For 2024 the aim remains to post a review at least every other Friday and to complete the Bookpacking reading journey.

05 January 2018

Review of 2017

The fortnightly reviews were successfully maintained throughout 2017, which meant 26 books reviewed, of generally high standard. Only eight authors had been previously read, and authors new to me included five encountered on the Bookpacking journey commenced in the year (South America has been reached).

From the books read seven are picked out to be particularly recommended: four good serious reads (though each contains some humour); a humorous novel (that has serious things to say); a young adult novel (of import to old adults too); and a non-fiction book for anyone interested in maths, the Simpsons or preferably both. Thumbnail sketches are given below for each (to see the full review go to the bracketed month).

Books for serious readers:

Skippy Dies – Paul Murray (Mar) – A sprawling roller-coaster of a book relating the pulsating events of one term at Seabrook College for Boys; humour, angst and tragedy affect students and staff alike and though Skippy dies, life is re-affirmed.

Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk – Ben Fountain (May) – Bravo Platoon’s ‘victory tour’ following its televised fire-fight in Iraq culminates at Dallas Cowboys’ thanksgiving game where contradictory forces can no longer be contained.

The Robber Bride – Margaret Atwood (Jul) – Three ladies who lunch in Ottawa each try to deal, in their own way, with the return from the dead of a common friend whose funeral they had attended and each, for their own reasons, celebrated.

The Corrections – Jonathan Franzen (Sep) – A forensic examination of grown-up family relationships in which each member has a turn centre stage before their stories and viewpoints coalesce in a fine denouement.

Humour:

A Man Called Ove – Fredrik Backman (Oct) – A grumpy widower’s attempts to join his beloved wife initially make him a figure of fun, but as the back story emerges and his social horizons widen, there is more to Ove than meets the eye.

Nonfiction:

The Simpsons and their Mathematical Secrets – Simon Singh (Feb) – Many of the scriptwriters for the Simpsons TV series are maths grads and often sneak titbits of mathematical significance into the show, as explained here in entertaining fashion.


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