Wednesday 2 September 2015

The Miniaturist

Fiction has been on the back burner for me for quite a while now. I tend to be a binge reader, and recently I've been ploughing through non-fiction, especially getting to grips with the Puritans and blogging about my discoveries in a blog of the same name. It took a recent trip to Amsterdam to whet my appetite for the novel again. I had bought Jessie Burton's The Miniaturist some weeks before, but standing in front of the dolls' house at the Rijksmuseum, which inspired her to write the story, reawakened my interest in finishing it.

The real dolls' house on show at the Rijksmuseum
Shortly after returning to the UK after that weekend break, I did just that. Walking along the Herengracht canal and the Golden Bend where the heroine, Nella Oortman lived, was just the impetus I had needed. I marvelled at how skilfully the author evokes the life and times of the wealthy Dutch merchants at the centre of the story, with her attention to detail. Her research into seventeenth century Amsterdam fashion, food, furniture, trade, social customs, religious practises and the legal system, is very evident.

While Burton succeeded in transporting me back in time to this fascinating city, constructing a completely authentic setting, I didn't quite buy into her young heroine's self-assurance and command of the situation she quickly becomes embroiled in. Nella Oortman comes to Amsterdam at the tender age of eighteen as the new wife of one of its richest merchants Johannes Brandt. this girl from the country with no experience of city life, suddenly has to deal astutely with wily merchants twice her age, doing deals over sugar, writing very accomplished epistles to the miniaturist of the title, and taking command of a fast-moving situation, which threatens life, liberty and livelihood.

The other major strand that I found quite hard to swallow, was the whole premise of the miniaturist's spooky insight into the minutiae of the Brandts' household. Its members are always sneaking around the dark corridors of the merchant's house, eavesdropping at keyholes, but to imagine that the miniaturist has the same kind of access, or has in fact some kind of occult psychic powers that enable her to see straight through walls, seems preposterous....yet these were the theories that sprang to my mind when reading the plot. Even so, I happily suspended my disbelief, and enjoyed being drawn into the intrigue and the sinister voyeurism that I imagined was taking place.

Reaching the end of the novel, I felt that overall, it was an enjoyable, well-written book, especially heightened by my visit to Amsterdam and exposure to the artefacts at the Rijksmuseum. Plus, even if Nella's transformation into a self-assured, assertive merchant's wife in a man's world is slightly unbelievable, I do love a feisty, young heroine. Many fellow novelists have declared The Miniaturist to be an accomplished novel, which it definitely is. If you are looking for an atmospheric, suspenseful, historical story with great characters, you won't be disappointed.

Friday 14 August 2015

A God in every Stone

This is a totally engrossing novel with a grand sweep of history, capable of transporting you to another time, place and culture, in a way that stone and marble relics of an ancient past in repositories like The British Museum simply cannot do. Not only do the stones come alive, but in the person of Vivian Rose Spencer, the young archaeologist at the novel's heart, we experience first love, betrayal and loss in heart-wrenching intensity.

After writing so consummately about Nagasaki in a previous novel Burnt Shadows, Kamila Shamsie felt challenged as a Pakistani to discover the fascinating history of the city of Peshawar. Once she had narrowed her brief to focus on the city museum, a story opened up for her linking an emissary of the Persian king Darius, the fate of the precious artefact he was bearing, and the efforts of various archaeologists to unearth it in the early twentieth century. All of this is brilliantly woven together with personal stories of heroism and bravery in the Great War, extracts from Herodotus about ancient kingdoms, the rise and fall of empires, chance meetings on trains, and a non-violent political protest in the city in the 1930s, which turned into a bloodbath. Loyalties are challenged, protagonists cross paths unaware of the significance of their meeting, and people and objects are lost and found.

This is her sixth novel, and the second one that I have read, and with both of them I've felt that I was reading something truly epic and accomplished. I have been left wanting more of her writing. Others have said that this reads like a classic. It would make a brilliant film too. As the Sunday Telegraph critic says:"Love, politics, history - it has it all."

Friday 10 April 2015

The Rosie Effect

I had so enjoyed Graeme Simsion's debut novel, The Rosie Project, featuring his dysfunctional scientist Don Tillman, that I was wary of reading the sequel. The first had made me laugh out loud in several places, and I wondered how Simsion was going to be able to match its humour and originality. I need not have feared, for Don Tillman's second outing continues to be just as charming and engaging as his Rosie Project was.


Rosie and Don have now decamped to New York, followed by their friend and serial philanderer Gene, whose marriage is on the rocks. Both of them are working at Columbia University, but things soon become quite complicated, not only because Gene has moved into their apartment, but also because Rosie has unexpectedly fallen pregnant. Predictably, Don deals with this news by going into overdrive, reading scientific papers on pregnancy, devising schedules and diets, and unintentionally driving Rosie to distraction. Don's eccentricity, which occasionally leads to unexpected and alarming outcomes may have seemed attractive and exciting to Rosie when it was just the two of them, but now seems to be a possible barrier to their future as a family unit. As the pregnancy progresses, she fears that Don won't be able to relate to their baby, and wonders if she would be better off as a single mother.

Simsion manages to extract humour and concern for his protagonists' future, without becoming twee or predictable. I found myself really caring about the feelings of a man, who is not noted for being able to feel or express his own emotions. I also loved the cast of characters he gathers around Don for male bonding and mutual support, and how Don becomes a kind of champion for them all.

It's a less obviously funny novel than the first, but this is because there is more at stake than two individuals and their happiness. I think that because of the stakes, it's a deeper, more engaging read; plus there are still cocktails and lots of great foodie details to enjoy.

Total Control

I think I've just read my first American blockbuster thriller, and I very much enjoyed all six hundred and eleven pages of it. It was top quality hokum, entertaining and strangely old, with its talk of modems and floppy disks, and yet technologically challenging. David Baldacci definitely did his homework, as he goes into great detail about the inner workings of the Federal Reserve Board, Internet fraud, terror plots to down airliners, corporate takeovers and the FBI.

His highly attractive and intelligent heroine, is Sidney Archer, an attorney at Tyler, Stone, who finds herself caught up in the murderous intrigue of a billion pound takeover battle for CyberCom, between two rival firms: Triton Global and RTG. When her husband, Jason is implicated in a fraudulent deal to sell one firm's secrets to the other, and then is presumed dead on a sabotaged passenger plane, Sidney's life and the lives of her parents, and young daughter Amy, are in grave danger.

Sidney sets out to discover the secrets that Jason was hiding from her, and in the process to clear his name; but with the FBI following close behind in the shape of experienced agent, Lee Sawyer, she has to stay one step ahead, and find out who she can trust.

Baldacci ramps up the pace and tension, as Jason's enemies close in on the beleaguered Sidney, and the Feds try to keep a tail on her. It was hard not to see the novel as one of those intelligent legal thrillers, like John Grisham writes, with Lee Sawyer's character played by Gene Hackman. It would be a big name, big budget affair, with one of those deep, raspy voiceovers on the trailer: "Total Control. Once you have it, you'll kill to keep it!"

So yes, a bit Hollywood in places, from the intelligent and beautiful, gun-toting widow, to the seasoned Federal agent, who falls under her spell, and the cold-eyed assassin stalking dark corridors, dispatching people in gruesome ways. We get a big gun battle, and a cliff top show down, and it's a rip-roaring read, full of suspense and dirty dealing from start to finish.