Tuesday, December 31, 2013

New Year's Resolutions for 2014


Recently it has occurred to me that more isn't necessarily the goal I want to achieve in the coming year. Rather than reading more books, I hope to be more discerning and selective, to take more time savoring the writing, to not be in such a rush to move on especially when I discover something I find worthy. More depth. Less breadth.

A friend once referred to those of us who are older as 'time travelers'. I find this far more palatable and charming than traditional terms. So this year I want to explore going backwards, remembering how things were when I was younger. Simplifying my surroundings. Going outside more. Eating portions and foods that were part of my growing up years. Exploring old friendships and places knowing that they will have changed.

As I begin my journey backwards in time, I want to remember the things that were important to me once that have slipped away, become hazy, and perhaps forgotten. That includes books and movies I have loved and that shaped me in some way.

What are your resolutions? Do you even find any value in this end-of-the year soul searching?


Saturday, December 28, 2013

PRECIOUS THING (2014)

Precious Thing
Precious Thing by Colette McBeth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

PRECIOUS THING, a marvelous thriller, could be this year's GONE GIRL. First time novelist Colette McBeth has carefully crafted a roller coaster read that slams to an end.

Rachel and Clara have known each other since school days always pledging to remain best friends, but terrible secrets lie just below the surface of their relationship.

In school Clara was the girl everyone wanted for a friend, but she chose dumpy, unhappy Rachel. The world has changed and Rachel is now a successful news reporter with a boy friend and a happy life. She has tried to reach out to Clara but been rebuffed.

Things begin to go awry when Rachel shows up to report on the disappearance of two people who turn out to be Clara and Rachel's boyfriend.

Some suspension of disbelief may be necessary; but in general this is a clever, well-written, psychological story with some surprising twists and turns.  

Bottom Line: Great writing pared with a narrator, who may be unreliable, draws the reader into a web where truth is always just beyond one's grasp. If you liked GONE GIRL, you will enjoy PRECIOUS THING. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Title: Precious Thing
Genre: Thriller
Publisher: Minotaur Books
No. of Pages: 304 pages
Copyright:April 10, 2014
ISBN:  1250041198
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Source: NetGalley

Disclaimer: An advanced copy of Precious Thing was provided to me by Minotaur/Net Galley for review purposes.


Colette McBeth was a BBC TV News Correspondent for ten years. She lives in West London with her husband and three young children. She attended the Faber Academy Novel Writing Course in 2011. PRECIOUS THING is her first novel. (from the author's website)

Sunday, December 22, 2013

PERFECT: A NOVEL (2014)



The hardest reviews, the ones I sometimes never get around to writing, are for the books that profoundly touch me in some way. The fear that whatever I would say might not be worthy overwhelms me. And it's how I feel about Rachel Joyce's Perfect.

The world is a different place when you are a child. The things that catch your attention, the things that worry you are beyond what an adult can see or understand.

What if your best friend, the cleverest boy in your school, tells you that two seconds are being added to the day but you weren't sure exactly when? And what if something terrible happened because of that? How could it change the course of your world and to what lengths would you need to go to save someone you love?

"Two seconds are huge. It’s the difference between something happening and something not happening. It’s very dangerous.”  

In Perfect, when something unfortunate does occur, the quiet, underlying sense of dread begins to affect the reader as well as the characters.

"Sometimes caring for something already growing is more perilous than planting something new."

There's a mystery here too. The story alternates between 1972 with eleven-year-old Byron's life and forty years later with Jim's struggle with mental illness. How do these pieces fit together?

"The rift between the past and this moment is so huge it is like being marooned on a square of ice, seeing other patches of his life also floating around him, and unable to piece them together."

Sometimes I was annoyed briefly when I had to leave one world for the other, put down one thread to follow the other; but it is impossible not to be drawn into the web of Rachel Joyce's tale. The ending is the only one I can imagine now.

Bottom Line: Beautiful writing and elegant plotting make Perfect a book to be experienced. It will be on everyone's best book list for 2014. Highly recommended. 

Title: Perfect
Author: Rachel Joyce
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Random House
No. of Pages:  400 pages
Copyright: January 14, 2014
ISBN:  0812993306
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Source: NetGalley

Disclaimer: A copy of Perfect was provided to me by Random House/Net Galley for review purposes.


Rachel Joyce is the author of the international bestseller The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry. She is also the award-winning writer of more than twenty plays for BBC Radio 4. She started writing after a twenty-year acting career, in which she performed leading roles for the Royal Shakespeare Company and won multiple awards. Rachel Joyce lives with her family on a Gloucestershire farm. (Source: AMAZON)

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

My Top 15 Reads for 2013




My original post has disappeared. I was inspired to create this list after seeing all the ones that asked how many of these books have you read. Since I didn't fare as well as I would like, I decided to create my own.

So here is how I remember my list in no particular order. I should mention again that Kate Atkinson's book was the highlight of 2013. I actually read it twice. And of course, the whole point of this list was to say that I had read 100% of them.

1. Life After Life by Kate Atkinson
2. How the Light Gets In by Louise Penny
3. A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
4. Annie's Ghosts by Steve Luxenberg
5. After Visiting Friends by Michael Hainey
6. Someday, Someday Maybe by Lauren Graham
7. The Burgess Boys by Elizabeth Stout
8. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
9. Night Film by Marisha Pessl
10. My Antonia by Willa Cather
11. Replay by Ken Grimwood
12. Wave by Sonali Deraniyagala
13. The Dinner by Herman Koch
14. The Black House by Peter May
15. Rage Against the Dying by Becky Masterman


Monday, December 9, 2013

More Help to Achieve Your 2013 Reading Goals



A couple of posts back, I linked to a site suggesting short books to help everyone catch up on attempts to achieve reading goals for the year. Now Huffington Post has weighed in with even more classic titles (not much overlap) giving all of us no excuse for failure.

Check out These Amazing Classic Books Are So Short You Have No Excuse Not To Read Them.