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

11 October 2024

Act of Oblivion – Robert Harris

It is the year 1660, and after the eleven years under the Protectorship of the recently deceased Oliver Cromwell, the monarchy has been restored in the person of Charles II. And there are scores to be settled. Under the Act of Oblivion, those who were directly involved in the execution of Charles I are to pay with their lives.

Fifty-nine ‘regicides’ signed the King’s death warrant and forty-six are accounted for (executed, awaiting execution, or otherwise dead) leaving thirteen still at large. Among those are Colonel Edward Whalley and his son-in-law Colonel William Goffe, now fled to America where they hope the puritan colonists will shelter them.

Back in London, Richard Naylor, clerk to the Privy Council, reports to the Lord Chancellor that his network of spies and informants have tracked Whalley and Goffe’s departure. His zeal in tracking them down is more than professional, he has an old, bitter score to settle. Cue a hunt as Naylor uses the power of the new king to flush out and pursue the two colonels across New England.

The action alternates between America, where Whalley and Goffe struggle to keep undercover in the sparsely populated wilderness, and London, where their families remain hidden in the teeming city.

It is a long 550 page read, but it covers a lot of ground going forward – including the fire of London and a plague or two – and some history flashbacks as Naylor recollects the Civil War from a Royalist viewpoint and Whalley pens a memoir of his time in his cousin Cromwell’s New Model Army. However, the pages fly by easily with Harris’s fluent prose and narrative flair all the way to an exciting and uncertain climax.

In summary, a good story, based on fact, well told.

27 September 2024

Violeta – Isabel Allende

In 2020 Violeta Del Valle is one hundred years old and dying as the coronavirus pandemic rages worldwide. She finds it oddly appropriate, as she was born during the Spanish flu pandemic of 1920. The story of her life is related in an extended autobiographical account addressed to Camilo (whose identity is revealed about halfway through the book).

Violeta’s childhood is spent as the spoiled daughter of a wealthy businessman in Santiago, Chile, but when the business fails and her father dies shamefully, her family choose to exile themselves in the far southern wilderness of the country. From there, she and her brother start to rebuild.

We get Violeta’s perspective of growing up, getting on, surviving life’s knocks, and growing old in twentieth century Chile. Over the years she gets through a few relationships and sees the carnage wreaked on the country by a succession of regimes, dictatorships, and brief periods of democracy. Her business acumen, in partnership with her brother, gives her some financial independence and protection that helps her manage her less successful personal and family life.

The twin tale of Violeta’s life and her country’s trials carry the reader effortlessly forward, keen to discover the next development. Allende skilfully conveys how a life story is a succession of lives lived in changing contexts, be they personal, political, economic, or cultural. The sixteen-year-old is different at thirty-six, fifty-six, seventy-six. Different priorities, different loyalties, different abilities, but at heart the same core values and underlying personality.

A thoughtful, interesting, and insightful read.

13 September 2024

Great Rides According to G – Geraint Thomas

Geraint Thomas, or ‘G’ as he is known in the cycling fraternity, here shares some of his favourite rides with the reader. Of course, as he is a winner of the Tour de France, these are not Sunday afternoon pedals for the family, but challenging routes for the enthusiastic amateur or aspiring professional.

And be prepared to ship your bike around the world. After a couple of settlers in his Welsh homeland, he is off to exotic locations in Italy, Spain, Monaco, Tenerife, California, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. In each location we are treated to undulating roads, steep ascents, great views, treacherous descents and, universally, a plethora of coffee shops and cafes. It seems a pro-racer’s training schedule includes obligatory coffee at the start, during, and towards the end of each route.

Well that bit sounds good to me; it is the cycling in between where I would struggle. Which is why the book makes pleasant armchair reading, imagining the ride, enjoying G’s descriptions of the terrain, landscape, and yes, the coffee. Anecdotes are told, and names such as Chris Froome and Mark Cavendish, are dropped. The odd non-cycling sporting icon gets a mention too.

G’s style is relaxed and conversational, so reading the slim volume is as easy as the flat 2km stage from the front gate to the newsagent’s and back.

30 August 2024

The Pier Falls – Mark Haddon

This collection of nine not so short stories showcases Mark Haddon’s talent and imagination.

There is a variety of settings from the deceptively mundane – a south coast pier, a country cottage, a housing estate – to the startlingly exotic – a deserted island, the Amazon jungle, the planet Mars.

Ditto the characters who feature – men and women, young and old, rich and poor. As in life, they are people ordinary in one sense yet unique in others. Haddon places them in unusual situations that have some commonality; they are generally in jeopardy, which makes for tense and entertaining reading.

The prose flows well, the present tense narration giving an immediacy to the events. It is just as well that the length of the pieces enables them to be read in a single sitting of under an hour.

The collection is highly recommended. If you think short story collections are not for you, this anthology could change your mind.

23 August 2024

Snap – Belinda Bauer

Eleven-year-old Jack Bright’s life turns when his mother’s car breaks down on a west country motorway. She leaves Jack and his two younger sisters in the car while she goes in search of the nearest emergency phone. She never returns, at least alive. Jack’s dad cannot cope and leaves home. Jack is now in charge, he keeps their parentless status a secret, manages to put food on the table, by burglary.

Catherine While’s life is due to change as the end of her pregnancy nears. Husband, Adam, is over the moon but somewhat over-solicitous. He travels for his job, so Catherine is used to being home alone. It doesn’t bother her – until a serial intruder starts to leave her cryptic messages. She doesn’t phone the police or tell Adam for fear of him becoming even more protective.

DI John Marvel is new to the west country. He’s a Londoner but has been shipped out to Somerset from the Met after a botched case. His interest is in solving murders, but they are fewer and further between out here in the sticks. Instead he is handed the ‘Goldilocks’ burglaries case, so called because the perpetrator tends to steal food and sleep in empty beds before trashing the joint.

It's all connected of course, but very cleverly with sufficient side plots to distract from and obscure the outcome. The writing is pacy with wry observations, and the characters stand out, even the minor ones such as Jack’s sisters and Marvels’ colleagues.

It is nicely entertaining. Bauer comes (as she often does) at the crime novel from an unusual angle, avoiding the stereotyping that prevails in most of the genre.

09 August 2024

Birnam Wood – Eleanor Catton

Birnam Wood is the name of a radical gardening collective set up by Mira Bunting but run on a strictly democratic and not for profit, basis. They take over abandoned, neglected, or donated spaces and grow produce for sale, barter, charity, or personal consumption. When a landslide in a national park in New Zealand’s South Island isolates an unused farm, Mira sees an opportunity to scale up Birnam Wood’s operations.

The farm owners, Owen and Jill (soon to be Sir and Lady) Darvish, are safely out of the way up north in Wellington, but when Mira arrives to surreptitiously scope the project, she finds an aeroplane on the airstrip; and the pilot finds her.

He turns out to be Robert Lemoine, an American entrepreneurial billionaire, who is negotiating for the purchase of the land. He’s an odd one, hard to trust, but seems happy to tolerate, even encourage Mira’s project. Mira needs to convince the rest of the group that this is Birnam Wood’s future. Her trusty lieutenant, Shelley Noakes, is in favour, but opposed is Tony Gallo, just back in town. He and Mira have history - unfinished business from when Tony left for the States a few years previously.

Tony’s interest in Birnam Wood is more political than horticultural; his ambition is to be an investigative journalist, and he smells a story in the offing.

The actual story, or stories unfold: Mira, Shelley and Tony a potential love triangle; Mira, Shelley and Robert ditto; Robert Lemoine and Owen Darvish, who is shafting whom in the deal; Lemoine and Darvish ripe for Tony Gallo’s probing; and what is billionaire Lemoine really up to?

All is revealed. Catton’s prose is wordy but never dull, and the pace picks up as motives emerge, distrust spreads, and tension rises to an exciting climax.

26 July 2024

Mourning Ruby – Helen Dunmore

It’s a bit of a jigsaw of a novel, centred on Rebecca, who generally narrates but not strictly chronologically, some key episodes in her life so far (she is about forty?)

To begin with: a baby in a shoebox, she is left outside the kitchen of an Italian restaurant to be adopted and brought up in full knowledge of her abandoned status. Later, a young adult, she shares a flat with Joe with whom she forms a strong but platonic bond. He introduces her to Adam, a doctor, who she marries and with whom she has a baby girl, Ruby. No spoiler, Ruby dies young; Rebecca struggles to cope.

While that is going on, Joe is writing a masterpiece about Stalin, or more accurately his wife, and relates much of it to Rebecca. Later, Joe moves on to writing a novel set in the first world war, in which the lead characters (William and Florence) seem to mirror him and Rebecca. Joe sends Rebecca chunks of manuscript, reproduced at length.

Somewhere in between is the life story of Rebecca’s employer, Mr Damiano, hotel proprietor and one time circus performer and creator of a ‘Dreamworld’ attraction.

Confusing? Not really. Each segment makes for pleasant enough reading, but with only Rebecca linking it all, there is no real cohesion. It might even have worked better as four short stories. I struggled to see how Rebecca’s life was impacted in any way by Stalin’s wife, Mr Damiano’s circus, or Joe’s unfinished war novel.

But maybe I missed something?