“Five Years Time” – Noah and the Whale
There’s whistling, clapping, and happy-making lyrics. Yipee, snow day!
“Five Years Time” – Noah and the Whale
There’s whistling, clapping, and happy-making lyrics. Yipee, snow day!
Gifted!! The third book in the (loosely connected) series by French that began with In the Woods and The Likeness.
I was worried I wouldn’t like this book as much; a number of friends read it earlier than me and the reception seemed a bit so-so.
Well, I had nothing to worry about. I loved this book; in fact, it MAY be my favorite of the three. It dips into Frank’s past and the current him gets confronted by the biggest mystery (and heartache) of the younger him. Rosie, his daughter, and really all the members of his family, are so richly drawn. I felt all caught up in their love affairs and their fights and those bitter things we can never take back. Frank was a bit of a cold fish in his earlier appearances in the other books, but you can see inside him here, through his many layers of self protection.
I love mystery and I love fiction but I super extra big time love when they come together in this world of deeper, thicker mystery fiction. Tana French can do no wrong!
Apparently her fourth book will also have a similarly loose connection, following Scorcher Kennedy, who drove me bananas in this book! I can’t wait to read a book from his point of view and come to love him just as I did Frank.
Here’s a cool interview where, among other things, French touches on that idea of moving up above that genre fiction labeling: More and more crime writers are rebelling against that, and I’d love to be a small part of the force that finally crumbles that ridiculous imaginary barrier.
The sequel to Lonely Werewolf Girl. I was So! Excited! when I randomly ran across this! YAY MORE KALIX!!!
I will say, though, that the beginning felt very stiff to me and if I owned the previous book, instead of having read it from the library, I would have gone back to see if that one felt that way as well. But then the story picked up and sucked me back in. And ultimately I really loved it. There are so many hilarious relationships in these books and so many miscommunications. Oh, Kalix.
These are fantasy + werewolves + lots of humor. They’re a cut above your typical werewolf genre fiction.
A gift!
So you know how David Mitchell’s first few books were all told from multiple (and in some cases MANY) points of view, alternating by chapter, sometimes showing you different viewpoints of the same event, sometimes unconnected? And then he came out with Black Swan Green, from just one viewpoint, which is honestly such a tour de force book, it’s breathtaking? (You can search for it on this page to read my brief thoughts at the time.)
So I started this book, and it kept going from chapter to chapter in Jacob’s viewpoint and, while obviously well written, there was a point at which I thought “You know, I’m really not sure I can make it through an entire book in Jacob’s voice, I just don’t know that I can…” And suddenly: it wasn’t his voice anymore!! Much fewer viewpoints than some of his early books, each viewpoint is in a much longer stretch of the novel, and the interlockings are very clear. And the voices he chooses are so the right ones, and I’m always amazed how he can write both women and men and make them sound right (and he’s also, in this case, writing Dutch AND Japanese and some Brits as well).
The beginning dragged for me a bit, and I did have to make a chart of the characters early on (so many Japanese names to keep track of!) but oh! oh, the ending! The ending really won me over. It’ll never be my favorite of his books. But it was SO worth reading.
A gift from some generous twinsers.
I think Gina Frangello is really a fantastic writer and she’s someone I learned about in Chicago from other Chicago writers and eventually heard read/met back in the earlier days of me living here.
Her previous novel “My Sister’s Continent” (read in 2006 on Mariko’s and my flight to Australia–you can search this page for “Frangello” ) was really dark and nasty and sadomasochistic and brutal and really, really good.
These stories are, if anything, even darker. To the point where, WOW, some of them were really tough to get through. Some I liked despite their nastiness…some were actually too cruel for me, very hard to deal with.
I would highly recommend her novel–if you can handle the darkness–but I would tread lightly around these stories. And if you’re in a bad, depressed, emotional frame of mind, good heavens, people, do NOT read them then.
The final book of the Hunger Games trilogy.
I loved it just as much as I loved the first two. It broke my heart and made me cry numerous times.
I’ve seen a lot of complaints online or “it’s OK…but not as good as the first book!” type of comments. If I enjoyed a story enough to let myself get lost in it (which is ALWAYS my goal), then I’m not looking to make that kind of judgement.
And I really would not have wanted it to end any other way. I thought it was fantastic.