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February 04, 2012

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Comments

Ah, that's a nice surprise - even better second time round because I am not blushing so much. Thank you. Always happy to make you cry...

I like you're book it make me cry too.

Darn! What a swiz!
I ordered it as you suggested and it arrived completely unsigned!

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Books Read: 2012

  • David Levithan: The Lover's Dictionary: A Love Story in 185 Definitions

    David Levithan: The Lover's Dictionary: A Love Story in 185 Definitions
    A great idea and wonderfully done. I love stuff like this. (****)

  • Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex

    Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex
    Read this along with a dozen or so others as part of an online social reading experiment. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Didn't love it, but it was very good. (****)

  • Brian Aldiss: A Rude Awakening

    Brian Aldiss: A Rude Awakening
    The Horatio Stubbs trilogy ends on a rather grim note. A view of army life in Sumatra shortly after the Second World War. Humid, irritable and dangerous. (***)

  • Leo Benedictus: The Afterparty

    Leo Benedictus: The Afterparty
    Really pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed this. Always slightly put off when something is described as 'post-modern' but this was most decidedly not up its own arse. Intelligent and witty satire of celebrity culture. (****)

  • Richard Cowper: The Custodians

    Richard Cowper: The Custodians
    Four long stories, or four short novellas depending on how you look at them, from this 'forgotten' SF author. Three of them were outstanding and the other very good. Out of print but worth hunting down. (****)

  • Sjon: The Whispering Muse

    Sjon: The Whispering Muse
    More magical myth and fable from Iceland. Sjon always challenges the reader but he also always delivers. (****)

  • Margaret Atwood: The Blind Assassin

    Margaret Atwood: The Blind Assassin
    Read this with a few people at the same time and we documented our thoughts on here. Enjoyed it. Could have done without the aliens but otherwise rather splendid. (****)

  • Brian W Aldiss: A Soldier Erect

    Brian W Aldiss: A Soldier Erect
    Starts out as a continuation of Horatio Stubbs' sexual adventures but ends up as quite a dark and grim account of the Battle of Kohima. Some remarkable passages. (****)

  • Jen Campbell: Weird Things Customers Say in Bookshops

    Jen Campbell: Weird Things Customers Say in Bookshops
    One of those rare humour books that actually made me laugh out loud. Several times. (****)

  • Patrick Easter: The Watermen

    Patrick Easter: The Watermen
    God, this was a much more pleasant read than the Patrick O'Brian I attempted a few weeks back. A most entertaining 18th century adventure caper. (***)

  • Richard Cowper: The Road to Corlay

    Richard Cowper: The Road to Corlay
    A wonderful slab of 70s SF/Fantasy. In the year AD 3018, Britain has succumbed to floods and is now split into seven separate island kingdoms. The soldiers of the Church are hunting down member of a peaceful religious sect. Meanwhile, in the early 21st century, a scientist goes into a coma while undergoing a brain experiment. Somehow the two things are linked. Absolutely loved this, got completely wrapped up in it. (****)

  • Faiza Guene: Bar Balto

    Faiza Guene: Bar Balto
    The story of a murder narrated by the corpse along with all the suspects. Starts off with some real promise but the voices become less convincing as the book progresses and the ending is a terrible let down. (**)

  • Christopher Isherwood: A Single Man

    Christopher Isherwood: A Single Man
    A wonderful short novel. Rather fine. (****)

  • Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness

    Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness
    I honestly have no idea why this is considered a classic. A dull and plodding build up to one of the most anti-climactic endings in literature. A waste of time. (*)

  • Brian Aldiss: The Hand-Reared Boy

    Brian Aldiss: The Hand-Reared Boy
    Hugely controversial novel at the time due to its frank portrayal of young men's view of sex and still quite shocking today. Also, very funny and tragic. (****)

  • Valeria Luiselli: Faces in the Crowd

    Valeria Luiselli: Faces in the Crowd
    An excellent translation of a highly promising debut. Expect to read more of Luiselli, hopefully translated by Christina MacSweeney. (****)

  • Chris Priestley: Mister Creecher

    Chris Priestley: Mister Creecher
    A splendid reworking of the Frankenstein story with a remarkable twist at the end. (****)

  • Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games

    Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games
    I crammed this in a little over a day so that I finished it before seeing the movie. A great book, quite thrilling to read. (****)

  • Philip K. Dick: Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?

    Philip K. Dick: Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?
    Not his best work. Not bad, just not great. (***)

  • Miyuki Miyabe: The Devil's Whisper

    Miyuki Miyabe: The Devil's Whisper
    I liked the insight it gave into ordinary Japanese life but as a mystery novel it was far-fetched and easy to second guess. She has better books. Avoid this one. (***)

  • Chip Kidd: The Learners

    Chip Kidd: The Learners
    Worthy sequel to The Cheese Monkeys. No idea why these two books aren't more widely read. They are wonderful. This one is a lo-fi Mad Men. Oddly delightful. (****)

  • Justin Torres: We the Animals

    Justin Torres: We the Animals
    Started out with great promise but ended up annoying the fuck out of me. (**)

  • Helen Smith: Alison Wonderland

    Helen Smith: Alison Wonderland
    Completely bonkers detective novel cum anti-vivisection thriller cum unrequited love story cum road trip. Loved it. (****)

  • Maxime Chattam: Carnage

    Maxime Chattam: Carnage
    99-page crime novel set in Brooklyn but originally published in French. Brevity comes at a price but it cracks along at a decent page and is thoroughly enjoyable. (***)

  • Thomas E. Kennedy: Falling Sideways

    Thomas E. Kennedy: Falling Sideways
    A bit Borgen. A bit cold and distanced but I enjoyed it. (***)

  • Andrew Crumey: Sputnik Caledonia

    Andrew Crumey: Sputnik Caledonia
    Not quite as successful as Mobius Dick (a book I loved) but still full of more wit and invention than most of the supposedly exciting literary novels I get sent to review. I have no idea why Crumey isn't up there alongside David Mitchell as one of our most acclaimed British novelists. (****)

  • Mordecai Richler: Barney's Version: A Novel

    Mordecai Richler: Barney's Version: A Novel
    Very different to the film, which shifted time, some locations and conflated characters, but I managed to enjoy this without losing any of my admiration for the movie version. Which is quite something. (****)

Firestation Book Swap

  • CLICK HERE FOR DETAILS
    Our regular monthly gig in Windsor.

    Thursday 21st June at 7.45pm

    Joining us will be Shelley Harris, author of Jubilee, and Vanessa Gebbie, author of The Coward's Tale.

    Click the link above for more details.

Hidden Gems

  • Michael Kimball: Dear Everybody

    Michael Kimball: Dear Everybody
    A young man's life told through the fragments and papers he left behind following his death. Inventive and heartbreaking. (****)

  • : Easy Virtue

    Easy Virtue
    Incredible cast. Based on a Noel Coward play. Directed by the bloke who did Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Very funny indeed and Jessica Biel is a revelation. (****)

  • : Mutual Friends

    Mutual Friends
    A bit Feist. A bit Seeker Lover Keeper. A bit good. (****)

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    Dipping Into

    New Arrivals

    Coming Soon From The Friday Project

    Big Mouth at the Movies

    • : Run Lola Run

      Run Lola Run
      Watched this again for the first time since it was on in the cinema all those years ago. Still very good, if a bit dated. (****)

    • : Kung Fu Panda 2

      Kung Fu Panda 2
      It looked stunning but there were zero laughs, no sense of real danger (not even mild peril) or excitement. It was just sort of there, on the screen, playing itself out. On a more interesting note, it is the most successful film ever to have been directed by a woman. (**)

    • : Police Story

      Police Story
      Frenetic, and hardly the most subtle piece of film making ever, but great fun. (***)

    • : Yogi Bear

      Yogi Bear
      Quite possibly one of the worst films I have ever seen. (*)

    • : Solomon Kane

      Solomon Kane
      Enjoyable action adventure but never quite makes it to amazing. (***)

    • : Soap

      Soap
      Weird but quite touching Danish drama about a woman who moves into a flat above a transsexual and the relationship that blossoms between them. (***)

    • : The Joneses

      The Joneses
      A great idea. Lacked any real emotional clout so struggles to be anything more than just OK. (***)

    Now Playing

    A Random Pick From My Shelves

    • Kenneth Robeson: Man of Bronze

      Kenneth Robeson: Man of Bronze
      The first in a cracking, if cheesy and dated, pulp series from the 30s. My dad read these when he was a teenager and I did the same. (****)

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