Sunday 25 December 2016

THREE YEARS OLD TODAY!

Hey all!

I know I've been MIA since quite some time on this blog and I've been posting here after a long blogging funk.However someone rightly said that it is better to offer no excuse than a bad one,so Im not going to make any for my absence.
I will however say that I've been reading but havent been making time to post any reviews.
I will also say that I havent forgotten this space and it still makes me happy to come here to this little corner of my world.

The blog is three years old today.This year in books was a bit different than expected and I read considerably less than I usually did.However I chose books that I really wanted to read and I had something to take away from each one.That doesnt stop me from wishing I can read more in the coming year and maybe stretch my boundaries to a different kind of reading.

So heres wishing that the coming year is filled with possibilities and I can explore more,surpass my limits and  of course read more and post frequently.
And on that note I wish that the coming year is wonderful for all of us.
Merry Christmas!!

The Bibliophile







Monday 26 September 2016

THE GLASS CASTLE

It had been a while since I picked up memoirs and I am so glad that I decided to read this book.

The Glass Castle is a remarkable memoir by Jeannette Walls.It is a simply narrated story about the unconventional upbringing of Walls and her siblings by their bohemian-minded dyfunctional parents.

My Views:

This was a very well-crafted and astonishing memoir!It left me shaking my head in disbelief at many parts.However I was very curious about the author and saw her interviews on YouTube,which made me correct my skepticism about her.

Despite being part of a dysfunctional family with bohemian-minded parents (an alcoholic father and a manic-depressive mother) and living in abject poverty, it is astounding to see not an ounce of self-pity in what Jeannette Walls writes.It requires guts of steel to revisit a dark past.

One cannot run away from ones past and the way she has bravely confronted hers is laudable.This book is very engaging and is an easy read.

She had her wits about her and worked her way up.Her life view is very positive even in bleak times and that to me was remarkable.

The family was nomadic and moved from place to place to evade the law sometimes and sometimes when they ran out of money or simply in search of greener pastures.Despite all that they go through ,Jeannette still loves her parents.She remembers her father as an intelligent man full of fantastic stories.Someone who gifts her a planet on her birthday!and her mother as a spirited artist.

I was however shocked by the parents selfish and neglectful behaviour.I just couldnt understand it.But then,it takes all kinds to make a world.

How the siblings take care of each other and eventually find their way to New York and prosper gives a very hopeful message.

It just goes to show that a persons messed up childhood need not translate into him/her being a damaged individual as an adult.

This book somehow reminded me of  Frank McCourts 'Angela's Ashes'.

It has sold 2.7 million copies worldwide besides being on the New York Times Bestseller list for a total of 261 weeks.It is also being adapted into a movie.

A must-read.Highly recommended.

Sunday 25 September 2016

THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS

Its been as unusually long time since I visited this corner of my world. I had been neglecting it for much too long so decided to come back here and realised that the joy this space gives me remains undiminished.This is beginning to feel more like meeting an old friend who is there for you whenever you wish to just come by and spend some quiet time.My safety net.

The good news is that I havent given up on reading.I've just not been making time to write about the fantastic books I've read.I intend to rectify that immediately.

I've had this book with me since 2012 but somehow it kept finding its way in my TBR pile (to be read) and I didnt get about reading it.It kept hovering somewhere at the back of my mind and when I recently got to know about the movie release,I decided that it was time to pick it up.

The story in brief: 
This story takes place in the town of Point Partageuse in Australia during the 1920's.Tom Sherbourne returns home after fighting in WW1 in Europe and takes up the job of a lighthouse keeper on an isolated island.He soon marries Isabel and they move to this secluded island.Time passes by and years later, after two miscarriages and one still birth , the grieving Isabel hears a baby's cries on the wind.A boat has washed up onshore carrying a dead man and a live baby.Tom a principled man with meticulous record-keeping wants to report the incident immediately but reluctantly gives in to Isabels entreaties to let her keep the baby and decides to raise the child as their own.

Time passes by and when they return to the mainland , they find that the choices made by them will have consequences and that it could devastate many people.

My Views:

What an incredibly poignant and emotional story! and it totally succeeds in manipulating the reader.I knew the choices taken were morally questionable but I completely sympathized with Isabel.I could just feel her pain.

I got so utterly involved in this story that it moved me to tears and I was deeply disturbed by it.This book just managed to do that to me.I surprised myself.

The story moves rather quickly and the writing is masterful with many passages that just hit home and make you rethink about the way you've been living life.The characters have distinct personalities and voices.

I could see Tom's struggle to run away from a past of chaos and find some peace on a secluded island and a routine and ordered way of living.How he proves to be such a woderful husband through it all,never once leaving his wifes side.It was a really tender portrayal of a marriage.Isabel's miscarriages and the grief  she goes through was heartbreaking.I could understand Hannah's pain as well but somehow it was just Isabel who managed to move me more.The side characters and their grey shades.Human nature at its worst and best.

It still makes me wonder about the right and wrong of the decisons taken.This is such a complex story that it does make you think long after youve finished reading the book.It is so difficult to judge and yet take a stand and still it leaves you with all these feelings.It was heart-wrenching.

And of course it was also about forgiveness but is there really anything to forgive when 'bad' choices are made by 'good' people!?

This novel is made into a movie starring Michael Fassbender,Alicia Vikander and Rachel Weisz.

I rate this book a 5 out of 5.

Sunday 10 July 2016

STREETS OF DARKNESS

I set very high standards for crime fiction and am often left disappointed when they are not met.But Im always up for a good thriller so when I got to know about this book,I was immediately curious.Many thanks to Netgalley and Random House UK,Transworld publishers for my copy.

This story is set in Bradford,a modern day Gotham city rife with racial tensions,lawlesness and a major drug problem.It starts with a Sikh detective Harry Virdee discovering the crucified body of a just elected local Asian MP.All the evidence points to Lucas Dwight, a junkie and a criminal who has just been released from jail.However,Harry,often known to take the law in his hands is suspended from the police and is awaiting to answer charges at a hearing.Given a chance to restore his reputation,by his superintendent who asks him to go undercover and authorises him to work without rules and whatever it takes to locate Lucas ,Harry cant keep himself away and takes up the case.He is soon to find out how little it takes to destroy a city,which is teetering on the verge of anarchy.The question however being- will it destroy his world and all those he holds dear as well?!

My Views:


Let me begin by saying that I pulled an all nighter for this one.Kudos to the author for a fast-paced novel which is a compelling page-turner.The characters were fresh and it was heartening to see a Sikh detective playing Batman in Bradford.All the characters were clearly etched with everyone being flawed.I liked that.Noone was larger than life not even Harry Batman Virdee.The backdrop was race,religion,politics,drugs and the power struggle.Harry and his wife Saima face their own struggles being ostracised by their respective families for an interreligious marriage.

It doesnt take Harry long to find Lucas Dwight only to learn that nothing is as it seems.Lucas has been falsely implicated and there are higher forces which want him dead.Harry and Lucas form an unlikely team to discover what exactly is going on.

The bad guys especially Bashir made my skin crawl but I was surprised at the sudden change of heart in a man with a soul so dark.That didnt seem credible.Zains character was wimpy.I loved Saimas character,she was as formidable as they can get.Heavily pregnant but with a never say die attitude.My heart was in my mouth when I was reading about what her character was fated for.

The riots,the anarchy,the characters seeking redemption,mercy,forgiveness ,its all in there.I liked that the story kept me guessing till the very end.There was a sudden twist in the tale at the end as is common in most thrillers and this one ensures that there will be a sequel.

The message that shines on is that despite a racial,cultural,religious divide there remains a spark of hope which continues to shine when all else fails.This book had its high intensity moments and thats what made it likeable.Its no wonder that the television adaptation rights have already been sold.

I rate it a 3 out of 5.

Monday 27 June 2016

THE VEGETARIAN

I am not going to mince words when it comes to writing what I felt after reading 'The Vegetarian'.It is the winner of the 2016 Man Booker International Prize.This slim,seemingly innocuous book is in reality so full of guile that nothing will ever prepare you for what it really is about.

So let me get straight to the plot :

Yeong-hye and her husband live an ordinary life.But a nightmare changes things for them and Yeong-hye decides to give up eating meat completely.In a country like Korea where the story is set, this decision to embrace a more plant like existence is a shocking act of subversion and people react to it in quite an extreme manner.

Yeong-hye ,however refuses to budge and slowly descends into a darkness from which there is no return.This is a story about choice, obsession and our faltering attempts to understand others.

My Views:

This isnt a very long book.Its narrated in three short parts but it is terribly impactful and disturbing.This is my first foray in transgressive literature.Yeong-hye gives no explanation when asked why she refuses to eat meat and just says that she had a dream (the details of which are vividly described only to the reader).Things begin to deteriorate rapidly when her father tries to force a piece of meat into her mouth and she stabs herself in revolt.Its a downward spiral from this point.Her relationships begin to fall apart and we realise that she is slowly but surely losing her mind.

Yeong-hye barely speaks in the book and the story is not told from her perspective.It is narrated from the point of view of her husband,her brother-in-law and her sister.Yeong-hyes husband states in the opening chapter that his wife is completely unremarkable in every way.I thought that this would set the tone for the book only to realise later how terribly wrong I had been.The Husband wants to just shrug off responsiblity.The Artist brother-in-law takes his obsession to a completely bizarre level and The sister realises that there is only so much she can do to help Yeong-hye.

This is one of the most bizarre books Ive ever read.It takes weirdness to an entirely different level but it does hit you and engulf you in a shroud of gloom.I just couldnt shake the feeling off for quite a while.It is a stark look at mental illness and how it affects not only the individual but everyone who cares about them.I wanted to keep reading because I was clueless as to where the story was headed.

The first part had me hooked and perplexed.
The second part was a bolt from the blue. 
The third part was where it all comes together but only to leave you feeling completely depressed.

I rate it a 3 out of 5.

Do not read it if you've been feeling particularly down.

Saturday 14 May 2016

BEHIND CLOSED DOORS

I am determined to get things done before I go back to being myself .Thats one of the reasons Im posting a second review today.This is a new author and a debut novel.I stumbled across a few people raving about it and decided to pick it up.Besides the title was intriguing and the synopsis said that sometimes,the perfect marriage is the perfect lie and in times like these,I thought that it is very believable.

This is the story of a seemingly perfect couple,Jack and Grace.Jack is handsome and rich and Grace is charming and elegant.But you soon figure out that somethings not quite right because they are never apart.Grace never answers the phone.They have a common email.She never meets anyone for lunch or coffee.She cooks elaborate meals but still remains very slim.So you know that things are not always the way they seem.Is it then the perfect life or the perfect lie?

My views:

This book was a fairly simple read.I liked the way it alternated between the present and the past.We are taken on a journey through the couples life from how they meet to how they get together.Jack comes across as the perfect guy in every way.Charming,handsome,accomodative towards Grace's sister Millie who has Downs syndrome and Grace is swept off her feet and agrees to marry him.Thats exactly when things go in a downward spiral.

It was a page-turner to a certain extent,then it got a bit unbelievable.I was very interested to see where the story was going and how it would end.Parts of the story are excellent and keep you at the edge of your seat but in parts you wonder why Grace is behaving the way she does.

Jacks character is believable to an extent.I know sadists do exist but here the sadism is taken to unnatural heights.I hated the way Molly,the puppy was treated.From there on it just got more bizzare.Thats when my interest level dipped and it started to feel like fiction.

But if you delude yourself into somehow believing that all of it could happen,then you'll enjoy the book.It shines in parts.I liked how the story ends.I would have been very disappointed if it had to end any other way.

Considering that its a debut novel,I rate it a 3 out of 5.

Thursday 12 May 2016

THE STORY HOUR

I've been procrastinating again.Havent come here in a really long time but I intend changing that very soon.Hopefully i'll be able to post more often.

Thrity Umrigar is one of my favourite authors.She usually writes women-centric fiction and I love that she provokes me to stop and think.Her books have characters which one might meet in everyday life.The stories she writes about feel so very real.

A bit about the book:

Laximi, a village girl who comes to the United States is desperately lonely and trapped in a loveless marriage.Forced to cut ties from her family in India and living a life restricted to a small restaurant and a grocery store,she attempts suicide in despair.However she is saved by timely intervention and her case is assigned to Maggie,an African-American psychologist with an Indian husband.Maggi who is usually detached in her professional relationships befriends Laximi and they become close.She also helps Laximi start a successful cleaning and catering business.

Laximi has a dark secret in her past and when she confesses it to Maggie she reacts in a way which is completely unexpected by Laximi.However the tables are soon turned when Laximi stumbles upon Maggies secret which in turn shakes her faith in Maggi and jeopardizes their bond.This is a very honest novel about friendship,expectations,disappointments and second chances.

My views:

I was immediately hooked on to this book.The characters are given distinct voices.It took some getting used to, to read Laximis part because the dialect she was given was that of an Indian village girl who barely knows how to speak English.So its fractured English for Laximi all way.But I got used to that quickly.Maggie Bose on the other hand is a self-assured ,independent woman but flawed at the same time.Being a psychologist and dealing with peoples problems and helping people deal with their lives.But when she faces her own demons she needs to take help as well.I was drawn into their lives.

We as adults lead very complex lives.As people we are capable of so many emotions,its scary if  we allow ourselves to get swept away by them.You cant logic your way through emotion sometimes and mistakes do happen.The most important lesson this book teaches is not to be judemental about others.Different people,lead different lives and have different pasts.Just because someone doesnt conform to your standards doesnt give you the right to take a higher moral ground.

I liked that this book explores the fragility of a friendship and takes us through an entire gamut of emotions.I was non-judgemental while reading this book though it provoked me to think that a certain character has behaved wrongly.It raises pertinent questions about the sanctity of marriage,being trapped in a loveless marriage and infidelity.

I liked that the conclusion was open-ended because it couldnt have been any other way.Its not easy nor is it simple to get back on track in life after life changing events.Its always an ongoing process,a story which never ends.

I rate this book a 4 out of 5.

Monday 4 April 2016

THE BELL JAR


I kept away from my blog for some time now mainly because I didnt know what to do with myself for a period of time after reading this book.You just cant be done with a book like this.I couldnt bear to write about it immediately nor could I gather my thoughts in a coherent form.I spent an inordinate amount of time feeling morose and I couldnt really place a finger on it but I knew that I had to snap back and eventually get on with life.The Bell Jar is a dangerous book.To those who havent read it yet,dont say I didnt warn you.

This is a semi-autobiographical novel and the only one written by Sylvia Plath.

Esther Greenwood,the protagonist is a beautiful and talented young woman who becomes mentally unstable during a summer spent interning at a magazine in New York City.We follow Esthers slow descent into extreme depression.Being unable to fit into the culturally acceptable role of womanhood and tormented by the death of her father,Esther attempts to commit suicide and end it all.She is sent to various psychiatrists,given shock treatments and psychotherapy sessions which ultimately aid in lifting the metaphorical Bell Jar in which she has felt trapped and stifled.However the journey to fight ones inner demons in never easy and to honestly document it is even more difficult.

My Views:

I had read a few of Sylvia Plaths poems and had studiouly avoided reading this book for a long time now.I knew it would be a difficult read but I have also challenged myself to read books I wouldnt dare to in 2016.So I took it on as a dare.Let me be honest and say that I took a really long time to get through this book mainly because I was reading it in small doses to bear the emotional onslaught in installments.

It is very simply narrated as if by detached observation and no histrionics but when it eventually sinks in ,you find it difficult to handle her emotional turmoil.It is written using a series of flash backs that show up parts of Esthers past.It addresses important questions like a womans role and living up to societal expectations.The way men percieve women.Nothing much has changed in any aspect even years after she wrote the book.The issues are still the same and its still very much a patriarchal society.Nothing much has changed for people with mental illnesses.There is still stigma attached to it.It is just like Esther has described her mother saying,'I knew you'd decide to be alright again'.'

Why cant people understand that it could happen to anyone.Arent we all on the brink of insanity anyway dealing with what life throws at us.All it takes is one bad moment or one bad day to push anyone over the edge.It is very easy to descend into the whirlpool of gloom.What is important at times like these is knowing that you arent alone,having moral and emotional support and seeking timely help from a professional.

There are so many scenes in this book which I will never be able to forget.It was a visceral experience to read it.This is so intense that it grabs you by the lapels and drags you to the darkest corner in your mind and leaves you there for sometime.

Read it is all I can say!





Tuesday 1 March 2016

MY NAME IS LUCY BARTON

This book came up on my social media feed while I was browsing for books.I was mid-way through a novel but my mind prompted me to search for something more.I am now officially a book polygamist.I read more than one book at a time and I can do it guilt free ;-)I had no idea what this book was about but I was familiar with the author's work and didnt think twice before picking it up.I finished reading it over the weekend.

Lucy Barton the narrator of this story tells us about the nine weeks she spent in hospital several years ago when her two daughters were young.Her mother,who she has been estranged from for many years ,comes to see her.They talk about trivial things,cousins,people they knew and of marriages that didnt work out and this gossip seems to reconnect them.But scratch the surface and there's a troubled family and Lucy's desire to escape it all,her life now,her marriage,her love for her two daughters and her desire to become a writer.

My Views:
Lucy Barton is a brilliant narrator and she tells us her story without telling us her story.The mother-daughter conversations about other people and gossip about their marriages,seem to reconnect them but what is most painful are the things left unsaid.Lucy carries the burden of acute poverty and abuse. To survive a past like that and come out unscathed is extraordinary.This story is about coming to terms with who you are.How the past defines us and makes us what we are.How we are just the sum total of the people we meet.She speaks about the people she met in her life,the impact they had on her and how grateful she was for them.She knew exactly when people were judgemental about her but she chose to see the kindness in strangers.That is a quality very few people possess.

It is difficult to make peace with one's past sometimes.It is too painful to go back and relive it.Lucy Barton's story is about all that and more.She knows exactly what defined her.She knows exactly who she is.She knows how similar she is to her mother in some ways.She doesnt begrudge her mother for anything.I could gauge that the mother probably had a past of her own which she could never recover from and that made her the kind of woman she was.Unable to love a daughter who craves for affection.However Lucy doesnt want the same for her children,she loves them and cares deeply about them.She aspires to be a writer and I loved the bit she wrote about her favourite author.You learn so much from this book.

I thought Lucy Barton was a very strong woman.At no point does she evoke pity.On the contrary you look up to her in awe.She is flawed but she is very insightful and I liked her for that.I will hopefully be reading her story again at some point in my life.

Do we really get time to introspect and look within us,skim through our past and remember the people or incidents which in some way contributed to who we are today.If I think about it,I feel Im made from all the people I've encountered and all the things I've experienced.However I often wonder if the way our life turns out boils down to one particular moment.Is it one definable moment which ultimately sets the wheels in motion?Would our lives have taken a different course if we had behaved differently back then?Would we never meet the people we met had it not been for that one choice.Conversations which impacted me were sometimes with people I least expected to connect with.At the end of it all,those conversations are what I remember most.Those conversations are responsible for the kind of person I am today.All these fleeting thoughts.All because of this book.

This is a book to be savoured.It will definitely provoke you to think back on your life and trust me sometimes its good to just look back and see how far you have come.

I rate it a 4 out of 5.




Friday 26 February 2016

THE BASTARD OF ISTANBUL

I have been fascinated with Turkey for as long as I can remember.This book was always there on my TBR list and I finished reading it a couple of days ago.However ,this week has been crazy,its just been one of those weeks when you are super annoyed and everything and anything serves to aggravate you further so I thought of escaping it all and writing my thoughts about this book over the weekend.

The Bastard of Istanbul tells the stories of two girls,Asya Kazanci and Armanoush Tchakhmakhchian and their respective families,one Turkish and the other Aremenian and how they are connected through the history of the Armenian genocide.Asya is the 'bastard' daughter of Zeliha,raised by an eccentric group of aunts and grandmothers in Istanbul.She knows very little about her past and has no interest in it.

In Arizona,Armanoush is trying to grapple with her past and find her true identity.She is the daughter of Rose and a Turkish step-father,Mustafa.She shuttles between Arizona and San Francisco where she spends some time of the year with her father Barsham's large Aremenian family.Struggling to understand herself and her Armenian roots,she decides to journey to Turkey and stay with her step-father's family,the Kazanci's.

When Asya and Armanoush meet,they begin to find a lot of common factors binding them together and this journey sets the ball in motion ultimately revealing a lot of closely guarded family secrets.

My Views:

This book had me hooked,with a very good opening chapter and I was hoping it would be a fantastic read.However as I progressed,I found that too many characters were being introduced too fast.Their names being Turkish and Armenian were a little difficult to get used to and I found myself failing to see any connection between their lives.It kept me wondering where the story was headed because it felt like reading disconnected scenes.

One really has to be attentive to all the details in this book and if you are distracted or are compelled to read it haphazardly due to time constraints,there is a good possibility that you might not really enjoy it.I would suggest you read it at a stretch, if possible over a weekend.I read about a hundred pages every night and still had to struggle with some parts.The characters failed to evoke any empathy in me.

There were a lot of unnecessary details thrown in which distracted me and even though I enjoyed reading about the elaborate Turkish and Armenian cuisine,I felt that it took away from the main story.The inclusion of a recipe came as an unwanted surprise.

The magical realism was unexpected and a bit strange.

However I did enjoy reading about the motley cast of characters in Cafe Kundera.

I hadnt read much about Turkish history and was shocked to know about the ruthless mass massacre of people and the Armenian genocide.It was interesting to read about how the Turkish-Armenian history is viewed through so many perspectives.
It was a bit disturbing to read the end because honestly it came as a surprise.I hadnt expected it to end that way.Zeliha's character was portrayed as being so strong-willed that it was surprising to see how she handled the situations in her life.But of course this is what I think.

I liked Asya and Armanoush ,they were independent women with a mind of their own. I thought it was a perfect portrayal of the need to erase the past sometimes and also the desire to examine it.
I liked the fact that everything fits perfectly in the end like a jig-saw puzzle.You realise that everyone was there for a reason and every scene which felt disconnected at the beginning,starts to finally make sense.
I was a bit disturbed after reading this book but I did like it in parts.

I rate it a 3 out of 5


Sunday 14 February 2016

BLUE

Danielle Steel always brings forth a fresh wave of nostalgia.I admit not having read her books since many years now but things were very different way back in junior college.One summer back then,I went on a Danielle Steel reading spree.I remember going to the local library and getting only her books throughout that summer.Not a good idea but I was young and foolish.By the end of the summer I was ready to move on forever from her books because the plot lines seemed very similar and I couldnt tell the stories apart.So things changed,I found new authors and her books were relegated to a remote corner on my shelf.

However there was something about this book that got me interested.Maybe I was trying to recreate the magic of that wonderful summer long past gone or maybe I wanted to see how I would react to her books after all this time or maybe I decided to pick it up for old times sake.But pick it up,I did and I just finished reading it yesterday.

Onto the story:


Ginny Carter is a young widow who led a once glamorous life as a tv anchor along with her husband and three year old son.She is now the sole survivor of a car accident that took the life of her husband and son.Wracked with survivors guilt,she gives up on life and tries to be of help to others by taking dangerous trips to countries where there are women and children who need help.On the anniversary of her family's death she comes back to New York.It is Christmas Eve and very depressing if you are alone in New York City and she is contemplating about killing herself when she encounters a homeless teenager,Blue,who has been living on the streets,abandoned by his family,directionless and utterly alone.


Ginny extends a hand to help and an unsual bond develops between the two of them.This relationship helps both of them to learn to trust and find a family's love again.However Blue has a dark secret buried deep inside his soul.Does Ginny succeed in reaching out to him or are some wounds too deep to heal.Is it really so simple to lead a whole life again after suffering so much is what this story is all about.


My Views:


When I began reading this book,I found that there was nothing terribly different about the story.The same old predictable plot.I knew what was coming next and nothing was surprising.Though it was fairly simple to read and didnt demand too much from the reader,it was narrated in a kind of a detached manner.I didnt find myself getting involved with the lives of the characters.


Of course my heart went out to Ginny and Blue.But I guess,I am a bit too skeptical,I find it hard to believe that goodness like this exists in the world and its beginning to get a bit difficult to accept that in fiction as well.It just seemed too good to be true.Besides Blue was lucky to come out of a situation like that without trauma or baggage of any kind.That didnt go down well with me either.What are the odds of two people (who are complete strangers and who happen to meet by chance ) being just perfect human beings and well suited to each other?!Honestly I think thats hardly ever possible.The chances of things going drastically wrong are very high in scenarios like these.Anyway let me not dwell too much on the negatives.
It is a story where everything has to fall in place in the end so I guess the plot calls for stuff like this.


The story was about
trust,friendship,family,guilt and mostly about finding a reason for living.Everything Ginny does was straight from the heart and I thought that as really commendable.

However as I neared the end,something changed.Sometimes,unexpectedly a book speaks to us.It could be a book you havent connected with for the most part but there is this one line somewhere which tells you exactly what you need at that moment and you stop to think about it.It might be something you already know,but its different when its staring you in the face.So there was something in there which did manage to touch me.


It also said that 'Everybody has something they can beat themselves up for.Its just not worth the energy to do it'.I liked that.


It didnt recreate the magic of that summer for me.I guess Ive come too far ahead to ever go back.


I rate it a 3 out of 5.






Wednesday 10 February 2016

AN INTERVIEW WITH KATARINA BIVALD,AUTHOR OF 'THE READERS OF BROKEN WHEEL RECOMMEND'

I had been travelling and couldnt post this earlier.My apologies.

I had reviewed 'THE READERS OF BROKEN WHEEL RECOMMEND' some time back when I got the chance to read an advance copy of the book.I had really enjoyed the story and can fondly recall it even today.It is the perfect book to perk up your spirits and one which can be enjoyed with a mug of hot chocolate.

I was curious about Katarina Bivald,the author and was thrilled when I got the chance to ask her a few questions.


Katarina Bivald grew up working part-time in a bookshop. Today she lives outside of Stockholm, Sweden, with her sister and as many bookshelves she can get by her. She’s currently trying to persuade her sister that
having a shelf for winter jackets and shoes is completely unneccessary. There should be enough space for a book shelf or two instead.Limited success so far.Apparently,her sister is also stubbornly refusing to even discuss using the bath room to store books.Katarina Bivald sometimes claims that she still hasn’t decided whether she prefers books or people but, as we all know, people are a non-starter. Even if you do like them, they’re better in books. Only possible problem: reading a great book and having noone to recommend it to.


On to the interview:

1. I loved your book, ‘The Readers Of Broken Wheel Recommend’ and I am curious about why you chose to set the story in Broken Wheel, Iowa?

I love books about quirky small American towns, and in the end, I just created a town where I could live for the years it took me to write it.

2. What was the most challenging part about writing this book?

To keep at it, I think, and keep editing it. What separates a publishable book from an unpublishable one is not the idea, nor the plot or the theme or the characters, but the stubbornness of the author.

3. There are various characters in the book, each with their own quirks. What inspired these characters?

I love quirky characters and books about them. When I set out to write my own book, it sort of came naturally to me.

4. Would you describe in brief your journey as an author?

I’ve always known I wanted to be a writer, but somehow I never really gave it any focused effort. As if I was so sure of my dream that I didn’t really think I had to actually work on it. Or perhaps I just didn’t want to subject my dreams to reality?

And then, when I was 25, I said to myself: pick any idea, write any book; it doesn’t have to be good, it will probably never be published, but finish something. From Chapter 1 to The End.

It was published, eventually, but it took years of re-writing and a lot of rejection letters. In fact, I don’t think there’s a publisher in Sweden, large or small, who hasn’t at one time or another rejected my novel. Even my own publisher has rejected an earlier draft of it. But it was necessary: the story needed it.

The rest has been a dizzying and strangely everyday experience: it turns out that being sold to some 25 countries, seeing dream after dream after dream come true, doesn’t really alter the fact that life is basically an everyday experience. As it should be.

5. Who are your favorite authors?

It’s almost impossible to answer; I have so many. Terry Pratchett, Lee Child, Jane Austen, Sherman Alexie, Fannie Flagg… the list just goes on and on.

6. Who or what is your biggest inspiration?

Other people’s conversations: I eavesdrop a lot.

7. Which book besides yours would you readily recommend to readers?


Every time I read a new book that I love I try to force all my friends to read it. Just last week I tried to convince a friend of mine that what he was really looking for was some light reading on loss and grief; I had just finished C.S. Lewis A Grief Observed. He promised to read it but then somehow managed to “forget” the book at my place. Fortunately I have since bought him his own copy. Although I did the same thing with a great book about the plague, and I have this suspicion that he hasn’t read it yet.

8. Which book are you currently reading?


C.S. Lewis Surprised by Joy.

9. What advice do you have for new authors?


Eavesdrop. Talk to everyone you meet that’s older than you. Life has a way of being stranger than fiction.

10. Do you really like books more than people?


Oh, I like people too. It’s just that they’re better in books.



Links and other relevant details:

ISBN-10: 149262344X

ISBN-13: 978-1492623441

PUBLISHER: Sourcebooks Landmark (January 19, 2016)

TWITTER HANDLE:@katarinabivald

FACEBOOK PAGE: https://www.facebook.com/katarina.bivald

GOODREADS AUTHOR PAGE 
LINK: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7205478.Katarina_Bivald


AMAZON LINK:

Thank you Katarina for your time and answers.




READERS, RECOMMEND YOUR BOOKSTORE!
Sourcebooks Launches Reader Voting Campaign to Grant Money to Community Bookstores

NAPERVILLE IL (January 5, 2016) — Independent publisher Sourcebooks announces the “Readers, Recommend Your Bookstore” campaign, which will give grant money to three nominated bookstores. The “Readers, Recommend Your Bookstore Campaign” is inspired by the phenomenal support booksellers have given The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend by Katarina Bivald, which was selected as the #1 Indie Next Great Read for January 2016. 

Katarina Bivald’s international bestselling debut novel, The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend, is a charming, big-hearted story about the joy of books and the transformative power of community bookstores. 

“Bookstores are the heart and soul of their community and have enormous impact on readers’ lives,” said Dominique Raccah, founder and CEO of Sourcebooks. “The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend inspired us to create a campaign that will not only give back to a few deserving bookstores, but hopefully highlight all the many wonderful bookstores that service communities across the country.”

Anyone can nominate their favorite bookstore at http://books.sourcebooks.com/readers-recommend-your-bookstore-sweepstakes/. Sourcebooks will award the winning bookstore with a $3,000 prize; two additional bookstores will each receive a $637 prize (the population of Bivald’s fictional Broken Wheel, Iowa). In addition to bookstores receiving prizes, weekly giveaways for those who nominate will be held throughout the campaign. Voting began January 4, and runs until February 19, when the winning bookstores will be announced.


Tuesday 19 January 2016

THE BAZAAR OF BAD DREAMS

I had this book with me ever since its publication last year and when I saw it trending for several weeks in a row on the NYT bestseller list,I knew it was time to pick it up.
The King of horror is on a roll in this book.He gives us not one or two but twenty creepy stories which get weirder by the minute.However there are only three previously unpublished stories in this one-Bad Little Kid,Mister Yummy and Obits.The rest have been previously published at some time or other.Each story begins with a small note by him explaining just what led him to write it.I love his irreverance when it comes to writing.How everything about it just shocks you and Im talking about much more than the plot here.I find his stories always toe the line between the impossible-but-could-happen-sometime to completely bizarre-but-maybe-could-happen-sometime.And of course theres no time like the night to read the books when you are free to internalize those screams.

So lets get started!I will try and not reveal what the plot lines are and just say what I felt after I read them.

Mile 81:Did I mention that he writes weird stuff.This story is about a station wagon which is not a station wagon at all.Stephen King fans will probably know what Im hinting at but the rest of us will have to read this story.I waited for a bit after reading this one and found myself thinking that something like this could happen.

Premium Harmony :  So all the stories need not be macabre and bloody to evoke the feelings of horror.This one disturbed me and made me rethink what marriage can really turn into sometime.

Batman and Robin Have an Altercation: I liked it.Life continues to throw surprises and we just have to deal with them.

The Dune: Loved it!I didnt see it coming so was appropriately shocked.Should have guessed.But I am not usually at my alert best on weekends.

Bad Little Kid: Loved it!Downright Eerie.Sometimes you are so sure about things that you do not entertain any other possibility.What was he thinking?What was I thinking?We definitely werent thinking the same thing.This one kind of creeped me out.

A Death: Awesome!Totally unexpected yet expected,if you know what I mean.Classic King.Continues to shock.

The Bone Church: Didnt work for me.

Morality: Was weird but makes you just sit still and think.

Afterlife: Totally loved it.I had so many questions after this.And some things just made so much sense.The only time I ever wished Stephen King was a friend.

Ur: Strictly OK.Kindle users ,Beware!

Herman Wouk is still Alive: Sad.Just random stuff happening to everyone around.Thats another thing I like about his books.The randomness in them mimics life sometimes.Predictable but not entirely.

Under The Weather: Figured it out as soon as I started reading this.Not a novel plot at all.Old wine in new bottle.

Blockade Billy: Good.But not in the same league as the ones I really liked.

Mister Yummy: Stranger things are known to happen and when its Mr King we expect nothing less.

Tommy: Didnt work for me.

The Little Green God Of Agony: This one was stretching it a bit too far.Totally over the top.Lots of eyerolls from me while reading this one but nicely written.

That Bus is Another World: Bizarre!Could really happen sometime,somewhere.Or maybe it already has.

Obits: Whoa!What a mean little story.Feel horrible to even think about it.But what if.....

Drunken Fireworks:Enjoyed this one!What a story!

Summer Thunder: Scary to contemplate.The end of the world ,Stephen King style!

You need to read this book to see what Im really talking about.Its surely worth a shot.Read it when you are missing a nightmare.

I rate it a 4 out of 5.