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  1. M

    Kazuo Ishiguro: Never Let Me Go

    This is a superb yet enigmatic novel, possibly more heart rending and thought provoking than any novel I have read for a long time. I'll have to be clear right at the onset that this novel isn't science fiction so I'll make it clear right now there could be some SPOILERS in this short review. It...
  2. M

    20K Leagues under sea - Jules Verne

    Nowadays there are attempts to bring science to the masses by "dumbing down" - I suppose this is the 19th century equivalent. Science brought to the masses in a form to thrill and entertain as well as educate. Written in 1869 its really a book about sea life and its creatures with a thin back...
  3. M

    Malorie Blackman: Noughts & Crosses

    I was impressed by the quality of this novel for teenagers; it has won several awards including the Children's Book Award. I saw it recommended and with its unusual and provocative storyline I thought it would be good for my teenage daughter, She read it very quickly and pressed me to read it as...
  4. M

    Picture Palace – Paul Theroux

    I found this 1978 Whitbread dull and un-engaging to read with insipid characters that don’t engage with the reader on any level. Written from the perspective of a woman photographer in her old age it goes back and forwards through her life but frankly makes little sense. It’s written in short...
  5. M

    How Far Can You Go? – David Lodge

    This was a highly entertaining if not a little risqué novel featuring the twin issues of Sex and Religion, this the 1980 Whitbread Best Novel for David Lodge is the first novel by this well known author I have read. When I said risqué I meant it, as the first part of the novel is undoubtedly...
  6. M

    Twelve Bar Blues - Patrick Neate

    This was quite an unusual read set over several generations from Africa to New Orleans from Harlem to London. Not so uncommon nowadays is the idea of generations intertwining over a couple of centuries with a thread running between them that they don't know about but then find out after a...
  7. M

    The Chymical Wedding - Lindsay Clarke

    Try as I might I couldn't fathom this novel at all, a strange blend of love triangle and weird Victorian ideas on mediaeval Alchemy. I thought Alchemy was the attempts to turn base metal into gold usually by men in pointy hats and long white beards. Obviously I'm wrong as it is actually trying...
  8. M

    Felicia’s Journey by William Trevor

    This was a strange read – not at all what I was expecting, at least in that as I read it I was thinking it was going one way when it was going another. The 1994 Whitbread winner it’s a short read but quite highly charged. Its also impossible I think, for me to write any kind of basic review...
  9. M

    White City Blue by Tim Lott

    Very good indeed is how I would describe this 1999 Whitbread Best First Novel - gripping dialogue really coming to grips with the mans perspective of life and friendship. Not at all just a "lads" book, but a real and conclusive attempt to get inside the psyche of the modern "bloke". The main...
  10. M

    Zadie Smith: White Teeth

    This is a very ambitious, funny and thought-provoking novel that won Zadie Smith a much-deserved Whitbread First Novel prize in 2000. I had read some mixed reviews some time ago but approached this with an open mind and was really quite delighted with this humorous approach to race, religion...
  11. M

    Colm Tóibín: The Master

    When is a biography not a biography but a novel based on a life's work and correspondence? When it’s a brilliant novel by Colm Toibin - its really a great thing to do , base a novel on the life of a great writer , Henry James , use a lot of his own letters and correspondence and try to get...
  12. M

    Achmat Dangor: Bitter Fruit

    This is a superbly powerful story set in Nelson Mandela's new post apartheid South Africa, short listed for the 2004 Booker prize. A really gripping and in places disturbing read it is a no holds barred look at South Africa (SA) from the townships and from the ruling party workers point of view...
  13. M

    David Mitchell: Cloud Atlas

    I really don't know where to start when trying to give a really honest review of a novel that tries so hard to break with traditional novel structure. A novel that combines historical with Sci-Fi , crime thriller with modern urban black humour. For this and this alone David Mitchell's Booker...
  14. M

    Sarah Hall: The Electric Michelangelo

    Got a tattoo? I haven't but I know a lot who have though I wouldn't have thought it was a subject for a Booker Shortlist novel. However it is here and Sarah Hall manages to pull it off quite well. From the seaside of 1920's Morecambe to the late 30's Coney Island in Brooklyn New York. We begin...
  15. M

    Gerard Woodward: I'll Go To Bed At Noon

    It would be hard to imagine a novel about the destruction that alcohol can do to a family being other than unremittingly bleak, however this novel by Gerald Woodward - short listed for the Booker - manages to be engaging and thought provoking indeed. The subject matter of Alcohol and...
  16. M

    Alan Hollinghurst: The Line Of Beauty

    An outstanding novel indeed, truly a magnificent piece of work, a novel deserving of praise and the recognition that the Booker 2004 prize gives it. Brilliantly written, Alan Hollinghurst could describe the back of a cornflake packet and it would be interesting, the descriptive passages coupled...
  17. M

    Nadine Gordimer: The Conservationist

    An enigmatic compelling yet mysterious and confusing read this, the 1974 Booker co-winner by Nadine Gordimer. It was so compelling, I couldn't get enough of the massive descriptive passages - early 70's South Africa brought to life through the eyes of rich whites, landless Blacks and Indian...
  18. M

    James Kelman: How Late It Was, How Late

    Imagine Robert Carlyle's "Begbie" character from the film "Trainspotting" getting all philosophical after waking up with a hangover in a police cell and you would have a good idea what this strange Booker 1994 winning novel is like. Imagine the Glaswegian vernacular of Begbie and Rab C Nesbitt...
  19. M

    The Diary of a Nobody by G & W Grossmith

    Fantastic, sharply funny even now given that it was first published in 1892, its satire on suburban mundane life is as good now as it ever was. I didn't know what to expect but I had tears of laughter from the bumbling yet endearing Charles Pooter with his run ins with awkward tradesmen and...
  20. M

    H. G. Wells: When the Sleeper Wakes

    Another very strange book by the almost visionary HG Wells - in a nutshell a man falls asleep Rip van Winkle-like for 200 yrs in 1898 and wakes up in a very changed future with slightly more than a fuzzy head from too much sleep and overdue library books!!. Like "War in the air" published later...
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