Showing posts with label recommended books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recommended books. Show all posts

Monday, 14 September 2015

MUST-READ BOOKS

WRITE, BUT FIND TIME FOR READING TOO

It takes a long long time to write a full length novel. Barbara Cartland, if anyone remembers her, used to write one a week but they were formulaic and very short.

For most of us writers the journey can take six months, a year, two years or even more, and other activities - housework, physical exercise, a social life, cooking a meal from scratch, walking the dog, tend to be scrappy or even non-existent.

So it's tempting to give up on reading books by other authors, when you could use that time to write another few chapters of your own book. But reading a really good book is such an intense pleasure that I for one can't give up on it. So here are a few I've read recently which I would like to recommend:

THE SECRETS WE KEEP and THE GIRL WHO JUST APPEARED
Both by Jonathan Harvey, author, playwright and television scriptwriter. His plots are ingenious, with unexpected twists and turns, and (like myself) he's from Liverpool, so there's an element of that quirky laconic humour throughout.

MAN AT THE HELM 
This is Nina Stibbe's debut book of fiction. Two children set out to find a new man for their dysfunctional Mum with hilarious and sometimes outrageous consequences.

THE CUCKOO CALLING  Robert Galbraith (aka J K Rowling)
I didn't enjoy The Casual Vacancy, J K Rowling's first assay into adult fiction (depressing and dreary), but this, the first of a crime series featuring an ex-Afghanistan veteran private eye, is a winner. The writing is humorous and accessible, as easy to read as her Harry Potter books, but definitely for the grown ups.  

Thursday, 26 February 2015

BOOKS FOR EARLY ONSET ALTZHEIMER'S PATIENTS AND THEIR CARERS

I see it's been proposed to make several books freely available to early onset Alzheimer's patients and their carers to enable them to cope with this tragic disease.

One of the books recommended is 'STILL ALICE', which has now been made into a film with Julianne Moore. 

I haven't seen the film but I did read the book, a beautiful and very moving novel by Lisa Genova, based on her own experience with patients.

However, I think it's the last book I personally would recommend, being deeply saddening and offering no hope as it carries the reader towards the inevitable ending.

A far better choice, I think, would be THE MEMORY BOOK by Rowan Coleman, with a similar main character, a teacher in her forties, also married and a mother.  

This equally beautiful novel is full of tips, practical and ingenious, on how to manage the downward spiral, yet at the same time it's full of humour, love and optimism.I recommend it to any readers who find themselves caught in this terrible situation.