August challenges: BB

 

August # a big book (400+ pages)

Firefly Summer


Author: Maeve Binchy

Genre: fiction

Page number: 645

First published: 1987

Setting: small town Ireland

Time: 1960’s

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: The sun came in at a slant and hit all the rings and marks on the bar counter.

One sentence comment: It is a page turner, but you only want to turn every page slowly enough to taste the flavor long lost in the modern world.

         I used to be misled by the title, Firefly Summer, which has received a great acclaim among internet book clubs. I thought to myself, even if the title was eye catching, what Binchy could write if it was about children playing with fireflies in the summer. Then I found out that I was completely wrong. Besides, it can be any nostalgic story, but told by Binchy, it trnsforms into a marvel. Like her previous books I have read, it urges me to read on as if I am reading a thriller. But far from it, her book reads like a heart-warming romance. How could a romance in this day still takes me for surprise, or even though I tried to predict it, there was still magic to lead me on, to make me bury my head in her brick-shaped thick volume.

          The book begins with an introduction of a wise and strong woman, Kate, common to other Binchy novels, then suddenly into the quiet town comes Patrick, a felt-like Jean Valjean character from Les Miserables, but he was from a different prison, materialistic America, to return to Ireland to give justice, as he thought, to his home town people. But Kate is warned, and we wonder, will Patrick soon inflict damage to the whole town?

          Binchy had a strong sense of community and land. She explored different values, about those between cities and towns, not to mention aspects of christian belief. Through a single young solicitor, Fergus, we see his love, larger than life, for the livelihood of all the people in this town. Binchy also gave insights into things I had never thought about, such as how Pretestant vicar live among the Catholic community. She wrote stories of characters like kaleidoscope. They cater for diverse appetites of readers of different experiences and personalities. Many times I like to listen to debates about topics or advice that one character gives to another. There are also a circle of teenagers. They make troubles and adventures. Readers get what they need from multiple-character books by Binchy.

          Last year since I discovered Binchy’s first novel, Light a Penny Candle, I have decided to read all her novels in order of publication. This is the third book and it takes a grimmer turn than its predecessors. It further puts me into the boots of the protagonists’ crisis and ponder about life. There is always so much in her story that moves me so I think and feel about, either fate, decisions, or faith. Whenever I read her book, I was thinking that there was no way the next book she had written could be better than this one. But this is the third book of hers and I am still think in the same way and will be eager to check out the answer from her next book.


August # A bargain book (half price from the bookstore website.)

The Fallen Angel (Gabriel Allon #12)


Author: Daniel Silva

Genre: spy mystery

Page number: 448

First published: 2012

Setting: Vatican, Israel and other countries

Time: 21 century

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: It was Niccolo moretti, care taker of St. Peter’s Basilica, who made the discovery that started it all.

One sentence comment: Mingled with history of art and religion, this book takes a modern reader to Vatican and Israel, their past and present.

          I usually read a book series following its published order. Months after I read the first book of the series and decided not to follow it, The Fallen Angel came up as a half-price sale on the bookshop website I usually surf. A sudden impulse gave me one more chance to read the series again.

This time I have been amazed by its exotic settings, various places of Vatican, and its historical telling about the lost civilization of old Italy. The same as when writing the plot in Israel, the author can brief through the Roman Emperor’s massacre in the 70AD to the Six-Day War effortlessly without tiring readers. Of course we also get a glimpse of the present tension of the archeologist war between the Jews and the Palestinians.

When I read to the middle of the book, I became bored. Part of the reason is I was not familiar enough with nowaday terrorism and details of Nazi history to appreciate tours of different locations . However, I think the major reason is the way the book was written. It didn’t tell people’s life stories like Ruta Sepetys did in her two books about Stalin and the fascist dictatorship Franco. Silva only intended his book to be a series of dangerous operations, a thriller and nothing more. 

Aug # a book with a black or blue bookcover

Why Mermaids Sing ( Sebastian St. Cyr Mystery #3)


Author: C. S. Harris

Genre: historical mystery

Page number: 329

First published: 2007

Setting: London

Time: 1811

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: Fear twisted Dominic Stanton’s stomach, compressed his chest until his breath came shallow and quick.

One sentence comment: This book prolongs my enjoyment of reading Harris’ language art.

          I adore this historical mystery series for the lovable characters and amusing conversations. Since the first book of the series, I have been reading with excitement, admiring the author’s way of dealing with plots. The series is full of lovable characters that fill me with curiosity – what will happen to them? While people follow a series for the like of the detective, I’m not particularly taken with the protagonist, a lovesick wayward aristocrat, Sebastian, whose relationship with a beautiful actress, Kat, is way too cliché. Even so, whenever he brings up people’s disapproval or even fright, I couldn’t help burst into laughter. Harris has created a man particular romantic, reckless, intuitive and resourceful, a mixture of virility. I don’t like his characteristics but grow to like reading about him.

          This particular book, the third of the series, is mainly about a series of murders inspired by a poem written by John Donne, a sixteenth-century poet. My favorite character, Sir Henry, who is a compassionate local magistrate, asks Sebastian to help crack the case. As a continuing story, Kat’s spy work for the French is on the verge of revelation. Another of my favorite characters, Lord Jarvis, a ruthless man and faithful servant to the Prince, threatens to destroy Kat. What a great combination! What’s more delightful is my favorite heroine, Hero, Jarvis’ daughter, makes appearance in this book after the first book of the series. I have read somewhere that she is going to replace Kat later. I’m looking forwards to keeping reading this series.

 

August # A book with the letter B occurring twice on the front cover


Simply Unforgettable ( Simply Quartet #1)

Author: Mary Balogh

Genre: historical romance

Page number: 422

First published: 2005

Setting: London and Bath

Time: Regency era

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: It never snowed for Christmas.

One sentence comment: A romance through psychological depth and realistic reminiscence is the only way to win my heart.

I was quite fascinated by the beginning of the book, where two young people begin what they thought a one-night liaison. Perhaps just because I’ve never read a romance so I found novelty in their psychology and conversation. Besides, as a regency romance, it gave me curiosity to check out the things mentioned in the book, such as the song the protagonist sang, Handel’s I Know That My Redeemer Liveth. It was actually a melody I often heard.

 I like some of the discussion between characters, such as when two women were talking about the possibility of whether a woman can live in Independence. However, it is disappointing that the ending seems to distort a progressing course of women’s mind. I agree that the author has a great technique to depict diferent characters in depth; however, she couldn’t go beyond the tropes that a romance genre can offer.