Author Archives: S.C. Karakaltsas

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About S.C. Karakaltsas

I am a published author of historical fiction and short stories.

Book Review: Edenglassie by Melissa Lucashenko

The latest book by Lucashenko is powerful, humorous but most of all is filled with raw honesty about our past and present.

It opens in present day with elderly Granny Eddie who has a fall along a Brisbane footpath. White people steer clear believing her to be drunk but it is a young Asian person who helps and gets her to hospital. It’s there that we meet her activist granddaughter Winona who rails against the establishment.

We are then taken back in time  to 1855 and introduced to Mulanyin a young man who’s life is deeply affected by white English occupation.

The story takes us well and truly away from the fake history so many of us have been fed and it’s stories like these that educate and explains and puts us right in the seat of injustice to give us a great understanding of the land we occupy.

It’s an insightful and riveting read full of beautiful yet colourful characters who can make us laugh and cry. Lucashenko is truly the master of the written word and it’s no wonder she’s raking in the prizes with her latest.

Book Review: One Hundred Years of Betty by Debra Oswald

This is a tale of Betty Rankin who on the eve of her hundredth birthday tells us all about her life.

Betty is born into a large poverty-stricken family whose stoic mother dies after giving birth to the tenth child. Her family barely survives with their errant alcoholic father. During WW2 she’s sent away to the country. From here on we are given a snapshot of her life throughout the decades of many highs and even more lows when she navigates to the other side of the world as a ten-pound pom.

This is a very easy read as Oswald quickly establishes the character of Betty in the early pages so that the reader feels a strong enough connection to care about her and her eventful life. I couldn’t put it down as I feared and hoped for her while admiring her courage and tenacity under all obstacles.

This is also a story of friendship and gives the reader pause to reflect on how important our own friendships are along the journey of life. Indeed, the love for her friends is what kept her going.

The writing is witty and smart told in a memoir-like fashion from Betty’s point of view. She’s funny, plucky and the mistakes she makes aren’t judged too harshly except by herself. She stands up for what she feels is right and tries to make a difference for herself and the world she navigates.

Themes of friendship, family, grief, trauma, indigenous rights, feminism, politics and love all feature in Betty’s commentary reflecting the history of the times as we stroll through the decades with her.

I found though the narrative waned a little towards the end by the telling rather than the showing. At times I began to wonder if the narrator was indeed a ninety-nine-year-old because her adventures in her eighties seemed a little far-fetched. But I caught myself as I recalled an aunt of mine who had indeed bucked the ageist stereotype by doing extraordinary things. It made me look at my own biases about what we think of our elderly and what we expect they should be like. Perhaps it’s a message that age is no barrier, only our thinking is.

This one is a very enjoyable read so check it out.

Book Review: Twist by Colum McCann

I really wish I hadn’t missed seeing this author when he spoke recently at the Melbourne Writers Festival as I’m sure it would have been just as fascinating as his recent book, Twist.

Probably like many, I had no idea that our internet comes to us via a series of cables which run deep under the world’s oceans. When one snaps as they can do, experts rush to find the cable break and fix it. It’s not easy because these cables can be kilometers deep where divers can’t get to.

McCann writes a story about one of these breaks and John Conway, a man charged to crew a vessel to find the break off the coast of Africa and fix it. The story is told from the point of view of writer, Anthony Fennel a borderline alcoholic who has been sent to write an article about a cable break. He meets Conway, his partner Zanele who’s an actress and their twin children. When Zanele leaves to take an acting role in London, Fennel wonders about their relationship while examining his own life as an estranged father.

The cable story, while interesting is a device to delve into broken people like Conway and Fennel, their relationships with others as well as each other and their secrets. Fennel is witness to Conway’s unraveling and in the process, we find out who these men really are.

The writing is truly exquisite, beautifully evocative with meaningful description which elevated this book for me.

“It was as if the Congo was purging itself, all that history, all that rancour under the sun, under the swollen stars, a rage of soil heading out into the channel, an underwater canyon that stretched for hundreds of kilometers… a place where there was no light except that which was throbbing within the cable, carrying in turn, just about everything.”

Give this one a go.

Book Review: Storm Child by Michael Robotham

I’ve never read anything by this author before and picked this one up not knowing that it was the fourth of a series, until I finished. It didn’t matter as this tale about Cyrus Haven a forensic psychologist and his friend Evie Cormac is gripping and chilling.

It opens on a beach in England where bodies begin floating to shore. They are asylum seekers from a boat which was deliberately slammed and sunk. One boy survives and Cyrus begins investigating what happened, unwittingly unlocking Evie’s traumatic past as a refugee. It soon becomes evident that the tragedy is somehow linked to what happened to Evie when she was a child.

There are themes of human trafficking, sexual abuse and refugees which may be tough for some readers, but Robotham shines a light on human plight and desperation of refugees who need to escape their homeland and those who take advantage of their vulnerability.

It’s not completely unpredictable but what is interesting is the character of Evie and Cyrus, their relationship and the demons they both battle. This is what I found the most compelling and of course the ‘who done it’ component made it a page turner. I’ll  have to give the earlier ones in the series a go.

Book Review: Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout

This is another novel about the character, Lucy Barton but this time she lives in Maine with her ex-husband, William. The story, though is about her deepening friendship with local lawyer, Bob Burgess who becomes involved in a murder case. Indeed, Strout does warn you that the story is all about Bob. For those of you who are Strout fans, Olive Kitteridge makes an appearance befriending Lucy at her retirement home where they swap yarns.

This is a story about relationships and a town of Maine, which Strout describes vividly throughout the seasons of the novel. The relationships Bob has is many and the reader voyeuristically observes his feelings and thoughts about Lucy, his wife, his brother and the man he is defending.

The reader can’t help but be embroiled in the stories exchanged between Lucy and Olive about the people they know whether they add any real value to the novel or not. We tut and judge alongside them as we might with our own friends and neighbours. Yes, we do it. You know we do.

Sometimes though, these stories failed to hold my interest enough, perhaps I was after more drama which I got as the murder investigation twisted into another not entirely unpredictable direction.

The resolution of Bob and Lucy’s relationship was a little pedestrian and I can’t say I liked either of them too much.

It’s a well written novel shining a light on the everyday and the unusual and was an okay read.

Interview

I was recently featured in UK’s magazine, Novelist Post where I talked about my writing journey, how I tackled research, my love of historical fiction and much more.

There are lots of other interesting and informative author stories in the magazine.

Book Review: The Ministry of time by Kaliane Bradley

A book about time travel where the past meets the present? This is a book I wanted to read.

A civil servant gets a job as a ‘bridge’ to Commander Graham Gore otherwise known as ‘1847’ when he is extracted from an Arctic mission with Sir John Franklin to find the North West Passage. All were lost during that fateful mission and yes these were real people.

Bradley deftly brings Commander Gore to life and so we have the basis for a novel. But this one is an unusual telling. Firstly, it’s told in first person by an unnamed civil servant, a young woman with Cambodian/English parentage. As a bridge, she is employed to live with him for a year to be Graham’s teacher and to help him adapt to life in the 21st Century. Their relationship grows and she soon begins questioning the real motive in bringing several figures from the past to present day.

This is an interesting book covering a multitude of themes. The story of being a bridge also coincides with her own story as the daughter of a mother who has undergone trauma having escaped the Khmer Rouge.  Was Bradley drawing a parallel with her mother’s background as a displaced refugee to Graham’s displaced life in present day London? It seems so. The exploration of her identity meandered with little purpose until the end when it seemed to make more sense. But did it truly belong? I found it difficult to buy into and although interesting, for me it became a distraction from the core story.

The unfolding of the arctic trip made by Graham was one I wanted to know but the narrative was completely separate and omnipresent. I’d have liked to hear it from Graham or to have been with him and surely this is what the bridge would have asked too.   Sometimes it almost seemed like an information dump as did the ‘teaching’ moments by the bridge. Indeed, I’d have loved to read more about Graham’s observations too.

Their relationship was interesting as it grew and reminded me a lot of the movie Kate and Leopold only not quite as charming. Detail of the bridge’s life was scant and although there was mention of her family and some friends, there seemed to be not much else in this woman’s life.

The writing is good but the overuse of metaphors was distracting. The plot did meander a bit in the middle although the last quarter seemed entirely different almost like an action movie.

I sped through this one as it was easy to read. I think though that Bradley tried desperately not make this tale too predictable but tackled too many themes without adequate exploration to make it feel like it belonged.

Overall, a delightful premise of a tale but not an amazing read.