Cassandra

Cassandra

Author: Kerry Greenwood

Publisher: Mandarin (imprint of Reed Books Australia)

Published: 1995

Rating: 5 stars

 

 

“It was not a vision. I smelt sweat, grease, salt, men and burning. Always the burning reek of wood and flesh which soured my nostrils and seared my throat.”

Cassandra is based off the prophecy cursed character from the Greek Myth of The Trojan War. Along with Cassandra, we have a second protagonist Greek healer Diomenes. Both characters are pawns for two of the Gods – Apollo and Aphrodite – as they see whose power is stronger.

This is an incredible retelling. I’m in awe of the way Greenwood is able to balance the fantastic elements of the Gods with the historical setting and culture of the ancient world. All the characters feel very grounded in a real historical setting. And the Gods feel like accurate representation of what the Ancient Greeks believed them to be.

The story doesn’t stray too far from the major plot points in the myth. And even though these events are prescribed they don’t feel out of place in the context of the story and they still pack an emotional punch. While reading it at work I was on the verge of crying three times — if I was home I would have been a sobbing mess!

I enjoyed learning about the differences in the Greek and Trojan cultures — how they celebrated the Gods, which Gods they favoured, women’s roles and healing practices.

I highly, highly recommend for any one interested in myth retellings or who is a fan of books set in antiquity.

Bad News: Last Journalist in a Dictatorship

Bad News

Author: Anjan Sundaram

Publisher: Bloomsbury Circus

Published: 2016

Rating: 4 stars

 

 

“But the written word belongs to no one. It has no source, no root that can be annihilated. It passes from hand to hand. It is destroyed; new words are written.”

What is the price of knowledge? Or free speech? In our Western world these are fundamental rights we take for granted. Bad News shows us just what that price is.

Sundaram gives us insight into a country still feeling the political and social unrest of the 1994 Rwandan genocide that shocked the world.

Sundaram is a journalist who is teaching a class of Rwandan reporters. This book is not one for the faint of heart. While not overtly gory, Sundaram is blunt is his recount of his time in Rwanda. He refuses to censor his own or his students experiences.

Bad News will tear you apart in all the right ways but leave you hopefully that change can happen.

Skylarking

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Author: Kate Mildenhall

Publisher: Black Inc.

Published: August 2016

Rating: 4 stars

 

 

‘I remember the way Harriet turned, breathless, laughing, a strand of her golden hair caught on her bottom lip. 
After that, I try not to remember’

Skylarking takes place on an isolated Australian cape in the 1880s. It follows Kate and Harriet, the daughters of lighthouse keepers. The pair grows up together and consequently shares everything until fishermen, McPhail, moved into their tiny community.

Mildenhall has created a beautiful and immersive novel. It’s hard to believe it’s her debut! After a while you can hear the waves crash against the cost and feel the salt brine on your skin. Skylarking is based on true events. Mildenhall has done a beautiful job of bringing the story to life and showing all the complexities of a tight knit friendship.

I highly recommend and am looking forward to Mildenhall’s next novel!

April 2016 TBR

Hi all! And welcome to a new month and another TBR post. I’m sorry for my lack of posts – still trying to find a balance now I’m back at uni. Because of my mounting assessments, I ‘ve decided to keep my TBR low since I don’t need any added pressure.

Most of these books are for my Around the World in 52 Books Reading Challenge.

Now onto the books!

 

 

That’s all for me for today. Comment down below and let me know what books you’re planning to read this month.

Until next time, happy reading!

Dearna

February 2016 Book Haul

Hi all! I’m going to share with you all the new books I’ve adopted over this month. Yes it looks like a lot but I will say all but I had a difficult month and book buying is my favourite kind of retail therapy.

Like always this post is going to be mostly pretty pictures so sit back and enjoy the books.

Onto the books!

 

 

 

This month I did an little day internship type thing a Readings bookstore. And to thank me for my time they let me take home some old proof copies. If you live in Melbourne or planning a visit please check them out, they are amazing at what they do!

 

So that’s it for this book haul. Comment down below and let me know was your first book purchase of the year.

Until next time, happy reading!

Dearna 

March 2016 TBR

Hi all! And welcome to a new month and another TBR post. Again I have decided to keep my TBR low so I don’t feel pressured. Also this month Uni has decided to give me all the assignments and I can guarantee that I will have a ton of required reading.

Most of these books are for my Around the World in 52 Books Reading Challenge.

Now onto the books!

 

 

 

 

That’s all for me for today. Comment down below and let me know what books you’re planning to read this month.

Until next time, happy reading!

Dearna

 

 

T5W: Biggest Book Hangovers

What time is it? Well it’s Top 5 Wednesday time!

Hi again! and welcome to a belated Top 5 Wednesday. Today’s topic is our Biggest Book Hangover – in other words books we don’t want to end and having rouble leaving the world once the pages end.

Before we get onto books that made me hungover I would like to mention that Top 5 Wednesday was created over on BookTube by the wonderful Laniey at gingerreadslaniey. Also you can check out the Goodreads page for past and future topics. They are listed in no particular order.

 

Now onto the books!

 

#5 The Sunne in Splendour by Sharon Kay Penman

Sunne

This must come has no surprise to anyone who has visited my blog before since I mention it in pretty much every post.

#4 The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan

The Gracekeepers

#3 The Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger

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This was one of the first Adult fiction novels I read. I love Clare and Henry so much and this story never fails to make we feel everything.

#2 The Crowded Shadow by Celine Kiernan

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Everything about this book is magical. I love Sol and Ashkr’s relationship and the Merron’s are amazing.

#1 Rules of Civility by Amor Towles

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This is my most recent book hangover. Everything about this book, world was beautiful and I’m not ready to leave it.

 

 

That’s all for me. Comment down below and let me know which books make you hangover.

Until next time, happy reading!

Dearna

REVIEW: Rules of Civility

… life is less like a journey than it is a game of honeymoon bridge. In our twenties, when there is still so much time ahead of us, time that seems ample for a hundred indecisions, for a hundred visions and revisions — we draw a card, and we must decide right then and there whether to keep that card and discard the next, or discard the first card and keep the second. And before we know it, the deck has been played out and the decisions we have just made will shape our lives for decades to come.

Maybe that sounds bleaker than I intended.

 

Hi all! I’m here with a new review. I adored this book and just couldn’t stop thinking about it. So I’m going to share my view with you in hopes you will all want to read it.

 

I will stress that this review was not commissioned or request by anyone and I’m not getting paid. All thoughts on this book are my own opinion.

 

Rules of Civility

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Author: Amor Towles

Genre: Historical fiction

First published: 2011

Publisher: Sceptre (imprint of Hodder & Stoughton)

Page number: 324

 

On the last night of 1937, twenty-five-year-old Katey Kontent is in a second-rate Greenwich Village jazz bar with her boardinghouse roommate stretching three dollars as far as it will go when Tinker Grey, a handsome banker with royal blue eyes and a tempered smile, happens to sit at the neighbouring table. This chance encounter and its startling consequences propel Katey on a yearlong journey from a Wall Street secretarial pool toward the upper echelons of New York society and the executive suites of Condé Nast–rarefied environs where she will have little to rely upon other than a bracing wit and her own brand of cool nerve.

Wooed in turn by a shy, principled multi-millionaire and an irrepressible Upper East Side ne’er-do-well, befriended by a single-minded widow who is a ahead of her time, and challenged by an imperious mentor, Katey experiences firsthand the poise secured by wealth and station and the failed aspirations that reside just below the surface. Even as she waits for circumstances to bring Tinker back into her life, she begins to realise how our most promising choices inevitably lay the groundwork for our regrets.

 

My rating: 5

 

This was a book I picked up on a whim at during a secondhand book sale because it’s set in New York during the 1930s. So where do I start.

This is a beautifully written book. Towles proses are lyrical and he manages to capture the essence of the 30s perfectly. Everything from setting, character’s behavior, food, clothing, technology is so vivid that you feel like you are there.

Going into the novel, I was worried has there are no quotation marks. So dialogue is signaled with a dash (ie. — Maybe the moon, I conceded). But I never had a issue telling what was spoken and what wasn’t. This is mostly because Towles rarely includes dialogue attributions and if there is a group of people talking it’s written like script. For example:

If you could be anyone for a day, who would you be?

Me: Mata Hari

Tinker: Natty Bumppo.

Eve: Darryl Zanuck.

 

I adored the structure of this novel. It opens with Katey and her husband at an art show during the 60s. The exhibit they go to see is a photographer’s work from the 20s and 30s – he took photos of people on trains. During the show, Katey notices two photos of her old friend, Tinker Grey. This moment sparks Katey in remembering the year she met him, 1938. For here the book spans over a year and splits into seasons – Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall (or Autumn). Its amazing to see just how much a persons life can change over the course of a single year – from the friends you gain and lose, your career, appearance and the place you love to go.

This will come as no surprise, but I highly recommend that everyone read this book. I think it is beautiful is every way shape and form. If you are interested in this novel please, please read it.

 

That’s all for me for today, comment down below and let me know if you’ve read Rules of Civility and what you though.

Until next time, happy reading!

Dearna

January 2016 Book Haul

Hi all! I’m going to share with you all the new books I’ve adopted over this month. Yes it looks like a lot but I will say all but one is secondhand AND my Mama and my boyfriend, Nathan, brought most of them. Being secondhand means that most of these books were $3 or $4.

Like always this post is going to be mostly pretty pictures so sit back and enjoy the books.

Onto the books!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So that’s it for this book haul. Comment down below and let me know was your first book purchase of the year.

Until next time, happy reading!

Dearna