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Other Uncategorized

August/September Summary and Plans for October

I was away at the end of August so didn’t get the chance to summarise that month’s reading. This means I have combined two months into one massive list. As usual, all books are listed in order of enjoyment so if you share a taste in books with me you should look for recommendations towards the top of the list.

Books of the Month:

The Novel Cure: An A to Z of Literary RemediesThe View on the Way Down

Books Reviewed in August/September:

The Novel Cure by Ella Berthoud and Susan Elderkin 

The View on the Way Down by Rebecca Wait 

The Casual Vacancy by J K Rowling 

The Fish Can Sing by Halldór Laxness 

The Antidote by Oliver Burkeman 

Burial Rites by Hannah Kent 

Benediction by Kent Haruf  

Pecking Order by Chris Simms 

The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud 

I Remember You by Yrsa Sigurdardottir 

Names for the Sea: Strangers in Iceland by Sarah Moss 

Harvest by Jim Crace 

Fortunate by Andrew JH Sharp 

Jar City by Arnaldur Indridason 

We Need New Names by NoViolet Bulawayo 

The Spinning Heart by Donal Ryan 

The Colour of Blood by Brian Moore stars21

DNF: The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton

Plans for October

In the next couple of days I plan to read The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin so that I can finish my Booker shortlist reading and bring you my thoughts on the list as a whole before the winner is announced on 15th October.

Once I’ve finished my Booker reading I don’t have any firm plans, but I’m being drawn towards older books and hope to try a few modern classics. These are the books that are calling to me at the moment:

Therese Raquin by Emile Zola

Night Flight by Antoine de Saint-Exupery

All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren

The Maid’s Version by Daniel Woodrell

The Last Banquet by Jonathan Grimwood

The Night Watch by Sarah Waters

Beneath the Darkening Sky by Majok Tulba

The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin

Night Film by Marisha Pessl

Schindler’s Ark by Thomas Keneally

I hope that you have a wonderful October!

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Blogging Other Recommended books Uncategorized

Farm Lane Books is Five!

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Five Years Ago

Five years ago I published my first post on this blog. The blogging world was very different back then. I followed about 250 blogs on google reader and that enabled me to know and interact with almost everyone in the world that had a book blog at the time. It was a close-knit community and I commented on YA, science fiction and chick-lit blogs just as often as literature ones. Finding someone with a similar taste in books was a rare, joyous celebration and many of the bloggers I met back then became good friends – both real and virtual.

Now

Since then things have changed a lot. The number of blogs has exploded and it is no longer possible to follow everyone with a similar taste in books, let alone keep up with different genres. Google reader no longer exists and social media is now dominating the blogging world. I’ve cut back on my blogging time and no longer try to post every day. I’m hoping that I can maintain 2 or 3  posts a week and concentrate on books that beg to be talked about. I’ll continue to review every book I finish, but I suspect that many more will be bundled together in shorter summary posts. I also hope to include more posts that enable you to discover books you hadn’t heard of. To begin that process I’m going to celebrate five years with a 5×5 of book love: my five favorite books in five different categories….

 

My Five Favourite Fiction Books

A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

Blindness by José Saramago

The Prestige by Christopher Priest

HHhH by Laurent Binet

 

Far From The Tree: A Dozen Kinds of Love

My Five Favourite Non-Fiction Books

Far From the Tree by Andrew Solomon

The Mountain People by Colin Turnbull

Leviathan by Philip Hoare

People Who Eat Darkness by Richard Lloyd Parry

Nothing To Envy by Barbara Demick

 

 

My Five Favourite Audio Books

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot

Testimony by Anita Shreve

Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith

Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend by Matthew Green

My Sister Lives on the Mantelpiece by Annabel Pitcher

 

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My Five Favourite Children’s Books

George’s Marvellous Medicine by Roald Dahl

Z For Zachariah by Robert C O’Brien

The Gruffalo by Julia Donaldson

Duncton Wood by William Horwood

Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C O’Brien

 

The Half Brother

My Five Favourite Lesser Known Books

The Harlot’s Progress: Yorkshire Molly – Peter Mottley

Ingenious Pain by Andrew Miller

When I Was Five I Killed Myself.by Howard Buten

The History of History – Ida Hattemer-Higgins

The Half Brother by Lars Saaybye Christensen

 

Do I share any of my favourites with you?

Do you plan to try any of my favourite books soon?

 

 

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Board Game Reviews Uncategorized

Board Game Review: Bugs in the Kitchen

Ravensburger Bugs in The Kitchen Game

Bugs in the Kitchen is a new board game for children. It is unusual in that it utilises the nano hexbug, a small woodlouse-like robot that moves erratically. The idea is to capture the bug in your trap by moving the walls of a simple maze. Which wall you are allowed to move depends on the roll of the dice, but the maze is so simple that the luck of the dice rarely makes any difference to who wins – it is simple fast-paced fun. The winner is normally picked at random by the unpredictable nature of the hexbug’s movements.

Age range

The manufacturer states that this game is for ages 6+. I’m not sure if this is due to the fragility of the hexbug, but I’d suggest a much younger age group. With supervision I’d recommend this game for children aged 3 or over. The concept is so simple and there is very little/no skill required to win. My six-year old enjoyed playing this game, but my eight-year old became frustrated by the fact that his skill counted for nothing and the hexbug would fall randomly into someone else’s trap, despite the fact that the route to his had been open for the longest time. The main appeal of the game is its novelty factor and I suspect it will be played when new people come over, but will be of limited appeal once they are familiar with the hexbug.

Design

The board is well designed and the maze walls are robust enough to withstand young hands. The hexbug eats batteries and probably requires gentler handling, but ours has survived so far!

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Number of Players: 2-4

The game works equally well with 2 or 4 players, but having an odd number of players gives a slight advantage to those that share a maze side.

Overall

This is an unusual little game and I’d recommend it for its novelty factor. I can’t see us playing it a lot, but I’m sure it will appear when younger children or those unfamiliar with board games come over to play.

 

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2000 - 2007 Crime Thriller Uncategorized

Pecking Order by Chris Simms

Pecking Order

Five words from the blurb: farm, chickens, kill, secret, project

Earlier in the year Scott Pack recommended Pecking Order and I decided to give it a try. It was free at the time, but the kindle edition is still only 99p and I recommend that you get a copy if you’d like a gripping piece of crime fiction.

Pecking Order is a psychological thriller that investigates how willing people are to follow the orders of someone in authority. It cleverly uses the plight of battery chickens as a backdrop; using the bird’s pain and fear to increase the tension of the human drama. The chickens also emphasize what is wrong with our society and, although this book can be seen as a quick, entertaining read, there are several deeper messages hidden under the surface:

As he walked back across the lawn to his own house he reflected on the concern shown for a missing cat while, if events so far were anything to go by, an old person could lie dead and undiscovered in their flat for days.

The book demands the reader’s attention from the very first page. The descriptions are vivid and sometimes disturbing – if you don’t eat free-range chickens already, you’ll certainly be more inclined to do so after reading this book!

The central character, Rubble, is deliciously evil. He enjoys his job slaughtering chickens and it is wonderful to read a book where it is a joy to hate most of the characters. The book also contains some scenes within a university and I loved this campus-novel aspect of the plot.

Overall, Pecking Order is an original, thought provoking and entertaining read. I look forward to reading more of Simm’s work in the future.

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Have you read anything by Chris Simms?

Which of his books would you recommend I try next?

Categories
1950s Books in Translation Historical Fiction Uncategorized

The Fish Can Sing by Halldór Laxness

Fish Can Sing (Panther) Halldór Laxness won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1955

Translated from the Icelandic by Magnus Magnusson

Five words from the blurb: Reykjavik, childhood, singer, fisherman, ethos

A few years ago I read Independent People and loved it. The Fish Can Sing isn’t quite in the same league, but it is still an impressive book and I’d recommend it to anyone who has enjoyed Independent People.

The Fish Can Sing is set at the start of the twentieth century and follows Álfgrímur, a boy who has been abandoned by his mother and raised by an elderly couple who live on the outskirts of Reykjavik. Álfgrímur is convinced that he will grow up to be a lumpfish fisherman like his adopted grandfather, but his cousin becomes a world famous singer and introduces him to the higher members of society, changing his outlook on life forever.

The Fish Can Sing has many impressive sections and I found the ending particularly striking, but the lives of Reykjavik’s elite didn’t interest me anywhere near as much as the isolated farmers of Independent People. This lead to a divided book where I loved the sections in which their rural life was explained, but the central sections in the city often left me cold.

Although I was bored at several points this was all made up for by Álfgrímur’s grandfather, Björn, who was one of the most inspiring characters I’ve ever read about. He believes that it is immoral to earn more money than you need and he dedicates his life to helping others. His house is open to anyone who needs a roof over their head and he often looks after the dying. His attitude was inspiring and the world would be a much better place if everyone shared his moral beliefs.

This book also contained several political sections and whilst most were of little interest to me, some were entertaining and I especially loved the debates around whether barber shops should be allowed:

He said that those who wished to be in fashion in these matters ought to be content to shave once a month, and to do it, what’s more, quietly and unobtrusively, each in his own home, without calling in perfect strangers from town – for shaving was a private matter….

and the counter argument…

No sane or healthy man had ever grown a beard. There was no conceivable work at which a beard did not get in the way. The only people who grew beards were men with tender skins, and the only cure for that ailment was to seize them by the beard and drag them back and forwards through the whole town.

The quotes above demonstrate the humour of this book. It is far lighter in tone than Independent People and shouldn’t shock or depress people in the same way.

This book is like nothing I’ve read before. It challenges the reader with new perspectives on life, gives an insight into the lives of Icelanders a century ago, and has a very clever ending. If you are willing to work through the slow sections you will be rewarded for your effort.

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 The thoughts of other bloggers:

At times I felt physically stunned by cunning revelations in the structure of the threads running through the book. Dangerous Ideas from the Wood

At any rate, this is a most peculiar novel, and while it kept me entertained and chuckling, as it came to its strangely airless end, I was left with the most peculiar feeling that the joke had been on me — and that I hadn’t gotten it at all. Kate of Mind

If you want to walk the trodden path when reading a book, chose another one. Beauty is a Sleeping Cat

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Other Uncategorized

I’m back from Iceland!

I’m back from a fantastic holiday in Iceland. The scenery was outstanding!

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We saw amazing waterfalls, bubbling mud pits, and lots of geothermal activity.

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We hired a 4×4 and drove ourselves clockwise around the entire country, making several trips right into the centre. The highlights (shown in the photos on this post) were exactly as I expected, but what I wasn’t prepared for was the large amount of desolate land. It is possible to drive for hours across empty lava fields and the vast majority of Iceland looks like the photos below:

 

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Once you’re out of Reykjavik (and away from the major tourist sites) it is possible to go a long time without seeing another human being. Most of the major roads are paved, but some of the best sites can only be reached by driving for miles down bumpy tracks. We all enjoyed splashing through the muddy puddles!

The Icelandic people were all very friendly and the only negative aspect of the trip was the cost. We knew it would be expensive, but were still a bit shocked when we popped into a supermarket on the first day to buy a few things for lunch and the total came to over £50, for what would have cost about £15 in the UK.

We saw very few children on our trip, which we thought was a real shame. Iceland is the perfect place for a family holiday as there is so much to do. Our boys loved seeing whales, swimming in geothermal pools, horse riding, skidooing and seeing all the natural phenomena.

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We highly recommend Iceland to anyone who enjoys being in the great outdoors!