Monday, March 17, 2008
Joanne Harris - The Lollipop Shoes
Three viewpoint characters, Yanne (Vianne from Chocolat), her daughter Annie (formerly Anouk) and the entrancing, amoral, identity-stealing Zozie de l'Alba, who has taken on the alluring magical mantle which Yanne has tried to cast off since leaving her old life. The other characters are varied and alive, from the property tycoon who wants to bring stability to Yanne, at the expense of adventure, to Annie's camera obsessed school friend who helps pinpoint Zozie's strangeness.
My 'grumpy rationalist' side refused to be entirely convinced by the magical signs, symbols and cantrips, but the writing is a sensual delight.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Khaled Hosseini - 1000 Splendid Suns
Hosseini's novel covers the miserable lives of two women in Afghanistan, covering the period before the arrival of communism, its overthrow, the jihad, the coming to power of the Taliban. It ends as the Taliban have been removed, and Laila and her childhood love, Tariq, reunited after many years, return to Kabul.
I found the book interesting for its social history, the information about the position of women, and the exploration of the relationship between the two central characters. Mariam the illegitimate child of a rich man from Herat,is married off to Rasheed, a bitter older man and the relationship becomes increasingly oppressive and violent as she fails to give him a child. Twenty years later Laila, the daughter of an educated couple in Kabul, who die in an explosion, becomes Rasheed's wife, in order to cover up her pregnancy by Tariq. The relationship between husband and wife turns sour after the birth of Laila's second child, a boy. Meanwhile the two women change from enemies to close friends.
I would have enjoyed the book much more if Rasheed had not been such an obnoxious individual. The personal violence becomes more horrifying than all the repression going on in the country.
Another aspect that I found unsatisfying is the shift in point of view from Mariam to Laila part of the way through the book. I would have liked to follow Mariam more closely during the intervening years before she and Laila are thrown together.
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Catherine Edmunds - wormwood, earth and honey
Starting from the everyday, these poems turn playfully surreal or dangerous and dark. From formal sonnet and sestina to free verse, her use of language is subtle and skilful. I find more in them with each reading.
sixty cows grazing on skinburness marsh
scotland the brave
scotland the bonny
scotland the only five miles away
what do you reckon, girls?
give it a go?
and then as one
they took to the waters
they swam and they swam and they swam and they swam
across the solway firth to the land of annan
ah, the bravery
the sense of adventure
the foolhardiness of cows
five died during the crossing
and several embarrassed themselves
by becoming stranded on sinking mudflats
where kindly firefighters and coastguards
came to their rescue
farmer bowe
has farmed at silloth
for more than forty years
and is
surprised
cattle have grazed on skinburness marsh
for hundreds of years
but this has never happened before
to the best of his knowledge
he will make the trip over the border
and bring his girls back home
he thinks they were spooked by military aircraft
but I wonder
I wonder
maybe they tired of the marshes of silloth
maybe they thought
the grass looks greener and we will away
(singing) speed bonny cow
like a pig on the wing
over the sea to annan
will their milk now have a richness, a wildness
a knowledge of all that might be?
a memory of endeavour, of courage, of strength
of bovine possibility?
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Summer People - Marge Piercy
The book is told from several different points of view, and the chapter headings are simply the name of the PoV person. This annoys me on occasions, especially when it shifts to Susan, the least sympathetic character of the three, and the one who exposes the fault lines in the three-way relationship. She longs for the glitz of New York, as represented by Tyrone the tycoon, one of the 'summer people' of the title.
The them of Jewish identity is explored in the relationship between Dinah and her flute-player lover Iztak.
I may have been aware of more problems in the book than when I first read it about 15 years ago, but I still enjoyed it.