Tag Archives: Novels
March 29, 2014 · 6:08 pm
The Ministry of Justice has recently banned prisoners in the UK from receiving books sent by friends and relatives. According to the Justice Secretary, Chris Grayling, the new restrictions on parcels received by inmates are part of an “incentives and earned privileges” scheme and aims to prevent drugs and other illegal items being smuggled into prisons.

Shelfie
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Tagged as Banned Books, Book, Chris Grayling, Libraries, Library, Literature, News, Novels, Politics, Prison, Prisoners, Prisons, Reading
March 23, 2014 · 3:31 pm
One of of my reading resolutions this year has been to get through more of the books I already have on my shelves and Kindle. I have been making some slow and steady progress recently but, as always, I still have my eye on the latest books. Here are a few I am particularly looking forward to which have not yet been published:

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Tagged as 2014, Book, Fiction, Haruki Murakami, Hilary Mantel, Karl Ove Knausgaard, Literature, Michel Faber, New Books, Novels, Reading, Robert Galbraith, Sarah Waters
March 15, 2014 · 10:21 pm
‘Apple Tree Yard’ by Louise Doughty tells the story of Yvonne Carmichael, a middle-aged geneticist who begins an affair with a man she meets while she is giving evidence to a Select Committee at the Houses of Parliament. It is revealed at the beginning of the book that the affair has been exposed in dramatic circumstances while Yvonne is on trial at the Old Bailey. However, even though it is clear that she is doomed from the beginning, the story behind how she became embroiled in the most serious of crimes and who her lover really is still offers many twists and turns.
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Tagged as Apple Tree Yard, Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Crime, Fiction, London, Louise Doughty, Novels, Reading, Reviews, Thriller
March 8, 2014 · 4:04 pm
‘Big Brother’ by Lionel Shriver tells the story of Pandora Halfdanarson and her relationship with her brother, Edison, a jazz musician who is coming to visit her in Iowa where she lives with her husband and two teenage stepchildren. On arrival, Pandora is horrified to discover that Edison has become morbidly obese in the time since she last saw him four years ago and has to decide whether or not she will take matters into her own hands.
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Tagged as Big Brother, Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Diet, Fiction, Food, Iowa, Lionel Shriver, Novels, Obesity, Reading, Reviews
March 7, 2014 · 6:43 pm

The longlist for this year’s Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction was announced today. The twenty titles are:
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – Americanah
Margaret Atwood – MaddAddam
Suzanne Berne – The Dogs of Littlefield
Fatima Bhutto – The Shadow of the Crescent Moon
Claire Cameron – The Bear
Lea Carpenter – Eleven Days
M.J. Carter – The Strangler Vine
Eleanor Catton – The Luminaries
Deborah Kay Davies – Reasons She Goes to the Woods
Elizabeth Gilbert – The Signature of All Things
Hannah Kent – Burial Rites
Rachel Kushner – The Flamethrowers
Jhumpa Lahiri – The Lowland
Audrey Magee – The Undertaking
Eimear McBride – A Girl Is A Half-Formed Thing
Charlotte Mendelson – Almost English
Anna Quindlen – Still Life with Bread Crumbs
Elizabeth Strout – The Burgess Boys
Donna Tartt – The Goldfinch
Evie Wyld – All The Birds, Singing
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Tagged as Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, Book, Book Awards, Donna Tartt, Eleanor Catton, Fiction, Hannah Kent, Jhumpa Lahiri, Literary Awards, Literature, Novels, Reading, Women's Prize for Fiction
February 22, 2014 · 6:53 pm
‘Sisterland’ by Curtis Sittenfeld tells the story of identical twin sisters, Violet and Kate, who have both had psychic powers of intuition, or “senses” as they call them, since childhood. While Violet continues to embrace this power as an adult and becomes a medium, Kate is a suburban housewife who has tried her best to suppress these senses. However, when Violet goes on television to share her premonition of a catastrophic earthquake which she says will strike the St. Louis area where they both live, their relationship is seriously tested in the days leading towards the predicted event. Continue reading →
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Curtis Sittenfeld, Earthquake, Fiction, Literature, Novels, Reading, Reviews, Sisterland, St. Louis, Twins
February 10, 2014 · 8:04 pm

The shortlist for the first Folio Prize was announced today. The eight nominated books are:
Red Doc by Anne Carson
Schroder by Amity Gaige
Last Friends by Jane Gardam
Benediction by Kent Haruf
The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner
A Girl is a Half-formed Thing by Eimear McBride
A Naked Singularity by Sergio de la Pava
Tenth of December by George Saunders
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February 9, 2014 · 4:15 pm
I thought I would try Eleanor Catton’s first novel ‘The Rehearsal’ before tackling her Man Booker Prize-winning epic ‘The Luminaries’ at a later date. Although difficult to summarise the plot as such, ‘The Rehearsal’ is essentially about the aftermath of an affair between a music teacher and one of his seventeen year old students, Victoria. The story behind the scandal is later turned into a play by a local drama school known as the Institute and one of its stars, Stanley, has unknowingly become involved with Victoria’s younger sister, Isolde. Continue reading →
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Drama, Eleanor Catton, Fiction, Literature, Novels, Reading, Reviews, The Rehearsal
January 25, 2014 · 6:34 pm
Regarded as a national obsession in his native Norway, ‘A Death in the Family’ is the first book in the six volume ‘My Struggle’ series of autobiographical novels by Karl Ove Knausgaard. Despite being marketed as fiction, ‘My Struggle’ is an unflinchingly honest and controversial memoir which explores both the mundane everyday details and the more significant events in Knausgaard’s life.
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Tagged as A Death in the Family, Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Fiction, Karl Ove Knausgaard, Literature, Memoir, Memoirs, My Struggle, Non fiction, Norway, Novels, Reading, Reviews
January 12, 2014 · 4:56 pm
‘The Thirteenth Tale’ by Diane Setterfield tells the story of Vida Winter, a successful author who commissions Margaret Lea, the reclusive daughter of a bookshop owner, to write her biography. Having previously avoided revealing any true details about her past to other interviewers, Vida is now seriously ill and wants to tell the real story of her childhood at Angelfield when she was known as Adeline March before she dies.
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January 5, 2014 · 5:31 pm
I love ‘The Secret History’ by Donna Tartt which is one of my all-time favourite books and also really enjoyed ‘The Little Friend’ so one of the books I had been looking forward to reading the most is her new novel ‘The Goldfinch’ which I recently received as a Christmas present. Given that Tartt only publishes novels approximately once a decade, I expect nothing less than Great Things from her work. In other words, I can’t remember the last time I had such high expectations for a book.
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Tagged as Art, Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Donna Tartt, Fiction, Literary Fiction, Literature, New York, Novels, Reading, Reviews, The Goldfinch
January 2, 2014 · 8:30 pm

‘The Rosie Project’ by Graeme Simsion is a quirky and endearing story about Don Tillman, a genetics professor with autism who embarks on The Wife Project in an attempt to meet his ideal life partner through a detailed questionnaire. Instead, he meets Rosie Jarman who fits none of his very specific criteria – she smokes, drinks alcohol, doesn’t eat meat and is late for everything. However, Rosie’s quest to uncover the identity of her biological father leads Don on an eventful journey of his own.
I was lucky enough to have the chance to interview Graeme Simsion about the process of writing ‘The Rosie Project’ and the inspiration behind the story: Continue reading →
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Tagged as Asperger Syndrome, Australia, Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Fiction, Graeme Simsion, Interview, Novels, Reading, Reviews, Romance, The Rosie Project
December 27, 2013 · 1:28 pm
Whether or not it was her way of sticking two fingers up at her critics, I think it was pretty clever of J. K. Rowling to publish ‘The Cuckoo’s Calling’ under the pseudonym of Robert Galbraith after receiving mixed reviews for ‘The Casual Vacancy’ last year. Interestingly, the feedback for ‘The Cuckoo’s Calling’ was unanimously positive from both critics and readers before the identity of the real author was revealed. But does it live up to the hype? Continue reading →
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Crime, Fiction, J. K. Rowling, London, Novels, Reading, Reviews, Robert Galbraith, The Cuckoo's Calling
December 20, 2013 · 7:34 pm
I was fascinated by the original premise of ‘Red Joan’ by Jennie Rooney which is based on the true story of Melita Norwood who was famously unmasked as the KGB’s longest serving British spy at the age of eighty-seven in 1999. In Rooney’s fictionalised version of events, Joan Stanley, an eighty-five year old woman living in the suburbs of south east London, receives a visit from two British intelligence operatives who have come to question her about her past after so many decades of silence. The story is cleverly told through a series of flashbacks as the links between Joan’s past and present are gradually revealed.
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Communism, Fiction, Historical, Jennie Rooney, Novels, Reading, Red Joan, Russia, Spies, Thriller, World War Two
December 14, 2013 · 4:01 pm
J. K. Rowling’s first novel for adults, ‘The Casual Vacancy’, opens with the sudden death of Barry Fairweather, a popular local parish councillor. This event sends shockwaves through the small town of Pagford and the upcoming election sharply divides the community, particularly with regard to the future of a nearby council estate known as The Fields.
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Fiction, Harry Potter, J. K. Rowling, Novels, Reading, Reviews, The Casual Vacancy, The Cuckoo's Calling
December 7, 2013 · 6:29 pm
If you’re looking for something to do this weekend and want the chance to win a year’s supply of books (£250 token), why not enter the Caboodle National Book Tokens Competition? All you have to do is guess the 20 book titles hidden in the pictures below. There are two games to play on the website to double your chances of winning.

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December 6, 2013 · 8:22 pm
When I first started this blog, I reviewed more or less everything I read in the order that I read them. However, I am no longer quite so organised. I still review the majority of the books I read but this year, I read quite a few other books which I didn’t write about on my blog for the following reasons: Continue reading →
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Tagged as 2013, Blog, Blogging, Blogs, Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Fiction, Literature, Maggie O'Farrell, Novels, Reading, Reviews
November 30, 2013 · 6:44 pm
‘The Various Haunts of Men’ by Susan Hill is the first book in the Simon Serrailler series of crime novels. A series of mysterious disappearances on the Hill near the small cathedral town of Lafferton catches the attention of Detective Sergeant Freya Graffham. A middle-aged woman, a man, a young girl and a dog have all gone missing at the same spot. But what exactly happened to them all and why?
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Crime, Fiction, Novels, Reading, Reviews, Simon Serrailler, Susan Hill, The Various Haunts of Men
November 23, 2013 · 6:00 pm
Once again, I was lucky enough to win another book to review from the Pot Luck draw for Waterstones cardholders a few weeks ago. This time, it was ‘Crossing to Safety’ by Wallace Stegner which was first published in 1987 a few years before his death and has recently been reprinted by Penguin Classics featuring an introduction by Jane Smiley. You can read my brief review here on the Waterstones website under the name Clare90. Continue reading →
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Tagged as Book, Book Review, Book Reviews, Crossing to Safety, Fiction, Literature, Novels, Reading, Reviews, Wallace Stegner, Wisconsin
November 16, 2013 · 9:43 pm
I randomly picked ‘Canada’ by Richard Ford off the shelf in a shop not long after it was first published last year and turned to the first page. I was immediately struck by the first two sentences: “First, I’ll tell about the robbery our parents committed. Then about the murders, which happened later.” As opening lines go, I found those to be pretty memorable and also very intriguing. Continue reading →
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