I notice elements similar to those of Tolkien and Pratchett in Eddings's writing and he is as deserving of a place on any fantasy lover's bookshelf as they are. This is the first of 5 books in the first series, with another 5-book series set after, and 3 related books, so if you like to swim deep in your fantasy worlds this is one you shouldn’t miss.
Friday, October 29, 2021
The Pawn of Prophecy, by David Eddings
I notice elements similar to those of Tolkien and Pratchett in Eddings's writing and he is as deserving of a place on any fantasy lover's bookshelf as they are. This is the first of 5 books in the first series, with another 5-book series set after, and 3 related books, so if you like to swim deep in your fantasy worlds this is one you shouldn’t miss.
Thursday, October 21, 2021
I'll Give you the Sun, by Jandy Nelson
The first of our Booksellers' Favourite Books! This one is Sian's.
Jude and Noah are twins. Two of the same. Split-aparts. They're soulmates, have their own language, and share everything as one entity... except for two things:
Their art and their mother.
Teenagers are jealous creatures, always craving love, acceptance, validation, all that good stuff. So when their pillar of grace, talent, and brilliance - their mother - passes away suddenly, the twins are left at sea, trying to find their way with their clueless, bacteria-loving father.
We get to hear this story from the points of view of both twins at different times: Noah at age 14, Jude at age 16. As the book goes on, we start to piece together their story. Who told which lies, who sabotaged whom, who's falling in love and when.
And that's really what this book is. A love story. A love story between two young people and their families, their crushes, their art, and themselves. And they see the world ever so beautifully. Noah paints portraits in his mind, of moments he wants to save. Jude has inherited her Grandmother's "bible", full of doolally nonsense that she's made up, by which Jude lives her life. They seem to speak in poems, in verses, in prophecies, in lyrics, in the feeling of floating. I have never read a book that I so badly wanted to highlight, dogear, and annotate... I still haven't the nerve, but I'm tempted to buy a second copy just to alleviate the guilt of doing so!
This book makes me want to fall in love over and over again. To throw away limitations and rational thinking. To grab life by the paintbrush and just create. To write new rules, reinvent reality.
I've never wanted any characters to be real more than these two. And deep down, ever so quietly, I pretend that they are. Because for all their flaws, diabolical behaviour, and horrendous decision-making, I want to find them one day and drink up all of their light.
This is such a fun read. A reminder of why youth is fun, even with all of pain that comes along with it. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll groan, you'll grieve, you'll gasp.
- Sian
CW: bereavement, assault
Paperback, £7.99. Find this in the Young Adult Fiction section!
Friday, October 15, 2021
Our Endless Numbered Days, by Claire Fuller
Paul suggested this book to me, since I was asking after books about survivalists, and living off the land –
people gathering, foraging, hunting, and all that jazz. I find it peaceful. Grounding.
Relaxing.
Boy, did I pick
up the wrong book for that! In fairness, Paul did warn me.
Peggy’s father
is a survivalist. But he’s also a bit of a lunatic. And when the rest of
his survivalist friends go home, shaking off the curiosity to go off the grid
and become recluses deep in the woods, Peggy’s father only gets more hyped. He gets
obsessive, training Peggy in camping skills, sleeping in a tent in the garden,
eating squirrels, and never bathing; even building a bunker beneath their home
with all the resources they’d need if the apocalypse came. It drives her mother
mad, and in a fit of rage, she leaves home to tour Germany as a classical
musician.
So when her
back is turned, Peggy’s father takes her away with two packs of resources, to a
cabin deep in the woods in Europe, which he calls die Hütte. Peggy isn’t
entirely sure what is happening – only that she is tired, confused, and misses
her mother. Life in die Hütte isn’t
what her father promised it would be. It wasn’t like in the garden, when she
could go inside for a glass of water and clean pants if she wanted. They were
isolated, vulnerable, and foolish. And to make Peggy as resolute in this decision
to disappear into nature as he is, he tells her that the world outside of their
forest has disappeared in an apocalypse; her mother with it.
And so Peggy stays.
She gathers water, chops fire wood, forages for food, and yearns for meaning in
a very primitive life. She finds it in the silent piano her father builds her from
wood scraps; in the small shelter she builds herself away from the cabin. And she
finds it in a mysterious young boy who suddenly starts wondering through their
woods.
Throughout the story,
we swap between Peggy’s nine years in die hütte with her father, and forward to
the 80s after she rejoins society. It builds so much tension to see two
versions of Peggy, two versions of reality that she is torn between.
It is gripping. It is disturbing.
It is scary. It is desperate. It is a very easy read, and I could not wait ‘til
the end.
I enjoyed it even more
than I expected!
CW for readers: there
are themes of abuse and neglect in this story.
Thursday, October 7, 2021
Many Different Kinds of Love, by Michael Rosen
Subtitled ‘A Story of Life, Death and the NHS’ this opens with a section entitled ‘Feeling Unwell’ and moves rapidly through ‘Going to Hospital’ and into ‘Induced Coma’. Anyone who paid attention to the news during the spring and early summer of 2020 might be familiar with the illness and gradual recovery of the former Children’s Laureate, but this series of prose poems takes us into the mind of a man on the verge of death. With the inclusion of numerous entries from the nurses who cared for him when he was at his lowest point, and messages from his wife to his wider family, this is the story of the Covid epidemic from somebody who very nearly didn’t make it back.
This is an intensely moving read, but never mawkish or
miserable. Michael’s wry humour peeks through even the darkest moments,
sometimes when you least expect it, which is when the horror of what he want
through really hits. His amazement at the love shown to him by strangers when
he was at his weakest is humble and genuine, and he is only too aware that not
everybody on his ward made it through. Interspersed with thoughtful and
affectionate illustrations by his friend Chris Riddell, this book is about
fragility and helplessness but ultimately hope.
I probably only have the emotional energy to read one book
about Covid this year, but I’m glad it was this one.
- Paul
Hardback, £14.99 - paperback available in March 2022. Find this in the Poetry section!