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March Reads | 52 Books 2013

03.29.2013 by Nicola //

It’s time for March Reads! It’s been a busy month, dragging myself out of the relative reading slump that was February and finally getting around to some books to read for fun. (Click through for February Reads, January Reads.)
#12. Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
★★★★★ – Part three of The Hunger Games trilogy. I hated this the first time around, but upon re-reading and knowing what to expect I got more out of it. If you’ve ever been intrigued by this series, I recommend that you read it.
The Cat's Table by Michael Ondaatje
#13. The Cat’s Table by Michael Ondaatje
★★★★★ – A nice wee story from the author of The English Patient (which I haven’t, but know I need to, read). It’s the story of a 10 year-old boy’s 21-day journey by ship narrated by his older self. As a memoir of a journey and the characters he travelled with, it was lovely. As it became the philosophical thoughts and fears of a middle-aged man, I was less enchanted.
A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
#14. A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
★★★★★ – A great read about a lost diary and the hands into which it falls. This has a hook that will keep you guessing: is it entirely fiction, or only in part? There are 3 or 4 ways to slice it, and I enjoyed everything about getting there. Read my full review here, or watch my review on YouTube here.
After the Apocalypse by Maureen F. McHugh
#15. After the Apocalypse by Maureen F. McHugh
★★★★★ – Short stories from after a (hopefully) fictional, near-future apocalypse. A bit of a mixed bag, really: some of these really stuck with me while others completely passed me by. As is common in the sci-fi realm, these are definitely stories of ideas over style, but also brought me out of my comfort zone. 

Where'd You Go, Bernadette? by Maria Semple

#16. Where’d You Go, Bernadette? by Maria Semple
★★★★★ – I loved this book. Flawed but fabulous, it’s a collection of correspondence compiled by a teenaged girl after her mother, Bernadette, disappears. Many great voices, exceptional rants, and subtle developments make this a hugely entertaining read. I highly recommend it.

 

Currently reading:
A Hologram for the King by Dave Eggers
I haven’t read the blurb, but so far this is the story of an American businessman in Saudi Arabia, pitching to build a city for a King. I’m about 20% of the way into this one so far, and quite enjoying it.

If you want to keep up with what I’m reading you can visit my 52 Books page, or add me as a friend on Goodreads.

I’ve also started a YouTube channel for reviewing books. You can watch and subscribe at http://youtube.com/robotnic

What are you reading?

Categories // Books Tags // 52 Books 2013, Books, Currently Reading

Book Review: A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki

03.23.2013 by Nicola //

Whether you are in search of lost time or a time being to share it with, this fine novel from Ruth Ozeki is a good place to start.

Part diary, part narrative, the story reproduces the pages of teenager Nao’s journal, scribbled on the insides of a hacked French copy of Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time). Across several years and an ocean, forlorn writer Ruth is its finder. After a few pages, it becomes clear that the book itself is Ruth’s experience of finding the diary, attempting to understand its deeper meanings, and making footnotes to explain its many Japanese words and phrases.

As readers, it is our job to decide whether Ruth is, in fact, a not-so-subtle stand-in for the author herself. She is a woman trying desperately to understand Nao and her world, to find out where life took her after the tsunami took the diary she has left behind. Did she really exist? Are these words truth or fiction?

Nao is a curious character, full of life despite her struggles with bullying peers and a suicidal father. She’s smart and engaging, at ease with technology and at once loving and becoming frustrated by her family. Some of her best moments are spent with her great-grandmother, a Buddhist priest named Jiko, in her temple, or reading, second-hand, her father’s favourite Western Philosophers. All of these concepts build towards a greater thematic arc.

Ruth is leaner as a character, filled with self-doubt and frustration in the face of writing difficulties and a keenly felt intellectual and physical imprisonment. Her husband, Oliver, has had to move to a remote Canadian island for health reasons. Their physical and emotional distance from the outer world is brought into sharp relief as they go about their simple lives on this hostile rock, hemmed in by storms, waves and wolves: all of which makes their story more remarkable. Like her or not, Ruth is the lens through which we learn about Nao, an integral reader within the story.

Often they are overused as a conduit to the writer’s journey, there is lots to learn through these two, particularly Oliver, but their expositional conversations are at times over-stretched. Intentionally or otherwise, there is little warmth between them. An inversion takes place: as Ruth, as a character, becomes less believably human, her obsession with Nao’s story becomes all the more immediate.

Ozeki’s storytelling is masterfully precise, weaving storytelling elements which reappear or transform later in the book, keeping the reader on their toes. At some points these are a little overwrought: this is not a larger-than-life story; however the rest of the story makes up for these concessions.

The simple, delicate prose and gradual build of Nao’s personality are the real gens of this novel. It is not until towards the end that Ozeki really plays with the idea of authorship, but her writing will guide you there. You can never be certain what you’re reading in this book; all its characters and its author are constantly tugging the rug beneath your feet. And that’s what makes it truly refreshing.

Buy A Tale for the Time Being at The Book Depository.

Video review:

Categories // Books Tags // 52 Books 2013, A Tale For The Time Being, Book Review, Man Booker Prize Nominee, Ruth Ozeki

February Reads | 52 Books 2013

03.03.2013 by Nicola //

This year I’m making a concerted effort to track what I read and write capsule reviews close to the time of reading. I’ll be updating with a post like this one each month. (Click here for January reads.)

It was a slim month, partly because I was also launching my own book! World Film Locations: Glasgow is now available and the launch at Glasgow Film Festival was a blast. You can pick up a copy at The Book Depository | Amazon.

Tell the Wolves I’m Home by Carol Rifka Brunt
★★★★★ – Full review here.

Buy it at The Book Depository | Amazon

The Maze Runner by James Dashner
★★★★★ – One of the more exciting YA dystopias I’ve read. Great world-buidling, drops you into the action via a very curious lead character. For me the pacing was a little off and I got a bit fed up with every chapter ending on a cliff-hanger, so the high tension all the damn time thing ended up meaning that it took me longer to get through this. Misgivings aside, definitely one of the good ones.

Buy it at The Book Depository | Amazon

The Hunger Games (re-read) by Suzanne Collins
★★★★★ – If you hadn’t guessed by now,  I’ve been researching the whole YA dystopia genre in anticipation of a re-read of this little darling. I’m in the midst of a big project based around The Hunger Games – notably its fandom. This is the third time I’ve read The Hunger Games (book 1) and it’s as fresh and exciting as ever. Worth a read if you haven’t caught up with it yet.

Buy it at The Book Depository | Amazon

Catching Fire (re-read) by Suzanne Collins
★★★★★ – Isn’t it strange when your memory of a book doesn’t match up with the reality? I remembered this as my favourite book in the series. On reflection, what I’d thought was a few chapters of homecoming was in fact almost half of the book. I’d revise my favourite to book 1 now, and the second half here isn’t as exciting when you know what’s coming, but still a fun read nonetheless.

Buy it at The Book Depository | Amazon

Currently reading:
Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
My least favourite in the series, but already different than I’d remembered.

The Cat’s Table by Michael Ondaatje
My book club pick for the month.

If you want to keep up with what I’m reading you can visit my 52 Books page, or add me as a friend on Goodreads.

What are you reading?

Categories // Books Tags // 52 Books 2013, Currently Reading

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