Bookcrossing

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

11 in 11 Step Challenge

 I finished the 11 in 11 Category Challenge and was busy reading some bonus books, until I decided to jump into a second challenge.  So here it is, Soffitta1's 11 in 11 Step Challenge, 11 categories but this time, the first category is 11 books, the second 10, etc.  Here are my initial categories, but I am sure they will change and be moved around.
 
11x 1001 Books


1. Agnes Grey ** Group Read
2. The Diary of a Nobody
3. Suite Francaise **Group Read
 
10x Asian Books



I usually read a lot of books set in Asia or by Asian writers, hopefully some from my huge TBR pile.
1. [Lord Jim]

9x Spanish Speaking World


1. Dreaming in Cuban

7x In Spanish


TBR
1. Muerte de Tinta

6x History

5x It's a sign!



Books that I pick up because of a connection, authors that crop up in conversation or by word of mouth.

1. Santaland Diaries I heard a bit of an interview with the author on BBC Radio 4 Extra and, a couple of days later, a colleague gave me this book.

4x Mystery


3x Short Stories


2x Children's Books

I am going to be working on a summer camp, so will be reading with my students. And, I am a big kid at heart ;)

 
 
1x Tome
A big, fat, scary book.

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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

11 in 11 Category Challenge COMPLETED

Top and bottom books of the challenge:

I gave out quite a few 4 1/2 stars, none of the books I felt merited the elusive 5, but I thought they were very good. Understandably most were 1001 books, but there were some lighter, more fantastical reads in there.

Here are my top 1001 reads:
Day of the Triffids
The Story of Lucy Gault
All Quiet on the Western Front
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Cold Comfort Farm
The French Lieutenant's Woman
Effi Briest
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

If I had to chose the crème de la crème, I would go for The Story of Lucy Gault, which affected me so much, I couldn't put it down and it went around my head for days afterwards. The same goes for The Reluctant Fundamentalist, which was removed from the latest version of the 1001 list, wrongly as far as I can see. Lastly I would pick The French Lieutenant's Woman, I think the combination of characters and a meddling narrator gives it that extra inch.

As for the rest, I would single out these 5:

Stardust
Inkheart
The Good Earth
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
The North China Lover

I enjoyed being transported to others worlds with Stardust and Inkheart. The Good Earth was so interesting, so well characterised. The Diving Bell is another of those slim volumes which catches you unawares, making you think and evaluate your own life and relationships. As for The North China Lover, an excellent revisiting of The Lover, from a different point in the author's life.

At the other end, there were few books I didn't really like, but here they are:
Bleak House
Sundays at Tiffanys'
Malinche
Lost Innocence
An Unequal Marriage
West of the Wall

Bleak House just bored me to tears and Lost Innocence was not my kind of book. West of the Wall annoyed me for the plot twist, though it had very good ideas in it. Malinche was a disappointment as I have enjoyed other books by the author. An Unequal Marriage was a horrible revisiting of Pride and Prejudice and I think James Patterson should stick to crime, as shown in Sunday at Tiffany's!

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11 in 11 Category Challenge: Last Quarter

The last quarter:

Category 1: Latin America

9. Captain Pantoja and the Special Service
10.Queen of the South
11.A death in the Sanchez Family





Category 2: 1001 Books
10. Under the Net
11. Burmese Days


Category 3: History
Fiction and Non-Fiction

10. El Capitan Alatriste
11. Rebel Heiress

Category 4: Books in a Series

8. Murder at Deviation Junction - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
9. Life, the Universe and Everything - part of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series
10. So long, and thanks for the fish- part of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series
11. Mostly Harmless- part of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series


Category 5: Asia Already Completed



Category 6: Mystery
Mysteries, Crime, Detective Fiction.

5. An Arsonist´s Guide to Writers´ Homes in New England
6. Bombay Ice
7. Death on a Branch Line - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
8. A Case of Exploding Mangoes
9. The Last Train to Scarborough - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
10. The Somme Stations - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
11. Crime and Punishment
 

Category 7: German Speaking World

8. Corazon de Tinta
9. The Rings of Saturn ** 1001 Book
10. All Quiet on the Western Front ** 1001 Book
11. Sangre de Tinta in Spanish

Category 8: Film and Adaptations
 Already completed
 
Category 9: Links

9. Jane Austen: A Life- Jane Austen link to I was Jane Austen's Best Friend
10. A Christmas Carol - also by Charles Dickens ** 1001 book
11. Vanity Fair ** 1001 book, mentioned in The Story of Lucy Gault

 
Category 10: Travel

6. The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy **1001 Book
7. The Restaurant at the end of the Universe
8. The Great Railway Bazaar
9. Seven Years in Tibet
10. Closely Observed Trains **1001 Book
11. Duende



Category 11: British Authors

10. El Emperador
11. Lost Innocence



Top reads for the quarter:
I read some very good 1001 books, the best being  All Quiet on the Western Front (a reread), Closely Observed Trains
 and Burmese Days.  I thoroughly enjoyed  A Case of Exploding Mangoes, I will be looking out for more by the author. Captain Pantoja and the Special Service amused me terribly, Jane Austen: A Life was informative without being dry. Finally, I read 2 of Cornelia Funke's Inkheart Trilogy, Corazon de Tinta and Sangre de Tinta, and I can't wait to get my hands on the third book.



As for weaker books, I think there were 2: Bombay Ice and  Lost Innocence .  While neither book was really bad, I felt that Bombay Ice didn't live up to the start and Lost Innocence just wasn't my cup of tea.

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Friday, June 17, 2011

11 in 11 Category Challenge: 7 German Speaking World COMPLETED

Category 7: German Speaking World


In the 999 Challenge, I looked at the Portuguese Speaking World, in the 1010 Challenge I concentrated on the Spanish, so this time the German is up.

1. Dragon Rider
2. Candide *1001 Book, main character from Westfalen.
3. Kleiner Werwolf (in Spanish)
4. Golem: An Old Prague Tale in German
5. The Pigeon ** 1001 Book
6. Effi Briest **1001 Book
7. West of the Wall
8. Corazon de Tinta in Spanish
9. The Rings of Saturn ** 1001 Book
10. All Quiet on the Western Front ** 1001 Book
11. Sangre de Tinta in Spanish

A bit of a random selection, rather surprisingly, three of my German books were in Spanish! Four entries from the German writer Cornelia Funke, I had read Inkheart in English a few years ago, but was waiting to get hold of the the third of the trilogy. When I found them in my local library in Spanish, I thought it was a sign! I love her books, I'm only sorry that it has taken me so long to read them, where was she when I was growing up?! I am off to get Inkdeath from the library to complete the trilogy. Five 1001 books, one a reread, but all strong books. Very different, from the funny Candide, to the impending downfall of Effi Briest, from the day in the life story in The Pigeon to a travelogue, The Rings of Saturn. And last, but not least, a reread of a great book, All Quiet on the Western Front, which affected me just as much as it did the first time I read it.

West of the Wall was a clunker, a great idea of a book ruined by a plot twist. This is on the list of books I'd love to rewrite.

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Sunday, June 12, 2011

11 in 11 Category Challenge: 6 Mystery COMPLETED



Category 6: Mystery
Books related with mysteries, crime or detective fiction.
1. The Big Sleep ** 1001 Book
2. Raffles
3. The Poe Shadow
4. In the Forest ** 1001 Book
5. An Arsonist´s Guide to Writers´ Homes in New England
6. Bombay Ice
7. Death on a Branch Line - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
8. A Case of Exploding Mangoes
9. The Last Train to Scarborough - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
10. The Somme Stations - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway
11. Crime and Punishment ** 1001 Book

I am pleased with this group, I do like to read crime books, but had never thought of having it as its own category. My favourites were A Case of Exploding Mangoes, a fictional narrative based on the death of a Pakistani leader, and In the Forest, also fiction that came from fact. 3 of the books were from the 1001 list, The Big Sleep is a great example of noir, Crime and Punishment was good but my head hurt with trying to remember the names (surnames, patronyms, nicknames) and the very creepy In the Forest. I didn't have any real duffers, but I was disappointed by The Poe Shadow, having read more of the author's work, and I felt Bombay Ice petered out.

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Friday, June 03, 2011

Jim Stringer Railway Mystery Series

When I won the 7th installment in Librarything's Early Reviewers Programme, I thought I'd better get started on the series.  I come from a family which love the railway, Dad's pretty much a trainspotter and even has a garden railway (which his grandson loves to play with!).  We always try and travel by train as much as possible.  I do like a good mystery, so when I saw the first book a few years ago, I thought "perfect"!

The Necropolis Railway is the first in the Jim Stringer railway mystery series. Jim is the son of a butcher, but he dreams of being a train driver. He finds a job on his local line, but gets his big opportunity when a Mr. Smith arranges a job for him in London a big railway company. Waterloo at the turn of the 20th Century is a dark and dangerous place, Stringer replaces a boy at the yard who was murdered and has trouble fitting in. The railway company also provides trains for the Necropolis Railway, and Jim soon starts transporting the bodies.
If you like trains, this is the book for you. Martin goes into a lot of detail about the railway, the protagonist, Jim Stringer is the early 20th Century version of a trainspotter. Stringer also speaks in the slang of the time, which, for me, adds a lot of humour and the OTT drama typical of books of that era.
A light mystery, good for a commuter. ( )

The second installment of Andrew Martin's Jim Stringer series is The Blackpool Highflyer. Jim has moved back north and is working for the Lancashire and Yorkshire. Still not a driver, but working towards that, Jim's colleague is the rather dapper Clive, well-dressed, a hit with the ladies. The Stringers decide to rent out a room in their home to George, another up and coming lad, who works in the ticket office.
As the weather warms up, Clive and Stringer are to take mill workers on a jolly to Blackpool, unfortunately, this is when tragedy strikes. In the midst of turbulent times, socialist groups against mill owners and even the railway companys, who is to blame? Jim takes up the case when a split second decision leaves him emotionally involved.
I enjoyed picking up Jim's story, as well as the character of his wife being more fleshed out, she is no shrinking violet of a housewife. I look forward to reading more about her. Martin also does well to set the scene historically, the mills of northern England and the trips to the seaside towns.
As in The Necropolis Railway, there is a lot of train info here, Martin fairly peppers the text with trivia and jargon, but it never feels affected or as if it were getting in the way of the story. This is a light murder mystery, but the railway backdrop gives it its quirky edge. ( ) 
  
In The Lost Luggage Porter, Stringer has left off engine work as a result of an accident. He signs up to be York's newest railway detective. After a meeting with the titular porter, Stringer is pointed in the direction of a criminal outfit operating around the station. Are Brains and the Blocker also mixed up in the recent murders, all three being somehow related with the railway?
Stringer's new chief decides to take advantage of his not being known locally, and gets him to work undercover to try and infiltrate the gang.
The encounter with th lost luggage porter sets in motion a chain of events, which will lead Stringer as far as Paris and put his life in danger. In this installment, we get more of an idea of Stringer's wife. Heavily pregnant, she is worried that the baby'll will be the end of her life. She is more involved than ever in the suffragette movement, causing friction between her and her father-in-law, who tries to 'help' her by sending her columns on household hints.
Another entertaining installment of the series, I look forward to book 4. As I said about the previous books, the charm for is in the backdrop of the railway. ( )
In Murder at Deviation Junction, Jim is on a winter's trip with his family when the train makes an unscheduled stop and a body is uncovered.
We have moved on a couple of years, Stringer is up for promotion, but is up against his direct superior, who would prefer to see him shuffling papers. Stringer should be on the trail of a football thug, but can't keep away from the mysterious circumstances surrounding the discovered body of man who apparently committed suicide. As in previous books, Stringer jumps blindly into danger, following the trail of 5 men caught on film by the dead man, taking him to London and even as far north as Inverness.
Jim is showing his frustration about being so near the railways, but yet not allowed to drive the trains, but his growing family is banking on his promotion. His wife, Lydia, is moving up in the Co-operative, intent on bringing the family up, not helped by a drunk Jim pitching up at her Christmas do. I still wish the author would give Lily more print, as she is a great character.
The series is still entertaining for me, the trains and the penny dreadful style. It is a gentle mystery, one for a quiet afternoon on the sofa. Number 5 beckons. ( ) 

Death on a Branch Line : A chance meeting at York Station with a condemned man causes Jim Stringer to put off his trip to Scarborough with his wife to go to the small village of Adenwold instead. Hugh Lambert persuades Stringer, more by his manner than anything else, that he is innocent of murdering his father, and that his brother could be in danger. As Lambert's hanging is set for the Monday, Stringer only has a weekend to discover the true murderer.
Stringer and his wife, Lydia, stay at the inn while they try to get to the bottom of Sir George's murder. Adenwold is a sleepy village, whose decline has been accelerated by the coming of the railway. It is a village of its time, with the local lords, in the guise of the Lamberts, a cricket match, rabbit shooting, an eccentric station master with his toy soldiers and a ever-so hands on vicar. Add into the mix the heightening tension between the U.K. and Germany, and a man with papers in German, and you have all of the ingredients of a good mystery.
I enjoyed the book, especially the short time frame, which made the story move at a cracking pace. I am also giving this an extra half a star for Lydia finally getting the page time she deserves. In this, the fifth instalment of the Railway Detective series, Jim's wife is along for the ride, and gets stuck right into the mystery.
The next book is ready and waiting! ( ) 

The Last Train to Scarborough, number 6 in the Jim Stringer series. Jim's wife is pushing him to leave the Railway Police Force and to move into becoming a solicitor, but the Chief has one last job for him. A railway man has disappeared from a lodging house in Scarborough, and is presumed dead. Jim is sent to Scarborough posing as an engine man along with Tommy Nugent, a fellow member of the Chief's shooting club.
Paradise, the lodging house, is an odd place. It is run by the beautiful, but strange Miss Rickerby and her brother, Adam, who is not the full shilling. There are two other lodgers, Vaughan and Fielding, both of whom seem keen to befriend Stringer. All of them are under suspicion.
Martin uses a different technique to drive the plot forward, the narrative is split between Stringer trying to uncover the truth and him coming to on a boat under guard. So we have two mysteries, the disappearance of the railway man, who the captain of the boat is and why he is so interested in Stringer's deductions. It works well, keeping up the tension and suspense, also we get a look at a different kind of machine from the era, a steamboat.
I enjoyed this, and look forward to the next installment, The Somme Station, which I received through the Early Reviewers Programme. ( ) 

I received  The Somme Stations  from the Librarything Early Reviewers Programme, and it galvanised me into getting stuck into the series.
In this, the 7th Jim Stringer book, WW1 is in full flow and a North Eastern Railway Battalion is being formed. Stringer signs up, and joins other railway men being trained in Spurn. The first part of the book deals with their training.
They are a mixed bag from Dawson, a porter, to two other railway coppers, Scholes and Flower, as well as Oamer from the ticket office and two underaged lads. They are joined by the Butler brothers, twins Roy and Andy, a pair of brutes ready for grunt work, and Oliver, who is looking out for them.
One of the youngsters, William, is found dead in the water, and suspicion falls on all of the men, none of which has an alibi. This cloud of suspicion hangs over them as they make their way to the front, being sent right up to the frontline. Stringer's railway experience is soon put to good use as he drives the small engines to supply the soldiers with shells and bring back the wounded. Despite being sent to the front, and the danger they are under, an MP, Thackeray, will not let the matter drop.
Similar in tone to the previous books, as Stringer tries to uncover the murderer under difficult circumstances. Martin does capture the time well, both the training and the reality of the front. It was interesting to read about the engines at the front, not something I had ever really heard of. Lydia gives us an insight into the situation back in Blighty, with women taking over the men's jobs, something I would like to have read more about. A good continuation of the series. ( )

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11 in 11 Category Challenge: 1 Latin America

Category 1: Latin America

In the 999 Challenge I had a Portuguese speaking world category and in the 1010 Challenge, a Spanish speaking one. This time I thought I would concentrate on Latin America related books as I am curretntly travelling there. As Latin America can be taken in many ways, here it will be all countries (or regions - like Quebec) in the Americas speaking a Latin language.

1. The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts
2. Senor Vivo and the Coca Lord ** 1001 Book
3. Malinche
4. The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman
5. La Ciudad de las Bestias (in Spanish)
6. El Reino del Dragon de Oro (in Spanish)
7. Relato de un Naufrago (in Spanish)
8. El Bosque de los Pigmeos (in Spanish)
9. Captain Pantoja and the Special Service
10. The Queen of the South
11. A death in the Sanchez Family

A very strong group, I cleared 9 books of Mount TBR. The list is made of two Latin American trilogies. The first by Louis de Bernieres, was very good, I enjoyed the style (magical realism) and the characters, as well as the absurdity and contradictions of life described. The second was by Chilean author, Isabel Allende, once again magical realism. Though written for YA, the stories about Kate Cold and her son, Alex, and their travels will also appeal to adults. While most of the books were indeed written in the style of magical realism, a genre which I clearly enjoy, it was interesting to read one of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's books from before he had fully developed his writing in that way. I also thoroughly enjoyed Captain Pantoja, a biting satire.

As for the negatives, well, only one really, Malinche. I don't think it stood up to Laura Esquivel's other work. I also took El General en su Labirinto back to the library, I'll try reading it again when I have more time to concentrate on it. I am happy that 4 of the books were read in their original Spanish.

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Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Top Reads in May

I cracked on with my 1001 challenge and read quite a few. They were very varied, both in nationality of the authors and in genre. Three of my 1001 books were WW1 and 2 related. The first, Closely Observed Trains is a short 1001 book. I saw the film back when I lived in Prague, and it was pretty faithful to the book as far as I remember. A young man Milos, working for the Czech Railways under German occupation, has just come back to work after a suicide attempt stemming from unconsumated relationship with Masha. It is comic, but also full of tragedy. I dusted off Suite Francaise as part of a Librarything readalong. Suite française are the two books that Irène Némirovsky wrote in WW2, before her death in Auschwitz. The two books themselves are rather different, but as can be seen from the first appendix, the author planned to tie the threads together. This is not a book about heroes, rather this is the reality of people living in terrible times. At first, in the first book, I found it hard to sympathise with the characters, until I tried to place myself in their shoes, surely our own survival is the most basic of instincts. All Quiet on the Western Front, a reread for me, I was chosen by World Book Night to hand out the book in March, and so I read it on its way to a friend. I wanted to give out the book because, despite being written about a war which started nearly a century ago, I think it's still relevant today. All politicians should be made to read this before being sworn into office.
I especially enjoyed Burmese Days, I am a big George Orwell fan, and this is another of his good books. This is a biting look at life in Burma, the machinations of the British, Burmese and other nationalities. Diary of a Nobody was a lighter read from the list, very amusing! I have had this for a while, but it was only at Christmas that I realised it was on the 1001 list, so I bumped it up to the top of my reading pile. Mr. Charles Pooter is a nobody, well, he is no Pepys or Johnson, but he won't let that hold him back. What makes this funny is that Pooter takes himself rather seriously, opening himself up to being laughed at by others.



As for non-1001 reads, Seven Years in Tibet, I finally read it after being put off the beautiful but terribly dull film. The book is Harrer's own words, his experience in Tibet, a country which, even today, is one of the last really mysterious places on Earth. Harrer arrived in Tibet after escaping from a POW camp in India, a great adventure in itself. He writes about all aspects of Tibetan life, from life in the provinces to life in the capital, Lhasa, where he became a tutor of sorts to the Dalai Lama. Recommended.



I also read a good mystery, A Case of Exploding Mangoes. I bought this for the title, who could resist such a provocative one, especially with a great cover. I must admit, I know very little about Pakistan, and the case that the book is about, the suspicious death of General Zia, was completely unknown of by me. The book opens with an assertion of the ending, the death of Zia, and then moves back to explain how Shigri comes to be the only survivor. Keeping with the military theme, I also read Captain Pantoja and the Special Service. Captain Pantoja is ordered to Iquitos to deal with a military problem, he has to stop the frustrated servicemen jumping on the local women. His orders are to organise the "special service", where "specialists" provide "services". Pantoja applies his military ethos to the task in hand, making "Pantiland", as his enterprise becomes known, a great success. As to be expected, "Pantiland" is not universally popular, especially among the good burghers of Iquitos and the clergy. Very funny.

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