Wednesday, August 29, 2012

A dream life - but one that doesn't fit!

Anita Shreve's Rescue
2012 by Abacus

Once we are introduced to the main characters Webster and Sheila, we know that their relationship will be riddled with pain, disaster and its fair share of problems.
Webster is a likeable character, evoking sympathy because of his turbulent relationship with an alcoholic wife who endangers the life of their only daughter. The same cannot be said of Sheila - his wife - who it is very difficult to feel sorry for as she brings it all on herself. She should never have tried to be something she wasn't - to try on a life that didn't fit.
Rescue begins on a cheerful, warm-hearted note as Webster and Sheila fall in love in extraordinary circumstances. Webster has a tough time trying to settle Sheila down but when he succeeds in rescuing her, the result is that she manages to grow up and lead a mature life.
All this happiness is not to last though. Once she becomes suffocated by this sensible life, where she can no longer handle the commitment, it soon becomes apparent that this story is bound on an unhappy journey. Sheila's poisonous personality sets to ruin their daughter Rowan's existence. Will Sheila return to rescue her daughter and make up for lost time or will she continue to cause disruption and distress?

A race between life and death

Ken Follett's Whiteout
2005 by Pan Books

Whiteout is yet another Follett special. The precise detail and descriptive characters he creates makes his books so difficult to put down.
Whiteout is an epic tale of human betrayal, family feud and medical catastrophe, all with a ticking clock.
Every page of this story has some dramatic action taking place, a cliff-hanger or even a developing love affair.
The audience will find Kit to be a most deceitful character and will take an instant dislike to his personality - stereotypically rich, a spoilt only son of a wealthy millionaire who gets extremely perturbed when things dont go his way. However, the fact that he finally gets what is coming to him, is justice enough.
I admire how Follett has decided to make the powerful woman in the story, the hero, the knight in shining armour who rescues the Oxenford family from certain death, after Kit embarks on a dangerous mission which heads towards even his own self-destruction. With the help of master criminals, all Kit wants to do is repay his building gambling debt. Things soon take a turn for the worse when they steal a lethal infectious drug from Oxenford Medical and then hold up Stanley Oxenford's family on Christmas Day as hostages in their family home. What makes this exceptionally is how they manage to steal this drug from right under, head of security Toni Gallo's nose, and even past her high-tech security systems.
We find ourselves asking, what will happen to this deadly drug, which has ended up in the wrong hands.

What lies beneath a perfect facade

Anita Shreve's Strange fits of Passion
1994 by Abacus

Strange fits of passion is told in the "reporter" style that recounts events that unfolded in the similar way that her other novel Testimony did.
Each chapter offers an outlook of what happened and the thoughts and views of the main characters and those local people who made contact with Mary/Maureen. Shreve writes their thoughts and views as a police interview account, which echoes the police interview they would have gone through at the time of the events in the story. The local people play the part of the eye witnesses to Mary's life and goings-on while she resides in their town.
When Mary arrives in their small town, things are not quite as they seem, for she hides beneath her disguise and lies. The residents accept her for who she is and befriend her, treat her like one of their own. Only when a dark shadow edges towards the town, to cast its ugly head over the new life that Mary has created for herself, do the residents begin to question who she claims to be and uncover the reality that lies beneath.
As the reader though, we find ourselves praying that the residents believe what Mary has hidden from them - the awful story that she is burdened with. We have to hope that true friendship will shine through the despair and stand against the evil that awaits, to help Mary through this tough time.
Justice does prevail in the end but in freeing herself, Maureen simultaneously ruins the lives of two families - her own and that of the man she comes to love. In taking revenge on her husband and ending her nightmare, she brings about more heartache to her life.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Behind closed doors!

Anita Shreve's Testimony
Published 2009 by Abacus
Drama

Told from the perspective of those involved, Testimony tells the story of an incident that occurred at a private boarding school, Avery Academy, and how the lives of those involved changed forever. The incident seems to have had a tremendous impact on so many characters who were either directly or indirectly involved.
The novel flits between past and present a bit too often which gets rather complicated but having each chapter written from the point of view of each character, each telling their own individual tale of the part they played in the affair and how it has changed their life in the present, is a great feature that helps the flow of the novel. Each character talks to the reader as though we are a reporter trying to interview them as they are very factual and matter-of-fact about it. Sometimes they almost feel like they see the reader as a friend or confidante; someone they can trust and who they are opening up to and telling all. The language and style of the novel is very similar to a police report or interview but it is crisp and to the point. It is very easy to read and an engrossing page turner.
Not only does the text describe what happened and how but it also provides testimonies, confessions and statements from the students involved. Although the initial event is horrific and graphic, nothing prepares the reader for the despair and colossal destruction that comes about afterwards. There is so much pain and remorse in this book. For once there is no happy ending, it simply ends with one student recounting the event and providing us with all the missing pieces of this puzzle.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Be mindful of love

Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility
Period classic - Romance

Spirited novel about friendship, love, sisterly affection, hope and deceit.
Austen presents brilliant stories that show perfectly the close connection that exists between siblings. She must have drawn from her own relationship with her sister Cassandra in order to portray such a likeness.
I think in making it the key focus in this text, alongside love and marriage, she expresses how important these bonds are not just to her but to everyone else as well.
I admire sensible Elinor Dashwood for being the responsible, practical, elder, clever sister who keeps her emotions inside in order to get on with what she must do and to put everyone else first before herself. Elinor is extremely unselfish and quite a sad character throughout the text until the very end.
Marianne would probably fit quite well in society today as she seems the character people could relate to because of her lively, spirited almost rebellious nature. She is a fun character but most of the time is rather immature, hence Elinor spends most of her time consoling her and taking care of her.
Finally, there is Margaret who doesn't get to do most of the fun things her sisters get to do because she is too young.
The interaction between these sisters makes it an enthralling book just like the Bennets' in Austen's Pride and Prejudice or Alcott's Little Women.
Of course, inevitably it all ends as we'd expect but it is far from disappointing.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Life's Foundations

The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett
Historical fiction
Published by Pan Books 2007

Despite the fact that it is a very long book with an extraordinarily bizarre style, the story is rather intriguing and especially after part one, it becomes a book you cannot put down. Stylistically, it is broken into parts with their own chapters and sections within those chapters which makes it easy to read in bite size chunks. However, there are breaks and gaps all over the place which can be a bit confusing.
In order to appreciate this text i believe you must have some interest in history or architecture with it being set in medieval times where the main characters' lives are based around the building of a cathedral. I find myself hoping the cantankerous William Hamleigh gets his comeuppance in the end and the other more faithful and affable characters who have been wronged throughout get to live happily.
I have enjoyed this book because we follow the main characters throughout their lives. We grow up with them as their stories evolve, their lives change and their personalities develop.