[ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

  • From: "CJ & AA MAY" <chrisalis.may@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 1 Jul 2013 15:29:06 +0100

Ha ha, Trish! Indeed the resemblance to a certain pr8me minister is barely
disguised in Ghost. I nearly left it off my list as, although I enjoyed it
at the time, I think I have enjoyed other books by Robert Harris equally.

No, I haven't read the Kite Runner, but will add it to my ist - thank you.

Alison

 

 

From: ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Trish Talbot
Sent: 01 July 2013 14:02
To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

 

Alison,

You've got some great choices there!  Some of them were outsiders for my
list.  I did consider "Room", which I found fascinating funny and totally
gripping.  "Goodnight Mr. Tom" I absolutely love, and indeed, I've enjoyed
all the Michelle Magorian books I've read.  "The Help" is a classic!  It
makes you think about the racial inequality that was still going on in the
sixties in the deep south, and wonder how much things have really changed in
the present day.  "A Thousand Splendid Suns" is amazing, a very
thought-provoking book.  Have you read "The Kite Runner" by the same author?
I think "Splendid Suns" is slightly better, but "Kite runner" is still very
good.  "Ghost" is interesting, though not one of my favourites.  I just
can't imagine whom Harris modelled his prime minister character on, can you?


 

Trish.  

----- Original Message ----- 

From: CJ  <mailto:chrisalis.may@xxxxxxxxxx> & AA MAY 

To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 

Sent: Monday, July 01, 2013 1:10 PM

Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

 

It is amazing how many of my books reflect Elaine's own choices, so here I
go:

 

Goodnight Mister Tom by Michelle Magorian - not having lived through the war
myself, this book captures the atmosphere of that time and is indeed very
moving.

 

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel. I do enjoy historical fiction but her books are
amongst the few which portray Thomas Cromwell in a favourable light but as
well as the narrative, I really enjoyed the style of writing in both this
and the follow-up, Bring Up the Bodies.

 

The Ghost by Robert Harris. This was the first of this author's books which
I had read and I found it both refreshing but also liked the way it
portrayed modern-day politics.

 

Sea of poppies by Amitav Ghosh - fantastic book about the opium trade in
India in the 1800s, with interesting characters and well read.

 

Whiteout by Ken Follett - couldn't put this book down about a scientist's
son who steals a virus at Christmas.

But I could probably have chosen any of this author's books and said the
same!

 

The gargoyle by Andrew Davidson; a brilliantly written book containing some
beautiful love stories about a porno star who is horrendously burnt in a car
accident whose life is transformed by a supposedly schizophrenic lady
claiming to have known him 700 years!

 

Room by Emma Donahue;I thoroughly enjoyed this story about a girl who is
abducted and kept prisoner in a 12 by 12 room where she raises her child and
the story of how they cope when they escape. Multiple readers and told
through the eyes of (and in the voice of) the 5-year-old - fascinating!

 

Beauty by Raphael Selbourne; Really enjoyed this book about a young girl
brought up in a strict muslim Bangladeshi family who runs away to escape a
forced marriage. She is befriended by a thug, who breeds pitbulls and an
inadequate middle class man who gets off on internet sex but by the time she
returns to her family, she has touched many lives for the better.
Fascinating!

 

The Pet Cemetery by Stephen King - for me, probably one of his most scary
books.

 

A Thousand Splendid Suns by seini Khaled; One of my best reads last year. A
tale about a shoe-maker's 2 muslim wives in Carbul which gives a real
insight into the 30 years of violence in Afghanistan and the plight of women
during this period. 

 

The Help by Catherine Stockett;An excellent book telling the story of black
maids in Jackson, Mississippi during the year that Martin Luther King and
Kennedy were assassinated.

 

The boy in the striped pyjamas by John Boyne; a thought-provoking book which
dealt with a very dark topic without needing to resort to explicit details.

 

 

Too many? Sorry, just couldn't cut any out!

Alison

 

 

 

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