Category Archives: Book reviews

Book Review: Murder at the Dunwich Asylum by Karen Thurecht

I recently visited North Stradbroke Island during their annual Arts Trail which I followed to the hall which was once the Dunwich Asylum. There I met author Karen Thurecht who has written a book series about Dr Hamish Hart. Murder at the Dunwich Asylum is the first in the series of mysteries and I couldn’t resist picking it up.

The setting is 1884 when Hamish Hart visits the island to undertake an assessment of the asylum but becomes embroiled in the deaths of two people, one of which is an inmate. The superintendant, keen to downplay the death insists it is suicide. Dissatisfied, Hart begins an investigation and finds evidence that the inmate, Emily Baker was murdered. His friend Rita comes from the mainland and together they begin digging into areas where they shouldn’t and put their own lives at risk.

I loved the island’s description particularly as I could visualise it exactly. I was keenly interested in the historical context woven by the author into the narrative snippets from the newspapers of the time for each chapter heading. I also appreciated the themes around the social problems such as alcoholism, abuse of women and mental health issues and how this was dealt with in the day. Being sent to an institution for being a disobedient wife is just one way.

Hart’s character develops he begins investigating and I particularly liked Wesley Wallace who is introduced in the first chapter. We never really know if he good or bad but his story takes a surprising turn.

If you’re after a bit of a mystery and some fantastic island history then read this one.

Book Review: The Fire and the Rose by Robyn Cadwallader

This is a moving and brooding story set in 1276 England when persecution of the Jews was rife and a woman’s place was at home.

Eleanor moves to Lincoln to work as a housemaid and meets Asher a Jewish spice merchant. They fall in love in a town where religious divide is rife but they are joined by their shared passion for words and books. Eleanor learnt to read and write which was rare for a woman. When she falls pregnant with Asher’s child she is forced to leave her employment as a housemaid and attempt to use her skills as a scribe.

This is a slow story burying the reader into the small mindedness and unjustness of the time.  She is forbidden to marry Asher and their relationship is as passionate as it is fraught. I was surprised she was allowed to live independently with her child with little consequence but in this story she did with the financial help of Asher and another Jewish woman.

Cadwallader paints a picture of tension, violence and love in a time when prejudice and fairness was dictated by the King and fed into the way people lived.

The characters are well drawn, the writing beautiful and the story compelling despite being a slow burn.

A good one to read for those who like medieval historical fiction.

Book Review: Carrie Soto is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid

I’ve become quite a fan of this author and grabbed this one.

This story is about the comeback of world tennis champion, Carrie Soto from her beginnings as a child coached by her father until her retirement after being declared the world’s best.

It’s not enough for her to have once been the best in the world despised by her peers and single-minded in her pursuit for perfection, she needs to conquer the world again at the grand old age of thirty-seven.

If you’re a tennis fan, you will no doubt love the details of her grand slam struggles, the detail of the games and coaching tactics together with the commentary but for me it was a little too drawn out and repetitive, but then I’m no tennis fan. Her character grows over time as she realizes what’s important in life but I couldn’t really warm to her terribly much. The interruption of the dialogue with Spanish between her father and Carrie without any translation was a little challenging but I got the gist of what was being said, but I wondered if it was necessary?

The history of the way women were treated in the tennis world was really interesting and the author did this really well to portray the media and the tennis community attitudes.

Overall, I didn’t mind it as it’s still an engaging and easy read, but in my opinion not her best.

Book Review: The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O’Farrell

My first encounter with this author was reading her novel, Hamnet. In my opinion, The Marriage Portrait is even better.

O’Farrell was inspired by the real life story of fifteen-year-old Lucrezia di Cosimo de’Medici who, in 1560 married the Duke of Ferrara, Alfonso II d’Este. A year later Lucrezia died officially from a ‘putrid fever’. However, rumours circulated that she was indeed murdered by her husband.

And so O’Farrell begins her story on the day when Lucrezia’s realizes she is in danger. O’Farrell then weaves the story back and forth between that day and through Lucrezia’s life. We learn about her childhood as the middle child of a large and powerful noble family, her betrothal and eventual marriage.

We are immediately transported into Lucrezia’s life, inhabiting her thoughts, observations, and intelligence. She has great talents and had she been a male would likely have made a great ruler. But alas, the bindings of being a woman mean that she is cast into a role she does not want, that of a wife and breeder of children. And that of course is in keeping with the time and for years since. In our present day it nevertheless is galling as we cheer on her struggles for recognition and rights.

The structure of the story is clever as the two timelines converge towards a tense crescendo so much so that you cannot put it down.

There is a lot of description and sometimes I find in some stories that it can serve to slow the story down. Not the case for The Marriage Portrait as each detail puts us in Lucrezia’s point of view understanding her surroundings and her acute observations of people which serves to paint a complete picture of her world.

It is a masterpiece of writing, the characters so detailed that we know and fear for them.

This is definitely one to read. Don’t miss out.

Book Review: Mayflies by Andrew O’Hagan

This is a tender yet heart-breaking story about love and friendship and how far you would go for your friends.

This is Jimmy’s story about his friendship with Tully who took him into his family after his parents abandoned him. The first half of the novel is about the growth and depth of their relationship at a pivotal point when they travel with a group of friends from Glasgow to Manchester for a weekend of music, drugs, drinking and everything else in between. The second half fast forwards thirty years ahead when Tully rings Jimmy and breaks devastating news and asks for help.

The novel is filled with humour even in the darkest of moments. It is also a telling portrayal of life during the Thatcher years where each boy’s political views are shaped by the economic woes forced on them and their families by the collapse of the coal mines. Music is their escape and for one weekend they lose themselves in youthful exuberance.

Even though I read the novel, I could hear the Scottish lilt in the dialogue. The writing is beautiful and particularly evocative of the era of 1986. Yet the author also captured the same boys as men and where they’d landed. Jimmy and Tully chose the path they wanted on that weekend seeking a better life and for the most part achieved that. Foremost, their relationship never weakened by the years and only grew stronger.

Revealing the request Tully makes would be a spoiler but let’s just say the mood changes markedly dealing with a distressing yet important topic. The reader is faced with contemplating the uncomfortable dilemma Jimmy is put into and wondering how they would respond.

Give this one a go but be warned it’s a heavy topic.

Book Review: Naked Ambition by Robert Gott

This is a light-hearted, humorous look at family relationships and the world of politics.

Young MP Gregory Buchanan has been elevated to the Minister for Education and is facing an election when he shows his wife a painting he recently commissioned of himself. His excitement is soon overshadowed by his wife’s disapproval and dismay. She is in PR and realizes that the portrait of him fully nude will do him no favours. His mother-in-law, a Christian zealot is horrified and his mother is not keen. Throw in the female premier’s disapproval and you have quite a situation particularly after the painting is stolen.

I enjoyed the characters particularly the gin and tonic toting mother and the Christian die hard mother-in-law. The dynamics between these two made for some laugh out loud moments. In fact, I imagined this book as a play with sharp-witted repartee between the main players being the hapless Gregory, his wife and the two mothers together with his sister and the premier. Being the only male character, Gregory is constantly on the back foot and when the artist who is also female threatens him, we have an interesting twist.

I found some of the dialogue repartee, a little laboured and repetitive at times as the two major scenes were in the Buchanan’s house with the same characters. Apart from this it is a short read with enjoyable twists which likened it a little to an episode of Yes Minister. A fun read which many will enjoy.

Book Review: A Disappearance in Fiji by Nilima Rao

A novel set in Fiji in 1914 about a missing indentured Indian woman was bound to be intriguing. This debut historical fiction by Australian author Nilima Rao was a page-turner, enlightening the reader about the conditions of Indian Indentured workers early last century.

A young Sikh policeman, Akal Singh is posted from Hong Kong to Fiji in disgrace.  He is sent to a distant cane plantation to find a missing indentured Indian woman. The plantation owner declares she has run off with the overseer with whom she has been having an affair. A parish priest challenges that by saying she’s been kidnapped.  When Singh arrives at the plantation, he finds that not all is what it seems and he is shocked by the work conditions of his fellow countrymen.

There are several themes in this book, the colonial system, racism as well as the class divide not just between the races but even within the Indian community. Of course, sexism is explored and the way women are treated, where questions of justice and morals contradict the system of exploitation by the colonial system. The brutality and squalor of the indentured system was well portrayed.

 I liked the comradery between Akal and the white doctor who is pleasingly on the side of justice. There are times where I yearned for Akal to look a little wider, his investigation slow at first but becomes more energetic as his confidence grows.

 It makes for a very compelling story with a nice twist at the end. Yet it still lends itself to a sequel. I’ll look out for that one.