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Cover of Body Surfing
  • Another great novel from Shreve

    Rating

    4 stars - a really enjoyable read

    Description

    At the age of twenty-nine, Sydney has already been once divorced and once widowed. Trying to regain her footing, she has answered an ad to tutor the teenage daughter of a well-to-do couple as they spend a sultry summer in their o ... (continue)

    Rating

    4 stars - a really enjoyable read

    Description

    At the age of twenty-nine, Sydney has already been once divorced and once widowed. Trying to regain her footing, she has answered an ad to tutor the teenage daughter of a well-to-do couple as they spend a sultry summer in their oceanfront New Hampshire cottage.

    But when the Edwardses two grown sons, Ben and Jeff, arrive at the beach house, Sydney finds herself caught up in a destructive web of old tensions and bitter divisions. As the brothers vie for her affections, the fragile existence Sydney has rebuilt is threatened.

    Reason for reading

    I’ve been a big fan of Anita Shreve since reading Eden Close many years ago and was avidly awaiting this novel’s paperback release.

    First line

    “Three o’clock, the dead hour. The faint irritation of sand grit between bare foot and floorboards.”

    Review

    I was happy to see the Beach House that has been a theme of Sheve’s earlier novels make another appearance - it’s interesting to read about the history of a house and the people who lived there lives within it in such different ways.

    This particular tale revolves around Sydney, a woman twice married, once divorced and once widowed - who spends the summer at the Summer House tutoring the Edwardses teenage daughter.

    The themes of the novel are family dynamics and secrets, love, marriage and deceit - and all are thrown together in a novel made up of broken paragraphs containing disjointed snippets of information, conversations, feelings and beautiful descriptions of Sydney’s thoughts and surroundings.

    The novel explores Sydney’s relationship with Mrs Edwards - an awkward one - and the love that develops with Mr Edwards and Julie - as they welcome her into their family. And then of course their are the sons, Ben and Jeff who between them weave a web in which Sydney becomes entangled.

    It’s hard to review this novel without giving away the story line - and there are so many twists and turns along the way I’d hate to reveal any secrets. It’s a beautiful book, well written and thought provoking - but one which can be devoured in a couple of sittings. Buy yourself a copy - you won’t be disappointed.

    The Beach House

    Some fellow readers have asked which Anita Shreve novels I’d recommend and in which order they should be read. Personally I’ve enjoyed all of them, although A Wedding in December is my least favourite. The Beach House that is owned by the Edwards family in Body Surfing also makes an appearance in the following novels:

    1. Fortune’s Rocks
    2. Sea Glass
    3. The Pilot’s Wife
    4. Body Surfing

    I’d suggest starting with Fortune’s Rocks and reading on from there - and then visiting some of her other novels.

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    ― Posted on Mar 29, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of Secrets of a Family Album
  • *** This comment contains spoilers! ***

    A book so comfortable you’ll want to read it more than once

    Rating

    5 stars - a book so comfortable you’ll want to read it more than once

    Description - from Amazon

    Compulsively neat, obsessively organised, Lily is a writer who writes about writers. When she is asked to contribute to a book on lost icons, she visits Rita Boothe - photographer ... (continue)

    Rating

    5 stars - a book so comfortable you’ll want to read it more than once

    Description - from Amazon

    Compulsively neat, obsessively organised, Lily is a writer who writes about writers. When she is asked to contribute to a book on lost icons, she visits Rita Boothe - photographer, journalist and wit - who took LSD when she was forty and never lived up to her promise. Rita shows Lily some of her photographs, including one of a beautiful, sexy creature drinking Jack Daniels in a white limousine. It is Mattie, Lily’s mother. Lily stares in wonder and with envy - she wishes she could live with such abandon. But Mattie is no longer the woman in the limo, and she and Lily’s father live in a neglected house with their neglected marriage. Lily and her siblings want to mend their parents’ rift, but Marie’s husband has walked out, and Rory avoids coming home altogether. Unless something happens, the family’s going to fade away. But something is about to happen…

    Why did you choose to read this book?

    The honest answer? I put my TBR books in alphabetical order and this one was next! I picked it up from the shelf and really didn’t want to read it - but that was the rule I set and so I did. Of course you could ask why I have the book on my TBR pile - and I honestly have no idea - the cover isn’t too inspiring and the blurb on the back could be more inviting - so i can only think it must have been on sale and found it’s way into my shopping basket some time ago!

    A review of the book

    So I’ve admitted I wasn’t too keen on reading this - and it was a little slow to start so I nearly gave in - but I forced myself to stick it out and I’m glad I did - for I really enjoyed this book. Despite the fact that the description focuses on Lily, this book doesn’t really have a main character - or a plot for that matter - rather it is a year in the life of a family, told from the point of view of each and every family member - as they go through normal life events.

    It’s heart warming, it’s friendly, it’s comfortable - and it’s oh so true to life that you’ll find yourself smiling as you realise that you do these things too.

    If you are part of a family, you’ve ever gone to bed on an argument, or looked at another person and assumed their life was better than yours - then you need to go and buy a copy of this book today.

    And now for the book exploration

    If you haven’t read this book - and plan to do so - do not read any further for there will be spoilers. If you have read it and would like to share your views then keep reading…

    Could you relate to the characters? Did you empathise with them and their plight?

    While the changing voices of the characters threw me at first I really enjoyed learning about each of the characters - the way they were thinking and feeling - and could empathise with each of them. Mattie - the mother - is a worrier - when someone says they have a problem she instantly fears the worse and her imagination runs away with her. Lily can be quite paranoid - and thinks that people are saying negative things about her, completely misunderstanding their words and actions.

    It was interesting to see the same plot from the different points of view - to see that perceptions and assumptions are not always right - and that this can often stop you doing things that will make you happy for fear of what other people will think.

    Is this book driven by the plot or the characters?

    The book is definitely driven by the characters - the plot isn’t at all obvious - it’s not like a crime novel where there’s a murder to be solved, or a action adventure where there’s treasure to be found - it’s simply a year in the life of an everyday family, experiencing everyday events.

    Share a quote from the book

    “She still thought this family like starlings, flying together, whooshing apart, then joining one another again, milling and calling, coming back to where they’d started. She knew, of course, that she’d never truly be one of them; she just hoped that now and then they’d invite her to stand back and observe their flight”

    I’m rather sad that this book has come to an end - I feel like I know these characters so well and I’m going to miss them!

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    ― Posted on Mar 29, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of Jemima J
Cover of Heaven Sent
Cover of 26a
Cover of This Is All
  • A unique book that should be on your must read list

    I picked this book up on impulse at Downtown Disney back in 2006 - Virgin have these great stands with books just sitting there looking inviting and asking to be bought. My husband thought I was mad as this being a hardback - and 800 pages long - is quite a hefty tome! Of course it has since been ga ... (continue)

    I picked this book up on impulse at Downtown Disney back in 2006 - Virgin have these great stands with books just sitting there looking inviting and asking to be bought. My husband thought I was mad as this being a hardback - and 800 pages long - is quite a hefty tome! Of course it has since been gathering dust on a shelf for as much as I wanted to read it the sheer weight put me off (I like to read at lunch times and it just looked too heavy to carry to work each day!)

    But I finally decided to get stuck in - and it was worth waiting for…

    The novel tells the story of Cordelia Kenn, a 19 year old girl, heavily pregnant with her first child - who is writing the story of her youth to present to her daughter when she turns 16. The narrative is broken up with excerpts from Cordelia’s *pillow book* - a collection of journals and poems that she had written during the time.

    The story focuses on relationships in Cordelia’s life, from her first love, to her father, her best friend and those she turns to in times of need and desperation.

    I found the book very easy to read - I liked the way the narrative was broken up - it was just like reading journal extracts - or a blog - and I felt I really got to know - and like - Cordelia.

    I was slightly confused when reaching book 2 - 200 pages in - when the pages didn’t seem to follow on properly… and I realised that this pillow book was actually two - one on the left facing pages and one on the right. With no guidance on how to read it I chose to read the left pages first (mostly abstract journal entries) and then go back and read the right pages (more of a normal novel narrative). This worked well - although it was quite hard to read in such a way - and a bit disheartening to get half way through the book - physically - and then have to go back some 200 pages!

    One *warning* I should give is that the book is quite graphic in places - especially when dealing with Cordelia’s sexual history. It reminded me of the shock factor of Judy Blume’s Forever. While reading I wondered whether I had led a particularly sheltered childhood - or whether the author was letting his imagination run away with him. Yep - slightly odd that such an in depth novel of female teenage years should be written by a man…

    But I decided not to dwell on this or it may have put me off!

    All in all this was a very enjoyable and insightful novel - and one I would recommend to those with strong enough muscles to tackle it! The good news is that after two years it is finally coming to stores in paperback format in March.

    Rating

    5 stars - I’ve put it on the re-read list

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    ― Posted on Mar 1, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of The Story of Us
Cover of On Chesil Beach
  • 1 of 1 people find this helpful

    *** This comment contains spoilers! ***

    Not all it's cracked up to be

    The back cover description suggests a tale of a newlywed couple on their wedding night and that pretty much sums it up - what it didn't warn me about was the graphic detail McEwan uses to describe events of the evening... well I considered it graphic anyway and am not sure I needed that much detail ... (continue)

    The back cover description suggests a tale of a newlywed couple on their wedding night and that pretty much sums it up - what it didn't warn me about was the graphic detail McEwan uses to describe events of the evening... well I considered it graphic anyway and am not sure I needed that much detail to understand the point he was trying to make!

    The book is short - I got through it in one sitting of two to three hours - but it's one of those books that you just can't take at face value. I'm still not sure whether I enjoyed reading it - but I did find myself thinking about the characters and their histories and trying to work out why McEwan wrote the book.

    The short of it is this - following a 12 month courtship Edward and Florence find themselves alone in the honeymoon suite of a hotel on Chesil beach, what follows is a *mishap* which leaves Florence heading for the beach in embarrassment and disgust and Edward alone in the room feeling angry and humiliated. Their joint inability to discuss their feelings leaves the marriage in tatters and the two never see or speak to each other again.

    All quite sad really.

    But throughout the novel McEwan shares snippets of their earlier lives, how Edward's mother became brain-damaged when he was five, and the lengths his family went to to pretend that she was a normal loving mother. How Florence's family were much better off, but her parents showed her no affection - well I say no affection but I got the distinct feeling she had been sexually abused by her father as a child - perhaps the source of her discomfort with intimacy.

    I was intrigued by the fact that following their divorce Florence went on to pursue her dreams while Edward followed a completely different path. I did wonder what happened to Florence relationship wise - since we were told that Edward was married again, if only for a short time.

    But that's as far as I got...

    I have to admit this lost me along the way, and while I'm sure some of the things I just mentioned are part of the point McEwan was trying to make I wasn't interested enough in the characters to try and unravel it all. I think perhaps McEwan could have made much more of this tale and turned it into one worth reading rather than glossing over so many details and leaving us guessing.

    In fact - I think I should have just read the last page and I may have walked away happy.

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    ― Posted on Jan 22, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of If I Am Missing or Dead
Cover of Eclipse
  • 2 of 2 people find this helpful

    Best one of the trilogy

    Meyer does not disappoint in the final part of the Cullen trilogy - the love triangle continues as Bella fights to combine her obsessive love for Edward with her friendship with her soul-mate Jacob. Not an easy task when vampires and werewolves are sworn enemies. It’s one of those tales where you fi ... (continue)

    Meyer does not disappoint in the final part of the Cullen trilogy - the love triangle continues as Bella fights to combine her obsessive love for Edward with her friendship with her soul-mate Jacob. Not an easy task when vampires and werewolves are sworn enemies. It’s one of those tales where you find yourself rooting for each boy in turn - should she be with Edward or Jacob or Edward or Jacob?? (I do love a good love triangle!)
    The story moves at a fast pace and the pieces flow much better than in the previous book making it a very easy read.
    From vampire and werewolf folklore to concerns of the ultimate commitment with a nail biting battle thrown in for good measure, this book left me wanting another installment!

    Score
    5 stars

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    ― Posted on Jan 19, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of Twilight
  • A definite re-read

    It's been a long time since I read a book pretty much in one sitting - couldn't put this down and can't wait to move onto the next in the trilogy.

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    ― Posted on Dec 31, 2007 | Add your feedback

Cover of New Moon
  • *** This comment contains spoilers! ***

    Loved this one

    With Edward off *finding himself* and hoping Bella will be better off without him we get to find out more about Jacob - and his struggles as he becomes a werewolf! Check out my review here: http://www.clareswindlehurst.com/bookreviews/2008/01/10/new-moon-stephanie-meyer/

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    ― Posted on Jan 10, 2008 | Add your feedback

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