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narrative

Mirror Shoulder Signal: A Thought-Provoking Read

23rd August 2017 by Gemma Leave a Comment

Mirror Shoulder Signal by Dorthe NorsMirror Shoulder Signal

Mirror Shoulder Signal was written by Danish author Dorthe Nors and translated to English by Misha Hoesktra for Pushkin Press. It was shortlisted for the 2017 ManBooker International Prize.

It tells the story of Sonja, a forty-year-old woman living in Copenhagen, who is single and lives away from her family. Sonja was born in the rural area of Jutland and fled to the capital in an attempt to make something of herself; to be something else other than the typical narrative of girls who were born and grown up in the area and has never left its confines.

I finished the book in two to three days. Granted, I had an off day from work where I did nothing else but read, but it is also a short book. With its bright tones and very relatable topic to most readers, is this a summer read to take with you to the beach?

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Filed Under: book-reviews, books, books: 2017, fiction, literary, narrative, three-marks Tagged With: book review, books: 2017, fiction, literary fiction

See What I Have Done: Sarah Schmidt’s Fictional Take On The Controversial Murder

27th June 2017 by Gemma 2 Comments

See What I Have Done Sarah SchmidtSee What I Have Done Sarah Schmidt

See What I Have Done is the debut novel of Australian author Sarah Schmidt about the famous axe murders in 1892 at Massachusetts, USA. It was famously thought to have been committed by the victims’ daughter, Lizzie Borden. Lizzie was acquitted but remains to be the prime suspect even after her death — everyone is convinced she was the murderer, and it remains a subject of speculation more than a century after the events.

 
Sarah was inspired to tell write a book about this more than a decade ago from a pamphlet she found at a secondhand bookshop. …

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Filed Under: advanced-copy, book-reviews, books, books: 2017, fiction, narrative, three-marks Tagged With: book review, books: 2017, crime/detective, fiction, fictional narrative

Top Ten Tuesday: 2016 Releases I Meant To Read (But Didn’t Get To)

10th January 2017 by Gemma 4 Comments

2016 Releases I Meant To Read

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly bookish meme created and hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. More information, plus future topics can be found on this page. This week was ‘2016 Releases I Meant To Read’.

I thought I’d do these prompts at least once (or twice?) a month since I seem to fare better at having one on instagram. Maybe it’ll make me a more regular blogger!

So I kept my ears quite close to the ground last year when it came to new book releases, and I have more than a handful of books published in 2016. Unfortunately, I still haven’t figured out how to balance reading with bookstagram and blogging, so I didn’t manage to read most of them (although I’m sure most readers always feel they haven’t read as much as they would have wanted in a year). I have to re-think my book purchases for this year, which is a post for another day!

Anyway, here are some of the books that were published in 2016, and I will hopefully get to tick them off the TBR list before the end of this year. …

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Filed Under: books, books: 2016, contemporary, crime/detective, fantasy, historical, lists, literary, mystery, narrative Tagged With: books, books: 2016, crime/detective, fantasy, fiction, historical fiction, listicle, lists, mystery, young adult

From the Publisher’s Desk: The Girls

30th August 2016 by Gemma 3 Comments

The Girls

Who has not heard of this book? Written by Emma Cline, her debut novel The Girls has been dubbed as the book to read this summer, and even the UK cover starkly reflects the idea of summertime — sun-streaked hair, loose summer dresses, and bright blue skies. One of the ladies from a book club I’m part of actually took it along as one of her beach reads!

Unfortunately, if your definition of a beach read does not involve cults and murders, then you might prefer to not bring this book along. On top of this, if your idea of a holiday read does not involve a lot of introspection and analysing and should, instead, contain quick-paced plotting, then I might suggest scheduling The Girls for another time.

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Filed Under: advanced-copy, book-reviews, books, books: 2016, fiction, literary, narrative, three-marks Tagged With: advanced copy, book review, books, books: 2016, fiction, fictional narrative, literary fiction

On The Nightstand: The Little Women Letters

14th June 2016 by Gemma 2 Comments

Every, if not most, women who have been avid readers since their childhood would know Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women. It is a children’s classic after all, and dare I say, well-loved. I myself have read it a long time ago in my youth, but I must add it was because I saw the movie first, and dear god, was Christian Bale as Laurie a sight! As with Jane Eyre in a previous post, I have not read this book since then, so I only remember details, such as being heartbroken over Beth, and why oh why did Jo not end up with Laurie*?? Bear in mind I had Christian Bale on the head, so I just found this development utterly unacceptable.

So yes, Little Women is a book quite dear to me. I was pleasantly surprised, of course, to then learn of this book, which I must have found featured in an article online. More about the March sisters, and a modern day connection**? Why yes, I’ll take that!

The Little Women Letters

Written by Gabrielle Donnelly and published in 2011 by Penguin Books, The Little Women Letters “explores the imagined lives of Jo March’s descendants–three sisters who are both thoroughly modern and thoroughly March.” It parallels the lives and characters of the three March sisters — Meg, Jo, and Amy — with Jo’s great, great granddaughters — Emma, Lulu, and Sophie. The reader gets little glimpses of the March family’s life after Little Women ended and before Little Men began, as one of the modern girls get to know their ancestor through her great, great grandmother Jo’s letters.

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Filed Under: book-reviews, books, books: 2016, chick lit, fiction, narrative, one-mark Tagged With: book review, books, books: 2016, chick lit, fiction, fictional narrative

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Gemma

Born in Manila, based in London. Endless curiosity turns into infinite adventures.    "I read; I travel; I become."

 

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