Category Archives: Literature/Fiction

Review: All Days are Night by Peter Stamm

I received an advanced copy of this book from the author through NetGalley.  This edition of the book is translated by Michael Hoffman.

My Review:

All Days Are NightWhen the book opens, Gillian is waking up in a hospital room after a terrible car accident.  Her husband, Matthias, is dead, and she has been terribly disfigured.  She must undergo several operations to repair her nose and make her look normal again.  As Gillian spends a lot of time alone, she contemplates her previous life as a wife, a television news journalist and a minor celebrity.

On the night of the accident, Gillian had a terrible fight with her husband and they were both drinking heavily.  Matthias found nude pictures of Gillian and confronted her about them.  Gillian had conducted an interview with an artist named Hubert whose specialty was taking pictures of and painting nude women.  Gillian starts meeting Hubert in secret and he tries to paint her nude as well, but he seems to have lost his artistic inspiration.

The second part of the book is narrated by Hubert himself.  He is stuck in a marriage in which there is no real depth of emotions.  When he met Gillian his artistic creativity is on the wane and he cannot quite figure out how to get it back.  Hubert takes a job teaching art at a local college, which means more financial stability for his wife and son, but he seems unfulfilled and uninspired.

The range of emotions that the author conveys in this short novel is astonishing.  Gillian feels guilt, pain, remorse and finally happiness.  Hubert feels stifled, jealous and confused. This book brings to light the contrast between what we are on the outside and who we actually are behind the façade.  Can Gillian and Hubert reconnect and get beyond their past?  Can Hubert fully disconnect from his wife and move on?  ALL DAYS ARE NIGHT is a short read, yet it is full of dialogue that will make you contemplate life, personal identity and the passage of time.

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About The Author:

Peter StrammPeter Stamm grew up in Weinfelden in the canton of Thurgau the son of an accountant. After completing primary and secondary school he spent three years as an apprentice accountant and then 5 as an accountant. He then chose to go back to school at the University of Zurich taking courses in a variety of fields including English studies, Business informatics, Psychology, and Psychopathology. During this time he also worked as an intern at a psychiatric clinic. After living for a time in New York, Paris, and Scandinavia he settled down in 1990 as a writer and freelance journalist in Zurich. He wrote articles for, among others, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung, the Tages-Anzeiger, Die Weltwoche, and the satirical newspaper Nebelspalter. Since 1997 he has belonged to the editorial staff of the quarterly literary magazine “Entwürfe für Literatur.” He lives in Winterthur.

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Review and Giveaway- As Far As The Eye Can See: A Novel by Robert Bausch

I received an advanced copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.

My Review:

As far as the eye can seeBobby Hale has been an orphan since he was nine years old and raised by an aunt who never showed him any affection.  When the Civil War breaks out he joins the Union Army and heads out on his own.  He actually joins the union, collects his bonus, drops out and rejoins under a new name 9 different times.  When the war is over, since he has no family waiting for him to return, he heads out west in search of land and the American dream.

The strength of this novel lies in two aspects: its characters and its setting.  Bobby, although he left the union army several times, tries to be a good and moral person and he realizes that the white man’s conquest of the Indians is unjust.  He travels with a wagon caravan and a man named Theo at its head.  Through Theo he learns to respect the culture of the Indians and how to navigate the vast and open land of the American west. Continue reading

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Filed under Historical Fiction, Literature/Fiction

Q&A with Dan Berne, author of The Gods of Second Chances

 

I recently had the opportunity to read and review Dan Berne’s book The Gods of Second Chances.  Dan has graciously agreed to do a Q&A with me about his book.  Thanks so much to Dan for his thoughtful answers.  I also invite you to read a synopsis and my review of his book, which I highly recommend you put on your TBR pile.

Q&A with Dan Berne:

Author Dan Berne

Author Dan Berne

1. Can you tell us a little bit about yourself and how you became a writer?

I’ve written stories since I was ten years old. I was the introvert in a family of seven kids in a relatively small house (our shared bedroom was wall –bed – bed – bed – wall). Reading books was my escape. In college and beyond, I focused on poetry, but turned to fiction and novel writing when I was forty. In poetry, every word and line break has to mean something, and you have a few lines to evoke a response from the reader. In the novel form, I loved being able to work with the arc of the story and the unfolding of characters.

2. What, in particular, drew you to Alaska and made you decide to use that setting for the book?

I had been up to Alaska kayaking and hiking. I knew that I wanted my protagonist to be a working class guy, and I was drawn to the life that I saw up there. The landscape is so compelling and really is almost a character in itself. Continue reading

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Review and Giveaway: A Sudden Light by Garth Stein

I received an Advanced Review copy from the author in exchange for an honest review.  I invite you to read my review, watch the book trailer and win your own SIGNED hardcopy of the book (US/Canada).

My Review:

A Sudden LightThe first thing that struck me about A SUDDEN LIGHT is the rich and flowing prose that immediately sweeps the reader into the story.  It begins on a very philosophical note that reminds me of a common theme in Greek mythology: a curse.  When something of beauty is destroyed, the ancestors of the destroyer are cursed and pass on this curse until someone, somewhere along the family line is able to make amends.  The universe must be paid back in order for the curse to be broken.

Trevor is a 14 year old boy who had a happy and normal life with his parents growing up in Connecticut.  But any contentment he has experienced in his life is broken when his parents decide to separate.  Due to his dad’s poor financial planning, his family has also gone bankrupt and they have lost their house in Connecticut.  Trevor’s mother takes off for England to stay with her parents and Trevor travels with his father to visit his father’s family in Seattle.  It is strange and alarming that Trevor has never met his paternal grandfather or his Aunt Selena. Continue reading

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Review and Giveaway: The Gods of Second Chances by Dan Berne

I received an Advanced Copy of this book from the author for an honest review.  I invite you to read my review, learn a bit about the author and enter to win your own copy (US/Canada).

My Review:

DanBerne+TGOSC+coverRay Bancroft is a widowed fisherman in Alaska trying to raise his 11 year old granddaughter by himself.  He has had a tough life and nothing comes easy to him. He surrounds himself with statues of gods from different religions in order to gain some good karma and extra luck from the universe when he is carrying out his daily tasks.

The Alaskan setting in this book is captivating.  Ray and his partner Felix are out on their boat in bone-chilling weather for 12 or more hours a day trying to catch crabs and shrimp.  The descriptions of the sea, the Alaskan landscape and Yatki Island make you feel like you are shivering on the boat right beside them.

At times it seems like the whole universe is against Ray.  His job is dangerous, a tourist that he took out on his boat for a fishing trip has filed a frivolous lawsuit against him and he is always struggling to make ends meet.  The one bright spot in his world is his teenage granddaughter Sitka, but even his relationship with her is threatened when his drug addicted daughter suddenly comes back to town. Continue reading

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