We first meet our narrator Rose as she is arrested in the 1990’s while studying at university. She’s met a fellow student called Harlow who announces her appearance on the scene with a whirlwind explosion of noise and anarchy. Dragging Rose into her escapades, she seems to neatly fit a hole in Rose’s life left by long disappeared sister, Fern. Rose and Fern were brought up by their parents as a sort of home experiment by their psychologist father, and the repercussions of that experimentation […]
A road-trip through medieval Europe, seen through the naïve and trusting eyes of a young classically educated friar.
John is the pupil of the famous philosopher Roger Bacon, trained in the arts of linguistics, medicine and a variety of other sciences. Evidently worried about being accused of heresy, Bacon entrusts a book containing all known knowledge at the time to the young man and secretly sets him off on a pilgrimage to the Pope to demonstrate his master’s knowledge, accompanied by two other fledgling friars he vaguely knows. On this eventful trip he gets to know his two companions, is repeatedly robbed, is […]
A bleak and darkly amusing tale from a master of character-driven plots and social drama.
Tom Keely is a collapsed wreck of a man. A disgraced and rejected environmental activist, he now spends his days drunk in his high-rise flat, venturing outside only for a quick stagger to the shops for ballast and a shot of coffee from a sympathetic café owner, before making his paranoid and unsteady way back. Divorced from both his wife and the world, Keely has all but given up on the country and himself until he comes into contact with a childhood acquaintance Gemma and […]
MelBivDevoe’s CBR review #13
I discovered Rainbow Rowell’s novels earlier this year, thanks to many recommendations from several friends. Her latest, “Landline,” differs from her most recent novels in that it’s not YA. Of all her novels, this one feels the most grown-up to me; it’s also the most supernatural or science fiction-ish. Georgie McCool is a successful television writer who has two young daughters with her stay-at-home husband Neal. Georgie and Neal have been together since college, but their marriage has become strained as Georgie’s career has taken […]
MelBivDevoe’s CBR review #12
This is going to be a short little review – I finished this book over a month ago and simply haven’t had the time to write a review. Forgive me if I mix up any of the details – like I said, it’s been a while since I read it! I was going to describe the character of the title, Bernadette, as an agoraphobe, but that’s not quite right. She’s not afraid of leaving the house or of other people – she simply loathes them. […]
A trivial comedy for serious people
Thirty-first book reviewed as part of the 130 Challenge. Yet again, I have taken up a play by Oscar Wilde and yet again, I’m amazed by the layer upon layer of depth and meaning that the satirical work contains. You wouldn’t think that a comedy of errors would have anything to offer in the way of moral commentary or philosophical meanderings, but when you’re reading Wilde, you better expect profundity in his most trivial statements. This is a play about two men who pretend to […]
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