No! Do not panic. I’m not reviewing a book on government systems from my Year 11 Politics class.
I came across this little beauty today, as I was cataloguing my book collection. I opened it up for a quick look see, and found something quite telling about why I have not been here over the last three and a half years.
Get this. ‘The Façade democracy’
This is where “liberal democratic…
View On WordPress
Helen Garner is 71!? Check out this article about her experience as a person “of a certain age”.
It’s always given me the ibits when people over 60 get treated as if they are somehow out of sync with the rest of the world.
My grandmother at 98 was more interesting and fun then most of younger people I knew..
#HelenGarner #monkeygrip is the only book of hers I read.
“I had known for…
View On WordPress
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NxenCGfxEk)
This is so good - c'mon laugh with me
The Dry, by Jane Harper I forgot how much I love a whodunit until my book club buddies started suggesting them way back at the start of this caper – with Adrian McKinty’s and his Sean Duffy series. Jo’s pick for this month hit the sweet spot. This one is set in a rural township, drought stricken, tinder dry and unbearably hot. The locals are not necessarily welcoming. A gruesome murder suicide…
View On WordPress
Bitten off more than I can chew?
I started a book club specifically so I would stop doing this … Four books on the go – that I’m listing here. This is not counting the ones I started and stopped reading last year. Made the mistake of updating my Goodreads account. There it was – the books listed as ‘currently reading’. And that is only the one I am willing to show you. A a sense of guilt, or is it defeat? whatever it is, it…
View On WordPress
How could I resist a title like that? So this is a side story to the Odyssey – it is set in Ithaca during the period Odysseus is trying to make his way home. The protagonist in this story is a young girl, who along with her twin brother, grows up as playmates with Telemachus, son of Odysseus and Penelope. As they reach adolescence their close bond is strained due mainly to the introduction into…
View On WordPress
Oh boy – months since my last. Oh well – not like anyone is waiting for them, or reading them. Kent, Hannah, The Good People Set in the late 19th century rural Ireland – where people lived a simple, yet harsh existence. Their labour was arduous, their earnings meagre, the climate mostly frigid. The country at that time is at the cusp of losing their traditional superstitions (Fairies) and…
View On WordPress
Ferney, by James Long Jo suggested this one. She said it was a story with a bit of time travel. Fab! I love science fiction. Only, it wasn’t. It was more fantasy. What is the difference I hear you ask? Well, Science fiction usually involves a scientific idea, and/or an amazing technical feat or at least some sort of semi coherent explanation for the weird stuff that happens. In fantasy, weird…
View On WordPress
Little pink post-it gave K action. She was unusually quick to get back to us with a title for March. Normally she agonises about what to get – and normally picks great reads. I wish she had agonised over this one a little. What a shit book. K hated it, and gave up on it at chapter 3. I hated it and gave up on it at chapter 6 – but that probably doesn’t count because I sped read those chapters…
View On WordPress
Rode parts of Ireland recently, had to write it down to make sure I remember it.
Pt.1 getting there
Buses, the lovelorn, and a bit of hangover.