Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Five reasons I'm compelled to post about Mog

Sticking to your guns is for people who wear holsters and blow bubbles. I, however, am expert at changing my mind. When I said I wasn’t going to blog about my sparkly-eyed, raisin-scoffing imp’s taste in literature, I just didn’t yet know there was good reason to do it.

I’m compelled to post about Mog the Forgetful Cat. We’re away from home right now and the raisin-scoffer is privy to a vast collection of kids’ books spanning yesteryear to today. For the last fortnight, no book has been more requested at bedtime than her favourite Aunty’s well-worn copy of Mog. So here are five of the best things about Judith Kerr’s masterpiece.

1) Like a sensible Aucklander in spring, Mog is layeredThere’s something for both parent and child and it’s sprinkled with Judith Kerr’s gorgeous, subtle humour. A favourite passage goes: “the garden was dark. The house was dark too. Mog sat in the dark and thought dark thoughts.

2) Not just charm but good looksJudith Kerr’s illustrations are expressive, detailed and really get the catness of cats… there’s something new to point out every night. Reminiscing with my mum about the book, she told me that someone sent me a copy written in Gaelic. So for a long time she just talked me through the illustrations and made it up.  And bonus for hipsters: some of the Thomas’ rooms feel like they’ve been curated for a mid century modern exhibition.

3) It hosts a gentle, gentle plot. No baddies, or goodies. It’s about the trials of being a cat in a human world and I think (next to thinking dark thoughts in the dark) the most wonderful thing about it is the illustration in which even the burglar is given a cup of tea in the kitchen.

4) It’s comforting to know that some things will always be good. I was a Mog fan and it’s been nice to get reacquainted and to have the raisin-scoffer back me up on this. And with a litter of Mog descendants (Mog and the Baby, Mog's Christmas and even Goodbye Mog) it means that someone's birthday just got easier.


5) Cats are polarising, but Mog is not. Though I write this as a cat lover… well anyway, here’s what I think. If you love cats Mog resonates because her cat foibles are so endearing and recognisable. I imagine if you were someone who was less fond of cats, Mog’s foibles would be so recognisable and irritating and that it might be soothing to feel like Judith Kerr understands your pain (see Mr Thomas above).

Sunday, 25 May 2014

Tigers need not apply... two years of books, the long list

No tigers, dogs, or wild things in this list.
Here’s the full list (as far as I can remember) from my two years of not much reading.

This is minus my five fiction faves, pregnancy guides, baby name handbooks, and books about hungry caterpillars, wild things, dogs with Scottish surnames and tea-taking tigers.

Back to Blood, Tom Wolfe Bonfire of the Vanities was ace. Vitriolic and cuttingly clever. This is kind of more of the same but set in Miami and less ace. Stereotypes abound.

Beyond Black, Hilary Mantel – before Henry VIII and her two Booker prizes, Hilary Mantel wrote Beyond Black. Black it is… it's about psychics, ghosts and personal demons. Funnily, it’s one of those stories that haunts me  from time to time -- I think about the characters as if they were real people and wonder what happened next.

Chaos Walking trilogy, Patrick Ness – young adult fiction. The trilogy’s central idea is a good one (a world where men’s thoughts are heard by everyone yet women’s remain private) but, for me at least, the new Dark Materials trilogy it ain’t.

A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens – sadly this has been spoiled by every sitcom ever to have made a Christmas episode. Ghosts of sitcoms past.

Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn – a well-written, twisting and, umm, twisted thriller. Might make you look at your significant other in an unfavourable light for a few days.

Goodbye to all that, Robert Graves – anti-war memoir detailing Graves’ life up to the late 1920s, including his time in the trenches. Had been meaning to read it for ages but didn't get to it until I was 8 months pregnant. Poor timing. Pretty harrowing.

Jeeves and Wooster Omnibus, P.G. Wodehouse – silly old Bertie Wooster. Luckily he’s got his right hand man Jeeves to skillfully extricate him from a multitude of scrapes and capers. Good fun, what.

Mortal Fire, Elizabeth Knox – young adult fiction. Magic and fantasy set in the New Zealandesque Southland of Knox’s two previous Dreamhunter works. Canny Mochrie meets a mysterious 17 year-old boy, held captive in his own home by strong magic. A mining accident is central to the plot and you can’t help but feel Knox’s writing is informed by the Pike River disaster. It's pretty good stuff.

Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut – World War II, satire and sci-fi. Billy Pilgrim is ‘unstuck in time’ and jumps between 1945’s Dresden bombing, his later life as an optometrist and abduction by two-foot tall aliens. Irreverent, sad and funny. Not for those who only like fiction based in the realms of the probable.

The Song of Achilles, Madeline Miller – narrated by Greek demi-god Achilles’ friend, or in this telling, boyfriend, Patroclus, this is a love story and a retelling of the Trojan War. It’s accessible and entertaining. Winner of the 2012 Orange Prize for fiction.

State of Wonder, Ann Patchett – set in the Amazon jungle. Far-fetched but Brazilliant. Obstetrics and wonder drugs. I read this before my sparkly-eyed, raisin-scoffing imp came on the scene. Parents, watch out for what now seems a fairly brutal finish…


Thursday, 22 May 2014

Now I have a scapegoat, I read less.

Not good with stuff, me. Like keeping an up-to-date blog. Hard enough reading any books bar Brown Bear, Brown Bear now I have a tiny, sparkly-eyed, raisin-scoffing imp, let alone remembering what I’ve just read.

Let alone writing about it.

Like other enthusiastic new(ish) parents, I now account for time in months. It’s been 27 since my last post. The sparkly-eyed raisin-scoffing imp is only 18. It’s wonderful to finally have a scapegoat.

In the interests of brevity, here’s my top five from my 27-month blog sabbatical (full list in a separate post, in case anyone’s interested – that’s probably just you, Mum).

Charles Dickens 
Best of books, definitely. Move over Count of Monte Cristo, there’s a new, old, page-turner in town. Set in London and Paris during the French Revolution with a rip-roaring plot and the kind of twists and coincidence that only Shakespeare and Dickens can really pull off. Main characters Darnay and Lucie are a bit wet (requited love is naff – at least in fiction) but Lucie’s spurned lover Sydney Carton is très cool and the vengeful Madame Defarge, stitching up both garments and the Revolution’s enemies (their names woven into the pattern of her knitting) has to be one of the most frightening villains of all time.
Extra for experts: some keen and crafty types have set up What Would Madame Defarge Knit with patterns and the like. Revolutionary!

Kate Atkinson 
Set during World War II, a period I often, callously, find a bit trying in novels, Life After Life is exceptional (thanks book club peeps for showing me the way). It's a novel that gives new meaning to Vera Lynn's 1939 tearjerking anthem 'We'll meet again'. Reincarnated into different versions of her own life, again and again, Ursula Todd begins to feel she may have an overriding purpose. Intriguing and, after the repetition of the first few chapters, enthralling. The Blitz chapters are gripping stuff.

Eleanor Catton 
It would have been unpatriotic not to read the first Kiwi book to win the Man Booker prize since Keri Hulme's The Bone People. I can’t pretend to understand the astrological theme (light years over my head) but I very much enjoyed the whodunit. Opiates, gold, vendettas, the South Island’s West Coast… all that good stuff. And conveniently a list of characters in the first few pages. With hindsight, it might have been one for the Kindle. At 832 pages, the physical book is the kind of hefty tome that leaves you with tennis elbow and upper back problems.

Salvador Plascencia 
If Love in the time of Cholera and Sophie’s World had a baby this would be it. Magical realism, author interaction with the characters… crazy but clever. While sometimes hard to read, it’s magical for the most part and certainly the most unusual book (including the picture flat we now own where a sheep gets a turkey to eat poo) I’ve read in the last 27 months.

Kent Haruf 
Quiet and very moving. Reminded me a little of A Good House and Gilead – it’s about loss and ordinary people in small-town America. I know I’ve already said quiet – but it is – quiet yet mesmerising with beautifully drawn characters.

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Scrap the aspirations, what have I actually read?


I’ve written too much of late about what I haven’t read. Here’s what I have.

Travels with my Aunt, Graham Greene
A sort of spy novel with a dash of Are you My Mother. Henry Pulling is drawn from the quiet decay of retirement and his dahlia-packed garden and into the racy underworldish life of his aunt. It’s a late coming of age for Henry as he scoots around Europe and finally South America, seeking out the seedy haunts of his Aunt’s yesteryear and rubbing shoulders with thoroughly disreputable characters for this first time in his life – most of them his aunt’s old lovers. Funny, accessible and a great example of why (apparently – thanks New York Times – the French call Graham Greene the ‘Grim Grin’).

Swamplandia!, Karen Russell
Exclamation mark indeed! Released last year – it was recent holiiiiiiiiiday (see Burmese Days below) reading for me. Actually – like Travels with my Aunt I think it could be described as a dark coming of age story. Ava Bigtree’s Mum has died and the bank is about to foreclose on their family home slash alligator wrestling theme park.  Her Dad’s not really dealing with the situation and her sister Ossie is eloping with a ghost. Hilarious, kooky, a ‘lil bit spooky… I thought, until Ossie explains that she has no interest in dating the living because black fruit, a human decay rots inside us. I’ve trawled the book looking for the passage again but can’t quite put my finger on it. At any rate it was a drawn breath moment for me – the first of many. Enter the Birdman, promising Ava he’ll help her journey to the underworld to pluck her sister from the grasp of her ethereal husband. But what sort of grown-up promises something like that? Swamplandia! held me between the real and the imagined or magical, never sure which interpretation was the right one. Until all of a sudden, at about the same moment it becomes clear to Ava, it became all-too-clear for me too.

Burmese Days, George Orwell
Myanmar/Burma is where I went on my holiiiiiiiiday last month and so at the end of the trip I decided to give Burmese Days a go. Apparently George Orwell – then a policeman in Burma – arrived home to England to announce to his family that he was giving up his steady job in the colonies to become a writer. The result was this, his first novel Burmese Days (and presumably a little bit of family tension). Hints of what’s to come from Orwell abound. Not unlike 1984 it’s the story of a man who passionately hates the system he lives in but who lacks the strength of character to do anything about it. Here the system is colonial rule… so it’s a novel that in many ways was well ahead of its time. Except in its treatment of Burmese women – who just aren’t portrayed as very bright or very real. But the scenery described is evocative and it gives a painfully compelling picture of its main character John Flory’s boredom and desperation as a self-appointed outsider trapped amongst the drunken British sahibs of the club.

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Unwrapped: the got and the not-got-lot

One out of six ain’t bad?

Like a bloke proposing to his missus on reality TV, when I posted my Christmas wish-list on a public forum, I was fairly confident of a particular outcome. Someone was going to buy me The Sense of an Ending.  My confidence stemmed from a conversation that followed an earlier conversation in which I’d modestly said I didn’t want anything special or specific for Christmas. I followed this by yelling across our (not altogether large) flat that there was one thing I should, at all costs, be got, please. I’m sure I said please...

So The Sense of an Ending, I got. The others, I did not, not got. I did however receive three additional unlisted, not wished for specifically but interesting (in the good sense) books, from three separate Santas.

When God was a Rabbit – Sarah Winman
According to the back of the book and reviewers from lots of prominent papers whose reviews are, in part, listed there (on the back), this is a ‘captivating, beguiling, mesmerising and whimsical’ book. Set in Essex, Cornwall and then later New York it’s not a memoir but it’s supposed to have that sort of feel (I read the note from the author at the end of the book and it says so). I’m sort of surmising from skim reading a few pages that bad things happen to good people and good people deal with them. Luckily there are avenging fairy Godmother style lesbian aunts and rabbits. It sounds witty and charming. Thanks Santa!

Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
'What the Dickens? This wasn’t on my list!’ I snorted – displaying very little gratitude to my real benefactor. It was the exact moment I realised that The Sense of An Ending was my lot – and that all my big hopes and Christmas library dreams were dashed. And that an older man dressed in red, year-round was not the giver of gifts at all. Dash it all. But I should still very much like to read the book – the description of Miss Havisham alone should make it worthwhile. Good one Santa!

Bird Typo – Yukina Narita
Little art book, you’re so fun! Bird Typo does what it says it will on the label. It’s an alphabet-slash-art book with a bird for each letter (even X gets a proper bird – xenops anyone?). Nice work Santa!

Oh, and in case you’re wondering… my birthday is in February.

Friday, 23 December 2011

On the sixth day of my wish-list, my Christmas library


I Want My Hat Back by John Klassen
And now… for a picture book. I lean towards the notion that children’s picture books are as much (maybe more) for grown-ups as children (my fingers aren’t jammy and I turn pages with the proper amount of zeal – i.e. not too much). I’ve gone all year without buying one for myself and I’ve bought lots and lots for wee people belonging to my friends so it’s time, Santa baby, you slipped one under the tree, for me. I’ve been an awful good girl.

One of the great things about a picture book is that you can read it cover-to-cover while you’re in the bookshop. So I’ve already read I Want My Hat Back – but I’d like to read it again. And again.

In the grand tradition of fiction for kids under four (The Little Mole, Are you My Mother, Hug) an animal (here, a bear) is on a quest to find something. Not poo, not his mummy and not a hug. Can you guess what he’s looking for?

Sounds like a book you’ve read before? You haven’t. It’s a bit darker than the aforementioned… it’s a jungle out there (well a forest) and if you steal a hat you might get eaten.

Fabulous illustrations, dark and witty. Not for sensitive souls... but for kids and parents (and childless book lovers) with a streak of evil genius.

Santa baby.... hurry down the chimney tonight.

Taking us to
Six bears searching

Thursday, 22 December 2011

On the fifth day of my wish-list, my Christmas library...

1Q84
‘1Q84 – secret Santa gift for my wife'
1Q who?’ 
I’d somehow missed the hype that ushered in the new Murakami novel. 
How is this possible? I love Murakami. Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World most, Wind-Up Bird Chronicle next.

Even the titles are great – and (as established in yesterday’s entry) I love a pun, even when the double/triple what-have-you entendre is in Japanese. The titular Q, you see, stands for question (apparently) but also for the  ‘kyu’ sound of the word nine in Japanese. Mum, if you’re reading this – I know this, not because I remember anything from high school Japanese, sorry. It’s because I read it in a review. The good news is that while I didn’t learn much in the way of Japanese at school, I did learn to read (though, I agree my spelling could be improved).

So… what can I say – from what I’ve heard (head nod to Mr Kajagoogoo for jogging my memory) it’s, as you’d expect, surreal. Literary and pop culture references abound. It’s crazy long and involves a story within a story and some chrysalises and leprechauns (really). ACE. If there’s a secret Santa out there looking to get me a gift – I’ll have what she’s having thanks.

To recap we’re at:
Five surreal things

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

On the fourth day of my wish-list, my Christmas library

Something non-fiction but not particularly serious to shake things up.


I love a pun – and this book sounds like a quacker… And really! How could 28,800 bath toys honest-to-goodness-for-rizza have been lost at sea? How? I must know! Is this incrementally over time – across the long, rich history of bath toys – or were they all lost at once? Were they all rubber ducks? What other sorts of bath toys are there?

So many questions! I must read the book (or someone who has read it must contact me immediately to tell me the answers). Spoiler alert – reading the New York Times article in the link in the title above will answer pretty much all of these questions… but guess what? Hong Kong features. Heyyyyyy! High five H-to-the-K, sometime city of mine.

So on the fourth day of my wish-list, my Christmas library that’s:
Four Christmas quackers

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

On the third day of my wish-list, my Christmas library…

Téa Obreht’s The Tiger’s Wife

An admission: I love fables and allegories. And tigers. But I’m not keen on books set during or around war (Birdsong is one of my least favourite novels of all time and I couldn’t get through the first 100 pages of The Book Thief). So it’s taken me a little while to weigh these against each other and reach the conclusion that I’d like to read Téa Obreht’s debut and this year's Orange prize-winner.

Here’s what I mean.

The following, nicked from the blurb on the author’s website, really doesn’t do it for me: “In a Balkan country mending from years of conflict, Natalia, a young doctor, arrives on a mission of mercy at an orphanage by the sea.” 

But then… “She turns to the stories [her grandfather] told her when she was a child. On their weekly trips to the zoo he would read to her from a worn copy of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book, which he carried with him everywhere; later, he told her stories of his own encounters over many years with “the deathless man,” a vagabond who claimed to be immortal and appeared never to age.”

Deathless man? Jungle Book? Hells yes.

I hope to add The Tiger’s Wife to my top tiger book faves (The Tiger-Skin Rug, Life of Pi and of course The Jungle Book), but I’m reminded that it doesn’t pay to be so black and white about these things. Not all tiger books have teeth… I was kind of tepidly enthusiastic about The White Tiger and will probably never read Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother (although I agree neither of these are, strictly speaking, about actual tigers). And war stories? Catch 22… fantastic. Birds without Wings… epic, moving, wonderful.

Taking the list to:
Three Balkan tigers

Monday, 19 December 2011

The second book on my wish list, my Christmas library... two Barnes' ending

A little obvious…  Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending
This year’s Booker (Man Booker – whatever it’s called) prize-winner. Short, pithy and apparently very, very good.

In a misguided attempt to read each of this year’s shortlisted titles before the prize was announced – note to self, next year assign this sort of task a timeframe stretching to several months rather than two and a half weeks – I bought this, Jamrach’s Menagerie, The Sisters Brothers and Pigeon English online. They arrived, I unwrapped them – stroked the covers (creepy) and wept to find that I’d accidentally bought the book-on-CD version of Sense of an Ending. I immediately sent it to my parentals. I wept again, after they’d listened to it when they told me that they agree with the Booker judges – it’s very good.

I now know precisely what happens to Patrick DeWitt’s hit killer-cowboys the Sisters Brothers and Carol Birch’s tiger petting, dragon-hunting Jaffy Brown – not to mention Year Seven’s second-best runner 11-year old Ghanaian immigrant Harrison Opoku. But I have absolutely no idea what happens in Julian Barnes’ novel. I loved Arthur and George and I think its fair to say (and bear with me because it is the season of terrible Christmas cracker style jokes) I’d like to get…

Wait for it….

A sense of its ending.

BA-DOOM-CISH!

So that’s two Barnes’ ending…