Friday, August 1, 2014

Her Brilliant Career by Rachel Cooke

A lovely evening, out in Cindy's productive garden, talking too loudly and probably disturbing the neighbours - Oh whoops we are the neighbours, that's ok then! 

The book is a short trot through the varied careers of 10 women of the 50's who managed by ambition, skill, chance, happen-chance and bravado to make a career for themselves in an era when having a career was unusual.  The women were as varied in career as they were personally, for a change the jobs they did were not the glamorous writers, actors and thinkers of the time, but gardener/plants-woman (Margery Fish), film producer (Betty Box), cookery writer (Patience Grey, more popular than Elizabeth Davis at the time), first woman judge (Rose Helibron), pilot and racing car driver (Sheila Van Damm) and her rotating partners Nancy Spain, journalist, Joan Werner Laurie founder of She magazine, archeologist (Jacqetta Hawkes) and last but definitely not least architect (Alison Smithson).  What we all noticed was in many cases the fact that children were definitely had but then quickly dispersed to boarding school, nanny or other carers ASAP.  The book was definitely a quick romp through their lives, although the notes were useful and informative.

With so many women we turned our discussion to their personalities and how they managed to achieve what they did.  Rose Helibron and Alison Smithson were interesting characters.  Alison in particular seems to have been a particularly determined and forthright person.  We discussed and compared the working lives of our mothers, most of whom HAD to give up work on marriage - and admired their determination in this era.  Our American member reflected on the difference between Britain still in the grip of austerity, rationing and belt tightening with the prosperity and burgeoning middle class life style in America at the time.

Words used to describe this book:  patchy, repetition, badly edited, waste of a good story, disheartening, interesting facts, doesn't do what it says on the tin

Marks out of 10:   between 5 & 8


Next Book

Grand Banks Cafe by Georges Simenon

(if you'd like to read the others by him Cindy suggested:  
Night of the Crossroad, The Yellow Dog)

Next Meeting

28th August at 115 Harbord St

Date for the diary

Juke Box Evening 13 August

Friday, June 27, 2014

Jerusalem the Golden by Margaret Drabble

Wonderful news, one of our book clubiees has had a baby!  Welcome to the world baby Jake and congratulations Simone.  So your book reading will be curtailed for a while!

I thought I'd put the book name and next meeting up and write the review later:
although here is an excellent one in  The Guardian

Next book

Her Brilliant Career by Rachel Cook

Next meeting

Thursday 31 July at 130 Harbord St

Monday, May 26, 2014

Smut by Alan Bennett

Two short tales by Alan Bennett, the first The Greening of Mrs Donaldson,  a recently widowed woman (perceived in this story at 55 to be old - to which many of us take exception) against her prudish daughter's wishes, continues with her work as an 'actor' of illnesses at the hospital for student doctors to practice their bedside interrogation.  Mrs Donaldson takes in student lodgers, who get behind in their rent and correct intuit that Mrs Donaldson might just be interested in watching them have sex - and she is.  There was something very odd about this story, it felt dated, the reactions of the protagonists were incorrect for people who live now, perhaps more appropriate for 40 years ago.  I felt that Mrs D was my grandmother - not me!

The second story - The Shielding of Mrs Forbes - again had a similar 'antiquated' feel about it; improbable in this day and age to think that a gay man would feel it necessary to marry to please his mother.  The 'little woman' attitude that the story took of his wife, the necessity of shielding Mrs Forbes, the man's mother from the knowledge that her son is gay, just didn't strike true, so much so that when Guy is being blackmailed, you just sort of think 'Oh for goodness sake, just tell everyone'!  The twist in the tale was humorously perverted though.

There is a review in the The Telegraph by Charles Moore which brilliantly outlines all that is wrong with these stories.  This doesn't take away from the funny lines, the sharp observation and casual cruelness that is part of everyday life, that Bennett writes about so well.  

Words used to describe them:  wry, witty, wisdom; beautiful turn of phrase and disturbing, fun, unlikely, confused, whimsical, Wildean, miserable, funny, precise, weirdly enjoyable, palpable pathos.

Marks out of 10:  between 5 and 9 with 7 people voting 8, so highly marked. 

Next Book

Next Meeting
26th June at 128 Harbord St
 


Friday, May 2, 2014

An Equal Music by Vikram Seth

Michael Holmes a violinist, recounts the recent love affair with the woman he loved and left after having a breakdown while studying in Vienna 10 years previously.  This is most definitely a musicians music book - the language and usage of complex musical themes to annotate and bring along the story is almost alienating of a non musical reader.  The relationship of Michael and Julia is bound together with their music and the instruments they play.  The story of her encroaching deafness, his incipient nervous breakdown and his relationship with the quartet that he plays most often with are almost incidental to the authors obvious interest in the music and the composers.  A number of us found the book difficult to read even if the language was beautiful.  The musical references too esoteric for most of us.

Words used to describe it:  loved the Trout, passion for music, too specialist, off key, musically indulgent, lyrical, musically elitist, passion for music not for people, uber intellectual
Marks out of 10:   between 5 and 8.5


Next Book
Smut by Alan Bennett

Next Meeting
Thursday 15th May
at
127 Harbord St

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Jumping the Queue by Mary Wesley

Firstly, thank you to Olivia for hosting what ended up being a rather large book club get together - I think the number of people who attend is directly related to the thickness of the book................. Thank goodness we hadn't eaten before arriving, the food was delicious with fabulous cupcakes...take note Rona your crown is wobbling!

The book had with a heroine that you can't really warm to, an implausible storyline it was not a difficult read, but was an uncomfortable read.    The main story line of a woman who has decided at the ancient? age of 50+ to end her life as her husband has died, her children no longer want to see her and her life is empty - who through a series of serendipitous events ends up with a man accused of matricide, finding out that her husband was not the man she thought - possible involvement in drugs, incest, and spying.  Her children ranging from a high class call girl, a drug using beautiful but cruel homosexual and a well intentioned married woman. The story was almost about how much is hidden in a life.  How people can intentionally not look to see what is going on to avoid difficult issues in life.  It generated an interesting discussion more on the treatment of animals and how much Matilda had poured her love into her relationships with her animals to avoid being hurt.  How she avoided the 'nasty' things in life - what her husband was, who her husband had turned into and the kind of people her children were.  Deftly written with a sly black humor we all like it.

Words used to describe it:  intriguing and unsentimental, blackly macabre, inspiring, implausible, masterful, blase, ambivalent, improbable, thought provoking.  Marks out of 10 - between 6 - 9, it actually scored quite highly most giving it 8.


Next Book
An Equal Music by Vikram Seth

Next Date
Wednesday 16th April at 117 Harbord St

A few dates for the diary - 
5th April Grand National
6th April Boat Race
15th May - next book club at 127 Harbord St


Friday, February 7, 2014

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt

A small book club gathering for a big book.  

I will admit now that I haven't finished the book - it was much longer than I anticipated (reading on a kindle hard to judge length, when you don't have the physical wedge of paper in front of you),  the final 3rd of the book wasn't discussed in much length.  Difficult to review in one short paragraph as the length of the book and the convolutions in the tale make it hard to precise but I will try.   

The book opens with a gripping epilogue as the main protagonist, Theo Decker,  sits in a Dutch hotel, scanning a Dutch newspaper, looking for mention of his name as he has murdered someone....the story then starts.  How did this happen?  Slowly through the narration:  starting with the death of his mother in a terrorist explosion at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, his survival, his theft of a piece of art The Goldfinch by Carel Fabritius on the instruction of a dying old man - the picture remains a totem throughout the book and the life that Theo lives as a consequence of the death of his mother.  I won't give a full precis of the story, but Donna Tartt's prosaic descriptions of the loneliness and isolation that the boy experiences, his wonderfully anarchic friend Boris, crystal clear prose with elegiac descriptions of scenery, people and situation are all beautifully evoked. One review I read mentioned that each third of the book was supposedly written in a different style: florid Dickensian, Kerouacian and sparse modern - but we didn't spot that!

The discussion about the book wasn't so much, I liked it, I didn't like it - we all liked aspects of the novel, some more than others.  The length of the book was a difficulty for many (which is why so many people didn't come to the meeting).  In this age of instant gratification and short attention span,  perhaps the concentration required to carry the storyline and characters and nuances of story in our minds is difficult, our busy lives intrude so much on our mind time.   Having said that we all enjoyed it, even though it wasn't an easy read.

Words used to describe it:   
too long, compellingly drawn characters, captivating storytelling, elegiac tome.  
Marks out of 10 between 6 and 8.5.

Next Book
Jumping the Queue by Mary Wesley (an easy read after this last one)
although we nearly chose
Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively

Next Meeting
Thursday 13th March
72 Kingwood Road
8.00pm

Monday, January 13, 2014

Nothing to Envy - Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick

Firstly welcome to our newest member Olivia, who has read all the books since August but been unable to make any of the meetings - until this one! 

Nothing to Envy - a factual narrative by the journalist Barbara Demick based on the stories and accounts from people she interviewed who managed to escape from North Korea and make a new life in South Korea.  The book illustrates and describes how the population of N Korea are completely insulated and cut off from the rest of the world, how they are inculcated into the 'cult' of the leader.  The utter control that  the state has over the lives of the people are well articulated and explained through the examples and lives of the people who Barbara interviewed.  The descriptions of the life that people live, how the state  has total dominance over every aspect of a persons life, from your level of school to who you may or may not marry.  The desecration of the society and the degradation of life with the mismanagement of the economy and the ensuing famine. 

The book generated an excellent discussion,  a number of us had heard on book of the week BBC Radio 4  - Escape from Camp 14 by Blaine Harden, about a boy/man born and brought up in a N Korean gulag, who escaped - and his complete lack of moral compass, due to the harsh dog eat dog up bringing he had in the prison.   A good example of nurture v nature argument!  This story and the accounts of the people in Demick's book really do highlight that a person can get used to anything, and that once the generation that knew something different dies, then there is no way for people to know or understand that things could be different.  The total isolation of the country works to the states advantage.  Horrifying and fascinating at the same time. 

Words used to describe it:   informative, disturbing, compelling, fascinating, uninspired writing but interesting, readable/educational/inspiring (more than one word but the excuse was I'm Irish!), journalistic, exhausting.

Marks out of 10 - between 8 - 9 so a high scoring book. One to recommend.

Next book
The Goldfinch by Donna Tarit 
(Mandy has found that amazon have the best price for this book)

Next Meeting
Thursday 6th February
126 Harbord St

Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce

Hic!  Thank you Simone for the cocktails, hic!  They were delicious! Hic! Those glasses were very large - well that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it!

Ah, the book - Harold Fry recently retired lives with his wife Maureen, his life is dull, ordinary and full of daily frustrations.  One morning Harold receives a letter written shaky handwriting from a work colleague Queenie Hennessey - a woman he could have had a affair with, if, if he had been a different man. Taking the letter out to post, he decides on the way that he will walk from Kingsbridge to Berwick on Tweed - and if he does so Queenie will live.  Dressed only in his deck-sider shoes and light weight coat he starts walking.  While walking he thinks about his life, marriage and his son.  The book is full of regret.  Regret at miss opportunities, regret at the way his marriage has turned out, regret at the man he was.  The light humour and slightly farcical situations that Harold found himself in along the way only highlighted the pathos of his musings.  (Spoiler alter) it is only later on that we find out that his son is dead and how and what impact the manner of his death had on him, the blame from his wife and the regret he felt.  Things happen to Harold that make him think about his life and Maureen. 

We all liked this book - sometime for a good discussion you need an opposing view.  We compared the journey of the character to that of Christian in Pilgrim's Progress.  Harold meets people along his way that bring him enlightenment, changing his view on life and bring him succor.  Although without the Christian allegorical references there were similarities.  It seemed to engender within us all a certain amount of sadness at the pathos of the story.

Words used to describe it:   endearing, quaint, metaphor, frustrating, tragic, poignant, pedestrian, moving journey, tragically whimsical, involving.
Marks out of 10:  between 7 & 9 so very highly marked.

Next Book
Nothing to Envy - Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick

Next Meeting
9th January at 12 Lysia Street

Christmas Do
Friday 13th at La Pizzica

Saturday, October 12, 2013

We Need New Names by NoViolet Bulawayo

A warm welcome to Pauline and a delicious thank you to Jackie for those scrumptious choux pastry eats.  Those were addictive.

Onto the book:  Darling and her friends Stina, Chipo, Godknows, Sbho and Bastard are street children in Paradise, a shanty town in an undefined city, in an undefined African country, but assumed to be Zimbabwe.  The lyrical cadence of the prose should almost be read aloud to understand the slightly sing-song/poetic turn of phrase.  The novel depicts in harsh but innocent reality the life of these children, whose family once had a house, material goods and a life, but with the change in government lost everything.  The desecration of a family through the ensuing poverty is slowly depicted.  The loss of the men from the family, as they go to South Africa to grub out a living (despite their university degree), Aids, violence and casual sexual violence, fervent preachers and strong women carefully outlined. The startling games the children play, enacting scenes of great violence that they have seen - making it normal by integrating it into play.  You can almost smell Africa in the description of guavas.  In the second part of the book, Darling has reached the promised land of America - but reality is not the dream.  Materialistic American and the loneliness of separation of all that she knew is bleakly and clearly depicted.  Seeing Western materialist society through the eye of one who had nothing is interesting.  Descriptions of snow falling and engulfing the land are positively brilliant.  

This book created quite a good discussion,  some felt that it should have been shorter or might have been better as a short story.  Others loved the lyrical prose and elegiac cadences and descriptions of the children's lives that capture the harshness without being sentimental.  

Words used to describe it:  poetic, lyrical, too long, should have been a short story, insightful migration, a verbal feast.  
Marks out of 10:   scored highly all between 7 - 9

Next Book
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry  by Rachel Joyce

Next Meeting
93 Harbord Street
Thursday 7 November - cocktails!

Another date for the diary
Friday 13th December - Book Club Christmas Do 
at La Pizzica, 764 Fulham Road
Please let me know if you are coming so that I can book a large table.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Middlesex by Jeffery Eugenies

Firstly, welcome to new Harbordian Simone hope you enjoy our wine club masquerading as a book club.  

Jeffery Eugenies uses a familial recessive gene, Alpha-5-Reductase, as a DNA helix on which to hang the story of an immigrants family in the US and Calliope/Cal's she/he hermaphrodites life/love with sardonic humour.  The tale of the brother and sister who fall in love and in the miasma of fleeing the Turkish invasion of Smyrna manage to hide the fact of their sibling relationship and pass off as strangers who meet, marry and bring up a family.  Their child Calliope/Cal is pronounced a girl at birth only to be found to be male once she/he reaches 15.  Although the recessive gene and the effects it has on the character Cal are interesting, the gene's history is almost as interesting as the family one.  The affectionate way that the Greek personalities are described are wonderful.  Descriptions of early industrial Detroit, mentions of the early life of the Muslim Brotherhood, placing incidents of American recent history within the brackets of an American families life are cleverly done. 

The discussion on this book wasn't that long.  As so many people were unable to make the meeting we have decided that we will discuss it in more detail at the next meeting.  However of those of us there who had read it - we all enjoyed it, but in many different ways.  Some found the family saga, the descriptions of America through an immigrant family very interesting.  Others found the emotional life of he/she struggling to understand the complex emotions and the differing ways that  men/women deal with events and issues, being effectively both, touching and affecting.  Very different responses to the same book.

Words used to describe it:   dramatic, enlightening, satisfying, heterogeneously complex,
Marks out of 10:    between 8 -  9 so very high!  One to be recommended.

Next Book 
We Need New Names by NoViolet Bulawayo

Next meeting
115 Harbord Street Jackie's
Thursday 10th October

Friday, July 19, 2013

Eleven Minutes by Paul Coelho

Maria, a beautiful Brazilian girl, brought up far from Rio - scarred by the rejection of her first love - the boy who offered her a pencil, which she failed to take - walks the inevitable path from country isolation and unappreciated beauty to the city where her looks bring her the coveted ticket to the rich West.  How is a girl like this to survive if she is not educated?  So yes, the oldest profession beckons in Geneva.  Maria finds she has an aptitude, she is disengaged, she even enjoys it and yes, it is only sex to her.  The book discusses her journey, how she remains true to herself and finds her love. 

The discussion of this book didn't center on the sex, but on Maria and her journey.  It elicited various and differing opinions.  It might have been that the translation didn't make the prose as lyrical as it should be, but most felt that the diary entries were leaden in comparison to the story. Having said that a number really didn't like the book.

Words used to describe it:      pretentious and humourless, pointless, unexpected, enlightening poetic, disappointing, premature ejaculation, simplistic, I've only come for the wine, could have been more.
Marks out of 10 - between 3 - 8 with 4 people giving it 8 - so the harsh remarks may not reflect the actual enjoyment of the book.


Next book

Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides

Next Meeting

Thursday 5th September 8pm 
at
130 Harbord Street

The Shed and all who sail in her!

 Homage to The Shed!



Goblins and pixies are jealous you see,
Cos Rona has a shed in her back garden, Yipee.
This shed is  divine, and useful too
With fire, seating and possibly a Yazoo?
Each time we arrive and shuffle ourselves in
Rona and Albert ply us with gin
 (oh Ok wine but it doesn't scan)
Chocolate brownies and little eats galore
We try and talk books but just want more
of the delicious grub and white wine juice
Our Book Club, you know, is really quite loose.

So Rona, for you, a homage to
To the Goddess of treats and chocolate goo
A heartfelt thank you and let's do it again.
Even though Albert's gone we love you too.

Excruciating verse - unattributed 



Friday, June 21, 2013

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte

A little sheepishly I write this blog not having read the book.  Having said that I do want to read it as it sounds fascinating.  Written from two perspectives - that of the heroines, through her diary, and that of her intrigued neighbour/lover.  A mysterious stranger Helen Graham is living at Wildfell Hall with her young son, no one knows anything about her or where she comes from.  Gilbert Markham a young farmer begins to casually court her.  Helen is however still married, rather than tell Gilbert why she is no longer with her husband, she gives him her diaries to read.  The second part of the book, written as a diary, details 'Helen's' seduction by Arthur Huntingdon, who once married to her takes up again his dissolute life of drink, drugs and women and his equally dissolute friends.  It is for their son and to remove him from his father's amoral care that Helen flees the marital home.  The third part of the book finishes with Helen caring for the dying Arthur, and the final reconcile between Helen and Gilbert.  

What was shocking about the book when it was first published was the independence that Helen shows by 'running' away from her husband at a time when women were the  property of their husbands.  It also dealt with themes of alcoholism and the destructive nature of drugs.  Piety, redemption and God loom large in the book - Anne being the most religious of the Bronte sisters who believe in the redemptive powers of the Lord.  We had an excellent discussion about the book, most enjoying the fluidity of the writing, the interesting characterization and the themes the book covers.  I wil,l I promise, read it!

Words used to describe it:  remarkably modern, beautifully written, piously intriguing, ground breaking, laborious.   Marks out of 10 - a remarkably consistent 6-8, 8 being the 5 out 6 people's vote!

Just to mention that one member read the other book suggested:  The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides and said it was excellent. 


Next Book

Eleven Minutes by Paulo Coelho

Next meeting 
17th July at 127 Harbord St, hosted by Judy.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Wild by Cheryl Strayed

For 3 months Cheryl Strayed hikes the Pacific Crest Trail.  A thousand miles across the undulating, harsh wilderness from Mexico to Canada. Alone. Using the hike as therapy, Cheryl writes about her internal discussion with herself, disecting her life to that date.  The loss of her mother, the serial infidelities that broke her marriage, her unfinished degree and her propensity toward self destruction.   During the discussion on the book, we came to the conclusion that the gulf between the US and the UK is wider than we thought.  This book is big in the US and we in the UK could not see why?  It's not that it's a bad book, it's not badly written, it's just too...............internal? Self introspection not being high on the British agenda.  Perhaps we all felt uncomfortable inspecting someone else's life, but on the whole most 'liked' the book, but didn't love it.   It did however generate a good discussion.

Words used to describe it:  shallow despite the height, unsatisfying, pedantry, too long, unfinishable, uneventful, stagnant, naval gazing.  Marks out of 10: between 3 - 6.5

Next Book

The Tenant of Wildfeld Hall by Anne Bronte
the other option was
The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

Next Meeting
Wednesday 19th June at The Shed with Albert in attendance

for the diary the meeting after that will be 17th July hosted by Judy at 127 Harbord St

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris

Not a biography as such, more a string of humorous anecdotes. This is the second book and follows on from Naked, and perhaps the book does have the 'feel' of second time around and less content.  Having said that some of the stories about his fascinating and psychologically interesting family are hysterical.  The short anecdote about the bobbing poo - had us all laughing: when read aloud by Rona in best RADA enunciation and intonation!  Chrissie found a quote where the reviewer says " He (David Sedaris) uses humor as a lens to examine humanity" which we all agreed with.  An enjoyable light read.

Words used to describe it:  amusing easy read, Amuse Bouche, delightful
Marks: between 6 - 8

Next Book
Wild by Cheryl Strayd

Next Meeting
15 May at 117 Harbord St

Monday, March 11, 2013

Year of Wonder by Geraldine Brooks

1666, and the plague is sweeping Britain and villages and towns out side of London are not immune from the spread of the disease.  The village of Peannie is struck by the plague thought to have been brought in with the fleas on a bolt of fabric by an itinerant tailor.  The village at the behest of the Vicar decide to cut themselves off from the wider community to try and contain the infection.  So for a year the villagers ride out the scourge of the plague which decimates their community.  This is the setting for the book whose main protagonist is Anna Frith, a survivor of a abusive childhood and whose husband and two children succumb to the disease.  This is the background against which a huge amount of historical detail is used to describe the story and characters, giving us an evocative description of life in a 17th century village, it's hardships, hierarchical society and harshness of life. 

Most of us felt that the epilogue was slightly superfluous to the story.  Although nice to hear what happened to Anna, it didn't fit well within the storyline.  We all found it fascinating that it was based on a true story and some of us have read further around the subject.

Words used to describe it:  harrowing, unsatisfying, relentlessly gruelling, interesting, well written and challenging, visceral,
Marks out of 10 - between 6 - 8 so quite highly marked.


Next Book

Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris

Next Meeting - change of date now Thursday 11th April at 59 Bishop's Road

Thursday, February 7, 2013

The Ladies of the Corridor by Dorothy Parker

Thank you Gilly for hosting last nights Book Club - hope we weren't too noisy leaving!   Now onto the book/play!

A short and not so sweet look at the lot of single middle aged women, in the late 40's/50's living in New York.  Their abject loneliness and the shallow life they lead, due to circumstance, societal expectations and reduced self confidence.  Widows, divorcees, single women each of the characters conforms to one of these characterisations.  Some of Dorothy Parker's wit and wisecracks make it through into the dialogue of the play, It is generally accepted that Parker was not a natural playwright, and some of the dialogue was klunky.  Tthis particular play is thought to have been one of her best even though it was not that well received at the time -  possibly, might be better received now.  The play is set in one of the long term serviced apartment hotels, that were popular at the time, the women gossip, go to movies  sew and generally pass the time.  Each character is used to illustrate a 'type' and draws out our sympathy for them and their situation.  Back stories are hinted at and characters are well drawn.

Words used to describe the book:
full of pathos, sad indictment of women of their time, melancholic, ripe for adaptation with Dames, poignant
Marks out of 10 - between 7 - 8 so highly rated by us all.

Next Book

The Years of Wonder
by Geraldine Brooks

Next Meeting

Friday 8th March - change of time 8pm
at 12 Lysia Street

Monday, January 14, 2013

The Gathering by Anne Enright

Blog post by Chrissie:


Thank you to everyone who came last Thursday and contributed to making it such an enjoyable evening and not particularly hangover inducing!  Those present included new members Maria and Pam, and added guest Andrew (with Carolyn) and Mary from 125 as she was celebrating her birthday.

The general view of The Gathering was very positive with an average mark of 8.5.  Words used to describe: visceral, poignant, haunting, foggy, chronologically unsound, heart-breaking and kaleidoscopic.

The next book is The Ladies of the Corridor the last major piece of work by Dorothy Parker.  It is a drama - not completely sure of the format in which it is written, (we can always have a play reading) and available for £6 on www.play.com    It is loosely based on Parker's life and is a "searing" drama about women of a certain age living on their own in a New York hotel "empty nesters struggling with lives that have lost their centre"!  Sounds fun.

Next Book
The Ladies of the Corridor by Dorothy Parker

Next Meeting
Wednesday 6th February
at 
Gilly's, 
74 Hurlingham Court
Ranalagh Gardens, SW6

Saturday, November 24, 2012

The Odessa File by Frederick Forsyth

   Peter Miller a German reporter receives from a friend of Salomon Tauber, a Jewish Holocaust survivor, his diary in which he describes an officer Roshmann  killing a German officer with unusual medals.   Investigating the story in the diary Miller meets Simon Wiesenthal the famed war-crime investigator who tells him about ODESSA (the Organisation of the Former Members of the SS).  Approached by Mosad, Miller agress to infiltrate ODESSA where he informs and unravels the entire ODESSA system.  Through a silly error (using his own car) his identity is compromsied, but he manages to survive.  He finally catches up with Roshmann - finding out that the man he killed was infact Millers father.  Miller suvives various attempts on his life, Mosad catch up with Roshmann - close down his factory and stop a plot to bomb Israel with biological warfare weapons. 
   Most of us enjoyed the book - it didn't generate too much discussion, although most felt that it was a good example of the thriller genre.  A fast paced and interesting read.  Words used:  formulaic, starter thriller, enjoyable, unchallenging.  Marks between 4 - 8.

Next book
The Gathering by Anne Enright

Next Meeting
10th January at 127 Harbord St

Christmas Get Together
Thursday 6th December - Del Aziz, Jerdan Place, Fulham

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Babette's Feast by Iska Dinesen (Karen Blixen)

Firstly, welcome to our newest recruit:  Gilly, I hope she enjoys this relaxed and voluble Book Club....As she will find out we take ourselves very seriously...no wine, all talk!

A gem of a book!  Babette Hersant arrives at the door of two faded spinsters, Martine and Phillppa, who have forsaken their chances of fame and romance for a life of piety and chastity, caring for their dogmatic father, a pastor of a proscribing Lutheran sect in a distant Danish coastal town.  Babette, a refuge from the turbulent times in revolutionary France, carries a letter of introduction from an old suitor of one of the sisters.  The letter is brief in introduction - only saying that she is of good character, down on her luck, in need of a place to shelter and that she (Babette) can cook.

The sisters asking no questions take her in, and for 14 years Babette serves, cooks and aids the sisters without recompense or discourse.  The story hinges on the sumptuous feast that Babette serves, using all the money she wins on the French lottery 10,000F.  Every penny is spent.  Babette's labour of love, cooking a meal fit for the aristocracy, for people who wouldn't know what they ate, or even acknowledge that they are eating the best food in the world. The question is why did Babette do this?

We all liked the book, some more than others, the discussion centred around the why, and our all very different interpretations of this.  The elegant prose - without a superfluous word, brilliantly drew the world the women inhabited, the uptight characters and unexpressed love that Babette had for the two women who had taken her in.  This meal was her way of saying thank you.

Words used to describe it:  folksy, haunting, deliciously satisfying, evocative, multi layered, a feast of a parable, lyrical.
Marks out of 10 - between 7.5 and 9 so it rates highly on the HSBC book club rating!

Next Book

The Odessa File by Frederick Forsyth

Next Meeting
Wednesday 14th November
at
115 Harbord Street

Dates for the Diary
Christmas Party - Venue TBC
Thursday 6th December

Chiswick Second Hand Book Sale 1st Sunday of the month
at Chiswick Community School

Car Boot Sale at Kempton
Sunday 4th November