Tuesday, 28 May 2013

The Other Half of Me by Morgan McCarthy

Childhood can seem idyllic the children living it when, in fact, they are being damaged by neglect. Jonathan and his sister, ethereal Theo, live an apparently charmed life. Rich, living in a big house and with endless freedom to roam and explore, they are unhindered by the constraints of adult interference and rules. Their father is absent - they are told he is dead - and their mother drifts around the edges of their lives in an alcoholic haze.

When their famous and beautiful grandmother, Eve, returns to the family house, however, the children's lives begin to change. As they grow to adulthood, the reader becomes aware of the damage their strange childhood has inflicted on them. Secrets and lies begin to unravel until Jonathan learns the truth that Theo had dreamed of in confused ghostly nightmares, and struggled with, for years. Buried the public glare of glossy magazine stories are darker tales.

Morgan McCarthy writes in gorgeous and darkly sensitive prose. Her depiction of Theo's mental instability, as it develops into real illness in adulthood, is gentle and true. She writes from the view point of Theo's brother, Jonathan, who reacts in a very human fashion as someone who has no prior knowledge or experience of such things and who responds much as most of us would in similar circumstances. Jonathan, too, is damaged by his childhood. The author subtly shows us the consequences of a loveless childhood on impressionable minds, even when those children have every advantage of wealth, position and family fame.

Recommended.

  

Monday, 20 May 2013

Lone Wolf by Jody Picoult

Jody Picoult is one of my favourite authors. I love the way she explores the moral dilemmas of human existence, asking us all how we would respond if we were faced with seemingly impossible situations involving our loved ones.

In this novel, Luke Warren is in a coma following a traffic accident in which his daughter was also involved and injured. Medical opinion is that he will not recover. His 17 year old daughter, who lives with him, wants to keep him on life support, his hitherto estranged son wants to let him go. Luke is a celebratory, having lived in the wild for 2 years with a pack of wolves. This experience has coloured his life and relationships ever since, and not always to the good.

The story explores the personal relationships of his family as they battle with each other and their own feelings and natures over who should make the decisions about Luke's care and future.

As always, Jody Picoult does this very well, although I think I detect the merest hint that she might have struggled to come up with a new theme after all the tales she's written before. It can't be easy to think of a new dilemma for a new novel every year or so in order to keep the publisher and readers happy. I could be imagining it, however. Whatever, I hope she continues to write because I really enjoy her writing. Keep it up, Jody, please.

The Ten Year Nap by Meg Wolitzer

I picked this one to read because the reviews printed on the book cover read "....hilarious...." and "....tartly funny.....". Well, I think I must have lost my sense of humour. This story is almost a commentary, rather than a novel, about 4 women who take career breaks from fairly high powered careers to have babies and then, either deliberately or through inertia, find that they are still at home 10 years later.

The writing is insightful, thoughtful, gentle, and clever. The author understands, very well, what goes on inside a woman's head at this time in her life and how captivatingly addictive caring for children can be. She also understands how quickly a woman can lose those sparks of confidence and ambition she once had once the contact with her professional life has been cut.

Amy, Roberta, Jill and Karen have very different lives but their friendship has survived the temporary time-out that has turned out not to be quite as temporary as they thought it would be. Now, however, they face a illici affairs, financial problems and children growing away from their motherly nurturing. Life is changing and they need to change with it.

The pace of this book is slow and gentle. If you like a page turned with a twist on every page, this isn't for you. If you like the psychology of human relationships - especially of the feminine variety - then this is for you. Funny? Hilarious? I can't see it.

The Tenderness of Wolves by Steff Penney

Another novel by Steff Penney but, having read this one, I'm not quite sure where the title came from. Yes, the story is set in the Canadian wilderness of the mid 19C, when the population was sparse and conditions for human living were primitive, but wolves don't feature in the story at all, except one expects to encounter them at every turn of the page. Perhaps that's the point.

However, that's by the by. The story centres around the murder of Laurent Jammet, a French born trapper who settled in the small settlement of Dove River and befriended the 17 year old adopted son of a local couple. When the boy goes missing, he is immediately suspected of the murder by everyone in the local community except his mother, who recruits the help of a visiting scout and the pair set of to find the missing boy. They are joined by others who have vested interests in the outcome.

The current intrigue the tale reveals, and the old mystery that is resolved, unfold as the journey progresses. The understated relationship between the scout and the stubborn wife/mother adds subtle flavour to the mix.

A story of determination, mystery, loyalty and a mother's love and harsh lives lived in primitive conditions. A good read.

 

Monday, 13 May 2013

The Vanishing Point by Val McDermid

You've heard the expression 'airport fiction' - well, this is really airport fiction. A child is kidnapped from his adoptive mother whilst they are transiting through an airport in the USA. The boy's natural mother, now dead, was a British TV reality star and his adoptive mother was her 'ghost' biographer and friend. But why was the boy kidnapped and by whom? At first, the adoptive mother comes under suspicion but, as she is questioned by the airport authorities and her story unfolds, a complicated history reveals layers of secrets and lies.

Val McDermid's Hill/Jordan books were adapted for television as the 'Wire in the Blood' series and she has written many more crime novels of repute. She has also been awarded the Crime Writer's Gold Dagger Award.

The Vanishing Point was published in 2012 and is the first of her novels that I've read, so I've discovered her rather late, although I enjoyed 'Wire in the Blood', as a TV series, very much. The Vanishing Point kept me turning the pages, and I didn't want to put it down. It's full of twists and turns although I thought the plot was too closely inspired by the real life story of a reality 'star', which took the gloss of it a bit for me.

What spoilt it - and really spoilt it - was the last chapter. I won't spoil it for you with a full disclosure but don't say you weren't warned!
Preferences
§
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0
-
=
Backspace
Tab
q
w
e
r
t
y
u
i
o
p
[
]
Return
capslock
a
s
d
f
g
h
j
k
l
;
'
\
shift
`
z
x
c
v
b
n
m
,
.
/
shift
English
alt
alt
Preferences