Category Archives: Serious

Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro

I found this book while browsing my local second hand book shop (trying to find more Trollope). As I’d always intended to read it, but had never got around to it, this seemed like a perfect opportunity.

I really enjoyed it. It’s quiet, calm, but deeply moving and very sad.

It is the summer of 1956. Stevens, an ageing butler, has embarked on a rare holiday – a six day motoring trip through the West Country. But his travels are disturbed by the memories of a lifetime in service to the late Lord Darlington …

The novel is written from the point of view of Stevens (the butler). He is reminiscing about the past and his life as a butler in service to Lord Darlington.  In essence, he has spent his life striving to be a ‘great butler’, which means displaying dignity in very trying circumstances. For example, he looks back on the death of his father as his finest hour because he was able to keep providing impeccable service while his father was dying (in a tiny attic bedroom).

Lord Darlington was involved in great world affairs during the 1920s and 1930s. He organised meetings between French, German, English and American officials trying to maintain peace in Europe. It’s left to the reader to determine if he was just misguided, a dupe of the Nazis or a traitor.

Darlington Hall has a very efficient House Keeper, Miss Kenton. Although Stevens describes their relationship as professional it is clear from Miss Kenton’s responses that they have a deeper more emotional relationship. In fact, she seems to be trying to provoke a reaction from him.

The beauty of this novel is in the subtle understated writing. Stevens tells us one thing while revealing something completely different about himself. And this – the saddest thing I’ve read in a long time…

Lord Darlington wasn’t a bad man. He wasn’t a bad man at all. And at least he had the privilege of being able to say at the end of his life that he made his own mistakes. His lordship was a courageous man. He chose a certain path in life, it proved to be a misguided one, but there, he chose it, he can say that at least. As for myself, I cannot even claim that. You see, I trusted. I trusted in his lordship’s wisdom. All those years I served him, I trusted I was doing something worthwhile. I can’t even say I made my own mistakes. Really – one has to ask oneself –  what dignity is there in that?

What a realisation for a man who has spent his life in the pursuit of dignity.

Here are some other people’s thoughts on this book…

http://mattviews.wordpress.com/2009/03/10/191-the-remains-of-the-day-kazuo-ishiguro/

http://superfastreader.com/the-remains-of-the-day-by-kazuo-ishiguro.htm

http://thebookladysblog.com/2008/12/31/book-review-the-remains-of-the-day-by-kazuo-ishiguro/

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The Warden – Anthony Trollope

After watching the BBC adaptation, I decided to read the books. This is my first ever Trollope (I bought my copy from my local second hand bookshop  for $3.50). I liked it – at least enough to consider reading the next one in the series (which I think is Barchester Towers). I didn’t expect so much authorial intervention – some good, some just time consuming – and I think I might not have been able to finish if the novel was any longer. Having said that, I did like it and I would recommend it.

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The Memory Keeper’s Daughter – Kim Edwards

I finished! My first thought, like usual, is that it could have done some editing.

Kim Edwards is a beautiful writer. All of her senses are finely crafted. This is a very visual novel and there is an underlying metaphor of photography. Capturing the moment, but how each moment could be seen in a thousand different ways.

I found the final third of the novel disappointing. I don’t want to ruin it for anyone, but I was disappointed with how the threads of the story came together.

However, I will definitely read more of her work.

Oh and before I started I thought the Memory Keeper was Caroline Gill, but it turned out to be someone completely different …

I’ve just finished reading The Story of a Marriage by Andrew Sean Greer and I’ll try to get my thoughts down soon.

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The Memory Keeper’s Daughter Update

I’m up to 1977 now – Paul and Phoebe are 13. I’m still struggling with David and Caroline’s decisions. However, the writing is beautiful – very visual almost poetic in her choice of words. Each chapter is written from a different point of view – Norah, David or Caroline – and the inner experience if each one is very well documented. I almost understand David’s decision (and perhaps by the end I will) and I can see Norah’s life slowly unravelling. Caroline (at this stage) seems to be the only one living a happy and fulfilling life (not without frustrations).

More later …

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The Memory Keeper’s Daughter – Kim Edwards

I’ve just read the first chapter and I have some questions.

First, why does he take his wife to his clinic? I know it’s closer and there is a blizzard, but it still seems a bit odd to me.

Why, why, why does he tell his wife the baby died? This can only end badly. Why did he want to give the baby away? Is it because of his sister’s illness?

I shall keep reading.

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If You Were Mine – Carol Lefevre

I got this book out of the library – very unusual, but I mean to do it more often.

It’s a story about loss and grief, mothers and daughters and when the hole left by the dead can’t be filled by the living.

Here’s the back …

On the fourteenth of February 1962, in the outback settlement of Sugarbag, Esther Hayes looked out of the schoolhouse window and saw three children struck by lightning. The boys were playing cricket on a strip of stubble field that did for the school yard; minutes earlier she had heard them laughing as they hammered in the wicket with a stone.

Numbed by the tragedy, Esther retreats into silence, while her young daughter Aurora, is left to fend for herself. Aurora’s childhood is played out against the backdrop of her father’s absence and her mother’s neglect, and she is forced to take comfort wherever she can. The fierce attachments she forms never seem to last – until she abandons South Australia for Dublin’s Temple Bar and the lush countryside of her father’s native Tipperary.

I haven’t made up my mind about this book. I read it quickly, but now I wonder what it was all about. Aurora is a child of neglect – her mother Esther neglects her (and drinks way too much) and William, her father, travels for work. The author seemed to judge Esther much more harshly for this than William, but really couldn’t he have found a job closer to home – I think he was escaping just as much as Esther was when she reached for a bottle of home brew beer.

There is an abandoned homestead near their house that is Aurora’s refuge. In it she finds and old cookery book (written in both french and english) she copies recipes (she leaves the book at the homestead as she wants it to remain unchanged) – meanwhile at home she is cooking for herself and her mother toast and baked beans.

Aurora has two significant relationships as a child – one with her teacher Kilkie Bleecker and one with a fellow student Iris Kenny, both end suddenly and in confusion.

Eventually Aurora escapes Sugarbag – she wins a music scholarship and finally she leaves South Australia for Ireland. In Ireland she leases a house in which a music teacher use to live. The terms of her lease are that nothing should be changed and that Aurora should teach the music students. Here she meets Rose, a young pregnant girl who is running away from home.

I think the best thing about this novel is the characters – they live beyond the page. The story I’m not so sure about…

I recommend this with some reservations.

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Home – Marilynne Robinson

Having read and loved Gilead I put Home on my Christmas list – I wasn’t disappointed.

Here is the description from the publisher …

Hundreds of thousands were enthralled by the luminous voice of John Ames in Gilead, Marilynne Robinson’s Pulitzer Prize–winning novel. Home is an entirely independent, deeply affecting novel that takes place concurrently in the same locale, this time in the household of Reverend Robert Boughton, Ames’s closest friend.

Glory Boughton, aged thirty-eight, has returned to Gilead to care for her dying father. Soon her brother, Jack—the prodigal son of the family, gone for twenty years—comes home too, looking for refuge and trying to make peace with a past littered with tormenting trouble and pain.

Jack is one of the great characters in recent literature. A bad boy from childhood, an alcoholic who cannot hold a job, he is perpetually at odds with his surroundings and with his traditionalist father, though he remains Boughton’s most beloved child. Brilliant, lovable, and wayward, Jack forges an intense bond with Glory and engages painfully with Ames, his godfather and namesake.

Home is a moving and healing book about families, family secrets, and the passing of the generations, about love and death and faith. It is Robinson’s greatest work, an unforgettable embodiment of the deepest and most universal emotions.

This novel is about family (the ties that bind), spirituality (in particular Presbyterianism) and parenting. Jack returns home after an absence, and silence, of twenty years. He is an alcoholic who has spend time in prison. His is a lonely soul who hasn’t been able to make a connection with his family – at most family gatherings (even as a child) he was absent. His father appears to love his ‘lost sheep’ more than his other seven children.

This is a beautifully crafted story – every word seems chosen with care. It seems such a simple tale; ne’er do well son returns home, tries to reconcile or at least understand (and possibly believe) his father’s faith and tries to  develop a relationship with  Amos his father’s best friend. However, I find myself thinking about the characters; what will happen to Jack and Glory, will he stay sober? Will he find grace? The characters are beautifully realised; the gentlemanly Robert who has spent his life pondering the great religious questions, Glory a pious, vulnerable woman who has returned home and can see her life stretching out forever in the old house (never able to change anything) and finally Jack searching for something, always disappointing someone.

The Boughton’s are religious – Robert was a Presbyterian minister –  and there seems to have been much discussion about grace, judgement and punishment. Jack and Robert spend a lot of time thinking about god’s purpose  and Jack in particular wonders whether some people are just born  doomed (predestination). Ewen MacDonald (Lucy Maud Montgomery’s husband) seemed to think he was eternally doomed as well (according to The Gift of Wings).

I think this book is fabulous, but I wonder if people unfamiliar with harsh judgemental Anglican religions will understand.

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Georgiana Duchess of Devonshire – Amanda Foreman

I liked this book. Ms Foreman combines an easy reading style with scholarly research. If you are at all interested in 18th Century History, Social History, Political History, then you should definitely read this book.

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The Mathematics of Love – Emma Darwin

Mathematics Of Love

I read this book for book club. It was my choice (unfortunately). I found this book really confusing – the backwards and forwards movement in time got me every time. I know the sections were separated with a squiggle, but I kept missing it.

I didn’t feel any sympathy for any of the characters – except maybe Lucy. It felt like a creative writing assignment where so many boxes have to be ticked. The best part were the descriptions of the battles, like Waterloo.

And Cecil was he moving backwards and forwards in time some how?

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The Secret of Lost Things – Sheirdan Hay

The Secret of Lost Things Cover

I enjoyed this book (so did everyone at book club). This is the stuff on the back …

 At eighteen, Rosemary arrives in New York from Tasmania with little more than her love of books and an eagerness to explore the city she’s read so much about. The moment she steps into the Arcade bookstore, she knows she has found a home.

The gruff owner, Mr. Pike, gives her a job sorting through huge piles of books and helping the rest of the staff –  a group as odd and idiosyncratic as the characters in a Dickens novel. There’s Pearl, the loving, motherly transsexual who runs the cash register; Oscar, who shares his extensive, eclectic knowledge with Rosemary, but furiously rejects her attempts at a more personal relationship; and Arthur Pick, who supervises the art section and demonstrates a particular interest in photography books featuring naked men. The store manager Walter Geist is an albino, a lonely figure even within the world of the Arcade. When Walter’s eyesight begins to fail, Rosemary becomes his assistant. And so it is Rosemary who first reads the letter from someone seeking to ‘place’ a lost manuscript by Herman Melville. Mentioned in Melville’s personal correspondence but never published, the work is of inestimable value, and proof of its existence brings the simmering ambitions and rivalries of the Arcade staff to a boiling point, and sets Rosemary on her own journal of self-discovery.

This novel seemed to be a yearning for impossible things – Lillian wanting to find her son, Rosemary wanting Oscar, Walter wanting Rosemary, all the bookshop patrons wanting undiscovered first editions etc.

It was also a bit of quest novel with Rosemary in the position of the knight and the relationship with Oscar as the holy grail. Ultimately, of course, she finds a bit of inner knowledge.

This book is definitely worth a read.

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