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Book Review : Myth New Zealand by Justin Brown Myth New Zealand by Justin Brown, Harper Collins, RRP$39.99, ISBN9780986452239, Available now. Box of budgies! Box of fluffy ducks! Ace! Choice! Corker! Have a choccie fishie! Cracker! Good as gold!...

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Book Review: A Foreign Country – New Zealand Speculative... A Foreign Country - New Zealand Speculative Fiction edited by Anna Caro and Juliet Buchanan, Random Static, RRP $24.95, ISBN 978-0-473-16916-9, Available now. If the past is a foreign country, it follows...

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BookieMonster gains a new contributor! Exciting news, y'all! Please join me in welcoming..... our new contributor, Rachel! It seemed a great time to get some new writing in here and expand a bit and generally cover over the fact that I am...

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We Excuse my absence, the details of which I will not bore you with. Christchurch! How are you doing? For those not aware (which won't be many because most of you are Kiwis according to my Google analytics)...

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Book Review: What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell

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Category : Book Reviews, BookieMonster News, New Releases, What's BookieMonster Reading?

What the Dog Saw and other adventures by Malcolm Gladwell, Penguin, RRP $30, ISBN 9780141044804, Available now.

What the Dog SawYou can always count on Malcolm Gladwell to deliver an entertaining and informative read – the one problem is when you gather the shorter essays in a long form like this it starts to look a little repetitive.

But, honestly, when you’re dealing with journalism/essay-writing as good as this that becomes a small distraction. Gladwell just has a great knack for taking odd subjects (the history of the birth control pill, reading a mammogram, the secrets of informercial hawkers, plagiarism) and making them engaging for everyone.

Because what he’s really about here is not the subjects themselves, per se. He’s not a journalist in the traditional reporter sense, or even in the traditional features writer sense. Gladwell is definitely an essayist and what he’s essaying is what goes on inside brains. Not just human brains, we’ve got dog brains here also, but mostly human brains. (“Braaaains”)

Gladwell is a consummate observer of people and interpreter of their words and their actions. And in many of these essays he shows us how the ways in which we think can link the most seemingly disparate things that we do (e.g. interpreting mammograms and interpreting intelligence photos from foreign countries).

And he knows how to serve up a page-turner. This is great writing, fun to read and damn interesting to think about for several weeks afterwards. In the words of the man himself:

Good writing does not succeed or fail on the strength of its ability to persuade. Not the kind you’ll find in this book, anyway. It succeeds or fails on the strength of its ability to engage you, to make you think.

The Widow’s Daughter – a different perspective

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Category : Book Reviews, Book Trade News, New Releases

One of the great things about the interwebs is reading all the perspectives and opinions on books – a perfect example is the new novel by New Zealand author Nicholas Edlin, The Widow’s Daughter, which as you know I didn’t enjoy – but for a totally different and much more positive experience of the same book check out this great review by A Certain Book :

The Widow’s Daughter by Nicholas Edlin

The Widow's Daughter

Book Review: Family Album by Penelope Lively

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Category : Book Reviews, BookieMonster News, New Releases, What's BookieMonster Reading?

Family Album by Penelope Lively, Penguin, RRP $29, ISBN 9780141041223, Available now.

Family AlbumHow does Penelope Lively do it? She’s 77, she’s written 19 or so books for adults (and more than that for kids), she’s been shortlisted for the Booker Prize three times and won it once, and she’s still giving us brilliant, contemporary, insightful novels like Family Album.

The story of a large family, revolving around the equally large family home named Allersmead, Family Album is an exploration of family dynamics, of what family means and the reality of adult lives vs childhood fantasy.

Family Album doesn’t focus on a linear plot as such, but is rather a revelation of memories, impressions and communications between family members – and as these progress we gradually become aware of family secrets and “lies” – and the deepening understanding of the now adult children and their awareness of their parents as wholly separate individuals.

Lively’s characterisations are as rounded and spartanly drawn as ever, accomplishing with few words skilful pictures of fully realised people. It gradually becomes obvious that our expectations of the characters are being lightly overturned – the cold, withdrawn father and the matronly, nurturing mother become a scared, trapped husband and a wife whose tendency to emotional meltdown must be appeased, even at the cost of others in the family.

A couple of threads appear in the story (like the “cellar game” the children play) that seem to get lost amongst the noise which is something of a shame – it’s the one small disjoint that marrs an otherwise great read.

An almost perfectly formed small gem of a novel – I have to recommend this as a brilliant little read.

What’s BookieMonster reading? Un Lun Dun by China Mieville

Category : Book Reviews, BookieMonster News, What's BookieMonster Reading?

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Mieville is a author who has been recommended over and over to me – especially on Twitter. So I dived in.

To the library!

And the only title available at my library was Un Lun Dun – a young adult title, but I don’t hold that against it. Zanna and Deeba live in London but strange things are happening to them. And through a series of even more strange things they arrive in UnLondon – a sort of London through the looking glass.

There they find out that UnLondon and London are threatened by the Smog – and the story continues around the fight against the Smog.

Un Lun Dun is fun enough, if a little removed feeling – maybe it’s the writing for young people but there wasn’t as much depth as I wanted. But it was more than enjoyable enough to convince me to read more Mieville and especially to read his books for adults.

That makes me sound like an old fart. Oh lord.

Book Review: Cannibal Jack by Trevor Bentley

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Category : Book Reviews, BookieMonster News, New Releases, What's BookieMonster Reading?

Cannibal Jack coverCannibal Jack : The Life & Times of Jacky Marmon, a Pakeha-Maori by Trevor Bentley, Penguin, RRP$40, ISBN 9780143203827, Available now.

Ah, Penguin. It’s a rollercoaster ride with you, isn’t it? So far this year I’ve loved a book, hated a book, and now back to love. And there’s all those odd goings-on with plagiarism and such. They’re like the Microsoft of New Zealand publishing.

But, on to Cannibal Jack. What a great book! What a great story! What a great character! Jacky Marmon was a “Pakeha-Maori”, born in Sydney to Irish parents who first jumped ship around 1817 to live with Maori around Kerikeri River and other Ngapuhi hapu around the Bay of Islands. Eventually he ended up with Hongi Hika, survived the Musket Wars and settled in the Hokianga, much later becoming involved with Hone Heke.

Cannibal Jack has a great narrative flow – based on two versions of Marmon’s supposed “autobiography” that were published in New Zealand newspapers around the time of his death in 1880, it intersperses sections from these with Bentley’s detailed research into the truer story of Marmon’s life. This allows Bentley to highlight and use the more flowery and, frankly, adventurous account of Marmon with the drier details of, for example, ship movements around New Zealand, missionary reports and other, more reliable, sources of historical data.

And it presents a fascinating portrait of Pakeha early involvement with Maori and the way those Pakeha viewed Maori as individuals and as a people. There is lots of detail of Maori life pre-colonisation, and some great examples of Pakeha misinterpretations of Maori concepts of tapu, muru and mana. Bentley also does a skilful job of interpreting Marmon’s stories to tease out the details of Pakeha feelings towards the Maori “way of life” and show us why the histories of Pakeha-Maori like Marmon are still so relevant today.

Marmon became a subject of much myth and speculation by other Pakeha in colonial New Zealand, mostly due to his wild tales of engaging in cannibalism and… yeah, okay, it was mostly the cannibalism. Let’s face it, even now cannibalism has a particular hold on the collective gory imagination of just about every culture in this world, and whether Marmon witnessed and was really involved with quite as much cannibalistic practice as he claimed would have to be open to conjecture, as Bentley makes pretty clear. What isn’t in doubt, however, is that Marmon’s editors/ghost writers knew that including as many details as they could attribute to Marmon’s flippant stories of such things, or embellish, was a great way to ensure readership!

Cannibal Jack is also wonderfully illustrated with both recognisable and less well-known images from early Pakeha history. I hope the story of early Maori and Pakeha interactions is as intriguing for other readers as it is for me – because really this is the story of why we are now who we are. Once we were people on opposite sides of the world, and when we came together we muddled through mutual captivation and confusion to some semblance of a nation and culture of our own. Histories like this can only help that grow even more. Three cheers.

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