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Thursday, November 13, 2008

Purple Coo Book Club


Winter Reading for the Purple Coo Book Club




Here is the suggested list of books.


Please make your 1st and 2nd choices in the comment box. I'll collate the votes and put the most popular book choice on the Book Forum. Then we can all put the book on our Santa list and hope.....

Eve Green by Susan Fletcher



A haunting tale set in rural Wales. A flame haired, motherless eight year old is sent to live with her grandparents and it takes a while to reveal her hidden past.



Last Goodbye by Arvin Reed



A tale of love and murder set on the mean streets and in the sleek society haunts of Atlanta.

(Hopefully this is the right book as I wasn’t given the author’s name and there are LOADS of books with this title)



The Birth House by Anni McKay



A gripping saga about a midwife’s struggles in the wilds of Nova Scotia



The Blood Detective by Dan Waddell



A plot full of genealogical intrigue and murder linking a gruesome past to crimes committed now – well it would make a change.



The Eustacia Diamonds by Anthony Trollop



A fast moving classic, with diamonds thrown in for good measure



The Meaning of Now by Michael Cox



A darkly Gothic Victorian type murder mystery



The Outcast by Sadie Jones


Set in the South of England in the 1950s, it’s the story of a boy who becomes estranged from his family after witnessing a terrible, tragic accident.



Uncommon Arrangements by Katie Roiphe



Seven Portraits of Married Life in London Literary Circles 1910-1939. A brilliant study of marriages ‘a la mode’ among the Bloomsbury set



White Tiger by Aravind Adrga



A Man Booker prize-winner. A tale of two Indias and a man of amoral character. The bleak life of an Indian village versus the glittering prizes apparently available in the big city.

(The painting is Memory in Green by Giuseppe Santomaso - oil 1953)









Saturday, August 23, 2008

Purple Book Club



Autumn Reading for the Purple Book Club



Here is the list of suggested books.


Please make your 1st and 2nd choice in the comment box. I’ll collate the votes and put the most popular book choice on the Book Forum. Then we can all get reading!




A Toss of a Lemon

Padma Viswanathan

About Brahmin life in India over several generations of a woman's family. A great chronicle and narrative.



Daphne

Justine Picardie

The story begins in 1957 when Daphne du Maurier discovers her husband's affair. She's researching her biography of Branwell Bronte and the mysteries of the Bronte sister's manuscripts is the second storyline. The final interwoven strand is that of a modern day PhD research student with a du Maurier fascination.



Finding Pegasus

Terry Church

A true life story that later inspired the Horse Whisperer. One woman's search to have a greater understanding of her horses and inner peace for herself .



Notes from an Exhibition

Patrick Gale

The fragments of a successful, but enigmatic and tormented, artist's life are slowly revealed to her Quaker husband and their grownup children after her death.



Suite Francaise

Irene Nemrikovski

Irene Nemirovsky was a successful writer in 1930’s Paris. She’d been born in Russia and her family fled to France at the time of the Russian Revolution. When Germany occupied Paris, she and her husband fled to the countryside with their 2 daughters. Although she had converted to Catholicism, she was arrested and sent to Auschwitz where she died. Her husband also later died there. After evacuating from Paris to a small town in the French Countryside, she had begun writing what would become Suite Francais



The Birth House

Amy McColl

Tradition clashes with modernity set in a small Nova Scotia village in the early 20th century, this is reminiscent of the works of Annie Proulx and Chris Bohjalian.
(infertility, difficult labour, breech births, unwanted pregnancies, and even unfulfilling marriages, they're all in this book?)




The Brief History of the Dead

Kevin Brockmejer

O.K. I know I promised no more frozen waste stories but this comes well recommended.


'In a city between earth and heaven the inhabitants all have one thing in common. They all know Laura Byrd, and more importantly, she knows them. She stranded in the cold expanse of Antarctica oblivious to the importance of her survival, while they roam the city in search of the reason for their coming together.'


The Memory Keeper's Box

Kim Edwards

About a family who have a baby with Downs syndrome, there is a shocking act of betrayal. Lots of grief and secrets



The Friday Night Knitting Club

Kate Jacobs

Love, life, knitting and yarns and everything else - a bit like Purple Coo really



The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society Mary Anne Schaffer


Set in 1946, a writer receives a letter from a Guernsey farmer who has found a book she once owned. A wonderful correspondence ensues between the writer and various members of the Potato Peel Pie Society (romance , humour and tragic historical detail)



The Uncommon Reader

Alan Bennet

A deliciously funny novella that celebrates the pleasure of reading



Wintersmith

Terry Pratchet

3rd title in the Tiffany Aching (Discworld) series. An imaginative yarn. Winter mistakes Tiffany for the Summer Lady and falls in love with her - All of T.Ps usual magical larks.



44 Scotland Street

Alexander McCall-Smith

Vintage McCall Smith, tackling issues of trust and honesty, snobbery and hypocrisy, love and loss, but all with a great lightness of touch.

(The painting is The magician by Gustave Singier)

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Summer Reading for the Purple Book Club



Summer Reading for the Purple Book Club



Here is the list of suggested books.


Please make your 1st and 2nd choice in the comment box. I’ll collate the votes and put the most popular book choice on the Book Forum. Then we can all get reading!




A Woman's Europe by Marybeth Bond


True stories and tales about women's travels in and around Europe. A wonderful collection by talented women writers.



Blue Sky July by Nia Wyn


Part prose, part poetry, this book reveals the pain and joy of the experience of motherhood when your child has profound and multiple difficulties. A deeply moving account of one mother's love for her severely disabled son.



Engleby by Sebastian Faulks


A rambling first person narration. A complicated and disturbing book, sad, serious and eminently readable.



Galloper Jack by Brough Scott


A grandson's search for a forgotten hero, General Jack Seeley. Ripping yarns about early 20th Century adventure and politics.



Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden


True confessions of one of Japan’s most celebrated Geishas.



Passion by Jude Morgan


The Romantics remembered. A novel about the lives and loves of those very Romantic, famous (infamous?) poets, Byron, Shelley and Keats. This story explores their lives through the eyes of the women who knew and loved them.



The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penny


In order to clear her son’s name a woman has to make a terrible journey through the Canadian wilderness in the dead of winter. Her only companion a strange and apparently brutal man.



The Wild Places by Robert Macfarlane


An inspiring book about the search for wilderness and its meanings - (back on the list at Exmoorjanes special request. If we all choose to read it, she's going to take up backpacking in the Highlands - isn't that true Jane?)



Two Caravans by Marina Lewycka


A funny, clever and well observed tale of migrant workers strawberry picking in Kent.



When We Were Bad by Charlotte Mendelson


A warm, poignant, funny, moving and totally believable portrayal of a London family in crisis.

(The picture is Cottages at Cordeville 1890 by Van Gough)




Sunday, February 24, 2008

Spring reading for the Purple Book Club








Here is the list of suggested books.



Please make your 1st and 2nd choice in the comment box. I’ll collate the votes and put the most popular book choice on the Book Forum. Then we can all get reading!



Atonement Iam McEwan



Forget the film, lovely though it is. This is the real thing.



A Thousand Splendid Suns Khaled Housseni



( The author of the Kite Runner)



This time he focuses on mother and daughters and friendships between women, and the plight of women in modern Afganistan



Day A L Kennedy



Alfred day joins the RAF after an abusive childhood. In 1949 he winds back time to see where he lost himself.



Diary of a Bad Year J.M. Coetze



A book that breaks new literary ground.



An aging author has been asked to write his thoughts on the state of the world. He hires a beautiful young woman to type his manuscript. The relationship that develops has a profound effect on both of them.



The Graveyard P M. Hubbard



As this was published in 1975 I don’t’ think it is a viable option but it may be of special interest to Purple Cooers as its set in a place called Lix Toll, near Killin in Scotland. Now isn’t that where our dear Headmistress resides, and where have I heard that name before?





Little Heathens Mildred Armstrong Kalish



Rural methodist life during the great depression in Iowa, USA . Hard times and high spirits.



On Chesil Beach Iam McEwan



Preliberated 1960s. ‘They were young educated and both virgins on their wedding night…..’



A bit short, but maybe that’s an advantage in our busy lives. ( I mean the book, not the wedding night!)



The Other Boleyn Girl



The title speaks for itself. The book is said to be much better than the film



The Wild Places Robert Macfarlane



An inspiring book about the search for wilderness and its meanings - (Well this book apparently inspired Exmoorjane’s man to want to take her walking and camping. I can’t wait for the blog. I hope she‘s buying her boots as I type)



What We Lost Catherine O’Flynn



This is her first novel and was rejected by 14 literary agents, and accepted by the 15th, then won best first novel - Costa so there is hope for us all yet.



Sounds like quite a complicated plot. A child detective disappears. There is a discovery 20 years later. A funny/sad book bursting with life…..


The painting is by Miro 1953










Tuesday, February 12, 2008

The People's Act of Love by James Meek




The author, James Meek, very generously offered to join our local book group to discuss his novel ‘The People’s Act of Love.’



His contribution, lively and wide-ranging, provided us with a fascinating insight into how he came to write this vivid and disturbing novel, and how he views the world of writing in general.



His new book, ‘We are Now Beginning Our Descent’ , has recently been published.



Members of The Purple Book Club suggested several questions to put to James. These short replies are a small flavour of a very exciting evening.



(I have written the answers from the notes I took during the evening)



Q. Did you research the book’s period first than assign characters to fit certain types e.g. Hussar, shaman etc?



James lived in Russia for most of the 1990s. He married a Russian and speaks fluent Russian. Much of the flavour, smell and texture of the book comes from the general experience of living in Russia. The initial stimulus for the book came from hearing about the practice of prisoners escaping from Russian labour camps and taking a naïve companion with them, with the intention of killing and eating them if the need arose.



The situation between the cannibal and potential victim arose first, but before such an act of killing could evolve there needed to be the idea of the hostility of nature, without this there could be no substance to the original idea. At about the same time James said he heard about the strange protestant sect that practised self castration and the interesting story of the Czech Legion stranded in Russia after the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.……



He spoke of the pyramid of knowledge that seeps into a novel, informing the writing but only to be dimly obvious to the reader. It was the knowledge of these three historical situations that eventually led him to write ‘The People’s Act of Love’.



Q. Did you have any difficulty keeping your 20C/21C viewpoint out of the novel?



He was aware of the dangers of a modern viewpoint leaking into the novel and sees it as a trap to be aware of and guard against. He worked hard to maintain a truly 19C feel.



Q. What was your inspiration for the title, ‘The People’s Act of Love’?



The work in progress title was ‘Paradise’ but this was initially discarded for, ‘To the White Garden’. When this was rejected by his publisher as being unsuitable, James sought about for an alternative and by chance came back to the scene where Samarin endeavours to explain his actions ( the actions of a cannibal and a revolutionary) to Anna.



“Would you like it better if he killed and ate a man for love? …. So he could live long enough to see the woman he loved again.”



Samarin is talking of the justification that could be made of any act of violence perpetrated by the state, when the end may be said to justify the means.



As well as an author, James is a reporter and was present during the invasion of Iraq.



Q. Were you pleased with the efforts of your editor and would you want to work with the same editor again?



James gave an abrupt ‘Yes, Yes’ to this question and said that he has used the same editor for his most recently published novel. He explained that a positive working relationship usually leads to some aspects of the book being changed and to some changes being opposed.



The original draft had a complete chapter elaborating on the life and viewpoint of the shaman. This was removed on editorial suggestion, as it was felt to hold up the natural flow of the novel and be out of keeping with the rest of the book.



Interestingly, the second chapter, where a few of our book club readers struggled, was originally the opening chapter. James exchanged it for the chapter about Samarin’s early life, as he felt it to be more accessible. He could not remember who suggested the change but thought it likely to be the result of a combined decision.



Q. Which character did you empathise with most strongly?



James emphasised that the had empathy with all of the characters except Matula. He saw him as a loathsome psychopath. The character he is most in sympathy with is Mutz. He can identify strongly with Mutz and his approach to the situation he finds himself in.



I would like to add that I am fascinated by this book. I enjoyed the strong 19C texture and the highly unusual story line, but mostly I admire the way the author is able to reveal so successfully, the dangers inherent in any system that has contempt for the individual as a fundamental principle, be it 19th Century or 21st Century.