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Review: Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger

As a huge admirer of Audrey Niffenegger’s The Time Traveller’s Wife it brings me no pleasure to say that her second major work Her Fearful Symmetry comes as a significant disappointment. Where Traveller’s was deep and visceral, impeccably composed, thrilling and emotive with rich and delicious characters, Symmetry (aptly for its title) is quite the […]
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Makers
In this situation I’m a representative. A martyr. Imprisoned, unable to grow. At the mercy of this resentment, this hateful millstone of envy of the Calibans of this world. Because they all hate us, they hate us for being different, for not being them, for their own not being like us. They persecute us, they […]
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Review: After Dark by Haruki Murakami
A single night is a night too many in the company of Haruki Murakami’s petite and pretentious After Dark, which compelled reading if only to fully appreciate the limits of its grotesquely crude idioms. One half-imaged the book, which reads as an unintended pastiche of post-modern literature, to be a tragic misadventure in Japanese/English translation; […]
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Review: The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom
Though frequently recommended, this is an appallingly poor excuse for a novel. If one is setting out to write a book of speculative philosophy about life death and the hereafter, one had better have a great sophistication of understanding for human experience along with fresh and insightful imagination regarding the human spirit. Albom seems to […]
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Review: Human Traces by Sebastian Faulks
Oh dear. This is one of the most unfortunate books I’ve read in quite some time. Sebastian Faulks has a name in popular historical fiction and Human Traces, which seemed to promise a fascinating tale of two 19th century pioneers of psychiatry – a subject I have a strong interest in – gave me high […]
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Review: Unseen Academicals by Terry Pratchett
Not the finest Discworld novel Terry’s ever written, but there’s still a great deal here to enjoy. This affectionate parody of football with the beloved Unseen University wizards is blessed with interesting characters new and familiar, but seems a little trivial in the context of his more recent works. Sadly, unless you have a love […]
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Review: Sexing the Cherry by Jeanette Winterson
Painfully pretentious and drowning in a mess of its failed aspirations, it’s always a bad thing when an author becomes too fond of the sound of their own voice. Characters, ideas, feelings, and stories are lost under the weight of what I can only presume is Winterson’s creative vanity. While arguably intelligent she lacks the […]
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Review: Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Literature Light. If you like your novels bland, insipid and unchallenging, Shadow of the Wind is probably for you. The prose is plain, the characters are two dimensional, a the plot – while it desperately aspires to be a thriller – is about as sleepy and predictable as they come. A couple of the characters […]
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Review: Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel
This is a most beautiful autobiography produced in a novel comic-book format. Alison Bechdel’s tale of growing up, her dysfunctional household, closeted homosexual father, and her own growing awareness of her lesbian identity is a touching and wonderfully rendered memoir of her early life. Insightful and fascinating from beginning to end, this is really worth […]
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Review: The Ebony Tower by John Fowles
Collection of five novellas from the genius that is Fowles. Stunningly brilliant, eloquent and profoundly intelligent. It is surely impossible not to learn from this man about both writing and life itself. This writer took literature towards a new frontier. Amazing.
