Tuesday, April 3, 2012

20/100: Dodie Smith - I Capture The Castle

20/100: Dodie Smith - I Capture The Castle
(First published 1948, this edition 2004 by Vintage)
(Book 20/100 for 2012)


This was an utterly gorgeous book - a classic which I'd somehow managed to not read until now.  I like it because it's funny, silly and sweet, and the hero of the book has a beard, even though he's made to shave it off.  I like beards.

19/100: John Ajvide Lindqvist - Let The Right One In

19/100: John Ajvide Lindqvist - Let The Right One In
(2007, Quercus)
(Book 19/100 for 2012)


Confession: I ordered Let The Right One In from the library not knowing what it was about.  I saw "a vampire love story" on the cover and nearly put it back.

It's a love story, sure, but it's also grisly and gory and really not very nice.  Great, though.

18/100: Kate Grenville - The Secret River


18/100: Kate Grenville - The Secret River
(2005, Text Publishing)
(Book 18/100 for 2012)


It's been a while since I updated this blog and since I read this book - over a whole month in fact!  My apologies - I started uni (coincidentally) a month ago and my life has been far too hectic for blogging.  But I have been reading, and there's a lot to catch up on.  I'm sick in bed today so I'm going to do my best to get back on track.

The Secret River was a pretty easy read, but definitely worthy.  If you have convict ancestry, I'd recommend it - I'm in the queue at the library for the sequel, Sarah Thornhill, and I am looking forward to reading it.    My mother's family has been Australian since Owen McBranty arrived in Sydney from Ireland 203 years ago; for a country only 224 years old that's a pretty impressive pedigree! 

The bits that deal with the English treatment of the local Aborigines make for difficult reading, though.  I've studied a lot of Tasmanian colonial history (though I don't know much about Sydney) and I'm sure what Grenville describes is all based on fact.  It's all pretty horrible.

I know Australia used to be ashamed of its convict past.  The Secret River goes a long way to show that our ancestors weren't thugs or hardened criminals - like William Thornhill, they were mostly good people who made mistakes and were redeemed in their new homeland.