24
Aug 2006

As humans we are designed to gravitate to story telling and it is an excellent way to remember facts and details.

This was proven to me recently on a tour of Japan. I collected books to read on and before the trip to go with my guidebooks and picked up this collection of short stories at Gleebooks out of luck.

The material in this book is well sorted into categories and covers the full gamut of the Japanese experience seen through the eyes of a foreigner. It wasn't...

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31
Mar 2008

For anyone with an interest in geopolitics and the vagaries of world power and who wants to understand what is happening in the world a little better, this book makes for compulsive and informative reading. Whilst the decline of the Roman Empire has been analysed ad nauseum (Gibbon’s classic receives its due here) and comparing America to the Roman template has also occupied many minds, this book still manages to make a refreshing addition to the body of work.

The...

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31
Mar 2008

Having just spent two months in India it was great to pick up a current interpretation of where this country finds itself in 2007. Shashi Tharoor is a well-respected writer on the international scene and he balances his love of his own country with some pretty sharp judgements and analysis on where it could, and should, do better by its people.

Tharoor’s life experience (he was the youngest undersecretary general of the UN when appointed), exposure to the cultures of...

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02
Jul 2008

Of all the ardent book lovers out there I'd guess there's a fair portion who have fantasised about being surrounded by books all day and extending their time in bookshops to the hours of 9 to 5. I know I have. I even went so far as to research the subject, only to find out about the low margins, long hours, tough competition and how darned hard it is.

This book is about a woman who actually turned her fantasy into reality, albeit for a short time. I heard Annette...

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03
Jul 2008

Let's face it. There are loads of how-to-write-a-novel books out there. Some are full of lots of technical gumph and you feel disheartened just reading them. Others are light and fluffy and you wonder how anyone could write a postcard using their advice. This book falls somewhere in between, having the positive aspects of both alternatives.

Louise Doughty is a published author who wrote a regular newspaper column for the London Daily Telegraph that took her readers...

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02
Oct 2009

The line of publications on the subject of Gallipoli grows ever longer, but occasionally something fresh turns up. This book, where all the action occurs in a five-day period, reads more like a fast-paced fictional thriller than an historical account. The author has achieved this in three ways: he delivers a contiguous, multi-layered narrative by sewing together every available detail (Turkish as well as Allied); the use of diaries, reports and letters allow him to ‘get...

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19
Mar 2011

It was an easy task to devour this book quickly. The prose is light, but the effects are crafted with a deft hand.

Most of the stories deal with the lives of women, although two are from the perspective of young males with voices that are equally authentic. The stories traverse the intimate territories of grief, rejection, religious feeling, guilt and the struggle to understand one’s self. In exploring these emotional landscapes, Swann often dips in and out of the...

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© 2012 Alicia Thompson
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