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Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Shut Eye by Belinda Bauer

DCI John Marvel wants to be promoted but he hates the new task his supervisor has given him. Marvel is given the unenviable task of finding his boss' wife's missing poodle. 

The humor of this scene contrasts with the grim details of two other missing cases--that of a male toddler, Daniel, and an twelve-year-old girl, Edie, who vanished in the same vicinity. 

Coincidentally, Anna Buck, the mother of the missing boy, and the supervisor's wife both consult the same "shut eye" or psychic. A natural skeptic, DCI John Marvel calls the "shut eye" a quack.

DCI Marvel is a stereotype who loves stereotypes yet he has a pure heart. He wants to find Edie more than anyone, even if it puts his career in jeopardy.

Ang, who works in a garage with Anna Buck's husband, is an illegal immigrant who tries yet fails to understand Western ways. Like the story cloth his mother made, Ang's tragic story is woven into the unusual events that occur in this novel. 


Belinda Bauer's debut novel Blacklands won a Gold Dagger award.

Friday, January 26, 2018

Virginia Woolf

"So long as you write what you wish to write, that is all that matters; and whether it matters for ages or only for hours, nobody can say."--Virginia Woolf

Thursday, January 18, 2018

The Albertine Prize

The Albertine Prize recognizes noteworthy Francophone fiction. 
http://www.albertine.com/

This year's contenders:
Angot, Christine. Incest.
Eduoard, Lewis. The End of Eddy.
Enard, Mathias. Compass.
Garreta, Anne. Not One Day.
Mabanckou, Alain. Black Moses. 



Safe House by Christophe Boltanski won the 2015 Prix Femina, another French literary award. 

Monday, January 15, 2018

Swimming Home by Deborah Levy


"You have to take a chance don't you? Its like crossing the road with your eyes shut...you don't know what's going to happen next." --Kitty Finch.

Nina decides that standing near Kitty "was like being near a cork that had just popped out of a bottle." Nina thinks Kitty is a wild, adventurous spirit.

Jurgen wants to marry Kitty; Madeleine Sheridan is afraid of Kitty and thinks she is "mad." Joe thinks she's depressed and a dangerous groupie.

Kitty, a botanist, is unlike any house guest he's ever met. She has stopped taking her medication and sees people walking through walls. 

Kitty is also beautiful with a habit of walking around sans clothes.

Kitty's poem, which she calls a conversation, is called "Swimming Home." In it, she calls the pool a "coffin" so its easy to surmise her intentions. 

Joe who pretends he hasn't read her poem does not want to accept consequences. He warns his daughter not to get in a car with her, but then, surprisingly, he takes Kitty out for drinks at the Negresco.

Maybe its her madness that make her vision clearer, like the fool in King Lear. She gives a spooky foreshadowing of events:


"I know what you're thinking. Life is only worth living because we hope it will get better  and we'll all get home safely. But you tried and you did not get home safely. You did not get home at all. That is why I'm here...I have come to France to save you from your thoughts."


Nothing is as it appears in this novel about two couples vacationing in France. Everything rings true, however. The characters are well-developed and the scenes are well crafted.

This startling novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker prize.  



Sunday, January 14, 2018

Skin

A horse's skin is seven times thicker than human skin.

Saturday, January 6, 2018

Hot Milk by Deborah Levy

Sophie takes her cracked laptop, where her unfinished doctoral thesis resides, with her to Almeria, Spain. She has a Master's degree in Anthropology so everything she sees and does is filtered through that lens. 

Sophie studies everything, including her mother, who is ill and looking for a cure at the Gomez clinic in Spain. 

More than once someone hints that Rose's illness is psychosomatic and that she had entrapped Sophie in her own destructive fantasies. 

Levy does a great job of making Sophie, who is at war with herself, accessible and likable. Though she is 25, Sophie remains child-like and dependent upon her mother. When she meets the irrepressible Ingrid Bauer, however, things begins to shift.

Ingrid is everything Sophie is not; she's bold and selfish. She carries a secret that changes Sophie's view of her. 

Sophie has been abandoned by her father at five, but it one climatic moment Sophie abandons her mother. 

This is a novel for reader's who like psychological, character-driven novels.

One question. Why is it called Hot Milk?



Monday, January 1, 2018

Down Among the Sticks and Bones

Jack and Jill's backstory, hinted at in Every Heat a Doorway, gets fully realized in Down Among the Sticks and Bones. 

Their parents, Chester and Serena Wolcott, had children for the most selfish of reasons. When the twins weren't what they expected, Chester assigned them stifling gender roles. One of them he dresses as a tomboy, Jill, while the other, Jacqueline, he dresses in finery. 

Unsurprisingly, what their father does has disastrous effects. When they reach the Moors, they reverse roles; Jack becomes self-sufficient and skilled in the sciences while Jill becomes the vain daughter of a vampire. 

This is the 2nd part of the Wayward children series. Though it lacks the spark of the first part, it offers a wonderful depiction of the Moors. 

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