Friday 29 April 2022

Mirror Man by Fiona McIntosh


Thank you Ms McIntosh for giving us another tale involving the very lovely DCI Jack Hawksworth...
 *sighs*


In Jack we have a really likeable character, he is-
charming
charismatic
 but more importantly 
authentic...


...solving crime has never be so desirable when you are Hawks team!





The Library Enthusiast and that book...


Sunday 24 April 2022

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens


This one requires persistence, you need to be prepared to allow it to shroud you in the diverse and mesmerising world of life in the marsh.


Owens writes descriptively, with a clear knowledge of the Carolinas and Kya is a well thought out character with an intensity that encourages the reader to accept the books slow burn.


The Library Enthusiast on Literature....



Friday 15 April 2022

One Hundred Days by Alice Pung


I loved this one from Ms Pung, it is written from Karuna's point of view and as a letter to her unborn child...


Ms Pung gives us a beautiful account of the intricate balance of parental love and the need to control a situation. 
The voices of both of her main characters are loud and clear and wonderfully written...


I enjoyed this window into second generation migrant families, a world in which I have no personal experience...


...seeing an unfamiliar Australia through the eyes of a teenage Asian Australian was powerful and thought provoking.


The Library Enthusiast's View of Life...

 

Sunday 10 April 2022

Everything is Beautiful by Eleanor Ray


An easy to read tale about loneliness and grief...


..Ray has successfully given us a dual narrative, which allows us to understand why Amy's life is frozen in time.


Whilst this book touches on the 'why' many of us may need to keep/collect things, it doesn't sensationalise it, which I felt is one of this books strengths.
I also enjoyed reading the perspective of the two boys who lived next door.


The Library Enthusiast & the great thing about Books....

 

Thursday 7 April 2022

The Distant Dead by Lesley Thomson


This time Thomson gives us a dual narrative - 1940 and 2019 - providing us with the very real idea that the events that have happened in the past, continue to have their echoes in the present day...



...you don't need to have read any of the other books about Stella Darnell, The Detective's Daughter, to enjoy this murder mystery, however having said this, it might help put some of her back story into perspective if you do!



The Library Enthusiast's #8 reason for Loving Libraries...


Saturday 2 April 2022

The Morbids by Ewa Ramsey


I really didn't know what to expect when I chose The Morbids...


...what I got was an intimate account of a subject that society is often not ready to acknowledge or indeed discuss, mental illness.


What I so, so loved, was Ramseys ability to be sympathetic when portraying the devastating effects of mental illness, whilst also giving us humour to soften this darkness.
Ramsey helps us to understand that people can be both...
 ...fragile and resilient.



The Library Enthusiast & Abridged Classics...



The Devil Stone by Caro Ramsay

  DCI Caplin is a troubled detective from Glasgow, she is a complex character with family issues and a past that is only hinted at in this, ...