulnerable people who just need someone to guide them when their mother dies, even though they are fiercely independent. This is a family that has always lived on the edge of their community - both their actual geographical location and socially. They live hand to mouth, and when Doris their mother dies, the twins have to go without food at times, when it transpires that Doris has left them with no money and debts. The cost of her funeral is the least of their problems (and they overcome that problem reasonably easily anyway).
There is a feeling that the twins are trapped by circumstance and by each other. Jeanie has never recovered from a childhood illness and is illiterate, and Julius is not only expected to look after her, but is trapped in their local area because he has severe travel sickness linked to their fathers terrible death. Their one comfort is their joint love of folk music (I wish I could have actually listened to these songs - I shall have to google them, and I hope they really exist!).
Claire Fullers use of language makes the everyday seem more lifelike in her books. I read most, if not all, of this with my heart in my mouth. How could I not? Jeanie and Julius are people who are shunned by society, taken advantage of and treated terribly. I feel I can’t leave this quite like this though: there are the good people, the ones that help.
I don’t want to spoil the story, so I’ll stop here, but what I will say is that this is another gorgeously written novel by Claire Fuller, and you should most definitely read it!
Many thanks to the publisher for providing me with an e-copy of this book through NetGalley to read and review.

Beck recommended Careless Love: Unmaking of Elvis Presley in Books (curated)
