Friday, May 17, 2013

Little Bee by Chris Cleave


This book was much more interesting than "Canada" but still wasn't my favourite type of book. I don't know if the scenario is possible. It is about a British couple vacationing in Nigeria who leave the safety of the compound to walk on the beach with disasterous consequences. 

A young Nigerian girl who briefly met them found the man's driver's license. When she found she must escape the country she heads for England to find this couple. 

I don't know if her description of her life in Nigeria was true to life but it certainly sounded as if it was. It was a simple life in her village but it changed in a minute to a dangerous life. Her experience waiting in confinement in England was beyond belief in this day and age. 

She did enter the life of the wealthy when she found the wife of the couple and stayed with her for a short while. She also learned that there were "pockets" of London where she would feel more comfortable, with people of her own kind. 

It was interesting from the point of view of the differences in culture but I was actually glad to get it finished. 

Canada by Robert Ford


I'm sure I've missed commenting on a lot of books but thought I'd catch up at least a bit. I re-joined my bookclub. I guess I mostly did it for the social interaction, I'm finding I didn't do it for the books.

I think "Canada" wins an award for the most boring book I've ever tried to read. It wasn't even in our library so I had to buy it. It was a waste of $15!!

The book is written from the point of view of a 15 year old boy who has a twin sister. The mother got pregnant and that's why she married the father of the children. The boy says many times that the marriage was probably a mistake. They were really not alike at all. The mother was very quiet,  unsociable, worked as a teacher. She was from Seattle and was Jewish, which meant when she married a gentile she was shunned by her family. The father was in the airforce. He was a southerner, from Alabama or such. He had wanted to be a pilot but wasn't able to pass the tests and so ended up being a bombadier instead. The family was constantly moving from city to city following his father's posts. In his most recent post he had gotten in with the illegal sale of beef. When he was caught by the military and that avenue closed he turned to the railroad. One of the shipments was tainted and the fellow at the railroad refused to pay. This left the father in a quandry with the local indians who had given him the beef and who he owed $2500.

When he was a child he told his son that he had discussed robbing a bank with a friend. So he decided that to get rid of his $2500 debt he was going to have to rob a bank. He talked his wife into it and they did rob a bank. They did a pretty botched up job of it and only stole exactly what they needed, $2500. They were caught and sent to jail. The daughter was sent to live with her grandparents in Seattle and the boy was sent to live with a relative in Manitoba.

That's as far as I got in the book. I just couldn't force myself to read more when there were so many other things I wanted to read.

According to another book club member the discussion they had was very interesting but most of the members felt the same way I did about the actual book.




Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Wall to Wall Dead by Jennie Bentley


I found this next book was way more exciting than her last one. I kind of suspected whodunit half way through but then discounted it. In the end I was right. There was not only one murder, which was questionable as to whether it was indeed murder, but two murders, and again the second murder was questionable for awhile.

Very enjoyable to get lost in.

Flipped Out by Jennie Bentley


I didn't enjoy this one as much as I have her other books. Somehow there just wasn't as much excitement in this one. Of course I read it 2 months ago (January) and had a lot going on in my personal life so that might explain why it didn't engross me as much as the others.