Tuesday, 22 June 2010

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, who played with fire, who kicked the hornets nest - Steig Larsson


Firstly I should say that I didn't 'read' these three books, I listened to them on audio CD.  I've always had a problem with books that contain a lot of foreign words and names, and since the original language of these was Swedish I knew I'd struggle to keep up with the characters.

So, I bought the abridged versions (10 CDs each, unlike the unabridged which would have taken me forever to get through!), and started listening to them in the car......sometimes staying in the car long after the journey had ended to keep listening!

All three stories centre around two main characters; a journalist named Mikael Blomkvist, and a troubled, goth teenage computer hacker called Lisbeth Salander, and all are thrillers but with slightly different focuses; the first is a murder mystery, the second and third build on the theme with international crime and politics brought in for good measure!

I don't want to give the stories away, but I'd certainly say read them in order.  The first is sort of 'stand alone', and it's would be possible to read the second and third together; but the whole trilogy works so well, and the stories all come together so well it would be a shame to miss that dimension.

One thing I will say is that they are not for the faint hearted, there is violence (lots of it), and explicit sex, most of it violent.  But don't let that put you off.

The characters are great, you come to care for them, and Salander is like no other book heroine I've ever come across before – victim and heroine at the same time.

The shame of these books is the fact that the author died (suddenly and very young) just after delivering the last one to his publisher – so he never got to see the success, and we'll never get to read another story by him.

Inevitably they've been made into films, with the first and second already out – I want to see them, but haven't had the opportunity yet.  Of course they are unlikely to live up to the books, but should still be enjoyable none-the-less.  I'm sure that the character of Salander will pop up again!

Bought on Amazon - CD Audio books
April - May 2010

Thursday, 17 June 2010

Who moved my Cheese? - Dr Spencer Johnson

'An amazing way to deal with change in your work and in your life'

The cover alone would have put me off reading this little 'self help' book, with endorsements by various newspapers and big bold text telling me that it's sold over 24 million copies!  But about four people at work had been singing it's praises....and it's only very short.

So short in fact that it only took me about an hour to read - more of an article than a book.

The basic premise of the book is that it uses a short parable about four characters in a maze looking for cheese to show how we can better deal with change in our lives.

So, learn how you deal with change, which one of the characters you are and how you can change to be one of the others - very few of us are one of the two mice; Sniff who sniffs out change early, or Scurry who scurries into action.  Many more of us are more like one of the Littlepeople; Hem, who denies and resists changea he fears it will lead to something worse; or like Haw, who learns to adapt when he sees that change to lead to something better.

A very interesting book, an excellent way of getting across a simple message, which really we all know - but fear!

15th June 2010
Lent to me by Gee.

Water for Elephants - Sara Gruen


One of my old work colleagues, a contact on Facebook, wrote a very short review of this book, and I realised that I already owned it!  I also realised that when I'd bought it, it was because I'd read an excellent review in The Guardian – so I thought I'd give it a go.

Jacob is now 90, or possibly 93, and living in a 'old people's home' somewhere in America; he's certainly got all his faculties even if his body is crumbling around him, and he can remember like yesterday his life after jumping aboard a traveling circus during the prohibition period (1920s).

Sara Gruen skillfully mixes the experiences and memories of Jacob, whilst telling the story of his life after both his parents are killed and he is left with no option but to try his luck with the circus.

At points during the book I found myself wondering if it was a true story (it's not, although many elements are taken from real circus history in the United States).  The love story between Jacob and one of the performers is wonderful, and dangerous all at the same time and the uncertainty of the outcome is kept up until very near the end.

As Jim said, this book is the type that you think about afterwards, that you wonder about going back to and reading your favourite sections – I'm looking forward to seeing what Gruen writes next (I know she's written some other books, but none like this I don't think).

I should just mentioned that if you are thinking of reading this you do so soon, as it is currently being made into a film (when I say 'currently', I do actually mean that filming has started).  It will be massive, as it stars one of the main actors from the Twilight series, but despite that I think they'll probably do a good job (not that I think that Robert Pattinson is a bad actor, just that I think that he will overshadow the film) – the book certainly lends itself to the visual.


June 2010
Bought on Green Metropolis.

Sunday, 30 May 2010

It's not what you think - Chris Evans

Although I liked The Big Breakfast (which Mum was addicted to!), and TFI Friday; and thought Chris Evans was great, I never liked him on the radio.

Perhaps as the first radio I was aware of him doing was Radio 1, I thought he was purile and childish, certainly too 'shouty' for Radio 2!  When he first arrived on the drivetime programme I refused to listen.

But I've grown to love his humour and zaniness, and now really miss his evening show (can't even bring myself to listen to Simon Mayo), and rarely get to listen to his morning programme (I'm either not in the car or I'm engrossed in the Today programme on Radio 4).

So, when Liz offered to lend me his autobiography I was mildly interested, but it had to be well written and in a style I could read.

I need not of worried, from the beginning I was enjoying reading about Chris's life and how the roller coaster got started.  In fact reading it I realised how, as a listener to his shows I already felt that I knew him, in a 'mate' kind of way.  But reading the book I realise that's how he really is, he is one of those people who are genuinely open and friendly to all - and I'd say that one of the things that make him such a good broadcaster.

In true DJ style he starts each chapter with a top 10, usually something from his life, but sometimes information he wants to share.

Unlike many autobiographies, this isn't a kiss and tell, in fact Chris is terribly nice about everyone!

Ending as he signs the deal to buy Virgin Radio, means that I'll certainly be reading the next book, which I understand he's currently writing.

Lent to me by Liz
May 2010

Sunday, 23 May 2010

The Island of the Colour-blind - Oliver Sacks

Having read and very much enjoyed his famous book 'The man who mistook his wife for a hat', I was pleased when Liz offered to lend me another Oliver Sacks book. 

Although more of a travel book, the writing style was easy and yet again I found myself please to be able to keep up and understand the concepts described.

Island of the Colour-blind is actually a documentation of two island trips made in the early 1990s, something Sacks admits in his preface. 

As you'd expect from a celebrated neurologist, the first trip is a study trip to the islands of Micronesia, and in particular to Pingelap.  The tiny atoll is home to an isolated group of people who suffer from hereditary colour blindness; achromatopsia.  Taking along with him a colleague who also suffers from the strange affliction, Sacks documents the ways the population deal with the lack of colour and inability to see at all in strong sunlight.  He looks at the scientific study that has taken place, and continues to do so.

The second trip is to the American territory of Guam, and again another disease - this time, Lytico-Bogig; but also finding time to take in some of his beloved cycads and ferns.  The Lytico-Bogig disease is another isolated disease, but this time cause is completely unknown, and with many patients there are completely different symptoms.

In comparison to the previous Sacks book that I read, this one was as engaging or as enjoyable.  Don't get me wrong, I did enjoy it but not as much.  It seemed very ephemeral, and lacking in detail or substance; I was left wanting more information about the sufferers of the two diseases, and certainly would have liked more about the cycads (including more pictures).  I ended up on the internet looking for much more detail about much of it.

Perhaps this due to the fact that this is 'from the major television series', and I suspect a bit of an after thought.  Shame, it could have been so much more.

Lent to me by Liz Jones
May 2010

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

The good man Jesus and the scoundrel Christ - Philip Pullman

I'm a fan of Phillip Pullman - not just his writing (His Dark Materials books although written for children are excellent), but also of his atheist stance (and his outspoken views).

So it was obvious that I'd be getting this book, and I knew that John would want to read it too.  It's not long, and is part of a series of books written by 'the world's finest authors', each a retelling of a well known myth.

I guess there will be those who do not regard the life of Jesus Christ to be a 'myth', but I've always believe it to be so or at least a story that could (or could not) be based on fact.  As the back cover proclaims in large letters 'THIS IS A STORY.'

Even if you've never read a bible story or heard any Christian parables I know that you'll have at least a vague knowledge of the life of Jesus, this book retells the stories but with a twist - Jesus Christ was not one man, but actually two brothers; Jesus and Christ.  The story tells of their birth to Mary and Joseph (in a stable), their lives and ultimately the death - as I said you'll know the story.

As you can see this book only took me two days to read, it's a short story essentially.  But it's well written and one thing can't be denied, Philip Pullman knows his bible and can tell a good story!  It's interesting and well written, and the Christian Pullman haters will be surprised to know that it's made me want to read the story in the bible - although I think I know it, it's been a long time since I went to church or read any religious writing.

The book is controversial, but not in that it denegrates or distorts the story of Jesus Christ, more that it chooses to put forward a different possible version of events - well it's been a long time!  One thing that Pullman makes very clear is to highlight the misinterpretation and misuse of these stories - even possibly by those who were closest to the protagonists. To be honest I'm not sure about the meaning of the title, and wonder if it wasn't thought up just to get attention?

Bought on Amazon
19th-20th April 2010

Saturday, 17 April 2010

A Book of Silence - Sara Maitland


I'm not sure why I wanted to read this book, I think I must have read a review somewhere... it seems an unlikely choice for me as it's a memoir by a religious feminist!  But when I came up on Green Met I decided to buy it - a bargin as I got the hard back edition.

The other weird thing about this book is the feeling I have that somewhere, sometime I've met the author - or maybe I just think I have... very strange.

Sara Maitland is a novelist who over the last few years seem to have been slowly withdrawing from society in search of silence - silence in which to immerse herself for prayer amongst other things.  This books tells of her journey, including trips to places associated with silence (deserts, woods, hermitages, hillsides and mountains), her reading of books and poetry which discuss silence,  and her gradual realisation that she needs to withdraw from the noise and pace of modern life.

There are many different silences, and ways of being silenced.  Some enforced (solitary confinement, exile, etc), but many others chosen (retreats, withdrawal, etc).

She describes her different experiments with silence; sitting in the desert, walking in the mountains, living in a remote cottage on Skye for 40 days.  She explores other people who have written about and experienced silence - mainly nuns, monks and religious followers (not just Christian like herself).

All in all I'm not sure I enjoyed the book, although for some reason I kept reading.  It's made me think about silence and the noise we are continuously surrounded by, but it's also made me realise that although I enjoy my own company I'm rarely 'silent' in the way that Sara means.

She ends by telling how she partly manages to find the silence she needs, but how even then it won't (and can't) be total.

Green Metropolis
28th March - 17th April 2010

Postscript: as I finished reading this book a strange silence of the skies had occurred across most of Europe. A volcano in Iceland was erupting and the resulting dust cloud had forced the grounding of all flights - therefore the skies were clear of contrails, and those below free from the constant rush of aircraft noise.