Monday 11 July 2016

What I've Been Reading Recently

Rivers Of London & Whispers Underground
Ben Aaronovitch
Rating: ***½ 
Being a fan of both urban fantasy and crime novels, I'm not sure why it's taken me so long to read Ben Aaronovitch's Rivers Of London series, but it took getting the books into stock at work to prod me into finally picking them up. They're far from perfect - at times the humour verges on the silly and puerile (I don't think, for instance, that the reader needs to always be told when Peter Grant, the protagonist, has an erection, and am also unsure why he apparently suffers from priapism more suited to a teenage boy), and they tread on some decidedly dodgy ground when it comes to race - but they're very readable, the combination of police procedural and magic being well handled and entertainingly written. 

Vinegar Girl
Anne Tyler
Rating: ***
Anne Tyler's take on the oft-adapted The Taming Of The Shrew is a fresh and witty approach to Shakespeare's classic comedy. Moving the action to suburban Baltimore (of course), her Kate is a cynical and unfulfilled young woman with a father trying to marry her off to his research assistant, so said assistant can get a green card. Avoiding the more unsavoury aspects of the original - most notably the wife beating - and replacing them with gentle family rom-com scenes makes Vinegar Girl* an enjoyable if not especially challenging read.
Modern Lovers
Emma Straub
Rating: ****
Modern Loversis a terrifically enjoyable comedy of manners set in Brooklyn following the fortunes of a group of friends from college who now find themselves with college-aged children of their own. Not a great deal happens, in the sense that nothing enormously dramatic occurs (well, apart from an arrest, a fire and a couple of breakdowns), but the characters are enormously engaging and I was very much invested in the journeys they all go on, separately and together. This would make a great beach read for anyone looking for smart, funny writing that's a cut above the usual summer bestsellers.

Life Moves Pretty Fast
Hadley Freeman
Rating: ****
Life Moves Pretty Fast is a collection of essays - always funny, often poignant - about the great teen movies of the 1980s: Dirty Dancing, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Pretty In Pink, etc. Subtitled 'The Lessons We Learned From Eighties Movies (And Why We Don't Learn Them From Movies Anymore)', each chapter looks at a different iconic film. From discussion with the stars, writers and directors, to personal anecdote, to looking at the changes to the Hollywood studio system that means such films couldn't be made now, Freeman dissects the movies that meant so much to her as a teen. My favourite chapter, predictably, was the one on Dirty Dancing, which focuses on the pro-choice message behind the film and ponders why abortion is a dirty word in mainstream movies today.

Scoot Over Skinny: The Fat Non-Fiction Anthology
ed. Donna Jarrell & Ira Sukrungruang
Rating: **

Oh, I had such high hopes for Scoot Over Skinny , which I picked up in a secondhand bookstore in Toronto last summer. An anthology of fat writers, writing about fat: it sounds great, right? Wrong. It started well and the first few essays, while not amazing, were pretty good. But then it went terribly wrong. The fat shame and fat hate included herein was depressing: there are pieces about bariatric surgery, about ‘hogging’ (a delightful practice wherein bros pick up, have sex with, and then shame fat women),  I suspect that actually many of the writers weren’t fat: David Sedaris is included, for one thing, and his piece about his sister, Amy, wearing a fat suit is just bizarre in its lack of relevance. The only thing that made me glad to read it was a superb essay by Sondra Solovay. “I cannot talk about fat politics without exploring race, sex, and other forms of discrimination…” she begins, before slaying with a completely on-point look at intersectionality and fat politics. I’ve made copies of this essay: the rest of the book will be swiftly donated.
The Woman In Cabin 10
Ruth Ware
Rating: **
I loved Ruth Ware's debut, In A Dark, Dark Wood, so had high hopes for The Woman In Cabin 10*. Unfortunately those high hopes weren't really met. Travel journalist Lo, traumatised by a violent break-in at home, leaps at the chance of reporting on the launch of a luxurious Scandinavian cruise. Stuck on the ship, with the wifi down ("teething problems"), the scene is set for a classic murder mystery. Sadly, despite the promising set-up, it all gets a bit overwrought and hysterical. Hinting at mental illness - a mention of past trauma here, a glimpse of medication there - has become a convenient short-cut to make your narrator both unreliable to the reader and to other characters, hence ramping up the tension as people refuse to believe what they say. Or so the theory goes, I suppose. Instead it comes across as lazy writing, and ableist to boot.

13 Minutes
Sarah Pinborough
Rating: ***½ 
13 Minutes* is an above-average psychological thriller for a YA audience which reminded me of Megan Abbott's books, if Abbott was from Lancashire instead of the USA. When Tasha, the most popular girl at school, is pulled from an icy river and revived, it begins a chain of events that lead to tragedy. Told through multiple first person narration - mainly Becca, Tasha's one-time best friend - but also Tasha herself, transcripts of counselling sessions, text messages and diary excerpts, the book slowly reveals its secrets, before pulling a bait-and-switch on the reader just when you think you have it all figured out.

The Fire Child
S K Tremayne
Rating: *
Warning, this review contains spoilers because this book is so bad I want to save you all from having to read it. As I said above in my review of The Woman In Cabin 10, I am seriously tired of lazy "is she mad/is it real?" plotting in psychological thrillers, and The Fire Childhas this in spades. The plot is ludicrous: woman is swept off her feet by a rich widow, marries him weeks later and is whisked to his palatial but past-its-best family home in an isolated valley in Cornwall. So far, so Du Maurier. Unfortunately, Tremayne is very much in the "tell, don't show" school of writing, so we are told that Rachel finds the house sinister, but not shown why that should be so. We're also told that she loves the house passionately (after a few weeks?) but again, not shown why. She constantly bangs on about wanting to 'heal' Jamie, her new stepson, but we're not shown any attempt from her to do so, apart from an ill-advised visit to a psychologist. As for her husband, events escalate ridiculously quickly - there's no sense of creeping menace, just BAM, he's a bad guy because we're told he is. All this and some shitty, lazy writing about poor areas of London (Rachel has 'escaped' from a 'terrible upbringing' being working class. It later transpires that some of it was pretty terrible, but the character talking about the escape doesn't know this at the time, it's literally just terrible because people wear high-vis vests and drink cheap larger). Truly, one of the worst books I've read in a while.

* These books were kindly provided by the publishers via NetGalley, in exchange for an honest review.

18 comments:

  1. Always love your book reviews. I hate it when I've long anticipated reading a book, only to find it has racist, ableist, etc. overtones (or even more direct than that, when a character spouts off such rhetoric and there are no consequences, or worse yet, it is played for laughs). I will look out for Modern Lovers.

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    1. Thanks! I was pleasantly surprised by Modern Lovers - some Amazon reviewers really didn't like it - but I think I was mostly just glad to have something that didn't wind me up, politically speaking!

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  2. Argh, I am just at the end of The Woman in Cabin 10, and read The (awful) Fire Child last week! In the middle I read "Dear Amy" by Helen Callaghan,, which I skipped big chunks of, but had figured out about a third of the way through. Three books with "mad" unreliable narrators, all equally disappointing.

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    1. I read Dear Amy last month and the combination of the 3 books in a short period of time - aaaah! It's becoming such a tired trope.

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  3. I love your book review style, Janet. I saw something about the Woman in Cabin 10 recently but didn't pick it up, so I'm glad I didn't.

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    1. Thanks! I sometimes worry that my reviews all fall into one of two camps - 'hated it cos it's problematic' or 'enjoyable' (like, how many times do I use that word?!)

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  4. Sounds like there were a few disappointments there... I've heard good things about the Hadley Freeman book but as I've seen apx 13 films in my whole life, it might not be my thing!

    Liz x
    Distract Me Now Please

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    1. Yeah I ended up skim reading the chapters on the films I hadn't seen, so not sure it'll be terribly interesting to you!

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  5. I really like the sound of Life Moves pretty fast, great concept. I've just read two books back to back with domestic violence in the background and another one about concentration camps, I need something different!

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    1. Isn't it weird how certain minor plot lines reoccur in reading? A couple of months ago it felt like every single book I picked up - from a diverse range of genres - had a rape sub-plot, which was not happy reading!

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  6. Life Moves Pretty Fast sounds right up my street, also intrigued by Modern Lovers because....Brooklyn ;-0 I am an Anne Tyler fan but haven't been especially chomping at the bit to read this one though I am intrigued by the whole series as a concept. x
    p.s. thanks again for my parcel!! :-D

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    1. I would really recommend Modern Lovers, maybe wait till Vinegar Girl is cheap in a charity shop though?!

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  7. I like your reviews- it feels like you weren't SO impressed with everything this month!

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  8. I've come back to recommend Lying in Wait by Liz Nugent - I loved it so much I read her first book (Unravelling Oliver) immediately after, which was equally excellent.

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    1. I've seen this on social media quite a lot these past couple of weeks - good to know it comes with a seal of approval!

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  9. I haven't read a single one of these AND I am out of books to read (well, besides some I don't care about reading) so here is my new must download list. Thank you! x

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    1. I've also just finished the first two books in Holly Bourne's Am I Normal Yet series and loved them. Intelligent, feminist YA - hells yeah!

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