Tag Archives: Reading

The Month that was…August 2023

Following on from last month’s blog about our road trip, we left Airlie Beach and travelled south and was lucky enough to visit some spectacular places. Here’s a few pics to give you an idea. We travelled to Yeppoon then onto Agnes Beach, popped into Maryborough and Gladstone, toured K’gari (formerly known as Fraser Island) and stayed on spectacular North Stradbroke Island, where we watched the whales. Truly a stunning trip.

I’ve been back home from our road trip for a couple of weeks now and whilst I loved travelling it is nice to be back. Of course, waiting for me was a list of things I’ve been putting off for the last couple of months. I’m busy now ticking them all off, one by one.

The biggest news is that my new novel is just about ready and will be out towards the end of November. Stay tuned for updates during September and October.

What I’ve been reading.

As ever I’ve still tried to keep up my reading but have also enjoyed a couple of audio books while travelling. Watch out for my thoughts about these ones in the coming weeks.

Until next month…

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.

The Month that was… July 2023

Road Trip

We set off for warmer places and drove 2400 kilometres to reach Airlie Beach. It took us fourteen days with a bit of adventure on the side.

The highlight for me was a tour of a seventy-two thousand acre beef cattle station near Carnarvon Gorge where we explored ancient aboriginal cave paintings, saw ancient cycads and peered up at colourful sandstone cliff-faces. The second highlight was prospecting for sapphires in the gemfields near Emerald. I can fully admit that I was seized with gem-stone fever as I uncovered a spectacular green sapphire.

What I’ve been reading.

It’s hard to know what books to pack for a road trip. Should I pack a suitcase?

Instead I packed just one hard copy, The Marriage Portrait and the rest were ebooks. This is what I picked.

Reviews will come out soon.

We are still travelling so until next month…happy reading.

Book Review: Bruny by Heather Rose

Books about Tasmania by Tasmanians rarely seem to put a foot wrong for me lately and Bruny is no exception.

It is a fantastical story of a time in the future when a bridge costing two billion dollars is constructed to Bruny Island a short distance from Hobart. For those who know Tasmania and in particular, Bruny Island, the place is not highly populated nor would it warrant a six-lane bridge. Understandably an explosion which collapses part of the bridge brings Astrid Coleman, a UN negotiator home from the USA to help her brother, the premier get the bridge repaired before the next election.

While central to the book is the bridge, there are many other issues the author freely explores. One is the destruction of the environment, both sea and land. It is well known that the waters around this particular area have been polluted by fish farming and this is spelled out again with the advent of a bridge and tourists. The author doesn’t hold back on the political aspects and I enjoyed this immensely as she foresees into the future pinpointing Chinese influence and economic colonialization. She also throws a jab at the AFL and considering that Tasmania has just been allocated a team in the recent month she was remarkably accurate in her forecast back when she wrote this prior to 2019.

The author is passionate about what Tasmania has and what is stands to lose, forecasting the consequences of the climate crisis. The future may not be that unrealistic.

There is also a love story and one of family together with loyalty and the challenge of allegiance. But more importantly, it is a story of being home and finding the joy of the land we’ve grown up on and where we really belong.

There are many issues in this book which will have you nodding your head in agreement as you turn the page not wanting to put this down.

It’s well written, easy to read and highly topical. It makes me want to head back to Bruny Island again to see it while it still is pristine.

Put this one on your list.

The Fortune Men by Nadifa Mohamed

This book was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2021 and was a book club pick for May.

It’s 1952. Mahmood Mattan lives in Cardiff and is a petty criminal walking the streets for opportunity. He’s cheeky, a pick-pocket, gambler and a proud Somalian. He is also deeply in love with his three young boys and his estranged wife. When he is accused of murdering a white Jewish woman, he believes in the English legal system and his innocence. His belief slowly crumbles amidst lies, mistaken identity and a system where privilege is not within his reach.

It’s a heart-breaking story and there is no happy ending. If anything, the carriage of injustice makes you angry and depressed. Mahmood is certainly a scallywag which he acknowledges but he admits he’s not a murderer. His blind faith in the legal system reveals the incompetence of all involved and all he has is the undying love of his wife and boys which of course only serves to make it all the more sad.

It is inspired by a true story as revealed at the end where justice was continually sought for years after. But what the author does is humanise the very details, putting us in Mahmood’s shoes, feeling all that he does. And it’s uncomfortable as we experience his fading hope.

It’s a descriptive book, probably a little too much for me as it slowed the story down. Yet the writing is beautiful so I can understand the shortlisting elevation.

It’s not a happy read but it is one about injustice, racial divides, and privilege. And that makes it an important one to read.

The Month that was… June 2023

We’re in the thick of winter now and yet the roses are still blooming. How can that be?

Despite the cold there is still plenty to get excited about.

Two restaurant recommendations which I’ve loved are Yan in South Yarra, where the speciality is smoked food. Delicious. The second is Grazia in Glen Iris, an Italian restaurant. Try them out.

What I’ve been watching…

I headed off to the theatre this month to see Is God Is a play about twin sisters seeking justice for their long lost mother. It’s a quirky yet dark and disturbing story so much so that there was long list of trigger warnings before the start of the play. It was enthralling and gripping with sharp acting and well worth seeing.

If you live in Melbourne, try to see it before it ends July 15.

What I’ve been reading…

Another good month of reading… reviews to follow shortly.

It’s time to seek a warmer climate so we’re going to hit the road next month. Watch out for updates via Instagram posts.

Until next month…