Reading and plants
June reading was quite varied in location and genres. This month I did not have a single DNF and completed five books. Yea!
ππ Books read ππ
Reading and plants
June reading was quite varied in location and genres. This month I did not have a single DNF and completed five books. Yea!
ππ Books read ππ
Loki resting with his stick. His X is quite prominent today.
Comment field update! First off, some comments you've left me have gone to Spam and so now I check spam/junk folder everytime I log on. Apologies. That's now handled . ✅
Also I found a way to leave comments on WP blogs, much to my delight :-) I just use my old AOL email address as it's not ever been associated with WP. Problem solved. ✔
Books
Manod Llan lives with her father and young sister on a remote Welsh island. She is a curious young woman and wants more than her sheltered existence provides. What she wants she does not know, she just knows there has to be more to life. The dwindling population make a living fishing, living a very simple life until a whale washes up ashore.
When English ethnographers (I had to look that up) arrive on the island to study the culture and the basic lives of the population, Manod's world is opened up and she is excited. There is much Welsh language in the narrative but the translation is there as you read. Manod is hired to make translations from Welsh to English to the reseachers.
Unfortunately the English researchers are scoundrals, in my opinion, and the book took a turn I did not expect. I suppose if you are looking for imagery the dead whale would represent the dying community on the island. This is a short book and many of the "chapters" are half a page.
Forgotten on Sunday
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Blink your eye and it's April. As Gilmour sang in Time, "then one day you'll find, ten years have got behind you..."
That's the truth. Time goes so fast. Since bringing this site back to life I updated on my February books here. This post is is a roundup of my March books. Then I'll be on track with some sort of schedule that suits me.
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In March I finished the second book in the Cormac Reilly series by Dervla McTiernan. I liked the first book, The Ruin, better than this second one - The Scholar. There are a few more to go before I am fully caught up. If you like police procedurals this would be a good one for you, set in Galway Ireland.
Also read in March: The Women by Kristin Hannah and Three by ValΓ©rie Perrin.
Three: In 1986 three young children meet in school and become inseparable. They are all ten years of age and come from different home lives. Etienne, Nina and Adrian. They hold hands all the time, they support each other, assist with school work and personal issues. You can't imagine these three ever having a falling out.
As I finished ValΓ©rie Perrin's novel Three this month, I wanted to transfer my review for Fresh Water for Flowers here. I read this one last August so if you've followed me on Goodreads you'll have seen it there.
"There are more than a thousand photographs scattered across the cemetery. On the day all of those photos were taken, none of the men, women, childen could have thought that that moment would represent them for all eternity. It was the day of a birthday, a family meal, a walk in the park, at a wedding...."
Violette is a wonderful character. The chapters will abruptly switch to another timeline where you'll get more of her back story. She was thought dead when she was born, roused by a nurse yet unwanted by her mother. She went through life in foster care, hoping to be adopted and belong. She never was wanted by any family. When she became of age to work, pouring drinks at a local bar she met her husband. The stunningly gorgeous Phillipe Toussaint singled her out and took her home. He may have been a handsome devil but he is also a scoundral. Once they had a daughter it seemed Violette's life was whole as she had what she always wanted - a family.
The back stories are not only of Violette. The people interred have stories as well. The visitors to the graves sit with Violette and pour out their hearts. It's all entwined how a mourning lover still leaves flowers or tokens on a lover's tomb, only to swept away by the widow when she visits.
A turning point comes when a policeman named Julian Sole arrives to ask questions about Gabriel Prudent, a man his mother Irene wants to be buried with. This man Prudent is a stranger to him but through his mother's journals, Irene and Gabriel's story unfolds in future chapters.
The story about Violette's daughter will break your heart. As you read you'll find love, hope, sorrow and grief.
This book was touching, moving slowly but not boring, learning about so many people and their stories then wrapping it up with several revelations I never considered.
Perrin's next novel is titled Three, also translated by Hildegarde Serle.
Review coming up.........
The Remains of the Day is a story about a seemingly cold unfeeling butler named Stevens and his reminiscing of days past. It's more tha...