More Books

Aug. 30th, 2010 05:26 pm
marjorie73: (Default)

Its not been a very exciting week - back at work, lots of rain, same old, same old.

So I decided it was time for another book-blogging post about my recent reading (Because, of course, you are all totally fascinated by my reading habits )

The Wrong Reflection by Gillian Bradshaw



This is a book which I first read about 5 years ago and which I keep coming back to. Sandra Murray is driving home one night and finds a car which has been driven into a ditch. She manages to pull the driver, Paul Anderson, out and give him mouth-to-mouth.

He wakes up in hospital with no idea of who he is, just a certainty that he is not Paul Anderson, and that he is afraid.

The truth about who he is, and how others react to him  is the basis of a thoughtful and intrigueing  science fiction thriller. The characters are well drawn and believable, and the book sets out some all too plausible scenarios.

It is difficult to go into further details without spoilers, but  this is well worth a try. Ms Bradshhaw has also written at leastr two other Science Fiction novels - 'Dangerous Notes' and 'The Somers Treatment', both of which are well worth reading, but she is better known for her hsitorical fiction.


The Floating Brothel by Sian Rees

The Floating Brothel is what you might call easy-reading - it is non-fiction, dealing with the 'Lady Julian', the first ship sent to carry female convicts to the then newly formed penal colony in New South Wales, in 1789.

The book gives some background, based on contemporary records and the memoirs of one of the ships crew of the womens lives, crimes, trials and eventual fates.

For me, my enjoyment of the book was marred by the author's habit of fictionalising those parts of the women's experience which is unrecorded. She is open about this being speculation, and I assume that it is intended to flesh out the bare bones of the story and make it more accessible, but I found it somewhat irritating!

Despite this, an interesting book about  an interesting period in history.

The Reformed Vampire Support Group by Catherine Jinks



Sticking with the Australian theme but on a much more light-hearted note, The Reformed Vampire Support Group is a YA novel, written in the 1st person by 'Nina' a Sydney teenager who, owing to a chance encounter with a vampire has been 15 for the last 37 years.

Unlike your typical fictional vampire, Nina and her fellow 'reformed vampires' are weak, vulnerbable and comitted to not biting anyone. They survive on a diet of Guinea Pigs and attend weekly meetings presided over by a local catholic priest.

When they find themselves faced with a vampire slayer, they have to try to track him down, in order to protect themselves, falling in with a werewolf as they go. Lightweight, fluffy fun, with an interesting twist on some of the normal vampire tropes. (And not a sparkle in sight, thankfully!)


Pastworld by Ian Beck

This is Mr Beck's first YA novel, and is set in the not-too-distant future, wherea chunk of Victorian London has been recreated as a giant theme park, complete with rookeries, criminals, Victorian laws and punishments for breaking them, and 'The Fantom', a Jack the Ripper figure who leaves residents in fear, and gives  'Gawkers' or tourists a vicarious thrill.


Eve, who had no idea her home was a theme park, runs away after learning hre presence may put her guardian in danger. Caleb Brown, a modern visitor, finds himself on the run and hiding from the law after his father is attacked and he is accused of murder, which, in Pastworld, is a hanging offence.

With characters including an Inspector Lestrade of Old Scotland Yard, there are nods to period fiction, and the author doesn't shy away from the harsher side of Victorian life - characters are cold, hungry,and vulnerable to disease and poverty. There are plenty of clues to allow the alert reader to work out Eve's secret, and to guess how things are going to end, well before she or the other characters get there, but for all that this is a fast paced book, and one which I suspect might well appeal to both boys and girls.


The Ask and the Answer by Patrick Ness


This is the second book of Ness's 'Chaos Walking' trilogy, and continues the story of Todd and Viola, starting immediately where the first book, 'The Knife of Never Letting Go' ended.



Todd finds he has not escaped the Mayor of Prentisstown, and both he and Viola have to contend with greater challenges, and more choices to make, never so simple as a choice between right and wrong, but between differing kinds of wrong.

The books raise all kinds of issues, about loyalty, courage, fundementalism, sexism and misogyny, exploitation and colonialism and compromised principal; not to mention addressing the areas between resistance and terrorism. Just like real people, most of the characters are neither wholly good, not wholly evil.

This is not an easy book to read; it makes you think. And it has no sense of safety, you cannot feel any confidence that things will work out alright in the end. In the first book, we saw that Todd's fathers were good men, and tried their best for him. But they died, and he is still in danger.

 Todd and Viola are both good people, neither wishing to harm anyone, but good intentions are no protection, and neither of them is able to remain entirely innocent.

As I said, not easy or simple books, but very, very good. At the end of 'The Ask and the Answer' we are again left on a knife-edge with a new danger looming and no doubt further hard choices and complex, nuanced issues to deal with. 'Monsters of Men', the final part of the trilogy, is just out, and I shall be reading that as soon as I can get hold of it, until  then, I shall wait, somewhat apprehensively.

marjorie73: (Default)
I just had the opportunity of watching the pilot episode of 'Pulse', a hospital horror drama written by Paul Cornell and featuring Claire Foy & Stephen Campbell-Moore, which will be broadcast on BBC3 soon - and which will potentially be picked up as a series.

 
The BBC Press release says
Pulse
St Timothy's is one of the UK's top teaching hospitals, home to some of the country's most promising trainee doctors. But beneath its veneer of medical normality lies a secret network of dangerous experiments pushing back the boundaries of science with potentially horrifying consequences in this one-off 60-minute medical horror drama written by Paul Cornell.

Hannah Carter's mother was a consultant at the hospital, but died suddenly a year ago. Grief left Hannah (Claire Foy) teetering on the edge, but following a year off, she's back to resume her training. But Hannah remains fragile, so when she starts glimpsing peculiar events in the hospital and unsettling behaviour from her ex-boyfriend and star surgeon Nick (Stephen Campbell Moore), she's unsure what to believe.

Ignoring the pleas of those around her, Hannah puts her sanity on the line to uncover the truth about the hospital
"
It's good. Bloody good.
 
 The opening scene, (which I hope I can forget if I ever need to go into hospital for an operation) gives viewers a glimpse of what is happening (although not how or why) - letting us know more than Hannah does: enough to make us fear for Hannah's safety as she begins to look into the anomalies she witnesses, and to realise what is happening.
 
 Hannah and the other characters are believable, and even in the confines of a single episode we see them start to develop in a realistic and believable way, and learn more about Hannah's past, without heavy-handed flashbacks or exposition.
 
There are some bloody moments, but this doesn't rely on blood for its horror.

 In short: Pulse is very well written, tightly plotted, and left me at the end, staring at the screen and saying "but I want to know what happens next.."
 
 I really hope the BBC commission a full series so I can find out. And you should definitely watch this when it airs.
 
You might not want to watch just before going into hospital, though.
 
marjorie73: (Default)
(First posted at http://margomusing.blogspot.com/)

I just finished reading Jenn Ashworth’s novel,‘A Kind of Intimacy’, and it’s a book which I think is going to stay with me.

The novel is told in the first person by Annie, whom we first meet as she moves, with her cat, Mr Tips, into her new home in Fleetwood, Lancashire, to start afresh following - what? A nasty divorce? An escape from an abusive relationship? A personal tragedy? At first, both to the reader, and to Annie’s unfortunate new neighbours, Annie appears naive, vulnerable, clearly clumsy (both socially and physically) but hopeful, and trying to better herself. She is not the most attractive character, but in her clumsy efforts to broaden her own horizons, and to move forward, she initially attracts sympathy, not fear.

As the story unfolds, we learn more about Annie’s past, and present, the dissonance between Annie’s interpretation of events, and the reader’s understanding of them becomes greater and more disturbing, but without Annie’s voice ever becoming lost, and without the reader ever completely losing a sense of her as a person.

The book has it’s darkly comic moments, and many more where all but the most self-confident reader will have an uncomfortable sense of familiarity.

A gripping, if not altogether comfortable read.

Full disclosure: I received this book free as a review copy, and I’d very glad I did, as I doubt I would have picked it out otherwise, which would have been my loss.

I recommend it. Read it. Just.... don't give t to that nice young womn who just moved in next door...

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