Yellowface – Rebecca F. Kuang

AutorRebecca F. Kuang
VerlagHarper Collins Publ. UK
Datum16. Mai 2023
AusgabeBroschiert
Seiten323
SpracheEnglisch
ISBN-13978-0008532789

„The night I watch Athena Liu die, we’re celebrating her TV deal with Netflix.“ (Zitat Seite 1)

Inhalt

Mit dem oben zitierten Satz beginnt dieser Roman. June Hayward und Athena Liu, zwei jungen Autorinnen, sind seit der Collegezeit befreundet. Im Gegensatz zu June, die immer noch vom großen Durchbruch träumt, wurde bereits der erste Roman von Athena ein gefeierter Bestseller und Athena ist seither eine in den Medien präsente, sehr erfolgreiche Autorin. Eines Abends, genau genommen ist es Mitternacht, feiern sie in Athenas Appartement, als diese bei einem plötzlichen Unfall stirbt. Kurz darauf präsentiert June das Manuskript für ihren neuesten Roman „The Last Front“, eine Geschichte über chinesische Arbeiter im Ersten Weltkrieg, und nicht nur ihr Agent ist sofort begeistert. Doch bald entstehen in den sozialen Medien brisante Diskussionen, nicht nur darüber, ob June, die den Roman unter ihren Vornamen Juniper Song veröffentlicht, als weiße Frau ohne chinesische Wurzeln einen Roman über ein Thema aus der chinesischen Geschichte schreiben darf. Noch könnte June einige Dinge richtigstellen, doch andererseits hat sie nun endlich den Erfolg, der ihr ihrer Meinung nach zusteht.

Thema und Genre

In diesem Roman geht es um Literatur, die vielen Aspekte der Literaturszene und der Social Media, um den kreativen Schreibprozess und die brisante Frage, wer worüber schreiben darf, um Identität und kulturelle Aneignung. Themen sind Erfolg, Eifersucht, Wahrheit und die erste Lüge, der immer mehr Lügen folgen.

Erzählform und Sprache

Rebecca F. Kuang wählt eine moderne Form des Erzählens. Einerseits lässt sie June selbst als Ich-Erzählerin ihre Geschichte schildern, was klar ist, denn nur June kann wissen, was wirklich vorgefallen ist. Vermutungen, wie verlässlich June als Erzählerin ist, ob sie den Ablauf dieses besonderen Abends, als alles begann, wirklich so beschreibt, wie es tatsächlich stattgefunden hat, bleiben uns Lesern überlassen. Was jedoch diese bekannte und oft verwendete Erzählperspektive in diesem Roman auszeichnet, sind Junes Gedanken und Meinungen zu den vielen auftretenden Konflikten und Themen, die sie mit uns teilt, ihre Erfahrungen mit dem Literaturbetrieb und den omnipräsenten Usern der Social Media, aber auch ihre Schuldgefühle und Ängste. Gleichzeitig wendet June sich in ihren Überlegungen und auch Erklärungen der Hintergründe an uns Leser als imaginäre Gesprächspartner, und sucht durch ihre Argumente nach einer Bestätigung für ihre Entscheidungen. Dies führt dazu, dass man mit June mitempfindet, ihre Schuldgefühle und zunehmende Bedrängnis intensiv miterlebt. Obwohl sie als Figur nicht sehr sympathisch ist und ich ihrem lockeren Umgang mit geistigem Eigentum nicht zustimmen kann, habe ich bald gehofft, dass sie einen Ausweg aus ihren immer dichteren Verstrickungen und Probleme findet, gleichzeitig neugierig, was sie als nächstes tun wird.

Ich habe das englische Original gelesen und so auch die eindrückliche, sehr gut zu lesende Sprache genossen. Die deutsche Übersetzung trägt ebenfalls den Titel Yellowface und erscheint am 29. Februar 2024 im Eichborn Verlag.

Fazit

Eine facettenreiche, intensive Geschichte, spannend wie ein Kriminalroman, beklemmend durch unergründliche Vorfälle, ein überzeugendes Leseerlebnis.

The Summer Without Men – Siri Hustvedt

AutorSiri Hustvedt
VerlagSceptre
Datum3 March 2011
AusgabeKindle Edition
Seiten225 (print-version)
SpracheEnglish
ASINB004Q9TK7A

“I will report on that later. Chronology is sometimes overrated as a narrative device.” (Zitat Seite 198)

Inhalt

Die fünfundfünfzig Jahre alte New Yorker Dichterin und Universitätsprofessorin Mia Fredricksen schlittert in eine ernste persönliche Krise, als ihr Mann Boris nach dreißig gemeinsamen Ehejahren eine Pause braucht. Rasch findet sie heraus, dass diese Pause eine wesentlich jüngere Kollegin ist. Sie beschließt, diesen Sommer als eigene Auszeit im ländlichen Ort ihrer Kindheit in Minnesota zu verbringen, umgeben von Frauen unterschiedlicher Generationen. Da sind ihre Mutter und deren vier lesebegeisterte Freundinnen, die älteste ist einhundertzwei Jahre alt. Spontan übernimmt Mia die Aufgabe, einen Lyrikkurs für Mädchen im Teenageralter zu geben. Sie hat ein Haus über den Sommer gemietet und freundet sich auch mit ihrer Nachbarin an, eine junge Mutter. Inzwischen hält Mias Tochter Daisy in New York den Kontakt zu ihrem Vater aufrecht.

Thema und Genre

In diesem Roman geht es um unterschiedliche Frauen aus verschiedenen Generationen, ihre Probleme, Konflikte, Freundschaft, Beziehungen, Ehe, Familie und die Erkenntnis, dass es möglich ist, in jeder Lebensphase neue Wege gehen zu können.

Erzählform und Sprache

Siri Hustvedt wählt hier eine moderne Schreibform, durchbricht die chronologischen Abläufe oft durch eigene Bewusstseinsströme, gedankliche Ausflüge in die Literatur, Erinnerungen, um dann nach einigen Umwegen wieder über die Ereignisse dieses aktuellen Sommers zu berichten. Die Sprache bringt Ruhe in die facettenreichen Handlung und ist einfühlsam, ehrlich und übt durchaus humorvoll Selbstkritik. Ich habe das englische Original gelesen, im Juni 2024 wird bei Rowohlt Taschenbuch eine neue Sonderausgabe von „Der Sommer ohne Männer“ erscheinen.

Fazit

Die Geschichte eines Sommers, in deren Mittelpunkt Frauen aller Alters- und Lebensstufen stehen, mit zeitlos aktuellen Themen.

Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf

AutorVirginia Woolf
Verlag Penguin Classics
Erscheinungsdatum 7 June 2018
FormatPaperback
Seiten192
SpracheEnglish
ISBN-13978-0241341117

„She felt very young; at the same time unspeakably aged. She sliced like a knife through everything; at the same time was outside, looking on. (Zitat Seite 6)

Inhalt

Es ist ein Mittwoch Mitte Juni 1923 und Clarissa Dalloway ist mitten in den Vorbereitungen für die Party, die sie an diesem Abend geben wird. Seit mehr als zwanzig Jahren lebt sie nun schon in Westminster, sie liebt das Leben in London und ihre Spaziergänge durch die Straßen und Parks, macht Einkäufe, trifft Freunde. Zu Hause überwacht die die Vorbereitungen für den Abend. So vergeht auch dieser Tag, während Big Ben pünktlich jede Stunde schlägt, bis die ersten Gäste eintreffen und das Gerücht, auch der Prime Minister werde kommen, für weitere Aufregung sorgt.

Thema und Genre

Dieser Roman, 1925 erschienen, gilt als wichtiger Meilenstein in der Entwicklung des Romans des 20. Jahrhunderts. In diesen Jahren nach Kriegsende ist die Gesellschaft im Wandel, verunsichert über die Zukunft und während die Gedanken der glamourösen Mrs Dalloway sich um ihre Abendgesellschaft drehen, kämpft der junge Septimus Smith, mit seiner italienischen Ehefrau in bescheidenen Verhältnissen lebend, noch immer gegen sein persönliches Kriegstrauma an.

Charaktere

Mrs Dalloway hält sich selbst nicht für außergewöhnlich, doch sie besitzt eine sehr gute Menschenkenntnis. Sie selbst fühlt sich manchmal beinahe unsichtbar, nicht Clarissa, sondern Mrs Richard Dalloway, Gattin eines Parlamentsabgeordneten. Peter Walsh dagegen, ihr alter Freund, sagt über sie „She came into a room; she stood, as he had often seen her, in a doorway with lots of people round her. But it was Clarissa one remembered.” (Zitat Seite 69)

Erzählform und Sprache

„Mrs Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself.“ (Zitat Seite 1) Mit diesem ersten Satz beginnt dieser ungewöhnliche Roman, inzwischen ein Klassiker der Moderne. Virginia Woolf gelingt es, innerhalb eines Zeitrahmens von nur einem Tag in London die Erinnerungen von Clarissa Dalloway und die Lebensgeschichten von einer Reihe von weiteren Figuren mit den alltäglichen Ereignissen dieses einen Tages zu vernetzen, zu einer unglaublich dichten, aussagekräftigen Geschichte, die bei aktuellen Autorinnen mindestens dreihundert Seiten füllen würde. Da werden Blumen gekauft, die Fehlzündung eines Automobils lässt kurz alle innehalten, die dies miterleben, ein Flugzeug malt Buchstaben in der Luft, wer kann das Wort erkennen, es werden Einkäufe gemacht, Spaziergänge unternommen, alte Freunde empfangen.

Wer mehr als nur Theorie über die damals neue, moderne Erzähltechnik stream of consciousness (Bewusstseinsstrom)wissen will, wird in diesem Roman fündig. Er ist eines der ersten Beispiele und setzt sie so weit um, dass die Gedankengänge der vielen sehr unterschiedlichen Figuren die eigentliche Handlung der Geschichte bilden. Die Sätze sind eher kurz, aber prägnant und treffend formuliert, Lesevergnügen. Ich habe diesen Roman in der englischen Originalausgabe gelesen.

Fazit

Diese Rezension fasst meine persönliche Meinung und Eindrücke zusammen, denn zu Klassikern wie diesem gibt es eine Fülle von Abhandlungen und Rezensionen von versierten, literaturwissenschaftlich ausgebildeten Menschen. Ich will einfach nur neugierig darauf machen, neben den aktuellen Neuerscheinungen auch immer wieder einen modernen Klassiker zur Hand zu nehmen, denn es lohnt sich.

Eine Frage der Chemie / Lessons in Chemistry – Bonnie Garmus

AutorBonnie Garmus
Verlag HörbucHHamburg HHV
PublisherPenguin Random House
Erscheinungsdatum 31. März 2022 – 2 March 2023
FormatAudible and Paperback
SeitenPaperback 400 pages
SpracheDeutsch – English
ErzählerinLuise Helm
ASINB09V5N7C74
ISBN-13978-1804990926

„Chemie ist untrennbar mit dem Leben verbunden, Chemie ist per definitionem Leben. Aber genau wie Ihre Pastete braucht das Leben ein starkes Fundament. In Ihrer Küche sind Sie das Fundament.“ (Zitat Kapitel 29, Hörbuch)

„Chemistry is inseparable from life – by its very definition, chemistry is life. But like your pie, life requires a strong base. In your home, you are that base.” (Zitat aus der englischen Print-Ausgabe, Seite 258)

Inhalt

Elizabeth Zott eine hochbegabte Chemikerin, doch in den 1950er Jahren ist auch das Hastings Research Institut weit davon entfernt, Frauen in der Wissenschaft anzuerkennen. Sie hatten zu Hause zu sein und Kinder zu bekommen, statt neue Bereiche der Chemie zu erforschen, von denen die meisten ihrer männlichen Kollegen ohnedies weniger verstanden, als Elisabeth Zott. Mit einer Ausnahme, Calvin Evans, ein brillanter Nobelpreiskandidat. Bald  verbindet sie nicht nur die Chemie der Wissenschaft. Doch das Jahr 1961 verändert alles. Elisabeth hat ihren Job im Hastings Institut verloren. Als ihr eine Sendung im Nachmittagsprogramm eines Fernsehsenders angeboten wird, genau genommen, eine Kochsendung, sagt sie zu. Kochen ist schließlich auch Chemie und gleichzeitig mit diesen neuen Erkenntnissen lernen begeistert zusehende Hausfrauen in dieser Sendung, dass es Zeit ist, an sich selbst und die eigenen Fähigkeiten zu glauben.

Thema und Genre

In diesem Roman geht es um die Situation der Frauen in den 1950er und 1960er Jahren, um die Erkenntnis der eigenen Fähigkeiten in einer von Männern dominierten Welt. Themen sind Familie, Freundschaft, Liebe, Zusammenhalt, aber auch Verlust, Trauer, Schicksal. Natürlich geht es auch um Wissenschaft, Forschung und die Chemie, der wir überall im täglichen Leben begegnen.

Charaktere

Elisabeth Zott ist in ihrer brillanten Logik und Geradlinigkeit für ihre Umwelt nicht immer einfach. Doch wir schließen sie mit einem Schmunzeln sofort in unser Leserinnenherz. Neben ihr treffen wir in diesem Roman auf weitere Charktere, authentisch, mutig und jede ist auf ihre Art besonders.

Handlung und Schreibstil

Die Geschichte wird chronologisch erzählt und durch Rückblenden ergänzt. Einfühlsam schildert die Autorin das Leben von Elisabeth Zott mit seinen täglichen Herausforderungen, manche unterhaltsam, andere sehr traurig und prägend. Doch nicht nur eine Reihe von Menschen kümmert sich um Elisabeth Zott, sondern auch ihr Hund Halbsieben, im englischen Original Six-Thirty versteht eine Menge vom Leben und „seinen“ Menschen, um die er sich kümmert. Luise Helm ist eine wunderbare Erzählerin und liest dieses Buch mit ihre ruhigen, eindrücklichen Stimme, die perfekt zu dieser Geschichte passt.

Fazit

Eine charmante, sehr kluge, unterhaltsame, aber nie seichte, Geschichte. Ich habe sie teilweise gehört, teilweise das englische Taschenbuch gelesen und beides ist ein großartiges Hör- und Leseerlebnis.

The Bookman’s Tale: A Novel of Obsession – Charlie Lovett

AuthorCharlie Lovett
PublisherPenguin Books
Date28 May 2013
EditionKindle-edition
Pages369 (print)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB00AFPVQN0

“But Amanda was dead – buried nine months ago in the red earth of North Carolina, an ocean away. A heartbeat away. And this painting, so much older than Amanda or her mother or her grandmother, could not possibly portray her. But it did.” (Quotation page 3)

Content

When Amanda Byerly dies at the age of only twenty-nine, she leaves her husband Peter, filled with deep grief. He leaves America and moves to the cottage in Kingham, England, which they had bought and renovated together. Here he leads a completely secluded life, withdrawn from everybody, friends and family. Until one cold February day he enters a bookshop in Hay-on-Wye and flipping through the pages of an old, beautifully bound book, he finds a piece of paper, a definitely Victorian watercolour. The painting shows a woman who looks like Amanda. His grief, together with his curiosity as an antiquarian bookseller tell him that he had to solve this mystery, to find out everything about a hundred-year-old portrait of his wife, born 1966, hidden in a first edition from 1796 about Shakespeare forgeries. Who was the artist of the watercolour, which shows only the initials B.B. and could this quest bring Peter Byerly back to real life?

Theme and Genre

This novel is about old books, bookbinding and restoring, about valuable collections of antiquarian books, but also about friendship, family, family secrets and love. It is a story of fiction with historical literary background.

Characters

The main character of the story is Peter Byerly, bibliophile, booklover and expert for antiquarian books. Historical characters, Shakespeare and other Elizabethan writers, famous book collectors and librarians as well as famous forgers surround him.

Plot and Writing

The story moves between four storylines, the actual researches of Peter Byerly take place between February 15 and February 22, 1995, with an epilogue in June 1995. The second timeline is the story of Peter and Amanda, and takes place in Ridgefield between 1983 and 1994. The two historical timelines cover the period between 1592 and 1720 and from 1856 to 1876. This combination of fiction and facts is interesting and fascinating, lively and still believable.

Conclusion

An interesting, entertaining story and a cozy, enjoyable read, not only for booklovers.

The Christmas Bookshop – Jenny Colgan

AuthorJenny Colgan
PublisherLittle, Brown Book Group
Date1 November 2022
EditionPaperback
Pages355
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0751584226

“Every time the bell dinged, Mr. McCredie would glance up in wonder and surprise, and Carmen would smile secretly to herself and make sure the lovely books were somewhere adults could pick them up and admire them.” (Quotation page 77)

Content

When her mother calls her in August, asking if she will come home for Christmas, Carmen June Hogan, nearly thirty years old, definitely is not ready to discuss a family meeting in Edinburgh at her sister’s new house. There is a simple reason: while her older sister Sofia is a successful lawyer, married, pregnant with her forth child, Carmen still works in the local department store, and compared to Sofia she always feels low. However, just three days later everything has changed, the store is going to close forever and Carmen has lost her job. Sofia of all people has found a new job for Carmen. Edinburgh is busy and shimmering in November, with every shop preparing for Christmas time. All shops but one: an ancient bookshop, owned by eccentric old Mr. McCredie. Without a Christmas miracle, he will lose the shop by January. Could it be Carmen to make this miracle come true and save the bookshop?

Theme and Genre

This Christmas novel is about family, friendship, love, and the charming, vivid Victoria Street in the Old Town of Edinburgh, with colorful shops preparing for the Christmas season and a scent of cinnamon on the air.

Characters

The characters are empathetically developed, their thoughts and acting believable and they all are likeable and entertaining.

Plot and Writing

The story takes place during November and December in Edinburgh and is chronologically told. Especially the everyday chaos and confusion with Carmen and the bookshop in the heart of the events, her ideas and first achievements, but also the cohesion of all shop-owners, visitors and clients are atmospheric and very entertaining to read. At this special time of the year, there is also some magic in the air, which might be useful and needed. I have read novels of Jenny Colgan before and she is one of my favorite authors, when I want cozy, delightful and very British, but this one was going to be my favorite from the very first page.

Conclusion

A perfect, enjoyable Christmas-read, heart-warming, funny and romantic.

The Paris Bookseller – Kerri Maher

AuthorKerri Maher
PublisherReview
Date11 January 2022
EditionKindle
Pages318 (print-Version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB097GF2B38
ISBN-13978-1472290786

“What if instead of a French shop in America, I open an American shop here in Paris? There seems to be a hunger here to read more works in the original language and no shop or library to supply them.” (Quotation page 28)

Content

Opening her own English bookshop in Paris, Sylvia Beach has made her dream come true. Together with Adrienne Monnier’s well known French bookshop, this literary cluster at rue de l’Odéon soon is highly acclaimed, well-known and almost daily visited by young and famous French and American writers of the 1920s and 1930s in a bohemian, sparkling Paris. When James Joyce tells her that his avant-garde novel Ulysses is officially banned and forbidden in America, before it even was published, she just has to do something, because she is absolutely convinced that readers could not be deprived of the possibility to read this innovative novel. There could be only one solution and she is ready to accept the challenge and risk everything.

Theme and Genre

This novel about Sylvia Beach, her friends and these exciting years between the two world wars in Paris is a very well balanced mixture between researched facts and fiction. It is about well-known bookshops, literature, artists, especially writers, but also about publishing, friendship, family and love.

Characters

Most characters are real and described in a vivid way, always based on reality.

Plot and Writing

The author tells the story of Sylvia Beach and her famous bookshop “Shakespeare and Company” during the most important years between 1917 and 1936, as these years are the years where Sylvia’s life as a bookseller and publisher takes place. This marvelous journey through literature, love and friendship is told from Sylvia’s point of view, but in the third-person-form, which made it possible to share not only Sylvia’s story, emotions and opinion, but add many other details that made the picture complete. Mostly written during the two years of the Covid pandemic, when libraries, publishing houses and bookstores with engaged staff made online events and information possible, this novel once again reveals the magic of books and reading.

Conclusion

A gripping, interesting, lively story about a famous bookshop, literature, artists und confident, modern women, set in the bohemian metropole Paris during the roaring twenties.

The Winter House – Judith Lennox

AuthorJudith Lennox
PublisherReview
Date9 April 2015
EditionKindle
Pages602 (print edition)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB00URUOT6O

Zitat Text

Content

Robin, Helen and Maia are childhood-friends. Yet, they want different things from life. The three of them have to learn during these years during the twenties and thirties of the last century in England, that it is almost impossible for women to lead an independent life, as different there own choices might be. However, they do not know, that the years still to come will ask them decisions that might cost their souls, their self-esteem and probably the most precious thing, their life.

Theme and Genre

This novel tales place in England between the two World Wars and is about growing up in a time far away from gender equality. Main topics are friendship, dreams for the future, love, loss and important decisions.

Characters

A different choice of main characters, very well developed, maybe not always believable and sometimes quite annoying in their behavior.

Plot and Writing

The story is told in four parts, each part leading over a certain period of the years between 1918 and 1938. We follow the main characters in alternating chapters, but without interruptions of a linear storyline. Open questions and own reflections during reading about missing gaps are solved near the end of the story. The language is enjoyable to read and gives a vivid picture of life in the period in which the novel takes place.

Conclusion

A gripping story about three women, growing up in rural England in the years between the two World Wars, searching for a place for their dreams and hopes in a world still dominated by men.

Summer on the Little Cornish Isles – Phillippa Ashley

AuthorPhillippa Ashley
PublisherAvon Fiction
Date18 August 2018
Editionpaperback
Pages400
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0008253417

“It was such a lovely name; so evocative and catchy. Who could possibly resist popping into a place called ‘The Starfish Studio’?” (Quotation pos. 68)

Content

The moment Poppy McGregor sees the gallery “The Starfish Studio” for the first time during a holiday week with her boyfriend Dan at the Isles of Scilly; she immediately falls in love because it reminds her of her dreams to one day run a gallery. Now, three years later, Poppy and Dan are taking on the almost closed Starfish Studio on St. Piran´s, just the now it I is only Polly moving to the small island, because Dan has left her just one week ago and is now going to live with Eve. Poppy still is determined to re-open The Starfish Studio, making it successful again. The owner’s grandson, the charismatic, famous nature photographer Jake Pendower, soon is a reliable friend, but he has lost his fiancée four years ago and still mourning and Poppy is sure there never could be more, or could there?

Theme and Genre

A romantic story about art, family, loss, love and new beginnings

Characters

The characters are well drawn and likeable, and who would not love Leo, the headstrong cat.

Plot and Writing

The story is settled on the Isles of Scilly, although St. Piran’s and most of the local places exist only in the author’s imagination, and the storyline is told chronologically. The plot of the novel is an entertaining mixture between funny and thought provoking. The language is enjoyable to read.

Conclusion

A funny, romantic feel-good story, a perfect read to bring summer in your thoughts.  

The Last Library – Freya Sampson

AuthorFreya Sampson
PublisherZaffre
Date19 August 2021
EditionKindle
Pages302 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB092S7S43D

„What these management consultants with their calculators and spreadsheets will never work out is that the library is about so much more than simply books. Libraries are like a net, there to catch those of us in danger of falling through the cracks.” (Quotation page 76)

Content

Beverly Jones had been the librarian of Chalcot Library and her daughter June was always found immersed in a book. Since ten years June herself works as a Library Assistant works at. She loves her work and the small little village Chalcot, but eight years ago, her mum has died and she still is missing her so much. Now June’s live is quiet, surrounded by books and her cat Alan Bennett, pretending to be happy alone with her memories. When it comes to the council’s announcement that there are six libraries to be closed in the county and Chalcot is one of them, June is asked to join the FOCL – Friends of Chalcot Library protest group, to start a campaign to save the library that means so much to everybody. But will she be able to finally make a step forward and open to real life?

Theme and Genre

This story is about loss, friendship, family and love. An important topic is life in small villages, caring about the needs of the inhabitants when investors in search for maximum profit are waiting who would change everything. Most of all it is about books, reading and the magic of libraries.

Characters

The different characters are likeable, a bit old-fashioned and sometimes quite funny with their tics. June is very shy, always trying to hide somewhere in the back, hoping to be overseen. But she cares a lot about the regulars coming to the library, offering much more than just perfect book recommendations.

Plot and Writing

The very-well-written story takes place during summer and early autumn and is told in a third person narrative perspective with June Jones as main character. It is a romantic, heartwarming plot that gets depth with themes like the social role of public spaces such as a library in small communities, politics, missing funds and personal courage.

Conclusion

An enjoyable, uplifting read – not only for booklovers.

Another Country – James Baldwin

AuthorJames Baldwin
PublisherPenguin Classics
Date11 September 2001
EditionPaperback
Pages448
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0141186375

 “People don’t have any mercy. They tear you limb from limb, in the name of love. Then, when you’re dead, when they’ve killed you by what they made you go through, they say you didn’t have any character.” (Quotation page 261)

Content

Rufus Scott is a musician and the evening he meets Leona, he plays a gig in one of the new Harlem spots. It was meant to be just one night, but soon they move in together, Rufus, charming, but also violent and full of hate, black, and the white lady from the South. Now, seven months later, Rufus is broken and lost and for him there is just one step forward left. Then things restart, but in a different setting, as Vivaldo, Rufus’s best friend, and Ida, the younger sister of Rufus, fall in love. Vivaldo, an Irish-Italian writer, as well as his friends, the now successful writer Richard and his wife Cass, are white New York Bohemians, having been friends of Rufus too, as well as Eric, a young actor, who is now comng back from Paris.

Theme and Genre

“Another Country” was written between 1956 and 1961 and is a famous, timeless classic novel about racism, discrimination, the life of Black people in the white American society of the vivid city New York in the fifties. It is about music, love, dreams, hope, destructive relationships, sexuality and gender, betrayal and hate.

Characters

Rufus, one of the main characters, carries the first chapter of the story and disappears, but now comes Ida, his younger sister. There is a bit of brilliant, violent, charming and self-destructive Rufus in every main character of this novel: Vivaldo, Ida, Richard, Cass and Eric. They all are looking for changes, trying to find out who they are and who they could be.

Plot and Writing

The novel is told in three main parts, with different characters in the center of the events. Book One, Easy Rider, moves between darkness, rage and philosophy. It starts with Rufus, who comes to meet his friend Vivaldo, but as they speak about what had happened, we learn from their memories and flashbacks what had happened and led to the present situation. The second book shows a profound situation of American life in that time. “And each man or woman that passed seemed also to be carrying some intolerable burden; their private lives screamed from their hot and discontented faces.” (Quotation page 265). In this Book Two, Any Day Now, we learn more about the actual situation and life of Vivaldo, Ida, Richard, Cass and Eric. Book Three is about decisions, possible future solutions, but lets us readers to think about it, offering only the possibility of changes. The powerful language is everything between realistic, clear, compassionate and profoundly touching.

Conclusion

A powerful, timeless classic novel, beautifully written.

History of Wolves – Emily Fridlund

AuthorEmily Fridlund
Publisher W&N
Date22 February 2018
EditionPaperback
Pages288
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13‎978-1474602969

“Maybe if I’d been someone else I’d see it differently. But isn’t that the crux of the problem? Wouldn’t we all act differently if we were someone else?” (Quotation pos. 1939)

Content

Madelaine Furston, called Linda, grows up in a small cabin at a lake somewhere in the rural woods of northern Minnesota. Her parents, old hippies, treat her like an adult person, letting her make her own decisions and ideas about live. In school, they call her “freak”.

When she is fourteen, almost fifteen years old, everything changes. Across the lake, which is very narrow at this point, one late winter day a family from the city with a small child arrives at their new summerhouse. The father soon leaves but the mother and the little boy stay. Linda begins to visit and soon she is Paul’s babysitter and feels like a girl friend to his twentysix years old mother Patra. She seems to have found a happy family who cares. Linda feels that something changes when Patra’s husband Leo, a Christian Scientist, returns, but she could not explain what was wrong because Patra and Leo are still exceptionally friendly, making it easy to assume that they are happy and everything is fine.

Theme and Genre

This novel, shortlisted for the 2017 Man Booker Prize, is about the difference between a truth that you create for yourself and desperately want to believe, and a reality where you should act. Important topics are outsiders, family, growing up in the lonely nature, and the strong influence of religion.

Characters

The characters of this story are not always likeable and understandable in their behavior and thinking. Linda, who is trying to find out if she is still just a kid, longing for a real family, or a teenage girl with all her worries, trying too hard to be an adult. As an outsider, she is interested in the lives of other outsiders, pretending to understand what happiness in their lives or just making things up.

Plot and Writing

Madelaine “Linda”, now thirtyseven years old, tells the story of her childhood and youth as the first person narrator. Not always chronological, her memories switch between years and ages, persons, incidents, and some events that happened, and this leaves us readers with some loose ends and implausibilities. Delightful to read are the poetical descriptions of the nature, the lakes and woods, but tough, sad and sometimes depressing, when it comes to the dreams, invented stories and real living conditions of the female main characters.

Conclusion

An interesting, but not always plausible coming-of-age-story, a demanding read with only partly coherent figures, leaving the reader with some open questions.

Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin

AuthorJames Baldwin
PublisherPenguin Classics
Date2 August 2007
EditionPaperback
Pages160
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0141032948

„It became, in a way, every room I had ever been in and every room I find myself hereafter will remind me of Giovanni’s room.” (Quotation page 76)  

Content

David’s mother dies when he is only five years old and he grows up with his father and his aunt Ellen, the unmarried sister of his father. As soon as possible, he leaves and lives on his own. When he feels weary of every part of his life in New York, he moves to Paris, where he meets Hella. When he asks her to marry him, she leaves him, travels to Spain to think about her future. David stays in Paris. One evening he meets the bartender Giovanni, and from the first moment, there is a deep attraction between them. Giovanni lives in a small one-room-apartment and David moves in the same evening. When Hella comes back, David leaves Giovanni on that same day, pretending that this love affair never has happened.

Theme and Genre

This novel, written 1956, is about living between truth and lies, bisexuality, love, lost innocence, shame and guilt. An important topic for Baldwin’s persons is their search for their sexual identity and the related insecurity.

Characters

David, the young American, hides his feelings for men and feels sure about Hella, wants to marry, settle down and have children. His life is a perfect vision, created for the others, but a vision, he desperately tries to believe to be true. He knows that Hella will probably come back.

Giovanni is Italian, emotional and lives his feelings. That David, whom he trusts and loves, just leaves without a word destroys him.

Plot and Writing

David, the first person narrator tells the story during one night, and thinking about the next day, just in the present time. The first pages contain the whole story, revealing the major points, themes and conflict. Doing so, the author is free of any timeline and suspense level. The story moves between memories and significant events in David’s childhood, teenage years, and his years in Paris, and the hours of the present night and morning. A central point of the story is Guilleaume’s bar, a place for bohemians living their sexual diversity. Baldwin uses the scenes to describe a different live, working or without work at daytime, but waiting for the evenings and living during the night. He shows a very special picture of early Parisian mornings and the locations still open or just opening, for example the famous Les Halles.

Conclusion

Not always highly acclaimed by literary critics, this novel for a long time now is a timeless classic. Written with empathy and sensivity, in a poetic narrative language, the story gives many questions to reflect on them, about human life, decisions, possible guilt and fate.

The Forgotten Letters of Esther Durrant – Kayte Nunn

AuthorKayte Nunn
PublisherOrion
Date6 February 2020
EditionPaperback
Pages384
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1409190561

“’Ex tenebris lux’, she read, running her fingers over the words. From the darkness into the light.” (Quotation page 356)

Content

When John Durrant takes his wife Esther on holiday in November 1951, she has to leave her son Teddy behind with his nanny and wonders, why they are visiting Cornwall and the rough, far away Isles of Scilly at this time of the year. At Embers Island, they meet Dr. Richard Creswell, an old friend of John, a psychiatrist with modern ideas about curing mental illnesses. But they did not come just for a visit; John leaves Esther in custody at the asylum, hoping that she might recover from her severe depression.

In spring 2018, her new research contract takes Rachel Parker, a thirty-five years old Australian research scientist, specialized on giant clams, from the South Pacific to the Scilly Isles, to study a special clam, Venus verrucosa. When she comes into a wild, raging storm, she is saved by Leah, an artist who lives at Little Embers. In an old suitcase, Rachel discovers six envelopes with touching love letters, all stamped but unsent, and with a name and address on it. She just wants to know, could she still find the recipient?

Theme and Genre

This novel, settled in the wild, beautiful nature surroundings of the Scilly Isles, is about traumas, traditional mental asylums, fate, family, but most of all it is about love.

Characters

We meet three very different women, Esther, Leah and Rachel, each one special and strong in her own way. Also the other characters are very well developed, realistic, believable and likeable.

Plot and Writing

The plot is told in two different alternating storylines, the first is about Esther’s life from November 1951 to spring 1952, the second story takes place in spring 2018. Memories that Esther shares with her granddaughter Eve, as they prepare Esther’s biography together, fill in about the years between. Impressing, vivid descriptions of the beautiful, outstanding nature complete the exciting storyline.

Conclusion

Romance, love and a gripping story, the outstanding surroundings and stunning seascapes of the Isles of Scilly, together with serious topics to think about and reflect, make this novel an interesting, impressive, uplifting, enjoyable read.

Covent Garden in the Snow – Jules Wake

AuthorJules Wake
PublisherOne More Chapter
Date20 October 2017
EditionKindle
Pages481 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB06XRFWHRZ

“From the end of November onwards, stepping out into Covent Garden is magical and as soon as December first hits, it’s positively enchanting.” (Citation page 167)

Content

Mathilde „Tilly“ Hunter loves her work as a make-up artist at London Metropolitan Opera and she is very talented and really qualified for her job.  But to get the career advancement she is hoping for, she needs to be familiar with modern technologies and computers und the new smart, attractive IT director Marcus Walker, who does not feel the vivid magic of the theatre world, has to train her. How could they work together successfully, when Tilly is just joking about her definitely missing computer-gen and for her the old card system is still perfect enough to manage the inventory? Then her life is near to shattering and she has to grow up, open her eyes to her problems and take things seriously.

Theme and Genre

This romantic Christmas novel is about family, friendship, love and life, and about beautiful London during Christmas time when Covent Garden, smelling of cinnamon and mulled wine, if full of lights and joy. An important theme is working with a leading opera company, opera, ballet, artists and the support team behind any performance on stage.  

Characters

The characters are well described, loveable and understandable, and the development of artistic, sassy, but always caring Tilly makes her even more likeable.

Plot and Writing

Tilly, the first-person narrator, tells the story. It takes place in London in the weeks before Christmas. The beautiful, festive atmosphere with snow slowly covering London, as well as the buzzling flair of theatre performances, are described in such a colorful and lively way that, while reading, the related pictures and feeling spring immediately to mind. The mixture between thoughtful and funny scenes guaranties pleasurable reading.

Conclusion

A funny, interesting and heartwarming Christmas story, the perfect read for a relaxed festive season.

The Christmas Cookie Club – Ann Pearlman

AuthorAnn Pearlman
PublisherSimon & Schuster UK
Date18 March 2010
EditionKindle
Pages292 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13B007990B54

“And maybe love is, ultimately, the best we get. It doesn’t solve everything, but in spite of it all, it’s the most significant thing we have.” (Quotation pos. 3554)

Content

Since sixteen years they meet on the first Monday of December, twelve women, close friends, and members of the cookie club. Marnie is the head cookie bitch. Every member brings thirteen batches of homemade cookies, a dozen in every package, one for every member and one for the local hospice. They eat, drink, dance and celebrate together, sharing not only their cookies and recipes, but also their story, something important that had happened during the year and inspired their choice of this year’s prepared cookie.

Theme and Genre

This book is about cookies, different ingredients and lifelong experiences of falling in love, separating, family, children, disappointment, loss, sorrow, but also about new chances and hope. However, most of all it is about female friendship.

Characters

Twelve different, grown-up women and each one is special, believable and far from perfect. They care and support each other.

Plot and Writing

The story takes place for just one evening in Marnie´s house. Marnie is the first-person-narrator and she and the cookie club are like a frame, which includes the twelve chapters, each one for one member, her receipt, her story and information about one special baking ingredient. Therefore, we are reading kind of twelve different short stories, not one continuous storyline, which for me was different from what I expected.

Conclusion

A story including twelve different stories about lifelong female friendship, about personal destinies and this special yearly meeting of the cookie club. A quiet, thoughtful, but not really Christmassy book that could not completely grip and convince me.

Lifesaving for Beginners – Ciara Geraghty

AuthorCiara Geraghty
PublisherHodder & Stoughton
Date27 September 2012
EditionKindle edition
Pages465 (print version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB008HTQ34I

„Four months. That’s all it takes. Four months for everything to fall apart.” (Quotation Pos. 893)

Content

A brief moment of inattention of the truck driver, a deer on the road, two hitten cars, and after this first of June everything has changed. For Kat Kavanagh, the thirty-nine years old famous author, who publishes her crime novels under an alias, who was in one of the two cars, and whose friend Thomas told her that she were lucky. For Milo McIntyre, nine years old, whose Mam was in the other car and had no chance. Faith, Milo’s twenty-four years old sister, who still lives at home, does her best to look after Milo. One day in October, when she is searching for something in the attic, she finds old documents and a hidden family secret that again had changed and will change the life of the persons involved.

Theme and Genre

This novel is about lies, trust, loss and grief, but most of all about family, friendship, love, courage and hope.

Characters

We meet likeable characters, most of all Milo, but also Faith and Kat’s brother Ed, and a main character, I have disliked for the major part of the story: Kat, selfish, egoistic, cold and sunken into self-pity.

Plot and Writing

There are two main stories, alternately told by Kat or Milo, both first-person narrators, interspersed with some flashbacks. The plot is believable and a well-balanced mixture of romance, humor and substance with some interesting twists, until loose ends are tied together.

Conclusion

More than just another chick-lit novel, this is a delightful, cozy story with deepness.

The Lido – Libby Page

AuthorLibby Page
PublisherOrion
Date4 April 2019
EditionPaperback
Pages400
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-1409175223

“We shouldn’t stop fighting, and we shouldn’t stop enjoying it here.” (Quotation pos. 2292)

Content

Kate is twenty-six years old and has recently moved to Brixton. She is a journalist for the Brixton Chronicle, longing for a real good story to advance her career. When she is asked to investigate and write a story about the local lido, open since 1937, and “Paradise Living”, a property company who wants to buy it and turn it into a private members gym area, she sees her chance. But she had no idea, how much meeting eighty-six years old Rosemary Peterson and her friends, and the campaign they would start together to save the lido, would also change her own life.

Theme and Genre

A feel-good novel about friendship, love, community spirit and solidarity, swimming and, of course, the lido, the outdoor swimming pool in Brixton, South London.

Characters

Rosemary has lived all her live in Brixton, it was here where she has met George, her husband and the lido with the happy memories of a lifetime now is all left for her, after George has died. Kate has always felt more comfortable with books than in real life. Apart from her job, she lives a lonely live in London, until she meets Rosemary. The characters we meet in the story are believable, witty and charming.

Plot and Writing

The story starts during springtime and time is short, because the lido is to be closed and turned in a private members property. Reading, we find us in the middle of the community and the campaign, hoping, that somehow there will be a solution to save the lido. We also learn about Rosemary’s youth and a long gone past, her life with George, many years of early morning swims in this lido and walks through the adjacent park. A fox on his way through the streets of Brixton in search for food leftovers shows the other side of the area, the poor and homeless. The story and the characters are fictitious, but Brockwell Lido and its history is real.

Conclusion

An enjoyable, uplifting read about the values of a community, about friendship, family and love. Full of vibrant and colorful descriptions, of charming, loveable characters, this novel is perfect to get lost in the story and summer dreams.

A Child’s Christmas in Wales – Dylan Thomas

AuthorDylan Thomas
IllustratorTrina Schart Hyman
PublisherHoliday House
Date17 October 2017
EditionHardcover
Pages48
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-13978-0823438709

“It was always snowing at Christmas. December, in my memory, is white as Lapland, though there were no reindeers.” (Citation page 8)

Content, Theme and Genre

The well-known Welsh poet Dylan Thomas writes about the traditional Christmas days of his childhood with the family celebrating together and the fun children had.

This is a book about Christmas that makes grown-ups dream and still will be enjoyed by children of any age. The illustrations by Trina Schart Hyman make this book a delightful gem, to be read every year again and again.

Conclusion

A beautifully illustrated story about the joy of traditional Christmas days for readers of every age.

Still me – Jojo Moyes

AuthorJojo Moyes
PublisherPenguin Books
Date23 January 2018
EditionPaperback
LanguageEnglish
Pages480
ISBN-13978-0718183196

“I had started to understand New York a little bit more and, in return, it had started to accommodate me.” (Quotation page 88)

Content

Louisa Clark has arrived in New York and is now working as personal assistant to Mrs Gopnik, wife of multimillionaire Mr Leonard Gopnik. The new employment includes a small staff room in the famous building “The Lavery”, address Fifth Avenue. She is missing her family and boyfriend Sam back in the UK, but buzzling New York is waiting for her, with daily new experiences. Then she meets Josh and long-distance relationships are sometimes tough.

Theme and Genre

This third novel of the series about Lou Clark is settled in New York. Important topics are family, friendship, love, changes, new opportunities and choices to be made during lifetime. It is also about feeling at home in different countries.

Characters

Lou Clark, although almost thirty, still has not found out, who she really wants to be, and what she wants to do with her life. She tries to adjust herself to the needs of others, until unforeseen events completely confuse her life and raise her self-esteem, forcing her to think about her own hopes and wishes for the future.

Plot and Writing

The story is entertaining and includes exciting moments, especially when Lou begins to behave and act like an adult. There are also funny scenes, sad ones, interesting descriptions of New York and its very different lifestyles. The book is well written and enjoyable to read.

Conclusion

An entertaining, loveable story, especially for readers who have read the first two novels, Me Before You and After You. Personally, I really liked Me Before You, was quite disappointed about After You, but I like this third book of the series.F

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