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Thursday 20th April 2017
”The Children Act” by Ian McEwan
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For the 16th March 2017 Book club , members had their own choice of either of these two books
The Tea Planter’s Wife a novel by Dinah Jefferies
or
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Thursday 16th February 2017
‘A Man called Ove’ by Fredrik Backman
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Thursday 19th January 2017
‘Days Without End’ by Sebastian Barry
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Some reviews of books read last year :
Marlay Guild I.C.A. Book Club April 2015
The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins
(reviewed by Mary McSweeney)
Rachel Watson, a hard drinking divorcee, is at first glance a conventional crime – fiction protagonist, but while Rachel, the main narrator of Paula Hawkin’s bestselling debut, The Girl on the Train, does turn into an amateur sleuth, she is anything but a cliched investigator.
Sliding into alcoholism in the wake of her divorce from Tom, Rachel is an idealist who creates a fantasy life for Scott and Megan, a married couple she spies on from her commuter train every morning.
The thing that gives Rachel’s fantasy a poignant turn is the fact that Scott and Megan live a few doors down from Rachel’s old home, where Tom, with whom Rachel remains obsessed, now lives with his new wife Anna, and their baby, a poignancy that is given a further twist by Megan’s own account of her life which is far from idyllic.
When Megan is reported missing, the police suspect Scott. This infuriates Rachel as she knows she could prove Scott’s innocence if only she could recall the details of the night Megan disappeared, which remain tantalisingly out of reach in the blur of an alcoholic blackout.
Paula Hawkins depicts the more sordid excesses of Rachel’s descent into alcoholism and self -delusion yet still manages to provide Rachel’s quest for truth and justice with a plausible motive.
It is a complex and increasingly chilling tale of courtesy of a number of first person narratives that will wrong – foot even the most experienced of crime fiction readers.
The Girl on the Train proved a very popular with the Club members overall though one or two members found it uncomfortable and indeed sad.
On March 12th we reviewed THE MINIATURIST by Jessie Burton
reviewed by Jean Hartin
Fascinated by Petronella Oortmann’s dollhouse which is on display in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam , the author created a fantasy tale to explain why so much effort would have gone into creating the dollhouse.
Set in late 17th century Amsterdam, The Minaturist gives a brilliant insight into Calvinist rule in this busy merchant city with its underlying culture of greed & hypocricy.
After an arranged marriage to wealthy merchant Johannes Brandt who is some 20 years her senior, 18 year old Nella arrives from her rural home to take up residence in Amsterdam. The household is presided over by Marin, Johannes’ frosty sister with two servants Cornelia & Otto, a former slave. It is a household with dangerous secrets.
Johannes is polite & respectful to Nella but shows no interest in consummating their relationship. He gives her a wedding gift of a beautiful cabinet replica of their home. She contacts a miniaturist to furnish the house but unsolicited items are also delivered. These items eerily mimic & foretell situations in the household.
When Johannes’ secret life is revealed, Nella behaves with extraordinary generosity & loyalty which did leave some of us a bit sceptical!
Overall, it was a wonderful read, beautifully descriptive with the feel of a good thriller
RATING average 3.6/ 5 ( 9 member ratings ranged from 2 to 4.5 )
Book Club Meeting February 18th 2015 reviewed by Jean Hartin
8 members attended, with apologies from 2 others
We reviewed NORA WEBSTER by Colm Toibin
It recounts the story of life in a rural town , Enniscorthy, in the early ‘60s as experienced by the recently widowed Nora Webster, mother of four children, as she journeys from being the wife of a popular schoolteacher, through her grief, to finally finding contentment in her independence. Along the way she returns to her former employment, takes an interest in union matters & finds solace in music.
Colm Toibin has revealed that while a large part of this book is autobiographical & written from memory, some is fictional, but he chooses not to reveal which parts. It tells a lot of what happened to his family when his father died when the author was still only 12 years old. He acknowledges that much of the character of Donal is based on himself. Like Donal, he developed a stammer when his father died & he became engrossed in a hobby – poetry, while Donal takes on photography as a hobby.
Nora didn’t allow concern for her children to get in the way of her efforts to establish an independent life for herself. This seems to reflect how Toibin viewed his own situation after his father died. Several years before Nora Webster was published, he wrote a short story called Donal Webster in which the adult Donal expresses his feelings of anger towards his mother but the author’s feelings mellowed over time before he completed Nora Webster.
This book is written in a restrained way, about an ordinary life with no great dramatic events. It prompted lots of discussion about the characters particularly Nora, the position of Irish women in the middle of the 20th century & the political landscape at that time.
It received mixed reviews with ratings ranging from 4/12 to 9/10
The Club met on 19 Jan and reviewed the books they read since their last Meeting in last November. The titles are THE IMMORTAL LIFE OF HENRIETTA LACKS by Rebecca Skloot
They agreed with the following appraisal that I found on the web by Amazon the book sellers:
Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. Born a poor black tobacco farmer, her cancer cells — taken without her knowledge — became a multimillion-dollar industry and one of the most important tools in medicine. Yet Henrietta’s family did not learn of her ‘immortality’ until more than twenty years after her death, with devastating consequences . Rebecca Skloot’s fascinating account is the story of the life, and afterlife, of one woman who changed the medical world foreve r. Balancing the beauty and drama of scientific discovery with dark questions about who owns the stuff our bodies are made of, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacksis an extraordinary journey in search of the soul and story of a real woman, whose cells live on today in all four corners of the world. It is a true story, harrowing, interesting and a must for anyone interest in medicine, medical research or ethics.
Our readers found this work hard to find in libraries because it can be classed under many headings. If you like medical/factual twist to your novels this is for you.
and about THE PARIS WIFE by Paula Mc Laheyin
If you are a fan of Jazz Age Paris (F. Scott Fitzgerald or Ernest Hemingway) This is a book you will enjoy. It opens a window on the type of life these privileged genius lead.
With both books the readers found that they were led into reading books in similar vain.
Books reviewed to date
Oct 16th 2014 BIRDSONG by Sebastian Faulks
Sept 18th 2014. THE GIRL WHO SAVED the KING of SWEDEN by Jonas Jonasson
Academy Street has been nominated for the Eason Book of the Year which is the pre-eminent category in the Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards 2014.
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MARCH MEETING
Five members attended on March 20th. and
reviewed The Spinning Heart by Donal Ryan.
Reviews were mixed
6 people rated it, ratings ranged from 2/10 to 7/10, averaging 5
FEBRUARY MEETING
We had a very enjoyable time reviewing The Light Between Oceans by M L Stedman. This book was a great read, received reviews from seven members: five gave 10/10, one 9.5 and one 9.
JANUARY 2014 MEETING
We had 8 members at Book Club last night, reviewing
The Husband’s Secret by Liane Moriarty
We marked out of 10 after a lively discussion, average 8.5
The book for next month is The Light Between Oceans by M L Stedman
Next meeting Thurs Feb 20th
NOVEMBER 2013 MEETING
Reading : Never Let Me Go, by Kazuo Ishiguoro for review on November 21st.
September/October 2013 Book Club Meeting:
Reading: “The Island” by Victoria Hislop
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