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Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Purple Coo Book Group Winter Read 2016

To vote for your books, please make you 1st and 2nd choices in the comments box below then, after a count up I'll post the most popular title on the Purple Coo main site. It then becomes our Purple Coo Book Club Autumn Read 2016

A Time of Gifts by Patrick Leigh Fermor DSO OBE
Aged 18, in 1933, the author set out to walk from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople. This is the first volume of a trilogy taking the reader as far as Hungary. Wonderful descriptions of countryside, culture and the people he meets of course, but with a fascinating undercurrent hinting of the political turmoil about to upset the whole of Europe.

Keeping On, Keeping On by Alan Bennet
Alan Bennet’s superb and playful memoir that shows him to be much more of a Tigger than an Eeyore. You may have heard some of this on radio 4 recently. I did while driving to the supermarket and had to stop my car I was laughing so much.

The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry
It’s 1893 and on leaving London for Colchester, a widow and her boy hear rumours of a strange mythical beast that’s said to roam the marshes claiming human lives. A keen and rational naturalist, she sets out to seek the real truth.  Essex Gothic? This is the book everyone is raving about. Waterstones Book of The Year no less. In hardback it would make a lovely Christmas present.

Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
Ostensibly a day in the life of a society lady sorting out the last minute details of a grand party, but as the day unfolds the reader discovers not only the woman’s troubled past but that of her friends as well that drives one of them to ... I won’t say more and spoil the plot but this is a landmark novel and the a mark of true genius.

The picture is by one of my favourite artists, Cheryl Culver
 


Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Purple Coo Book Group Autumn Read 2016


To vote for your books, please make you 1st and 2nd choices in the comments box below then, after a count up I'll post the most popular title on the Purple Coo main site. It then becomes our Purple Coo Book Club Autumn Read 2016

Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks
Acclaimed as a tragic and brilliant book that exposes the unimaginable gulf between the traumas of what happened in WW1 and the present day. A story of love and heartbreak spanning three generations, dark, romantic and surreal. Described as a cross between Farewell to Arms and The English Patient, a rewarding but not easy read.

Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote
Not to be confused with the rather sanitised version made into a film starring Audrey Hepburn. Set in 1943, the real Holly Golightly is a fragilely glamorous teenage New York cafĂ© society girl who makes her way in the world by socializing with wealthy men. Although she survives by accepting their money and presents, she’s not quite a prostitute, more an American geisha with  quirky view of life.

His Bloody Project by Graeme Macrae Burnet
A tricksy, yet gripping crime novel giving an evocative insight into the tough, brutal existence of Highland crofters. It tells of the trial of a 17year old boy living in 1896 Ross-shire, who beat the local constable and two other people to death.  Yes, that’s right, a crime novel good enough to be shortlisted for the recent Booker Prize.

The Girl on a Train by Paula Hawkins
Rachael, the slightly overweight, divorced alcoholic heroine, is sacked from her job and staying with a long suffering friend. Obsessive and bitter, she fantasises about other people’s lives, while keeping up the pretence she is still working and coping well. In reality she is in total pieces. This book is flavour of the month, but be warned, its masterful deployment of unwitting unreliable narration evokes the aftershocks of abuse and trauma, making it neither an easy nor comfortable read.

Slaughterhouse 5 by Curt Vonnegut
An absurdist classic and satirical anti-war novel about the world experiences and journeys through time of Billy Pilgrim, American WW2 soldier/ alien abductee.

The Painted Lady by Maeve Haran
A well written romp through 17th century England. A vulnerable young lady arrives at the restoration court to find her innocence and beauty highly attractive to King Charles II, who will stop at nothing to make her his mistress. But she’s not a girl who gives in easily, if at all… Topical in that it covers not only the Great Plague, but also the Fire of London.

The painting is a cottage on Iona, by Cadell



Saturday, June 25, 2016

Purple Coo Summer Read 2016


To vote for your favourite, please make your 1st and 2nd choices in the comments box below then, after a count up, I'll post the title of our most popular book on the Purple Coo main site. It then becomes our Purple Coo Book Club Summer Read 2016

A View of the Harbour by Elizabeth Taylor
In the faded coastal village of Newby, everyone looks out for - and in on - each other, and beneath the deceptively sleepy exterior, passions run high. Beautiful divorcee Tory is painfully involved with her neighbour, Robert, while his wife Beth, Tory's best friend, is consumed by the worlds she creates in her novels, oblivious to the relationship developing next door. Their daughter Prudence is aware, however, and is appalled by the treachery she observes. Mrs Bracey, an invalid whose grasp on life is slipping, forever peers from her window, constantly prodding her daughters for news of the outside world. And Lily Wilson, a lonely young widow, is frightened of her own home. Into their lives steps Bertram, a retired naval officer with the unfortunate capacity to inflict lasting damage while trying to do good. ( A Virago Modern Classic)

How to Measure a Cow by Margaret Forster

Tara Fraser leaves London to start a new life in a Cumbrian town selected at random. She plans to obliterate her past, which contains a shocking event that had serious consequences, by becoming a completely different personality from her previous volatile self. She is going to be quiet, even dull, and very private. 

But one of her new neighbours, Nancy, is intrigued by her. She wants to become her friend. Equally determined not to be discarded are three old friends who Tara feels let her down when she most needed them. 
Tara fights to keep herself to herself, but can she do it? And does she really want to? Slowly, reluctantly, she discovers the dangers of trying to suppress the past and reject other people.

My Brilliant Friend by Elana Ferrante  
Much acclaimed when it came out and likely to be a real antidote to our miserable summer, My Brilliant Friend is the first book of the trilogy, The Neapolitan Novels and apparently is an addictive epic about two girls in Naples and the pathways they take into life.

The Road to Little Dribbling by Bill Bryson
Famous for his bestselling travel book, Notes from a Small Island, The Road to Little Dribbling is Bill Bryson’s latest book about Britain and covers his journey from Bognor Regis to Cape Wrath, so that just about covers us all in I would think. Given the changes about about  to come because of the Brexit result, this could be a timely read.

The colourful painting is by Wassily Kandinsky







Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Purple Coo Book Group Spring 2016

To Vote for our Purple Coo Book Club Spring Read 2016 please list your 1st and 2nd choices in the comments box below, or let me know via the Purple Coo site or via Facebook. The most popular book will be announced on Purple Coo as soon as I've had the chance to add up your votes. Only 5 books to vote for this time, and all of them very worth reading, so it's going to be a close run thing. 

Girl on a Swing by Richard Adams
By the author of Watership Down, but a much different tale, no dear little wandering rabbits in this one. Girl on a Swing is a spooky supernatural thriller. Think, young married couple, a mysterious antique, strange influences, worrying noises in the night, faint sounds of a child crying in the garden, with the promise of more troubling things to come.

Hotel du Lac by Anita Brookner
The novel that won the late Anita Brookner the Booker Prize.
Edith Hope, a determinedly unmarried novelist seeks exile and solace in the Hotel du Lac. Among the assorted pampered female guests is Mr Neville, and Edith is tempted by this final chance to change her life. A subtle, elegiac, charming and thoughtful novel.

Queen of Silks by Vanora Bennett
Part love story, part thriller, a masterly piece of storytelling set around the intertwining fates of two beautiful sisters during the reign of Edward IV. One woman is mistress to the king, the other the court silk weaver, both find out secrets perhaps they shouldn’t know.

Red Fortunes by Hugh Fraser
Set in Russia between the tangled years of 1914 – 1929, this is a page turning tale around love and romance, language difference, class, revolution, prostitution and vodka. Nostrovia!

The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
The first of the comedy science fiction series, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is a real blast of original, mind bending mirth. Fabulously funny … but then I guess you’ll know that already.

The picture is of Dorothy Johnstone by Anne Finlay 1920, currently on show as part of the Modern Scottish Women Painters and Sculptors exhibition in Edinburgh