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Amazon love us! They really love us! So, it seems someone at Amazon has finally moved their coffee cup off their "Kindle shipping map" and realised that underneath it lay the little old land of New Zealand. "Oh crap, you guys. We forgot...

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The Booker goes bonkers No, it doesn't really. I was just trying to get your attention. Mean Bookie! So, the 2010 Man Booker Prize longlist of 13 titles has been announced and the ... nominees... are (dundahdahDAH!): Peter...

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Book Review: Cannibal Jack by Trevor Bentley Cannibal 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?...

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What's BookieMonster reading? Changeless by Gail Carriger Soulless, Changeless, Blameless... Meaningless. Aha! I slay me. :twisted: Changeless and Soulless have bounced around the interwebs for a while so I thought I'd dive in and have a read - Changeless...

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Win Gunshot Road by Adrian Hyland!

15

Category : BookieMonster News, Competitions, New Releases

Gunshot RoadSame drill! Leave a comment and win Gunshot Road by Adrian Hyland – it’s a good ‘un too!

This giveaway ends Monday 12 July at 5.30pm and I’ll announce the randomly drawn winner at 8pm.

Usual blurb: As usual,  judges decision is final, no correspondence will be entered into, yada yada yada. Oh, and sorry overseas readers, but I can only post to New Zealand addresses, so New Zealand address holders only, please.  And, uh, I reserve the right to change these rules because there may have been something I’ve forgotten.

Book Review: Gunshot Road by Adrian Hyland

4

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

Gunshot RoadText Publishing, RRP $39, ISBN 9781921656309, Available now.

SO GOOD. Two words that sum up my entire reaction to this fabulous book. Yes, this is another crime/thriller but I have nothing bad to say about this one – what amazing writing! What fantastic characterisation! What a stunning hold on pacing and tension Hyland has!

Gunshot Road is Hyland’s follow up to Diamond Dove and, like that title, follows Emily Tempest – the new Aboriginal Community Police Officer for the outback town of Bluebush. We get straight into the problems involved for Emily in dealing with her white bosses and her Aboriginal friends and townmates, problems which only get compounded with the death of an old friend in a seemingly open and shut murder.

Emily, though, suspects that there is nothing open and shut about the case and embarks on an investigation of her own, one that puts her in physical danger. The story progresses at a great pace – not necessarily fast chronologically but perfectly timed to keep the reader hooked and involved. The tension is perfectly balanced with some beautiful domestic scenes and witty one-liners. The whole story really put me in mind (oddly enough) of the old TV mini-series Edge of Darkness (god, no, not the movie) – it had the same feeling of a local story that becomes something much larger and with genuinely thrilling moments interspersed with haunting personal introspection.

At the same time Hyland has an amazing ear for voices and Emily’s in particular is charming, rough and humourous – which describes the whole book, really. The location is outback Australia and there are no pulled-punches here – Hyland shows both the whites and Aborigines viscerally responding to and interacting with the land around them, and his portrayal of the social problems in the Bluebush community is both casual and heartbreaking. Over all of this looms the land itself – large, open, wide, hot, dusty. Empty. Watching.

It’s all brilliant stuff and I honestly can’t recommend it highly enough. Buy it! Don’t question me! Just do it!

Book Review: Shadow Sister by Simone van der Vlugt

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

Shadow SisterText Publishing, 31 May 2010, RRP $39

Shadow Sister is the new psychological thriller from Dutch author Simone van der Vlugt, and her second to be translated into English. It’s the story of twins Lydia and Elissa – Lydia’s apparent stalking by a violent student and Elissa’s search for answers when Lydia is killed (I realise this seems like a spoiler but really, it can’t be when you find this out on page 20).  No slow build-up here, the narrative jumps right in with what initially seems like the pivotal moment in this thriller – Lydia being threatened with a knife by one of her immigrant students.

From there the story progresses to further moments where Lydia is seemingly threatened by the same student and then a sudden switch to her twin Elissa’s story and point of view – we go back and forth between the two point of views throughout the book, an effective technique, if slightly confusing at times. It becomes clear that the twins are close but see the world from different angles – Lydia dominating Elissa and viewing the world as it revolves around her, and Elissa coming to terms with losing Lydia and also realising Lydia’s life was not as strictly controlled as it appeared to outsiders.

There’s obviously a political aspect here, one which I have a brief awareness of, with Lydia being a teacher of Dutch to (mainly Muslim) students who are immigrants or children of immigrants. She sees her work as being fulfilling and genuinely appears to like it but with a distinct tone of self-congratulation. Lydia, it becomes clear to the reader as the novel progresses, is a person who is rather intensely self-involved – interested in her own fears and sadness and feelings, but with little genuine interest in those of the people around her, or at least little awareness that they might not view her actions in the same light as herself.

Shadow Sister is a good read, until the last few pages and does a great character study of the people inhabiting this story. Van der Vlugt is effective at capturing the feeling of “there’s more going on here”, at revealing people who are not what they seem and who are not being truthful with the world and with themselves.

It’s just a shame that the ending is so terrible. It really is a total let-down, as if the author got completely bored and looked for the easiest way to tie everything up. Which annoys me just so much – potential good book ruined so easily. It feels like a lack of total commitment to the story, which is what is needed to push a suspense/thriller to the top level.

So, a book of two halves. Or not really halves, more sort of 9/10ths and 1/10th. Incidentally the translation (without being able to compare language versions) seems excellent, smooth and without any concentration-breaking moments where the chosen English equivalent isn’t quite right. Translation is an unheralded art, really.

Final words? Good but flawed.

Secondhand books just spread the love

2

Category : BookieMonster News, Books for Sale

A few more choice selections for your purchasing (and reading) pleasure…

How to Build a Great ScreenplayHow to Build a Great Screenplay by David Howard ($16)

In making individual decisions about each element of the screenplay a writer builds a good story from the ground up. David Howard offers in-depth consideration of the many elements that make up a screenplay, clarifying his lessons through examples from the most successful films: Pulp Fiction, American Beauty, The Usual Suspects, Trainspotting and Chinatown among many others.

Accessible, clear and practical ‘How To Build A Great Screenplay’ is a working bible for the budding screenwriter. Recognising that story structure is the framework for a successful screenplay David Howard teaches how to incorporate the other elements so that the screenplay takes on a life of its own, creating the emotional connection, spectacle and intellectual stimulation that will impact on an audience.

JPod : A Novel by Douglas Coupland ($11)JPod

Ethan Jarlewski and five co-workers are bureaucratically marooned in JPod, a no-escape architectural limbo on the fringes of a massive Vancouver video game design company.

The six jPodders wage daily battle against the demands of a bone-headed marketing staff, who daily torture employees with idiotic changes to already idiotic games. Meanwhile, Ethan’s personal life is shaped (or twisted) by phenomena as disparate as Hollywood, marijuana grow-ops, people-smuggling, ballroom dancing, and the rise of China. JPod’s universe is amoral and shamelessand dizzyingly fast-paced.

I just <3 Douglas Coupland so much. He’s damn funny and damn weird. Recommended!

The Chimney Sweeper’s Boy – Barbara Vine ($11)

Bestselling and critically acclaimed novelist Gerald Candless dies suddenly, and leaves behind a wife and two doting daughters. To sort through her grief, his daughter Sarah puts aside her university studies and agrees to write a biography of her famous father. But as she begins her research and pulls back the veil of his past, her life is slowly torn apart: a terrible logic begins to unfold that explains her mother’s remoteness, her father’s need to continually reinvent himself — and sheds shocking light on a long-forgotten London murder.

Regular readers will know that I discovered the amazing writing of Barbara Vine only last year (the shame, the shame!) and this is a fantastic book – highly recommended by me.

Virginia Woolf – Hermione Lee ($10)

While Virginia Woolf–one of our century’s most brilliant and mercurial writers–has had no shortage of biographers, none has seemed as naturally suited to the task as Hermione Lee. Subscribing to Virginia Woolf’s own belief in the fluidity and elusiveness of identity, Lee comes at her subject from a multitude of perspectives, producing a richly layered portrait of the writer and the woman that leaves all of her complexities and contradictions intact. Such issues as sexual abuse, mental illness, and suicide are brought into balance with the immensity of her literary achievement, her heroic commitment to her work, her generosity and wit, and her sanity and strength.

One of the best biographies I’ve read, Lee delves so deep into Woolf’s life and character you feel like you’ve somehow known her.

Hey! It's That Guy!Hey! It’s That Guy! : The Fametracker.com Guide to Character Actors ($8)

So you’re watching Full Metal Jacket and there he is that guy! What’s his name? You know, that guy who always plays a drill sergeant! Or you’re watching Fast Times at Ridgemont High and there’s another one that creepy science teacher! That guy always plays a creepy somebody! What’s his name?

We’re talking about R. Lee Ermey and Vincent Schiavelli, of course and you can read all about them in Hey! It’s That Guy!, a guide to identifying “famous” character actors and actresses.

From Steve Buscemi and Philip Seymour Hoffman to J. T. Walsh, Judy Greer, and Amy Aquino, they’re all here. You may not know their names, but you’ll certainly recognize their faces! 

Hilarious. And I love Steve Buscemi. Mwah, mwah, mwah.

What’s BookieMonster Reading? Naming the Bones by Louise Welsh

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Category : Book Reviews, What's BookieMonster Reading?

Naming the Bones by Louise Welsh

Text Publishing, RRP $35, Release date 29 March 2010

Naming the BonesSo it feels like ages since I posted a review. And I’ve just looked back and the last one I posted was February 15! Argh, that’s bad. In my defence: it has been busy, busy times, and will continue to be as we are about to embark on matrimonial bliss. Plus I’ve realised I start far too many posts with “So…”. But what can you do?

…So… that brings me to this review which is for a brand spanking new release title to be brought to our fair shores by Text Publishing – Naming the Bones by Louise Welsh. Which is presented with more than a whiff of “mystery/crime fiction” about it (more on that shortly) so initially I was a bit unsure, being not so much of a “mystery” fan, as I’ve previously explained. I determined though that I was not going to turn my nose up and I was going to be more open to new reading – turns out that this was quite a good decision on my part.

Naming the Bones really can’t be confined within the traditional mystery/crime fiction genre at all, and I found in the first 20 pages or so I was busy looking out for the standard mystery plot points (one thing I find with mystery is the intense plotting is almost distracting to me because of my need to spoil anything that’s vaguely suspenseful) – but they never appeared. When I realised this isn’t that kind of book and I didn’t have to spend so much time thinking about the plot I started enjoying the writing and the reading a heck of a lot more.

Fortunately this is accomplished writing and plotting and so it was indeed enjoyable. Naming the Bones follows Murray Watson – an English professor in Edinburgh, about to embark on a year’s sabbatical to write a book about “live fast, die young” poet Archie Lunan. Lunan’s life and death are something of a mystery – which lends Naming the Bones it’s tense moments. But on finishing I felt that this book is not so much about the mystery of Archie but about the mystery of Murray’s life – about Murray realising the people and events in his life are not necessarily who and what he thinks they are. His brother, his dead father, the fellow professor’s wife with whom Murray is conducting an affair…

The writing is tight, very readable with moments of humour and, despite the lack of distinct genre, the plot carries the book along nicely. Total mystery buffs might feel slightly shortchanged – the real suspense only kicks in towards the end. Every so often I wished the language was slightly more lyrical – in small parts it can come across as dry, and the dropping in of contemporary references like Twitter did make me wonder how this will read in several years time. The characters are well drawn and have individual voices and I happily read along until the end of their story. A straight forward enjoyable read of a book with a not-so-straight forward presentation.

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