Another Young Adult novel following on the heels of Fault in Our Stars that also features teenage love and tragic death, but falling short.
The family breakfast idyll, where a disappointing snow storm gives the excuse for everyone to skip work or school, soon shatters when they are involved in a tragic car accident. Both parents are instantly killed and daughter Mia is rushed to hospital in a critical condition. It is frustratingly unclear what has happened to her younger brother, Teddy. Mia continues to tell the story of her treatment at the hospital and the various ways in which family and friends cope with the bereavement via an out-of-body experience. The question is does Mia have anything left to live for now or should she let go?
Interspersed with the current timeframe are Mia's reminiscences of her family and blossoming first love with Adam. Mia and Adam both share a love of music, as she develops as an accomplished cellist and he as a guitarist in a rock band.
Saturday, 7 February 2015
Sunday, 18 January 2015
Testament of Youth
The Book
Vera Brittain's memoir of the First World War was published in 1933, quite a while after the prolific outpouring of novels, poems and biographies in the late 1920s. She acknowledges Robert Graves' autobiography, Goodbye to All That, early on and having read his harrowing, reportage of life in the trenches, I found Testament of Youth a less powerful read. I think because she is writing of her own experiences, mainly away from the front as a volunteer nurse, and relying on letters and telegrams from her brother and her tragic first love to fill in detail, the book is more personal and concentrates on her feelings and reactions to what is going on around her and out of her control.
It was interesting to read about the way civilian life back home altered as a result of WW1 and the attitudes of the older generation to the conflict, but it did not grip me as Graves did.
Vera Brittain's memoir of the First World War was published in 1933, quite a while after the prolific outpouring of novels, poems and biographies in the late 1920s. She acknowledges Robert Graves' autobiography, Goodbye to All That, early on and having read his harrowing, reportage of life in the trenches, I found Testament of Youth a less powerful read. I think because she is writing of her own experiences, mainly away from the front as a volunteer nurse, and relying on letters and telegrams from her brother and her tragic first love to fill in detail, the book is more personal and concentrates on her feelings and reactions to what is going on around her and out of her control.
It was interesting to read about the way civilian life back home altered as a result of WW1 and the attitudes of the older generation to the conflict, but it did not grip me as Graves did.
Monday, 29 December 2014
Keeper of Lost Causes
The Book
The book from which the Scandinavian film is adapted is Mercy by the Danish author Jussi Adler-Olsen. It is the first in a series of books about a police department (Department Q) set up to investigate cold cases. The department is an initiative set up as a political ploy and to gain funding for the force, but the actual department is one man - Carl Morck - given the job as nobody wants to work with him after his last investigation left one of his partners dead and the other unable to move due to spinal injury. He is given a helper - Assad, a Syrian immigrant who has an unclear past - who prods Carl into actually doing some work rather than moping in his office.
Across its 500 pages, it manages to keep the story fresh and interesting by including various side stories while not losing sight of the main plot - the disappearance five years ago of Merete Lyngaard. The reader is aware that she is still alive and being kept in harrowing conditions, so it is a race against time to find her.
The book from which the Scandinavian film is adapted is Mercy by the Danish author Jussi Adler-Olsen. It is the first in a series of books about a police department (Department Q) set up to investigate cold cases. The department is an initiative set up as a political ploy and to gain funding for the force, but the actual department is one man - Carl Morck - given the job as nobody wants to work with him after his last investigation left one of his partners dead and the other unable to move due to spinal injury. He is given a helper - Assad, a Syrian immigrant who has an unclear past - who prods Carl into actually doing some work rather than moping in his office.
Across its 500 pages, it manages to keep the story fresh and interesting by including various side stories while not losing sight of the main plot - the disappearance five years ago of Merete Lyngaard. The reader is aware that she is still alive and being kept in harrowing conditions, so it is a race against time to find her.
Monday, 22 December 2014
The Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies
And so we finally come to the conclusion of all things Middle-Earth. The final film in the Hobbit trilogy covers the last seven chapters of the book. After wreaking revenge on the Lake people, Smaug is finally despatched by Bard with his last black arrow, aiming at the dragon's breastplate weak spot.
As the dust settles, however, as with all vacuum's created by a dictator or powerful ruler, various parties sniff the possibility of wealth and position left by the death of Smaug. Thorin's greed and stubborn pride lead him to reject any sharing of the dragon gold and he is beseiged as armies of men, elves, dwarves and goblins gather and align themselves into factions to fight for the title of King under the Mountain.
The final battle sees the return of characters featured earlier in the book, including the Eagles and Beorn, and is not without its main character casualties, which I was not expecting.
As the dust settles, however, as with all vacuum's created by a dictator or powerful ruler, various parties sniff the possibility of wealth and position left by the death of Smaug. Thorin's greed and stubborn pride lead him to reject any sharing of the dragon gold and he is beseiged as armies of men, elves, dwarves and goblins gather and align themselves into factions to fight for the title of King under the Mountain.
The final battle sees the return of characters featured earlier in the book, including the Eagles and Beorn, and is not without its main character casualties, which I was not expecting.
Monday, 1 December 2014
Mockingjay part 1
The Book
And so we come to the end of another trilogy - but not quite, as the film company has decided to drag the end out over two films. Because there is so much in the source novel to get across in just one film or because they will get twice as much box office takings?
As we are only looking at a Part 1, I have only read half way through the book and am guessing where the film will end - with Katniss being shot following the rebel attack on the Nut defences in District 2, I suspect, as its a good cliff hanger but we all know she survives.
What becomes clear through the first half of the novel, is that Katniss is still being used for other people's purposes - she's enlisted as a propaganda emblem (much like Captain America during WWII) to strengthen morale and purpose with the rebelling Districts and to be a niggling itch with the Capitol and President Snow. It feels that President Coin of District 13 and Plutarch have their own agendas in their quest to usurp and gain power, however.
And so we come to the end of another trilogy - but not quite, as the film company has decided to drag the end out over two films. Because there is so much in the source novel to get across in just one film or because they will get twice as much box office takings?
As we are only looking at a Part 1, I have only read half way through the book and am guessing where the film will end - with Katniss being shot following the rebel attack on the Nut defences in District 2, I suspect, as its a good cliff hanger but we all know she survives.
What becomes clear through the first half of the novel, is that Katniss is still being used for other people's purposes - she's enlisted as a propaganda emblem (much like Captain America during WWII) to strengthen morale and purpose with the rebelling Districts and to be a niggling itch with the Capitol and President Snow. It feels that President Coin of District 13 and Plutarch have their own agendas in their quest to usurp and gain power, however.
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