Friday, August 15, 2025

Graham Greene and Charlotte McConaghy books this week

Wild Dark Shore.  I was hooked on this story after the first chapter.  A woman, close to death by drowning and hyperthermia,  washes up on the Arctic shore of a remote island.  The woman, Rowan, is dragged up to the lighthouse and cared for by Dominic Salt and his three children.  She has grave injuries requiring stitches where jagged rocks tore her body open.


 

When Rowan awakens the little boy, Orly Salt, asks her name.

"I'm Orly Salt. And you're on an island in the middle of the Southern Ocean, fifteen hundred kilometers from any other landmass.  Closest is Antarctica. So my question for you is: How did you get here Rowan?"

She is on Shearwater island, an island one hundred and twenty kilometers squared.  It's a tundra climate with many species of plants and hundreds of sea lions, seals and the last colony of royal penguins in the world.  It's also a research island where millions of seeds are stored to repopulate the earth after flooding.

All of them have secrets and as soon as you think one has sinister intentions, you get their backstory.  You've heard the saying -  don't-judge-a-book-by-it's-cover - and the reveals of all the characters took me by surprise, just when I thought I was figuring them out.

Rowan does not reveal her husband Hank is a reseacher who sent alarming emails to her while she was in their Australian home.  Dominic Salt, the father, doesn't know she is Hank's wife (at first) and there is quite a story there about Hank. Other researchers seem to have vanished, the children  (Raff, Fen and Orly) have lived on the island for the last eight years with their widowed father and I don't think any of them are thrilled to be leaving for civilization.  You are plunged into the cold, the storms and I hate to use this overused descriptor but it's atmospheric. 

I will be reading more by this Australian author.   5 stars.

The Quiet American

The setting is Vietnam in the 1950's and there is fighting between the Vietnamese and the French. France wants to hold on to the power they have, with the help from American govenment. As we all know, when France pulls out the Americans were involved in the war.  This one was on my Classics Club list I knocked out in a few days.


Aiden Pyle is the American who isn't in Vietnam to absorb the culture or as a journalist to report on the conflict.  He is an agent of the United States with the intent of bringing a better government and way of life to the Vietnamese people. That's one point of view because imposing American "values" to restructure is to ignore the the intact culture and regard as inferior. 

Thomas Fowler is the British opium addicted journalist who befriends Pyle.  Fowler was basically living with the lovely young Vietnamese woman named  Phuong.  She would prepare his opium pipe in the evenings and was quite devoted.  Then Pyle became infatuated with her and promised her marriage, Was he trying to save her from the middle-aged married Brit as well as "saving" her country?

Pyle is naive and ingenuous. Fowler has no moral compass. 

This is a classic but not one I personally found fantastic.  I am obviously in the minority.  In the past I have enjoyed some of Graham Greene's novels but this one was just meh for me. Knocking another off for my Classic Club list. 3 stars


25 comments:

  1. Yay for knocking books of your Classic Clubs list! Have a great weekend!

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  2. An Affair to Remember left me cold, so I haven't put any more Graham Greene novels on my TBR. While I think his writing is superb, his subjects just don't appeal to me.

    But reading the classics is always a good idea!

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  3. I wonder if I would enjoy Wild Dark Shore. I really liked her book Antarctica, but it was not a scary book. I am a big baby about scary books.

    I liked Quiet America a good big, more than you did, I think. Here's my little review, if you are interested: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2630674550

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    1. I just read your review. It's spot on and I'm glad you enjoyed that one. This Greene book just wasn't for me I guess, and I now I am in the minority.

      Deb, the book called Antarctica was by Claire Keegan but if you mean the book Migrations by McConaghy, that's an arctic setting. I just got thatnone from the library.

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    2. Yes, of course! I think I got those two confused. Oh dear. It's hard to get old!

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  4. I read Quiet American a long time ago for a class. I don't actually remember if I enjoyed it. I suspect that discussing it for a class made it more meaningful.

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    1. Joy, I think if I'd read this book 20 or 30 years ago my impression may have been different. But I find that with certain books I read a decade or so apart.

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  5. Nicely reviewed. Glad you enjoyed Wild Dark Shore. It is a bit spooky as to what happened to the other researchers on the island ... then you know something is amiss. The scenery is terrific. You're doing well with your classics list. What is next on that one?

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    1. Thank you. I try and fit a classic in here and there. Yes, definitely had you wondering what happened to the other researchers. Once those scenarios were explained it wasn't sinister at all!

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    2. hey that was my msg above ... somehow it came out Anonymous. sorry lol.

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  6. I saw your comment on Nicky @ The Bibliophibian's blog. I love lighthouses so I looked for the book and it's on Amazon. I'll probably get a copy soon.

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    1. Vicki, if you think of it please send me the link. The only copy I found was in Spanish.

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  7. I think Wild Dark Shore sounds amazing.

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    1. Erin, I loved it. It wasn't a feel good story but the writing was great.

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  8. I liked The Quite American but didn't love it and, just a year later, hardly remember a thing. Guess it didn't make much of an impression. Wild Dark Shore sounds great. I have McConaghy's Migrations waiting on my kindle.

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    1. JoAnn, I have Migrations now but just started another book. Hope I can get to it before due dates. Yeah, I think I am in the minority on Greene's classic. That's cool, we all have different tastes.

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  9. Wild Dark Shore sounds like a great book. I read Migrations a few years ago (gosh, it was four years ago!) for book group and thought it was pretty good. This one sounds better.

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    1. Les, I am definitely a fan of McConaghy's now. I want to start in on more of O'Farrell's books - you have me inspired.

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  10. I haven't read Charlotte McConaghey yet but I am pretty sure I am going to love her when I do read here.

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    1. Marg, she's an Aussie author I will read more of when I can get her books.

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  11. I have a copy of Wild Dark Shore but haven't read it it yet. I'm glad to see you loved it. I'll have to pick it up soon. That's too bad about the Graham Green book. He's one of those authors I've never read but feel like I should at some point.

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    1. Katherine, I will probably try another Greene book in the future but I'm not champing to get on it yet. I have some good ones in my lineup.

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