Category Archives: Fiction – Light

The Journal of Dora Damage – Belinda Starling

We selected The Journal of Dora Damage by Belinda Starling as our January book way back in July – it is quite large and we thought we would need two months to read it (we don’t meet in December hence the two months). We picked it mostly based on the life of the author – sadly she died shortly after publishing this novel (she was only 34! and had two small children).

This novel is set in Victorian England in the time before adequate sanitation – Dora’s mother died from Cholera. She is married to Peter Damage a book binder who is suffering from a disease that makes him retain fluid – his hands are so swollen he can no longer work. She also has an epileptic daughter, Lucinda.  Peter disappears one day – the rent is due plus Dora finds out that Peter has borrowed from a money lender at an horrendous rate of interest. She sells what she can, pawns other stuff, but it is not enough. She finds a book sellers card and determines to visit him to see if she can get any binding business. Dora possesses a knack of binding books in a manner appropriate to the content – this leads to more commissions and ultimately the extremely lucrative job of binding pornography. She works for Sir Jocelyn Knightley a man who thinks of himself as a renaissance man. He is interested in science, medicine, Africa, the differences between races, etc. Sir Jocelyn has the ugly Charles Diprose act as his intermediary – he is a book seller and a very unattractive character. Sir Jocelyn provides Dora with bromide crystals (which seem to stop Lucinda’s epilepsy) and laudanum for Peter. He also provides lavish gifts of food, clothes, etc.

Sir Jocelyn’s wife, Sylvia, is a member of a society which tries to help free slaves. The society purchases a slave and brings him to England. Sylvia wants Dora to give him a job in exchange for a regular sum of money – Dora can’t resist. Charles Diprose is horrified and tells Dora she must find a way of binding Din to her (find a secret and black mail him with it).

Eventually Dora is disgusted by the pornography, which gets more graphic as time goes on and confronts Diprose in his shop – unfortunately there is a raid and she is forced to hide away in attic for several hours. She can’t extricate herself – they know she is doing the binding and not Peter plus they threaten Lucinda.

I won’t reveal any more of the story…

The social history aspects of living in Victorian England are well written – the tap only works at certain times, it’s difficult to get anything clean (with all of the soot and smog). The characters are well written and the story fascinating. Having said all of that, I struggled through the middle third and only kept reading because it is my bookclub book.

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Second Chance – Jane Green

I wanted to read something light after Georgiana and this one was waiting in the pile.

It’s about a group of college friends who are reunited 20 years later by the death (in a terrorist attack) of one of their friends. Tom’s death is a catalyst for change in Holly’s life – she has always harboured a secret feeling that Tom and her were meant to be together, but the timing was never right – she is unhappily married to Marcus and begins an emotional affair with Tom’s brother Will. Paul and his wife Anna desperately want to have children, but despite many rounds of expensive IVF they haven’t been able to conceive. Saffron is an actress having an affair with a married man (who happens to be an incredibly famous actor) and finally there is Olivia who has a fling with a colleague of Tom’s and finds herself pregnant – will she keep the baby? Will she let Anna and Paul adopt the baby?

I did like this book, but the ending was very disappointing. It was like Ms Green reached the required number of words and then just wrapped the story up in a chapter (almost like an epilogue). Stop reading now I’m about to ruin the ending. We don’t know what happened with Holly and Will (just that she ends up with someone else), Olivia keeps the baby, Anna and Paul stop IVF and Anna seems to find peace by doing pilates (and she sells her company for lots of cash) and Saffron and the incredibly famous actor get married.

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Literacy and Longing in L.A – Karen Mack and Jennifer Kaufman

I read about this book here and bought it from here (I’m not sure if it is even available in Australia).

Here is the synopsis from the Literacy and Longing website.

Some women shop. Some eat.

Dora  cures the blues by bingeing on books reading one after another, from Flaubert to bodice rippers, for hours and days on end. In this wickedly funny and sexy literary debut, we meet the beguiling, beautiful Dora, whose unique voice combines a wry wit and vulnerability as she navigates the road between reality and fiction.

Dora, named after Eudora Welty, is an indiscriminate book junkie whose life has fallen apart — her career, her marriage, and finally her self-esteem. All she has left is her love of literature, and the book benders she relied on as a child. Ever since her larger-than-life father wandered away and her book-loving, alcoholic mother was left with two young daughters, Dora and her sister, Virginia, have clung to each other, enduring a childhood filled with literary pilgrimages instead of summer vacations. Somewhere along the way Virginia made the leap into the real world. But Dora isn’t quite there yet. Now she’s coping with a painful separation from her husband, scraping the bottom of a dwindling inheritance, and attracted to a seductive book-seller who seems to embody all that literature has to offer –intelligent ideas, romance, and an escape from her problems.

Joining Dora in her odyssey is an elderly society hair-brusher, a heartbroken young girl, a hilarious off-the-wall female teamster, and Dora’s mother, now on the wagon, trying to make amends…

I haven’t quite made my mind up about this book. There are bits like this (which make me think of trashy romance novels)

I’ve never been able to figure out my looks. I’ve been told I’m striking.

and then there are bits like this (which seem a bit more insightful)

I collect new books the way my girlfriends buy designer handbags. Sometimes I just like to know I have them and actually reading them is beside the point.

and

Now when I read, I think I might open to any page and find the truth. I just can’t stand the fog of not knowing. Whether you love someone or not, what you are willing to do to make it last, how you come to terms with the people who leave you or disappoint you, or how you deal with people with whom you feel a deep connection, but who ultimately may not have anything to do with your life. I don’t know. The answers are there. Somewhere. Each author has their own vision, whether it be transforming, unnverving, inspiring or devastating. It’s comforting in a pleasant sort of way and I have wallowed in this comfort most of my life.

I wonder if it is because there are two authors?

I do like a first person narrative and I liked Dora and I wanted to find out what would happen to her, which man would she end up with? (Because it is a romance…). The book talk was lovely, but the plot was disappointing (although it might make a good movie), Sara was an interesting character (but seemed a bit pointless – I think she was just in it so the authors could include literary converstations).

I did like this book, but I doubt I would read it again.

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Almost Perfect & Just Perfect – Julie Ortolon


I’ve been on a holiday to the beach, so I needed a beach read and these two books are ‘perfect’ beach reads.

Extremely easy to read – very light and fluffy. In fact, these should only be read if you are going to be distracted and constantly interupted.

The plots are fine – girl meets boy, they fall in love, something complicates the situation (usually a self inflicted complication), it gets sorted out and they live happily ever after, but I never for one moment forgot I was reading a book. The dialogue is stilted and the action a bit trite.

However, having said that I think I’ll read the third in the series Too Perfect.

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Addition – Toni Jordan

 I went to my local book store and asked for something fun to read (nothing uplifting or inspirational) and they came up with Addition by Toni Jordan. I read it in two days. It’s hilarious – a light read that never the less has made me think more about obsessive compulsive disorder (particularly the compulsive part of it).

Here is the stuff on the back …

Grace Lisa Vandenburg counts. The letters in her name (19). The steps she takes every morning to the local cafe (920). The number of poppy seeds on her orange cake, which dictates the number of bites she’ll take to eat it. Grace counts everything, because that way there are no unpleasant surprises. Seamus Joseph O’Reilly (also a 19) thinks she might be better off without the counting. If she could hold down a job, say. Or open her cupboards without conducting an inventory, or leave her flat without measuring the walls. Grace’s problem is that Seamus doesn’t count. Her other problem is …he does. As Grace struggles to balance a new relationship with old habits, to find a way to change while staying true to herself, she realises that nothing is more chaotic than love.

Grace steals Seamus’s banana because she finds herself with only 9 at the checkout instead of 10 (how did that happen?), so they meet for the first time. They then run into each other again at a Cafe (where Grace uses the number of poppy seeds to determine the number of bites required to finish her piece). He asks her out to dinner and Grace intends to go, but she discovers at the last minute that she doesn’t know how many bristles there are on her toothbrush. By the time she finishes counting she is too late for dinner. She pops out to the local supermarket to pick up all of the toothbrushes like hers (so she doesn’t have to count the bristles again) and runs into Seamus (buying dinner). They go back to her house and thus a relationship is born.

Grace attends therapy to become more ‘normal’. She takes drugs, has group therapy and behavioural therapy. The drugs make her brain split in two (the conversations between her two brains are hilarious) and gain weight. The group therapy is dominated by germphobics (apparently there aren’t many counters) – did you know you can flush the toilet with your foot? The real Grace disappears. She can barely stay awake and can no longer think clearly – the deal breaker is when her mother ends up in hospital (after setting fire to the microwave) and her sister thinks she should move into care and Grace can’t articulate why this is wrong. She dumps Seamus and stops taking the drugs and attending therapy. I’ll leave the recap there so I don’t ruin the story.

This book has made me realise the huge range of ‘normal’ in society and also that it is not a problem unless you think it is a problem. Grace’s counting is an essential part of her personality without she is not Grace.

This book is a fun read and I recommend it.

Here are some other reviews …

http://www.smh.com.au/news/book-reviews/addition/2008/02/01/1201801015320.html

http://sleepy-bird-books.blogspot.com/2008/09/addition-toni-jordan.html

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Simply Unforgettable – Mary Balogh

I’ve been on holiday to the beach – so a beach read.

This is one of the better Regency Romances that I have read. There is quite a bit of sex – so not for the faint hearted! The period details were great – nothing jarred as being out of place. So if you like Gerogette Heyer, but are after something a bit racier this is for you.

Here is Mary Balogh’s website – http://www.marybalogh.com/

An excerpt from Simply Unforgettable http://www.marybalogh.com/s-unforget-ex.html

And a review (way more comprehensive than mine) – http://mytbr.blogspot.com/2008/09/simply-unforgettable-by-mary-balogh.html

A site about the regency – http://www.thenonesuch.com/

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The Last Anniversary – Liane Moriarty

TheLastAnniversary

A friend lent me this book for a bit of light entertainment. I wasn’t sure – I had noticed it in the book stores, but hadn’t felt much desire to read it. In fact I enjoyed it so much, I bought another of her books (Three Wishes – which I’ll review later).

This is the story of the Doughty family who own Scribbly Gum Island. Aunt Connie dies and leaves her house to Sophie Honeywell – the ex-girlfriend of Thomas Gordon the grandchild of the ‘Munro Baby’. Scribbly Gum Island is famous for the Munro murder mystery. The Munros (Alice and Jack) simply disappear one day leaving a baby, a cooling marble cake and a stain on the floor that could be blood.

Sophie moves to the island and into the lives of the family – there is the beautiful Grace who is living in her mothers house with the her husband Callum and their newborn baby. Grace’s mother, Laura, has gone a 12 month round the world trip.

There is Enigma, the Munro baby, she loves being the centre of this mystery. There is Margie and Ron. Margie is Enigma’s daughter (and Laura’s sister). Her marriage to Ron is unhappy – he just ignores her.

There is Rose (she and Connie found the Munro baby).

Everyone on the island has secrets. Grace is planning on killing herself, but first she wants to find a new wife for Callum (Sophie). Everyone thinks Margie is attending Weight Watchers meetings, but do they really have that many? And Rose, is she going senile? And what is revealed when the family members turn 40.

I found this story compelling – I wanted to discover the mystery, would Grace realise she had postnatal depression, which man was perfect for Sophie and what was Margie up to?

All is revealed, of course,  at the Anniversary Party. Every year they celebrate the day that Connie and Rose found the Munro baby (Enigma).

The characters are realistic if a bit eccentric and I enjoyed reading an Australian story. Read this novel if you’re looking for something light an entertaining.

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The Alchemist – Paulo Coelho

He has a vision of the Oasis being attacked (which is against Tradition – capital T – not the vision the attack!) and informs the chiefs. Ultimately his warning saves the Oasis but first the boy has to prove himself reliable – this invoves turning himself into the wind). The boy and the Alchemist continue his journey to the pyramids. They stop at a monastry where the Alchemist turns lead into gold. He divides the gold into four – giving one section to the boy, another to the priest, keeping one for himself and another one help by the priest in trust for the boy (in case he returns from the pyramids with no treasure).

TheAlchemistCover

This is the story (parable) of a Spanish boy, a shepherd, who has a recurring dream that he can find buried treasure near the Pyramids of Egypt. He consults a gypsy women wise in dream lore who tells him he should go to Egypt and find his treasure – plus she wants 10% of it. On his way he meets a man who calls himself a king (and who gives him two stones to help him pick omens), a thief who steals all of his money and so strands him on the wrong side of the desert (from the pyramids). He works for a man who owns a crystal store – and dramatically improves the business. Once he earns enough money, he joins a caravan travelling across the desert. On the journey he meets an Englishmen trying to become an Alchemist and a wise camel driver. A war is brewing between the desert tribes and the caravan is stranded at an Oasis. There the boy meets the beautiful Fatima and the Alchemist

 

The boy continues to the pyramids and digs for his treasure …

I won’t ruin the rest of the story for anyone.

For me this book was about finding your personal legend (your purpose) and then following that path. It’s about believing in yourself, living in the moment and listening to your heart.

It is for anyone who feels that they are just going through the motions, sticking with a job they hate for the money. It reminds us to be open to the world and its possibilities and in Oprah speak to live an authentic life.

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Water for Elephants – Sara Gruen

Water For Elephants

 

One of the girls in book club recommended this book. I loved the cover (not the one shown) and was intrigued by the prologue – were we meant to think Rosie was a person? Or did I just not read carefully enough?

This book was a real page turner for me – I read it in two days. I was enthralled by the stories of the circus train – the toothless lion, the fat woman who died and was promenaded around town in the hippo tank, the elephant that stole the lemonade, etc.

This is a well researched novel written in a light, easy style. I can easily see it being made into a film. Read it for the information about circus life in the depression.

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High Plains Tango – Robert James Waller

It would never have occurred to me to read a book by the guy who wrote The Bridges of Madison County. Some one lent it to me and I feel the need to read the books that people lend to me. I was very surprised – I enjoyed it. I thought it went on a bit too long, but I loved the style. I also enjoyed the theme about the evils of conspicuous consumption. I might even read The Bridges of Madison County!

 

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