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dommiz Locked account

dommiz@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 1 year, 10 months ago

Part-time organic sheep farmer in Exmoor National Park, rest of the time an International development economist (SE Asia & UK). Sometimes reads books, not as often as I would like. Mastodon: @dommiz@climatejustice.social

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dommiz's books

Currently Reading

David Mitchell: Ghostwritten (2001, Vintage) 4 stars

A gallery attendant at the Hermitage. A young jazz buff in Tokyo. A crooked British …

Review of 'Ghostwritten' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Another winner from Mitchell. I have read most of his other works, so came late to this debut. It has his trademark style of nested stories, which he later perfected in books such as Cloud Atlas. I did sense that this book started as a collection of short stories that he then strung together in a novel. He is so bursting with ideas perhaps this form suits him best. But perhaps I am just too thick to understand the connection that links all the stories together. Not that it matters, as the book is a great read, with some stories (such as the Mountain Tea Shack) that are evocative, moving and immersive. What more could one want from a novel?

The only reason I give it 4 stars instead of 5 is to distinguish it from Mitchell’s other great books. I therefore use separate calibrated scale for Mitchell. His 4 …

John Lanchester, John Lanchester: The Wall (Hardcover, 2019, W. W. Norton & Company) 4 stars

Review of 'The Wall' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Besides the good story, well told, this book is a masterclass in how to structure and pace a novel. The author clearly knows how to edit, as this is just the right length. So many books start well, but outstay their welcome. It is a cracking good read.

The story is familiar to anyone who enjoys dystopian speculative fiction (Atwood et al.). It echoes the recent BBC Radio 4 play 'Borderland' (www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08dnhjx), with themes of migration and what happens when nationalism and nativism lead governments into unravelling the social contract. One of the points of the book is that if we allow our government to treat 'the Others' as undesirables without rights, then in so doing we enable a process whereby our own rights are discarded. The distinction between us (with comfort and prosperity) and the others (facing insecurity and death) becomes a bureaucratic distinction. Too easily, we …

Sarah Perry: The Essex Serpent (2017) 4 stars

"Costa Book Award Finalist and the Waterstones (UK) Book of the Year 2016." "I loved …

Review of 'The Essex Serpent' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I really wanted to like this book more than I did. Halfway through I abandoned it, then after reading a couple of other books I came back to it. I am glad that I persevered, as the final quarter was the best part of the book and it all sort of made sense.

Some of the passages are beautifully written. It is evocative and moving. But I wish the author had cut 50 pages somewhere in the middle and allowed the story to gallop along with a bit more clip. I suspect there were just a too few many themes going on, and they needed to be threaded and unthreaded for the story to make any sense at all. But some of those themes (such as the presumably autistic son, the social justice warrior companion) could have been dropped with no peril to the main plot.

David Szalay: All that man is (2016) 2 stars

Here are nine men. Each of them is at a different stage in life, each …

Review of 'All that man is' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I gave up half way through. I just found it too depressing. I found it hard to sympathise with the characters, except in a vague 'aren't men hopeless?' kind of way. Perhaps my lack of perseverance is one of the failings the book depicts? In which case, I don't need reminding!