Reading High
Books are my addiction, nearly every genre (except Sci Fi and Fantasy), fiction and non fiction. Straight from the heart reviews.
Monday, October 28, 2024
To Die For by David Baldacci
Thursday, October 17, 2024
The Ghosts of August by Peter Watt
Peter Watt’s historical novel, The Ghosts of August, covers the years from 1914 to 1916. The settings are Sydney, Rabaul in Papua New Guinea, France, Germany and the Middle East.
David and Ben Steele, brothers from a wealthy Sydney family, join the Australian army to fight in the First World War. David is sent to France and Ben to the Middle East. David was in Germany visiting a friend before the War began and Ben was in Rabaul pursuing the family’s interests there. Peter Watt is one of those writers in the Michener mould who entertain while enlightening, and for me, having lived in Papua New Guinea but never having been to Rabaul, I was especially interested in that part of the book.
The fighting scenes in the two theatres of war, France and the Middle East, are graphic and at the same time gripping. War in any form, of course, is horrible, disgusting, terrifying, but hand to hand close combat between young men who in other circumstances would have no animosity towards each other is dehumanising as well as heartbreaking. That is how a lot of that war was fought and Peter Watt is unflinching in his representation of it.
The perfect balance for the horrifying reality of the brothers’ experiences in fighting for their country is the telling of the individual stories of their personal lives as well as those of their family and friends and the women they loved. There is equal depth and power in all aspects of the book.
This quote stayed with me: “It was ironic to think that the Kaiser was a cousin of the British King and Russian Czar. This was truly a war between royal European families that was dragging millions of men to their deaths…”
Well done, Mr Watt.
Published by Pan Macmillan
Friday, October 4, 2024
Love Lay Down Beside Me and We Wept by Helen Murray Taylor
This is a memoir as moving, as powerful and as beautifully written as the best novel. Helen Murray Taylor was a brilliant student who became a doctor working punishingly long hours in a hospital, and from there she went on to work in medical research.
Helen had a loving husband, Mark, as well as a loving family and she adored her nieces and nephews. When Helen and Mark decided it was time to have a baby of their own they did not envisage the problems they were going to encounter.
Helen’s honesty is heartbreaking. She had reached all of her academic goals with ease, she loved playing sport and she was in a loving relationship, but the one thing she now wanted was becoming harder to reach. She goes on to tell of the traumatic consequences she suffered and she does it so clearly, even saying she checked some of her facts with Mark while writing this memoir, that she was able to project her emotions off the page directly on to me, as she will to any reader. I wanted to take her under my wing but the best part of this is she always had the love of her husband, family and friends throughout her painful and at times rather terrifying struggle.
Although I want to talk about Helen’s story in detail I have been deliberately vague here because it is her story to tell and I want everyone to be as captured by it as I have been. I do want to mention, though, Helen’s cat. Animals know when people need them. They are great givers of comfort and sympathy.
I love psychological studies and this is one of the best I have read. Helen wants to pursue writing and I am sure she will be a wonderful novelist, if that is the path she wants to take.
Published by Unbound.
Saturday, September 21, 2024
The Last Trace by Petronella McGovern
The Last Trace is a story with many components. Lachy has a secret: if he unthinkingly drinks alcohol too quickly he experiences black holes in his memory. It is more of an embarrassment than anything else until it begins to cause problems in his recent and further back past. Lachy’s fourteen year old son, Jai, has come to live with him in country New South Wales and Lachy has taken a year’s leave of absence from his job of getting water to drought-stricken areas around the world. Jai has been ‘sin binned’ by his mother and stepfather who believe he needs to spend some time away from his Sydney school mates.
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Death at the Sign of the Rook by Kate Atkinson
Jackson Brodie is back and he’s on the trail of an art thief. Jackson has been hired by a sister and brother whose mother has died and they are dividing up her possessions between themselves, in accordance with her Will. They have found that a painting their mother held dear is missing and they have asked Jackson to find it.
As he goes about this task, Jackson meets up with various characters from his past, both in person and in his mind. As usual, there is lots of witty repartee with all of them. As well, lovely new characters are introduced, including an agnostic vicar (call me Simon); Lady Milton and all who dwell in her Stately Home which has had to stoop to holding Murder Mystery weekends; Ben, an amputee war veteran and bee keeper, and more. Jackson joins forces with Detective Constable Reggie Chase (with great reluctance on her part) who is hoping to capture a spree killer.
The mystery of the stolen painting is cleverly laid out; Jackson Brodie is as quirky and as funny as ever, and there are a lot of laugh-out-loud moments through the book which is unputdownable, of course.
I have been in Kate Atkinson’s thrall since I first read Behind the Scenes at the Museum, a long time ago. She is still as brilliant as ever.
Published by Penguin
Saturday, September 14, 2024
Here One Moment by Liane Moriarty
In her unique way, Liane Moriarty weaves an intriguing story from this starting point. The individual characters who, mostly, logically reject their assigned predictions, are all unsettled and unnerved, as who wouldn’t be? Under the circumstances who wouldn’t try to take control of this hypothetical destiny, you know, just in case? In every alternate chapter ‘the lady’ is telling her own story.
This is so clever, and so different, and I have never read a book like it. Individual characters have their own stories but I had no trouble remembering which was which because they were all examining aspects of life pertaining to each of them and so they all stood out. I wasn’t able to guess how the mystery of the lady and her predictions was going to be solved but when it was, it made for a most satisfactory ending.
Just brilliant!
Published by Pan Macmillan
Saturday, September 7, 2024
The Masterpiece by Belinda Alexandra
The Masterpiece is an epic story covering Paris in two time lines: 1923 and 1943-1946. In 1923 Katerina, a Russian emigree, is a brilliant although as yet unacknowledged artist; Max and Serge have ambitions of becoming established dealers in highest quality art; Madeleine, Katerina’s friend, having run away from her upper class family, is working as a singer; Efron Archer, an Errol Flynn-like character, is part of the story at this point.
Paris in 1943 is firstly occupied by the Italians, but then comes the full horror of German occupation. To this day ownership of paintings looted by the Germans from European homes is still being contested with the aim of restoration to the descendants of original owners.
The Masterpiece is about the almost unimaginable world in which people found their previously purposeful, meaningful lives torn apart and the struggle for survival, without losing their humanity and compassion, became paramount. Katerina, Max and Serge bring that time to life.
In 1946 Eve Archer has left Australia and is living in Paris. She has come with the purpose of finding Serge Lavertu. The most important part of this epic story involves Eve, her connections to Serge, Madeleine, Katerina and Max, amid the chaos of France’s restoration and the rush for justice and punishment for alleged crimes committed through the war years, while currently corruption and cover ups are putting the outcome of true justice in jeopardy.
This is a book you can sink your teeth into. It keeps alive a history which must never be forgotten.
Thank you Belinda Alexandra for your gracious gift of a copy of The Masterpiece.
Published by Harper Collins
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