Monday, November 28, 2016

His Bloody Project by Graeme Macrae Burnet

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The book is engrossing right from the beginning. It takes the reader to Scotland village of the 19th Century riddled with enmity between two families and related oppressiveness and hardships in the contemporary times. The presentation and characterization is excellent as is the trial and inquiry of the lead character who pleads guilty of the multiple killings. It is a book exploring definition of sane and insane and the intricacies of relationships in a family after the death of the mother of the lead character.
This book is highly recommended and it scores a 10 out of ten.

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Do Not Say We Have Nothing by Madeleine Thien

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The story of a family panning across three generations and continents through war ravaged China, Mao's China and progressing on wards till the modern day with a climax at Tiananman Square the book has been written in a free flow style with the write drifting with ease from the present across decades yet never going offtrack. Another brilliance of the writer's mesmerizing style is through the use of music compositions and the lives of composers and musicians. The book has multiple characters yet all orchestrated through hardships into a nicely knitted story. The book is a very intelligent work and surely is a must read. In a scale of 20 we give it a 19.5.

Thursday, November 3, 2016

Hot Milk by Deborah Levy

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Sofia has abandoned her pursuit of a doctoral degree in Anthropology because of her mother Rose's strange illness which has been a mystery for her all her life. The story begins in Spain where she comes with her mother to Dr Gomez - a last chance to cure her mother's paralyzed legs. 
Amidst Dr Gomez's strange methods, Rose's complaints Sofia discovers herself and her deep desires as she meets amazing characters Juan, Ingrid, and Julieta, in Spain and travels to Greece to meet her step mother four years elder to her, her step sister and her father who had abandoned her when she was 14. The book is written in a powerful and exciting way in Sofia's voice as she discovers the true ailment that had entrapped her old mother and her adult life.
The book was in the short list of Man Booker prize 2016.
In a scale of 10 we give it 9.5. It is a compelling hard to put down novel involving psychological complications of ailing mother - ailing daughter relationship.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi


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When breath becomes air is a memoir of Paul Kalanithi, a young neurosurgeon, written by himself as he transforms from a doctor to a patient. At the age of 35, after long grueling and arduous years of medical training and education just when Paul is about to embark on a much sought after career and future, he is diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.
The book is about two aspects of his life. In the first part it is about how he grew up reading poetry and literature and obtaining degrees in Literature and how he finally ended up finding his vocation in neurology in search for meaning. The second part is of him being a patient grappling with his dreams vanishing.
Written with a need to be truthful, this memoir is definitely a must read. In a scale of 10 we give it an 8.5