Bringing Books to the People

Bringing Books to the People
The Book Bus

Jul 28, 2012

The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst

Homos and Margaret Thatcher in a book hefty enough to act as a weapon when concealed in a handbag? Don't mind if I do.

Let me break it down for you: 80s; White collar gay boy goes to Fancy University where he meets adobs straight rich boy; Moves into London house of said boy's family as lodger; Daddy of said boy is MP in gay boy's patch. Complicated.

Wow. If only all vastly complex, intimately nuanced Booker prize-winning novels could be described like that, 'eh? Maybe they should make that a criteria on the entry form or something.

So anyway. This is a very London book - jaunts on Hampstead Heath, coke in bathrooms, cycling in traffic, canoodling in Chelsea, mischief in Notting Hill, keyed gardens, riding the bus - it's all there. I guess if I was into dogging and loaded blokes this might be like reading Monkey Grip. Alas.

God, I don't know why I'm finding it so hard to express that I absolutely loved this book. From page 1, it's tits on a bull obvious that this isn't going to end well. Truly, you can see the tragic writing on the wall from a mile off. Let me be clear here: this is not a problem, it just means you are, step by step, watching a train crash. And falling in love with all the passengers even as the impact throws them out of their seats.

It's beautiful.


What I Loved Siri Hustvedt

Warning - tear-jerker. That's a warning for anyone other than Nicole reading this, unlikely, as she clearly already has
What's interesting to me though is that in both of these books (this one, and the one you just blogged about) the woman has to leave the relationship and the home to grow & change. What do you reckon that's about? I mean, completely different circumstances by the sounds of it, but it's like that archetypal storyline in children's fiction where the parents are somehow 'not there', either the kids go to boarding school, or it's Summer holidays, or whatever, but this lets things happen, creates the space for a-typical events to take place. 
This story interested me from the point of view of the young man, actually. Kind of a ridiculous thing to say, since I guess the whole book is about how your point of view frames everything - truth, love, art - without you being able to really do a single thing about it, even in the unlikely event you're aware of its influence. Anyway, yes - Mark. Fascinating. What to take from this? That having 3 parents will really mess with your juju? That everyone who wore fluro was a monster? I don't know, but there was a lot, I felt at the end, that was unresolved with that character. 

This was my first Hustveldt, so I guess I'm going to be looking to you, Lovelock, for where to go next, ploise.

The Hare With Amber Eyes: A Hidden Treasure by Edmund de Waal


Here's a book disguised as a book about a tiny white ceramic rabbit which is actually about THE ENTIRE WORLD. Well, ish. 

Edmund de Waal is, apparently, a well famous potter. I guess however famous you are for potting (?) I'm going to be far too philistine to have ever heard of you. But, be that as it may, what I'm getting at here is that despite having put together a truly incredible, captivating book, that's not even his real job. But then, I guess a potter writing a book about a tiny white ceramic rabbit makes, I guess, more sense than a carpenter doing it.

This book charts the journey of a set of these tiny objects - Japanese netsuke - from where Edmund's distant relative bought them in Paris in the 1870s to Edmund's London home today. So what? So what?! These little guys - essentially a really old Japanese belt keepers - accompany a Russian Jewish family through Paris, Vienna, Czechoslovakia, back to Japan and then onto London, taking in some of the most vitriolic anti-immigrant, anti-Jewish sentiment, seeing the rise and fall of a fortune, witnessing incredible wealth, indecipherable suffering and cataclysmic change. They are toys, curiosities, emblems, talismans, treasures.

Also, there's a family tree in the front, and I really like that junk.

You need to be able to devote yourself to this a bit - it's non-fiction with people and places and names and events you're going to want to keep track of - but it's absolutely worth it.

Jul 3, 2012

You'll be sorry when I'm dead by Marieke Hardy

You will either LOVE this book, or you will FUCKING HATE IT. Some chapters, I switched between huge snorts of laughter to being semi-disgusted at her conduct, which has been pretty shady at times. I admire that Hardy has no filter (even employing quite an endearing mechanic where she writes about an episode involving someone else, be an ex-lover or a bestie, and then gets them to write their side of the story). They don’t always match up, so it’s fascinating exercise in memory and how we like to write our own histories. It’s pretty admirable but can also be way over-sharing. And this is a girl that likes to over-share. Over-sharing is her stock in trade. Often it’s backed up by hilarious anecdotes about being a borderline alcoholic with a penchant for bad boys in Melbourne bands during the Noughties. Does it seem a little premature for her to essentially be writing her memoirs to date? Just a tad. Has she achieved a lot for her young years? For sure (see her Women of Letters project) Does she come off like a petulant adolescent at times? Totally. Do I think she gives a toss? Not likely. Life
would be boring without firecrackers like her going off at random … I’m just kind of glad that I don’t have to deal with her at 2am on a Sunday night.

The Summer without men by Siri Hustvedt

Another one of my favourite writers; she of What I Loved (which was creepy and awesome and confusing) and The Sorrows of an American (unnerving and suspensful) but this sadly, was not my favourite book. I find her writing in this to be a little overwrought, or maybe over-thought, like she was trying to prove how smart and erudite sh
e is. Making a massive assumption on someone whom I’ve never met, I’d put money on her being fiercely intelligent, likes to fight with her husband after a glass of red too many and slightly high-strung. I like these women but she seems high maintenance (is this being sexist? I’m sure I could say the same of male writers – Franzen would be slightly off kilter for sure. Eggers, definitely). Can you make this judgement based on their writing? I point to cases of some other favourite female writers and say yes: I’m looking at you Joan Didion and Lily Brett. Anyway, back to the book. Man cheats on wife of many years with a young Frenchie, woman rents a house out of town and teaches a writing class for teenage girls, makes friends with the young neighbour and her family, gets visits by daughter, sees shrink, husband asks for wifey back at the end. No-one gets blown up, there is not much action, just the slow breakdowns and build-ups of human relationships. The whole thing is a little bit plodding, a little bit “let’s spend time in psychoanalysis land”, but there are rays of sunshine. Like when she as the teacher spends time with the bratty teenagers as they turn on each other (bought back many memories) and her friendship with her mum’s subversive nursing home buddy Abigail, who reminded me of my Gran. The rest is….mas o menos.

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

Oh Mr Eugenides, you make me swoon with your literary smarts; your witty pop-culture references; your cliché-free relationship observations and your general cleverness. Now might not be the time to tell you that I never read The Virgin Suicides I thought maybe the praise was just a tad over the top. But you’ve really got me with this one.
Leonard. Never has a character with such an unsexy name been so captivating. Immeasurably flawed, hilariously depressed, unaccountable for his dastardly actions and constantly over-worked brain, he is one of modern literature’s most brightly coloured protaganists. He made me laugh out loud and cringe inwardly with every awkward incident. His long-suffering girlfriend (and maybe too long-suffering in the end for my tastes) Madeline is writing her thesis on “The Marriage Plot” which lies at the heart of many of Austen’s novels. She is a book lover, and I love reading novels that are self reflexive like that – ones that are nodding to the books that the author has been read, shaped by, appreciated to get to the point where he/she is writing one themselves. Then crazy Mitchell rounds out this love triangle, and the ending is neither treacly nor expected. And the whole book is just exceptionally clever and sparky and kind of amazing. I would put it up there with A Visit from the Goon Squad as being in my top five of the past five years. You can listen to an excellent podcast of Eugenides in conversation with the ABC's Books and Arts program here

Before I go to sleep by S.J Watson

Is it compulsory to have just your initials instead of your full name if you’re a crime writer? All signs point to yes. The premise of this book really got me in the store: woman wakes up next to a man she doesn’t know, has to read her journal to piece together that she has amnesia from a car accident, doesn’t recognise her husband but knows something is not quite right. I don’t read them often, but I am totally partial to a good thriller. This did not quest my thrill thirst though. It builds in a nice, unsettling way but the pay-off left me feeling decidedly short-changed.