It's been a while since I book blogged...burnt out on the food blogging but books have always pulled me back to the keyboard. Here are three of my February books.
Beyond That, the Sea is a book spanning decades.
The working class family Reg and Millie Thompson decide to send their young daughter Beatrix from London to America during WW II. The girl doesn't want to go but joins other children in relocation, safe from the bombs and destruction.
All the chapters are short and told from different viewpoints. There is the Thompson family in London and the Gregory family in the U.S. Nancy and Ethan Gregory have two sons, William and Gerald. They welcome Beatrix with open arms and she eventually blends into their family, becoming the daughter they never had.
Meanwhile Millie is missing her daughter, feeling like she is missing out on Beatrix's childhood and indeed she is. Mille and Reg are dealing with war, food shortages, burnt out buildings and hardship. Bea, as the American family call her, lives with the Gregory family for five years and has many wonderful experiences.
Over the decades the stories are about love, death, disappointment, friendship and hope. The settings are New York, Boston, Maine and London. 4.5 stars
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When All is Said by Anne Griffin is reflective story of a man's life and the people who meant the most to him.
Eighty-four year old widower Maurice Hannigan reflects on his life as he sits on a barstool, raising a toast to the five people he loved the most and the influences of others (not always positive) who shaped his life. He starts with his brother Tony and sips a stout, moving on to the other dear people in his life with a different whiskey and ale for each.
The story unfolds and intertwines with the lives of the rich Dollard family and how they effected each other. Near the end some fairly interesting twists came to light.
The setting is Meath Ireland.
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Skylight by Jose Saramango
This is a novel translated from Portuguese by a Nobel Prize winner author. It's a slice of life from the 1950's in a small town, getting into the everyday lives of regular people. There are fractured relationships, secrets, love and deception.
Something I found interesting was the preface explaining about the author and how this novel came to be published after his death. He sent it to a publisher and unbeknowst to him, it was placed in a drawer and forgotten for over 30 years. When the company was moving to a different location the manuscript was discovered.
Imagine 30+ years later getting a call about this manuscript. Saramago immediately went to pick up his typed work, was offered to have to publsihed and he declined. He stated you must respect people and so he wouldn't have it published until after his death.
I rounded up to 4 stars.
One more to go and I'll start my March book stats. So far, so good :-)
Something I found interesting was the preface explaining about the author and how this novel came to be published after his death. He sent it to a publisher and unbeknowst to him, it was placed in a drawer and forgotten for over 30 years. When the company was moving to a different location the manuscript was discovered.
Imagine 30+ years later getting a call about this manuscript. Saramago immediately went to pick up his typed work, was offered to have to publsihed and he declined. He stated you must respect people and so he wouldn't have it published until after his death.
I rounded up to 4 stars.