Monday, 21 December 2015

Holiday themed reading for Citysiders

Our Citysiders decided they wanted a book selected for the holidays so after a bit of a scramble, a book with a cover looking like an old-fashioned suitcase was chosen. The Travels of Daniel Ascher written by Deborah Levy-Bertherat has been translated from the French by Adriana Hunter and apparently has enjoyed much success in France.






The Kirkus Review is not overly impressed however Kristine Morris from Foreword Reviews gave it a five heart rating which seems to indicate a more positive reading experience.

No doubt everyone will have their own encounter with this novel and we'll be able to share this when  we meet on the first Thursday in February.

Merry Christmas and happy reading!


Wednesday, 16 December 2015

End of year Book Club Chatathon goes well!

Fourteen people from the three Mackay Regional Council Libraries Book Clubs met to share delicious food and delightful conversation on all things books. It was a wonderful way to round off another successful year of book clubbing. Closing time came long before topics had been spent so it was a bit of a rush to wash up, tidy and pack up.

Both BTLBC and CBC have opted to have a book selected for the Christmas break so we'll be able to hit the ground running in 2016.

Wishing all book clubbers a wonderful Christmas and looking forward to much animated discussion about books in 2016!

Monday, 30 November 2015

First Thursday this Thursday!

It's December today so it's the first Thursday this Thursday! Time for Cityside Book Club to meet and chat about Sonya Hartnett's Golden Boys.

See you at the Community Venue Room at Mackay City Library at 6.00 pm this Thursday!

Thursday, 5 November 2015

Sonya Hartnett's 'Golden Boys'

For the month of November, Cityside Book Club will be reading Sonya Hartnett's Golden Boys which was shortlisted for the 2015 Miles Franklin Literary Award.

 
 
Peter Pierce from The Australian wrote this about this rather disturbing read.
 
 
It'll be interesting to hear about people's experience of this novel by an author who has specialised in writing for young adults.
 
We'll meet on Thursday 3 December at 6.00pm at Mackay City Library's Community Venue Room!

 
 


'The Golden Age' resonates with readers

Joan London's The Golden Age really impressed our readers. When some of our readers realised it was a novel set  in the Golden Age Children's Polio Convalescent Home in Perth, they were preparing themselves for a rather bleak read but were rather pleasantly surprised by the light touch used to tell the tale. Readers spoke of the deft way the author wove the stories of the various characters together. People were impressed with the array of characters, the way they were introduced and the way they came to life with a brief sketch of their character and background. Others spoke of the light but respectful way the author handled such a potentially depressing topic.

There was mention that another group had considered Sister Olive Penny's behaviour as being rather implausible for that era but this group boisterously refuted this notion. Rather they believed that this behaviour was indulged in but rather more clandestinely in past times than today.

Readers found the ending a little abrupt and a little strange but in many ways satisfying. There seemed to be a general consensus that Frank's relationship with Elsa was indeed 'The Golden Age' and as such it was a relationship that transcended mere earthly sex. Much hilarity and tangential discussion followed this concept.

Our book club membership stretches across several generations and this span meant there were different experiences of  'polio'. Some remember taking the pink oral sabin on sugar cubes while other younger members have never experienced the vaccine. Some knew of family members or friends who bore some paralysis from polio. One of our members has a medical background and was able to inform the group of what the eradication of polio actually means and why after a polio-free period it is counterproductive to distribute the polio vaccine which is why children today do not receive it. Sister Kenny's role in treating polio patients was mentioned as was the 'iron-lung' and the group found out more as to when, how and why this machine was used and the role it played in the survival of so many polio patients.

A couple of our time-poor members had not finished the novel but the rest of the group were certainly positively impressed by the novel. They seemed to think that a difficult topic had been handled sensitively and well. They enjoyed the array of characters and their stories and the overall telling of the tale. They appreciated how each character was travelling their own difficult road but somehow the Golden Age Children's Polio Convalescent Home provided them all with an opportunity to glow if not shine.

Our next book club selection features the word 'golden' as well but the subject matter is somewhat more tarnished.

We will meet on Thursday 3 December at 6.00pm at the Mackay City Library Community Venue Room to discuss Sonya Hartnett's Golden Boys.

Wednesday, 4 November 2015

November's here!

We had a great meeting last month but the blog never got a chance ro reflect all the insights revealed. Humble apologies for this!

Hopefully this will not happen this month!

Looking forward to hearing your views on Joan London's The Golden Age at the Community Venue Room at Mackay City Library at 6.00pm this evening!

Monday, 28 September 2015

September's nearly done and October starts on Thursday!

This means Cityside Book Club will be meeting to discuss Harper Lee's Go Set a Watchman this Thursday at the Community Venue at the Mackay City Library at 6.00pm.





Due to the classic status of Harper Lee's previous novel To Kill a Mockingbird, expectations are high for this novel which Harper Lee has described as the parent novel of To Kill a Mockingbird.

Cara Erica from The Guardian writes this about this long-anticipated novel while Michelle Smith in The Conversation posits a variety of aspects of Go Set A Watchman.

Looking forward to hearing our book clubbers experience of Harper Lee's new novel this Thursday!

Wednesday, 9 September 2015

'The Eye of the Sheep' impresses

Seven Cityside Book Clubbers met to discuss Sofie Laguna's 2015 Miles Franklin Literary Award Winner The Eye of the Sheep.

The title evoked much discussion. Some thought the book would attract a bigger audience with a more attractive title while others thought a title like this intrigued and encouraged readers. Most of our readers would like to know why the author came up with this title and deduced that it had special meaning to the author and, being curious, they were aching to know more detail. Some of our readers were glad that our Book Club Set sticker covered the book cover image of Jimmy Flick and they were able to develop their own version of him.

Some of our readers had had much experience, in some cases personal involvement with children on the autism spectrum and therefore found this book difficult and rather emotional to read. Other readers appreciated and were fascinated by the way the author endeavoured to portray Jimmy Flick's thought processes and concepts of the world. Other readers had great difficulty with the notion of an adult writing from a child's perpective and felt this lack of authenticity. There was much curiosity about how the author came to write this book. Our readers were very interested in whether it was personal experience of a Jimmy or was it extensive empathetic research?

Our readers generally found all of the characters believable. There was much sympathy for Paula and much discussion ensued about how caring for a child like Jimmy Flick usually fell to the mother and how exhausting this reponsibility was. Most of our readers loved the way Paula was portrayed and how Jimmy conceptualised his mother.There was much discussion about why Paula just gave up when Gavin left after beating both Paula and Jimmy. There was talk about how denial of the domestic violence by the victim effectively stymied any possibility of assistance from medical authorities. There was much conversation about the community's role as silent witness to family violence and the way family violence travels down the generations.

The relationship between Jimmy and his father and the longing Liam had for his father fostered much discussion about the need for connection between sons and fathers. In Liam's case the loss of this much yearned-for connection and the denial of this loss did not bode well for his future. His psychopathic behaviour was portrayed in such an understated but nevertheless unsettling manner. The pressure in the foster family furthered discussion about the exhaustion involved in caring for children with behavioural difficulties.

Our readers generally enjoyed the actual expression and style of writing in The Eye of the Sheep even though they found the content and story distressing and difficult. Most of our readers agreed it was a worthwhile read and some were considering re-reading it at a later date because they thought a slower read would do it more justice.

There was much excitement when next month's book was revealed: Harper Lee's second novel Go Set A Watchman. It should be a very interesting meeting when we discuss this much anticipated novel on Thursday 1 October at Mackay City Library at 6.00 pm.

Monday, 10 August 2015

Our next read is Sofie Laguna's 'The Eye of the Sheep'

Sofie Laguna has written twenty children's books, plays, a screen play and one adult novel prior to writing The Eye of the Sheep. Apparently it was one of her earlier plays that begat her 2014 novel which has won the 2015 Miles Franklin Award.







Susan Wyndham, literary editor of The Sydney Morning Herald wrote this about Laguna's prize-winning book.

Looking forward to hearing your views on this modern prize-winning Australian novel.

'The Denniston Rose' discussed

There was much discussion about the bleakness of the physical environment of the Denniston coal mine and the determination needed to survive in these conditions. There was a lot of talk about how the three women Totty Hanratty, Mary Scobie and Bella Rasmussen were the strength and really the founding mothers of the Denniston community. Many mining stories focus on the men but this one seemed focussed on the strength of the women and how the men made the decisions but it was the women who had to somehow ensure that things actually happened.

Rose's mother while coming under fire for her rather hands off approach to mothering could be seen as a survivor of her time who considered her only means of existence was under the wing of a man whether he hurt her (and Rose) or not. She certainly understood men and where they were concerned she generally got her way in the big picture even though in the detail she was somewhat less particular and certainly did not consider collateral damage.

There was a lot of discussion about the community knowing how Billy Genesis was treating Rose but how not one adult spoke in her defence: "No one liked to admit that a child's voice is always harder to hear than an adult's." There was also the excuse that 'Billy's skills were necessary to the community.' Despite being a small child, Rose was very much on her own. There was much talk about whether this was still the case today.

There seemed to be much discussion about many facets of the novel but while Rose's situation merited opinions, the character Rose did not engender a great deal of discussion.

Most of our readers seemed to enjoy the read. One of our readers particularly enjoys books based in historical fact and followed up her read with quite a bit of internet research on Denniston, the coal mining industry there and the incline. One can even experience a virtual ride on the incline which was eventually closed in 1967.

Looking forward to our next discussion on Sofie Laguna's book The Eye of the Sheep on Thursday 3 September at 6.00pm.

Tuesday, 4 August 2015

Cityside meets this Thursday!

Hello folks,

Just a reminder that it's the first Thursday of the month and that means Cityside Book Club meets to discuss Jenny Pattrick's The Denniston Rose at 6.00pm in the Community Venue room at Mackay City Library!

See you there!

Thursday, 2 July 2015

July's read is Jenny Pattrick's 'The Denniston Rose'

We're off to the wilds of early settlement on the inhospitable coal fields of Denniston on the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand. This novel follows the slow painful development of community in this pioneer settlement.

 
 
To find a few images to set the scene pop onto Google Images and type in 'Denniston'. I tried to upload a couple of them for you but computer is not playing the game - it didn't say 'No' exactly, it just ignored my instruction! There are archive photos of the incline and the break head which are really illuminating. I'd certainly prettied things up in my imagination so it was a good reality check.
 
Here is a brief precise of the book from Random House.
 
Certainly a book that needs to be read with a hot chocolate or a mulled wine.
 
Looking forward to hearing about your experience of this popular New Zealand novel.
 
 
 
 
 




'The Girl Who Couldn't Read' discussed in detail by girls who like reading!

John Harding's Gothic mystery stimulated much discussion among our avid readers. One of our regulars due to work commitments had not read the novel so the rest of the group had to very carefully circumvent discussing the novel's conclusion. Discussion was sufficient to encourage her to take a copy to catch up this read.

Our readers generally felt that Harding had created a dark, bleak menacing atmosphere well. There was much discussion about how asylums have been used to confine people, especially women, who did not conform to the social norms of the time and how these people appeared to have no basic human rights whatsoever. There was also much mention of the recency and even in some cases, the contemporary continuation, of this practice of isolation in the case of refugee boat arrivals. One of our readers who is associated with today's health industry and thus accustomed to processes and guidelines of accountability and duty of care was horrified by how people could be just 'disappeared' into an asylum. There was was much discussion about the cruelty of the 'modern methods of rehabilitation' espoused in the novel.

As The Girl Who Couldn't Read had a prequel, there was much discussion about whether reading it would have cleared some of the mystery surrounding Jane Dove but possibly ruined the twist in the tale's tail. Our readers are still keen to read Florence & Giles and there was much animated conjecture about what dastardly deeds Jane Dove concealed in her past thus resulting in her 'hiding' in the asylum.

Our readers spoke of Doctor John Shepherd's strong sense of intellectual superiority and how this smugness led to his downfall. Several readers commented on a variety of situations where, despite his cleverness, he left himself vulnerable. These 'mistakes' lulled our readers into a false sense of security about him leaving them ripe for a nasty surprise. Our readers talked about how, despite the fact they knew Shepherd  was a 'bad egg', his treatment of his 'fiance' had taken them completely unawares and physically shocked them.

Our book clubbers spoke of how maybe the staff running these asylums were probably more qualified to be inmates than many of their patients. Both Dr Morgan and Nurse O'Reilly were considered as prime candidates for institutionalisation. There was talk about how particular personality types were attracted to organisations where they were encouraged to indulge their unhealthy appetites.

Jane Dove despite having dark secrets still seemed to have the support of our readers who were quite satisfied with the book's conclusion. Readers felt that there were sufficient clues as to her reading competency and that staff just often ignored the simple obvious by accepting a less credible explanation. John Shepherd utilised this concept in his deception - 'I had always found that the extraordinary lie is the one most likely to be believed.'

Overall despite this novel not being the preferred genre of our book clubbers, they had enjoyed the read and it proved a good stimulus for discussion.

Our next read takes us back to the 1880s and the bleak coalfields of New Zealand's West Coast settlement at Denniston. It'll be interesting to hear about our readers' experiences of this book. The damp wintery conditions we experienced recently could prove a fertile background to reading this novel by Jenny Pattrick if they return as predicted.

We'll meet to discuss The Denniston Rose on Thursday 6 August at 6.00pm at Mackay City Library.




Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Gothic mysteries under the spotlight this Thursday at City!

Just a reminder to mark your diaries for our Cityside Book Club meeting at Mackay City Library at 6.00pm on Thursday 2 July!

We'll be discussing John Harding's The Girl Who Couldn't Read.

Looking forward to hearing about your experience of this Gothic mystery this Thursday!

Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Is it a rook or a raven?

John Harding's enigmatic Jane Dove has her views on the answer to this question in the novel The Girl Who Couldn't Read. This is a gothic thriller from its cover to the final twist of the tale. You may have to leave your lights on.



For a selection of reviews of this book, try Goodreads.

We'll be meeting to discuss this novel at Mackay City Library on Thursday 2 July at 6.00pm with the lights on.


Skyping with Rebecca Mascull - Awesome!

We had half an hour to chat about The Visitors before we went online to chat with the author who currently lives in Cleethorpes on the Humber Estuary in eastern England. It's certainly a wonderful way to make a book come alive!

Prior to chatting with Rebecca the group had been discussing why the novel had been called The Visitors when The Visitors were for most of the book rather peripheral characters. Rebecca explained how much of the storyline was involved with characters either visiting or being visited. The choice of title then just made so much sense. Discussion after the Skype session contemplated the philosophical notion that we are all just visitors.

It was wonderful to hear how characters in a novel have the ability to determine their own fate despite what the author thinks is going to happen. Originally Rebecca had expected Liza and Caleb to make a match of it. As the author was starting to have misgivings about the success of this relationship Caleb goes off to South Africa and finds Maria, a woman who sees him for what he is, thus providing more fertile grounds for a successful relationship. Rebecca spoke about authors ignoring the will and development of their characters at their own peril.

It was enlightening to hear how much research Rebecca put into The Visitors and then how an author after putting in so much effort has to overcome the temptation of letting the audience know how much they now know about a topic. Rebecca spoke of the delight of uncovering the specialised words associated with the hop industry. There was much discussion of the Boer War which features in The Visitors. Rebecca was able to access uncensored letters from the men who had gone to South Africa and thus ensure an authentic understanding of the various attitudes to this largely unforgotten war.

Hearing how many variations a book experiences before the final version emerges was also fascinating. It was also informative as to how an author gathers bits and pieces from all sorts of places and experiences and then knits them all together into a novel.

Overall our Skype conversation with Rebecca was a delightful success. When reading so many books it is easy to forget the amount of effort and persistence an author invests to develop a novel. Speaking with Rebecca was a gentle reminder for readers to be more mindful and appreciative of an author's effort.

I'll include more details about our next book club selection in the next blog.

Happy reading!

Sunday, 17 May 2015

We're reading about 'The Visitors'

Rebecca Mascull's debut novel takes us on a journey into the world of a deaf-blind girl born in late Victorian England. The only communication Adeliza experiences is with the ghosts she speaks to in her head, 'The Visitors' until she meets Lottie who teaches her to 'talk' and 'listen' with her hands.




Goodreads included these reviews while Deborah Crabtree had this to say about The Visitors.

Looking forward to hearing about your experience at our next Cityside Book Club at Mackay City Library at 6pm on Thursday 4 June.


Sunday, 8 March 2015

Across the sea to Ireland

Our next novel is a contemporary novel set in Ireland. John Boyne's A History of Loneliness traces the tribulations of the Catholic Church in Ireland in modern times.



Helen Dunmore wrote this review in The Guardian while Jennifer Bort Yacovissi from Washington Independent had this to say about John Boyne's novel.

John Boyne writes with great authority on this sensitive issue and hopefully this novel will evoke much discussion.

Looking forward to hearing your views!

"All the Light We Cannot See" gets a positive reception.

Eight readers congregated in the Community Venue Room to discuss Anthony Doerr's war-time novel which traces the paths of the blind Marie-Laure LeBlanc which begins in Paris and the German orphan Werner Pfennig,  a prodgy in all things radio, who starts life near the coal mines of  Zollverein. Marie-Laure patiently negotiates a world without sight and Werner develops a way of finding secret radio broadcasters. Eventually their paths cross for a brief moment.

Readers spoke of their pleasure in Anthony Doerr's writing style and of the freshness of his expression. Others spoke of the incredible network of tales intertwined into the story. They loved the side stories and the variety of characters introduced. Others who usually find the backing and forthing in time in some novels confusing, found Anthony Doerr's deft handling of this approach did not befuddle the reader. Having 1944 as a fulcrum probably helped and have short pithy chapters helped keep all stories under the spotlight.

Some readers were a little disappointed with the ending and considered some parts of it quite superfluous while others liked to know 'what happened after the novel'. Some thought that it was not essential to tie up every tale. One reader was very pleased that the Sea of Flames diamond's fate was not clear - was it allowed to return to the water or did it continue to wreak havoc?

There was some chat about whether there were too many stories and maybe there could have been some judicious trimming. For some folk the ending could have been less tidy while others enjoyed the neatness.

The overall view was that the book was something special and well worth reading. Some of our time-poor readers who had not quite finished the novel, asked that they have the book a little longer so that they could finish it as they had not reached the place where the stories intersected and they were looking forward to that. Folks were sufficiently inspired by this novel to intend to read more works by Anthony Doerr.

Hopefully our next book club selection generates as much discussion.

Reading, reading, reading..............

Thursday, 5 February 2015

Cityside readers start their book club year!

Five folk were keen to start their book club reading for 2015. It was wonderful to hear the variety of books that our members had read over the break. Mysteries, biographies, histories, chick lit were just several of the genres indulged in. Some of our book club books from last year were re-visited and discussed anew as were some of their associated films.

We have rather a hefty tome to start the year but it is just so beautifully written, I'm hopeful our members will persist. Although set during and around the Second World War, to categorise Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See as a war story would be doing it a disservice and not giving any  indication of its scope.

Carmen Callil from The Guardian had this to say about the novel while William T Vollmann from The New York Times gave the following review.

Looking forward to hearing your views at our next meeting on the first Thursday in March at Mackay City Library at 6.00 pm!

Read to live!

 


Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Cityside Book Club kicks off tomorrow Thursday 5 February at Mackay City Library!

Hello everyone!

Just reminding you that we start our Cityside book clubbing year tomorrow at Mackay City Library at 6 pm!

Looking forward to catching up with your reading news and then giving you a taste of the first novel on the menu for 2015!

If you want to join our club, just come along! You do need to be a Mackay Regional Library Member so if you are not yet, just come a bit earlier and bring along some official ID with your Mackay residential address and our friendly staff will get you signed up!

Looking forward to another year of reading, discussion and laughter!