Category Archives: Book Review

Never Let Me Go (2005)

Kazuo Ishiguro and his family moved to England when he was 6 years old. He was educated in schools in England. He writes in English. You may read more about him in Wikipedia. He is probably best know for an earlier novel “Remains of the Day” which was made into a film with Anthony Hopkins.

My copy of “Never Let Me Go” was the paperback Vintage edition. I tell you this because I refer to page 81. If you know nothing about this novel (and I try to avoid spoilers) then you might not appreciate what is happening until you reach page 81 at which point the lightning strikes. After that the novel can seem many things: strange, creepy, grim, or quite possibly boring. Because I always try to give a book a fighting chance I plowed onward determinedly. Because the premise is so threatening I just had to find out what happens to the characters. At least be forewarned this much: do not expect fireworks. Finally for me the overwhelming emotion was sadness.

The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest (2007)

Stieg Larsson’s Millenium Triology was published after his untimely death at the age of 50 from a heart attack. Wikipedia has a discussion of his death and whether it was related to the fact that he lived under death threats for his work against right-wing extremism. His biography in Wikipedia shows him to be a man of action.

“The Girl Who Kicked” is number three in the trilogy and seems to me to be the least interesting of the three. It is largely procedural. It ties up some but not all of the details from the second book “The Girl Who Played With Fire”, thus leaving room for more installments which Larsson had planned and partially written. I read number three in a paperback purchased in England.

So far the Swedish filming of the first two books was well worth watching. Needless to say, if Sweden films the third novel, yours truly will be eager to watch it.

Cloud Atlas (2004)

“Cloud Atlas” is David Mitchell’s third novel. See Ghostwritten (1999) and Black Swan Green (2006). Much like “Ghostwritten” this fiction novel consists of several independent streams each of which has some connection with at least one other stream. Somewhat unusual is that one stream (chapter) (such as a conspiracy story about corruption and poor design relating to a nuclear reactor) ends suddenly in the middle of a sentence only to pick up several chapters later. Mitchell is a clever and somewhat trendy wordsmith. Scattered throughout are fun phrases such as “prostitute Barbie” and “Andrew Void-Webber”. In general he seems to be very pessimistic and cynical about human beings although he allows some happy endings.

I must admit that there was one (independent) chapter in the middle of the book that I did not have the energy to read. It is written in a heavy and strangely spelled dialect that seems to originate somewhere in the far south of the United States. I could be wrong. But I really enjoyed the rest of the novel. Don’t be put off by the first and last chapters (which are also the first and second parts of a story about missionaries taking advantage of natives) which are written in a somewhat older, archaic style.

“Ghostwritten” and “Cloud Atlas” have similar constructions. I never finished “number9dream” which did not appeal to me. “Black Swan Green” is more traditional in construction and is about a bullied young boy. Eventually I will get around to reading “The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet”.

The White Tiger (2008)

Aravind Adiga has written this novel (276 pages in paperback) in the first person of an Indian servant to a wealthy Indian. It won the Man Booker prize of 2008 (but don’t all published books these days win some prize ?). As such it is a witty or sarcastic criticism of many of the problems in India: poverty, corruption, class divisions, etc. The book pretends to be a succession of letters that “The White Tiger” (the name the protagonist assigns to himself) has written to the Premier of China to explain the unfortunate culture of India. If anything, the theme is that of an individual brain-washed into accepting his “inferiority” who fights to rid himself of that image. At times outrageous, funny, violent, call this merely an entertaining read.

Black Swan Green (2006)

We already reviewed David Mitchell’s first novel Ghostwritten (1999) in which we list his novels in order of date written.

After reading “Black Swan Green” I should probably re-read “Catcher in the Rye”. In Mitchell’s version, Jason Taylor is a 13 year old student living in Worcestershire, England. For a well-written review see the Wikipedia review. If there is a theme that stands out, it is Jason’s struggle to fit in with the crowd, made very difficult by the fact that he stutters and that he is bullied mercilessly. It doesn’t help that his parents don’t get along.

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2005)

From the book jacket:

Harriet Vanger, scion of one of Sweden’s wealthiest families, disappeared over forty years ago. All these years later, her aged uncle continues to seek the truth. He hires Mikael Blomkvist, a crusading journalist recently trapped by a libel conviction, to investigate. He is aided by the pierced and tattooed punk prodigy Lisbeth Salander. Together they tap into a vein of unfathomable iniquity and astonishing corruption.

Stieg Larsson has written a trilogy entitled “Millennium” whose three books in order are:

  • The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
  • The Girl Who Played With Fire
  • The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets’ Nest

My Vintage Books paperback edition is 644 pages long. Because the book is such a page-turner I devoured the book in a weekend. I was intent on reading the book before I watched the Danish film version.

Much of the narrative alternates often between the activities of Blomkvist and Salander, somewhat like ships in the night. Eventually they work closely together. Take “closely” to have two meanings because Blomkvist in the course of the novel sleeps with three different women.

Expect some graphic rape scenes, sadistic serial killings, and really nasty members of the Vanger clan. Also expect to have a lot of fun.

Initially I tried to maintain a written list of the many characters. Finally the novel itself provides a table of Vanger family members to which I often referred.

Ghostwritten (1999)

Currently (2010) David Mitchell is the “it” author. There have been many articles about him, especially one in the New York Times Sunday magazine section. He is said to have re-defined the novel. You can read about him in the Wikipedia article.

Mitchell’s novels are as follows:

  • Ghostwritten (1999)
  • number9dream (2001)
  • Cloud Atlas (2004)
  • Black Swan Green (2006)
  • The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet (2010)

If you like T.C. Boyle (especially his short stories), you will also enjoy David Mitchell.

Let me tempt you with “Ghostwritten”, his first novel. Each chapter is a somewhat self-contained short story, but not really. The chapters eventually wrap around to where they started. But the fun “trick” is that each chapter after the first contains within some sly reference back to the previous chapter. If you did not read that previous chapter carefully then you might just miss the reference in the succeeding chapter. I’ll give you a hint for chapter one, namely, “telephone call”.

To tempt you a bit more I’ll describe chapter one. All chapters are written in the first person as I recall. In chapter one the speaker is the Japanese cult fanatic who personally released the sarin gas in the Tokyo subway. In the entire chapter while he is fleeing the scene and hiding in some remote guest house he is ruminating about his cult under the leadership of someone always referred to as “His Serendipity”. He interprets each and every event in the unwavering context of someone so completely brain-washed that he is deceived about everything.

Mitchell has a clever and often witty way with words. I do worry that his choice of words may be trendy enough that his book might some day be outdated.

Some chapters are manic (think Thom Jones), but not all. There is a somewhat poignant chapter in which a brilliant woman scientist tries to retire to her beloved small Irish (Celtic) island in order to escape being forceably employed by the CIA. This chapter relates to a following chapter about a nighttime radio talk show in an astoundingly clever way.

The Pugilist At Rest (1993)

Pugilist 1 Pugilist 2 Pugilist 3

For background on the author Thom Jones see the Wikipedia article.

If you read nothing else from this set of short stories, you must read the short story entitled “The Pugilist At Rest” for which the book is named. The above photos are different views of a Roman copy of the Greek original “Pugilist At Rest” attributed to Apollonius which copy is found in the Palazzo Massimo, Rome, Italy.

It helps if you read each of Jones’ short stories quickly as if you were having a manic attack because that’s fairly close to the author’s reality. Note that he suffers from temporal lobe epilepsy and diabetes. As noted in the Wikipedia, he has two more collection of short stories: Cold Snap (1995) and Sonny Liston Was a Friend of Mine (1999).

I just finished “Cold Snap” and I assure you it is just as manic as “Pugilist”. There are some wild and very explicit sex scenes. There is a lot of drug use. Don’t say I didn’t warn you!

Enjoy the roller-coaster ride!

My Stroke of Insight (2009)

Jill Bolte Taylor, Ph.D wrote this New York Times bestseller after 8 years of recovery from a stroke. At the age of 37 she experienced an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) which accounts for only 2 percent of all hemorrhagic strokes. Prior to the stroke she was a trained and published neuroanatomist who was working in the Harvard Medical School Department of Psychiatry at McLean Hospital in Belmont. Among other tasks, she collected brains.

What makes this book unique is that as a trained neuroanatomist she was able to describe in minute and personal detail the experience of having such a stroke. She could literally watch her brain systems shut down, one by one. She was alone in her apartment when the stroke occurred. Just how she managed to call for help is a suspense short story in its own right.

Initially the book explains the science of the brain for the reader. It then covers the stroke experience. Following that it describes her treatment (and more importantly, her mistreatment) by hospital staff. From that experience she is able to offer suggestions for how to treat stroke victims. The hero in the story is her mother who immediately came to live with her and devised years of patient painstaking day-by-day care.

Despite the fact that the book is repetitive and preachy (the author is a bit full of herself), it offers a fascinating insight indeed into the horror of a stroke.

The Terracotta Dog (1996)

Andrea Camilleri is a Sicilian author who in fact writes in an Italian that has a sprinkling of Sicilian phrases and grammar that is sufficient enough to make it a real pain for yours truly to translate. He has created another famous detective Inspector Salvo Montalbano, a fractious Sicilian detective in the police force of Vigàta, an imaginary Sicilan town. Of course, the Mafia play a big role as does Sicilian cooking. You can read more about Andrea Camilleri in Wikipedia.

“The Terracotta Dog” is number 2 in a series of 16 Montalbano novels. The last two have not been translated into English. This is my first Montalbano and again I am hooked and will read more. In this particular novel in addition to a main plot, there are side episodes, discussion of food, sex scenes, and problems with personal relationships.