Monday, September 30, 2024
Random Things Tours: Unraveling by Preethi Nair
Sunday, September 29, 2024
Under Her Roof by A.A.Chaudhuri
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
Random Things Tours: Deadly Choice by S.Lee Manning
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Nicht ich by Zeruya Shalev, translated by Anne Birkenhauer
Zeruya Shalev is by far one of my favorite contemporary Israeli writers and from one novel to another she is becoming more deep and meditative, dissecting love, pain and betrayal. I´ve read until now all her novels, in various translations.
Her latest, Nicht ich - Not me, in my approximate translation, from Hebrew Rakadeti. Amadeti/Dancing. Standing - translated by Anne Birkenhauer was chronologically not her latest. In fact, this book was written 30 years ago, and as the author herself mentions she kept it in the drawers for 30 years.
It is a story of a woman who abandoned her family for love, confronting her passions and temptations. Unnamed, she is confused, is wandering through the labyrinth of her own uncertainties while playing between unassumed roles of wife, mother, lover.
As a first person account, it is an unidimensional story, self-centered and we are unable to compare, explain and understand, but beyond this relative shortcoming, it touches upon very relevant strong feelings and roles assigned and expected from women, any of them.
Maybe if I would have start my exploration of Zeruya Shalev books would have been different? Not sure about it, as although a debut, Nicht ich shows a strong introspection and understanding of emotions, literary skills that I appreciate so much at this author.
A recommended read to anyone interested in strong women voices, with an unique take on deeply understanding emotional turmoils.
Rating: 3.5 stars
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Nochmal von vorne by Dana von Suffrin
The shortlist of the German Booker Prize/Deuscher Buchpreis was already announced, and this book by Dana von Suffrin doesn´t figure on it, however I will keep reviewing some of the books longlisted, because they are important anyway for Germany´s current literary trends.
Nochmal von vorne - in my (very) approximate translation, Starting again, Suffrin´s second book (her debut, Otto, waits for a review hopefully in a few days) is a linear family story, between Germany and Israel. It is a story of - as the title suggests already - eternal re-start. A historical and personal destiny repeating itself in different variations.
The name of the storyteller, Rosa, is mentioned relatively late in the story, but it matches the specific evolution of the story itself.
Personally, I´ve find interesting the inter-historical reflections - from communist Romania to Israel and Germany - very relevant for the story development, and it does affect the personal evolution of the characters as well.
The plot does not set extraordinary aims, allowing the story to unfold in a slow yet steady pace. It does not innovate or challenge, it just tells a story, which is enough for a good literary achievement.
I just wish, as in the case of many other books written by German authors, that there is a translation into English so many more readers can read such stories.
Rating: 4 stars
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Rachel´s Random Resources: The Sticky Toffee Pudding Club by Rosie Green
The weekend is about to start and if you are looking for an easy sweet novella, I am happy to recommend you something that will really sooth your soul: The Sticky Toffee Pudding Club by Rosie Green.
The book is part of a series set around a small coffee place in a village, but it can also be read as a stand-alone.
The Sticky Toffee Pudding Club is built around the story of a missed-connection: the good-hearted Annalise saved a poor dog together with the handsome Jensen, but took over by the events, she forgot to ask his number. Short after, her life will take a turn for the bad, as she lost her job, among other misfortunes. But she is offered a chance to turn her pudding skills into art, and this may be the beginning of a new chapter in life, and maybe love will find her too.
I love to read romantic novellas, and this not only a lot of romance, but also an eventful plot, taking plaace within a relatively short period of time, however allowing both the characters and the story to develop. I particularly liked Annalise, fragile and funny, yet resilient and strong enough to start over.
I am interested in exploring more novellas set in the same place and more reading by this author, as I enjoyed the style. It is not easy to find good novellas, and I may store some of them for the very busy days when my attention span does not allow me to focus on too long and complex reads.
Rating: 4 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered as part of the book tour but the opinions are, as usual, my own
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Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Random Things Tours: The Durian Pact by Christopher Howarth
Monday, September 16, 2024
Random Things Tours: The Accidental Plus One. Travel Tales from a Trailing Spouse
Thursday, September 12, 2024
A Death in Cornwall by Daniel Silva
As usual, I´ve spent my last summer days, in expectation of the latest book from the Gabriel Allon series, the successful Mossad top spy featured in Daniel Silva´s series. My very busy working and life schedule, rarely allows me to follow series from A to Z, but this one is probably one of the few, if not the only one, that I religiously followed one book at a time, every single year.
The 24th installment, A Death in Cornwall, is very well structured, and following a clear story: the search for a looted Picasso, stolen years ago during the Shoah from its rightful Jewish owners. Gabriel Allon, now retired - officially, because a spy never actually is fully enjoying his non-active time - is trying to figure out some mysterious murders surrounding this Picasso getting entangled in a conspiracy leading to Downing Street and upper echalons of the British politics. It does also involves some thriller travel, from Cornwall to Corsica and back to London.
From one perspective, the book is extremely moderate in terms of suspense, without the extended global outreach and terrorism focus as in previous books. However, the focus on looted art is enough, and the information about the dark ways of art money laudering is accurate and it is complex enough to keep the reader focused.
The focus on British politics is also relevant, given the latest corruption scandals and unaccountability of politicians that took the first page of local and international newspapers.
Unexpected, in the very good sense, systematic and relevant, A Death in Cornwall is another gem from the series. I am just left with the sad feeling that I have to wait just another one full year until the next installment.
Rating: 4.5 stars
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Tuesday, September 10, 2024
Grenzgänger by Mechtild Borrmann
La Belle Créole by Maryse Condé
After around two months break, I was finally able to return to the world of Maryse Condé. La Belle Créole is a social story, a tragic passion story taking place during times of social change.
Dieudonné is accused of murdering Lorraine, a rich lady for whom he worked as a gardener. Manipulative, emotionally and psychologically instable and much older Lorraine used him, and wants to get rid of his presence, but he may reach violently killing her. He is becoming a kind of local celebrity, for all the wrong reasons, and he will return to freedom, but the life he is back to is an empty, lonely, full of remords life. Not worth living it.
I love social stories, or novels with a strong social dimension, but I am often afraid to discover that some may just be strongly biased accounts trying to convince the reader without being based on a narrative of sorts. In this case, everything come admirably perfectly together: the characters, the story, the context. Both events and the characters do grow up in sync, developing under each other´s influence.
Especially Dieudonné, the main character, is portrayed in his psychological complexity, put into the specific social context he grew up, experiencing the social alienation and relationships, interacting with people involved at different degrees in the social experiment. The social environment, its cruelty particularly, is experienced through the daily interactions and the personalities of the main characters. It is the background against which the story unfolds, allowing however the own stories of the characters to take shape.
I´ve read the book in the original French language, rich in local expressions, which makes the book even more authentic. I was very fond of this book and would continue discovering Condé´s work both for the style and writing, as well as for the social relevance.
Rating: 4.5 stars
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Monday, September 9, 2024
Mon Enfant de Berlin by Anne Wiazemsky
Berlin is nowadays a place where people may find themselves. As in running away from everything, re-inventing oneself. It seems it happened the same at least for a previous generation.
Claire is a young nurse working for the Red Cross that insisted to leave her bourgeois family in Paris to join the post-war efforts. But she is not any Claire, she is the daugher of François Mauriac, the great writer who dared to remain on the side of the Resistance, unlike many of his peers. But Claire wants to write her own story and Berlin is the place to start. There she will fall in love with a Russian prince, a former war prisoner working for the allies. They got married and their first child is the author of a fictional auto-biography, Mon enfant de Berlin - in my approximate translation, My Berlin Child.
The late actress and author Anne Wiazemsky re-wrote that story, using letters her mother sent back home and diary entry, and filling the gaps in between with accounts from people that knew her parents or fragments of memory. The method is ingenious, as it combines both biography and fiction.
The story evolves chronologically, kindly focusing on the love story, with moderate remarks and observations about the general historical and society context in war-torned Berlin of the mid-1940s.
Although it does not excel from the literary point of view, it was a story of searching oneself in a world in turmoil. Someone not familiar with Claire´s background may just consider the story a work of fiction, which in the end is not very relevant. Fictional or not, Mon Enfant de Berlin shares a narrative that makes you think and reflect. The choice of literary genre is less important.
Rating: 3 stars
PS: I also have a YouTube channel, feel free to follow for more bookish inspiration: https://www.youtube.com/@WildWritingLife