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December 31st, 2010 Comments off

Doomsday Book by ConnieWillis

Ebook on my iPad

Time travel is a very hackneyed concept in science fiction. After all it was done first, and arguably best, by H.G.Wells in The Time Machine, more than a century ago. But Connie Willis has managed to grab hold of the idea and make it interesting again.

In Willis’ near-term future (2054 AD), time travel has been invented and is in the hands of academics at Oxford University. Doomsday Book details a research trip to the early 1300s to investigate mediaeval life and settle academic questions about the way the English language was spoken.

But things go horribly wrong and the time-traveller, a young woman called Kivrin, ends up arriving at a time right when the Black Death hits England. Co-incidentally, an epidemic of severe flu afflicts 21st century Britain, throwing all into confusion at both ends of the time travel voyage.

Willis seems to effortlessly combine comedy and tragedy in this book, no mean feat. We certainly feel the tragedy of the Black Death, because Kivrin, and ourselves as readers, come to know the people whom it affects, and feel their suffering. Contrast this with the almost dismissive treatment of the same plague by Ken Follett in World Without End in which the only people to die are characters we don’t much care about.

I really enjoyed this book.

Grasshopper by Barbara Vine

Audiobook on my iPhone

“Barbara Vine” is a pseudonym of Ruth Rendell, used when she is writing outside of the mystery genre.

Grasshopper is, to my mind, one of Rendell’s best books, which is saying a great deal.

It is in some ways a charming book, with a genuine romance in it, and even a (fairly) happy ending – not things one normally associates with this writer.

Having said that, though, there is tragedy a-plenty as well. It tells the story of Clodagh (pron “Clo-da”), in her late teens, who leaves her rural home to study in London. Clodagh has survived a terrible accident in which her slightly-younger boyfriend was killed, and for which Clodagh is bitterly blamed. There is a sense of her being banished to London, where she is to live in a flat owned by a distant relative.

The slow evolving of what happens to her in London, and the development of Clodagh’s character, is beautifully and convincingly done.

Without giving away too much of the plot, she falls in with a group of people of similar age, who are living together in a flat at the top of a house in Maida Vale. Their passion is climbing over the roofs of the terrace houses. In doing this, they discover a secret which will eventually bring them all undone, and lead to another tragedy. The book is cast as a retrospective memoir by a grown-up Clodagh, and is full of backwards and forward references which help to build the tension.

“They have sent me here because of what happened on the pylon” is the first sentence of the book, but it takes a long while before we discover what happened in the first tragedy of her life. The later tragedy is foreshadowed repeatedly, but because the narrator is telling this story from a time in her life when we know she is settled and happy, we know that all turns out well in the end.

This is the second time I have listened to this book (beautifully narrated by Emilia Fox), and I thoroughly enjoyed it both times.

All Flesh is Grass by Clifford D Simak

Paperback

I re-read this because I am going through all my paperbacks, trying to dispose of most of them.

Entertaining-enough 1960s science fiction, written in Simak’s inimitable style. An unusual first-contact story in which a small American town finds itself enclosed by an impenetrable bubble. It turns out that the alien species which has done this is… well, a bunch of flowers. Nevertheless, Simak makes this convincing and memorable.

My only gripe is that the book ended rather suddenly and limply.

Guardians of Time by Poul Anderson

Ebook on my iPad

Four novellas based on Anderson’s Time Patrol. Enjoyable if light-weight time-travel SF with plenty of fun with paradoxes.

Case Histories by Kate Atkinson

Ebook on my iPad

This is the first of Kate Atkinson’s books which I have read, and the first to feature the private detective Jackson Brodie. The book seems to start strangely, and you wonder what is going on: you are presented with three quite distressing ‘case histories’ – a young girl goes missing without trace; a young woman dies in an apparently senseless attack at a solicitor’s office; a new mother murders her husband with an axe. None of these stories seem related, but when the book proper starts, all of these tales are explored and are seen to intertwine. Enjoyable and well-written, with really interesting characterisation. On the strength of this I went out and bought the other books in the Jackson Brodie series, all as ebooks, at a great price from Kobo Books.

The Mind’s Eye by Oliver Sacks

Hardcover, my own collection

This book deals, as the title indicates, with vision and its disturbance by problems in the brain (or as in Sack’s own case when he is affected by cancer, how a physical problem with the eyes impacts on the mind).

Everything that Oliver Sacks writes is fascinating and enjoyable, and this book is no exception.

Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers

Audibook on my iPhone

For some reason I seem to find myself re-reading Sayer’s series featuring Lord Peter Wimsey, in reverse order.

This book starts out, though, focusing entirely on Harriet Vane, the detective writer (clearly based heavily on Sayers herself), who is on a trip back to Oxford University for a reunion which her old classmates. There’s a lot going on here about women’s education (still a fairly new thing in the 1930s when Sayers was writing), the academic life, and the celibate life.

I did find myself wondering how the average reader of detective stories would cope with all of this if they were to come upon the book without having read any of the preceding novels in the series. Personally, I found it very interesting for the light it sheds on the thinking of the time. Harriet Vane also agonizes endlessly about her non-relationship with Peter Wimsey and why she can’t contemplate marrying him, as he regularly proposes. Naturally, however, by the end of the book, Sayers finds a way to rationalize a change of heart on Harriet’s part…

The mystery this time, if there is one, is very much subordinate to all of the above, but is still intriguing enough to hold the reader’s interest – poison pen letters are being sent to staff and students of Harriet’s old college, and acts of vandalism occurring. Who is doing this and why, are the core mysteries to be uncovered.

Gaudy Night is certainly not your average detective story, but very enjoyable nevertheless.

The Children’s Book by A.S.Byatt

Ebook on my iPad

It was a bit of a struggle to get into this long book. One of the problems is that there are a very large number of characters, most introduced quite quickly during the course of a party, and keeping them all straight is a challenge. But once I got over that hurdle (greatly assisted by the Search function in iBooks – who was that character again?), I started to become gripped by the story.

Basically the book follows the lives of a group of disparate children growing up in the late 1890s and early 1900s in southern England. They are linked by an artistic community of writers, poets, artists, sculptors and general free-thinkers associated with the Fabian Society and the Arts and Crafts movement. Indeed, the Victoria and Albert Museum is almost a character in its own right in the book.

A key figure is the mother of several of the children, Olive Wellwood, an author of childrens’ stories who clearly seems to be based on Edith Nesbit, in real life one of the founders of the Fabian Society, and whose marriage, like Olive’s, was strained by infidelities of both partners. Olive’s stories, however, are definitely darker and more disturbing than Nesbit’s real tales, drawing their inspiration more from the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Anderson (whose unexpurgerated tales would terrify most children).

Each of the children in the book is an interesting individual, and their fates are not easily predictable – except that it is not hard to work out from the timing that their adult lives will be profoundly affected by the Great War of 1914-18, and so it proves. Byatt has created a wonderful picture of the rich artistic culture and society which existed before that cataclysm, and a group of people riven by personal and sexual tensions as they try to work out how to live differently than previous generations. And of the children of these people, trying to come to terms with it all.

Bad Boy by Peter Robinson

Ebook on my iPad

I was profoundly disappointed by Robinson’s previous book in his Detective Inspector Banks series. It was full of silly shenanigans to do with MI5, a gay man driven to murder by a whispering campaign, and ended with Banks acting stupidly and against character.

However, this latest volume at least partly redeems the situation, by returning to a more believable scenario, this time involving Banks’ daughter. Banks himself (as though ashamed of his previous appearance) is off-stage for most of the first half of the book and the action is carried by Annie Cabbott.

A good page-turner; I hope Robinson sticks to this form.

Unseen Academicals by Terry Pratchett

Hardcover, my own collection

Disappointing, I am afraid. A rather confusing plot and some very confusing scenes. The book needed a strong editor, particularly as it was apparently dictated by Pratchett rather than typed by the author himself (Pratchett, alas, has been diagnosed with early Altzheimer’s disease). But it didn’t get it.

Currently Reading:

Atlantic by Simon Winchester

The Link by Colin Tudge

Recent Reading

July 31st, 2009 Comments off

My fortnightly monthly! summary of what I’ve been reading and listening to.

The Endeavour trapped in the ice

South! by Sir Ernest Shackleton

E-book on my iPod

Amazon link

This true story of Antarctic adventure in the early years of the 20th Century starts a little slowly, as Shackleton recounts the slow and frustrating progress of the expedition on the ship Endeavour as they vainly try to find a way through pack ice to make a landing on the Antarctic coast.

But it really takes off as a story of almost superhuman endurance and struggle when the Endeavour becomes permanently frozen into the ice, and is eventually crushed and destroyed, leaving nearly 30 men stranded on the shifting ice floes, hundreds of miles from the nearest land and with no hope of communicating with the outside world to seek rescue.

They float with the ice for many long months, unable to do more than hope that they will drift far enough north that they can become free of the pack ice and launch the ship’s boats which they drag with them from floe to floe. The long, long struggle to reach land is harrowing. Finally they manage to struggle ashore on Elephant Island, a desolate crag with barely any shore – and no people. From there, Shackleton and another five men set out in the strongest boat to try to reach the nearest outpost of civilization – the whaling station on South Georgia. Amazingly, they manage to do it, only to find they are on the far side of the island from the whaling station, and so have to trek across mountains and glaciers to reach help.

Even when they do reach the station, it is many months before a ship can successfully reach the stranded men on Elephant Island. It is astonishing that despite all the privations, not one man was lost on the expedition. And grimly ironic that most of the men, once rescued, set off for home to join up with those still fighting in the trenches in World War I, where many of them are then killed.

Real – but true life – Boy’s Own material.

The Appeal by John Grisham

Audiobook

Amazon link

This is a bleak indictment of the power of corporations and their disdain for the common person, as Grisham looks at the fall-out from a courtroom success against a major chemical company. The little guy – the community devastated by pollution of their water supply by the company – has won! But has he? Not if the billionaire running the company has anything to say about it. Quite gripping reading, but ultimately pretty depressing.

All the Colors of Darkness by Peter Robinson

E-book on my iPhone

Amazon link

This is the latest in Robinson’s series about Detective Chief Inspector Banks, set in the North of England. And I think Robinson has finally jumped the shark with the series. What starts off as apparently a straightforward case of murder-suicide by a homosexual man blows out into a pointless investigation into whether the murder had been triggered by Iago-like whisperings from another party – pointless because it’s clear all through that no charges can be laid against such a person – and into fantastical stuff with the involvement of Britain’s spy agency MI6 (with apparently unlimited powers).

Definitely not the best book of the series, but possibly the last, as I can’t see where Robinson can go from here with any credibility. A great pity.

Current Reading

I’m currently part-way through:

  • Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin (Hardcover, my own library) – yes, I’m still reading this.
  • Almost Perfect by W.E. Pete Peterson (Ebook)
  • Harlequin by Bernard Cornwell (Audiobook)

Recent Reading

April 18th, 2009 Comments off

My fortnightly summary of what I’ve been reading and listening to.

While I’ve been reading a fair bit over the last fortnight, I haven’t completed very much in the period.

I’m part way through:

  • Trunk Music by Michael Connelly (Audible audiobook)
  • The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett (Ebook on my iPod)
  • Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol I by Edward Gibbon (Ebook on my iPod)

I confess that I’m reading Gibbon’s massive treatise on the iPod just to prove that it can be done, and how well the iPod Touch/iPhone works as an ebook reading platform, something I’m growing increasingly to believe. Even Gibbon’s extensive footnotes work pretty well thanks to intelligent formatting by Gutenberg (from where I sourced the book).

On the down-side, Lexcycle, who produce the Stanza ebook software I had been using to read books on my iPod, dropped the ball. They released a new version incorporating a dictionary lookup feature which manages to interfere with the comfort of reading (the feature pops up if your finger dwells a fraction of a second too long on the screen when you are turning pages). They have promised to fix it, but in the meantime I’m using the almost-as-good eReader from Palm.

Friend of the Devil  by Peter Robinson.

Ebook on my iPod Touch.

I grew up in what is now West Yorkshire in the United Kingdom. Robinson was born not far away from where I was born, and only a year before me. His series of novels about Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks are all set in this part of the world, so many of the places he writes about are quite familiar to me from my childhood. This, of course, adds to the interest I have in this series.

But even if you don’t know this area of the world, DCI Banks is an engaging and multi-layered character with a complex private life, and the cases he encounters are full of interest and mystery. In this novel, the 17th in the series, a young woman is raped and murdered in the town of Eastvale; and in what seems a completely different case, a woman quadriplegic is found murdered in her wheelchair at the top of a set of cliffs facing over the North Sea. How these two cases – one handled by Banks, one by his colleague and ex-lover Annie Cabot – are related only becomes clear as the book progresses. A really intriguing read, and the ending was not at all obvious for almost all of the book.

Various Blogs

Here are some links to a few of the blogs I read regularly:

Coding Horror  by Jeff Atwood

This is always must-read stuff for me. Jeff Atwood talks intelligently and interestingly about the craft of programming, and continually introduces me to new thoughts, and links to things I ought to know or to think about.

I, Cringely  by Robert X. Cringely

Cringely wrote one of the best, and funniest, books about the early days of the computer industry which I have ever read: Accidental Empires (or, How the Boys of Silicon Valley Make Their Millions, Battle Foreign Competition, and Still Can’t Get a Date)

He writes regularly and very intelligently about technology. While he’s occasionally a bit too self-important and self-congratulatory for my taste, he’s never less than thought-provoking and well-informed.

Whimsley  by Tom Slee

This British-born Canadian doesn’t blog anywhere never enough so far as I am concerned. He writes very clever and amusing stuff, sometimes at great length, about the digital economy. For example, he dedicated dozens of well-thought-out posts to demolishing the book The Long Tail by Chris Anderson; and he has written amusingly about the hidden flaws in the way that Google and Amazon work.

I hope Slee keeps on blogging, because I want to keep on reading his stuff.

Journal  by Sam Pepys

This guy blogs just about every day, and it’s all full of his rich life in London, all the stupidities and corruption of the politicians and bureaucrats that he has to work with, about all the women he bonks (he’s a very naughty man!), his long-suffering wife, and the renovations he’s having done to his house. Just lately, he’s been rather worried about the spread of a dangerous infectious disease in the city, seemingly on the rise every day. And about the progress of the current war with the Dutch, of course.

Fascinating reading. Oh, did I mention that this guy is writing in the 1660s?

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