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You are here: Home / Archives for review

review

Book Review: Pop, by Kitty Aldridge

5th February 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

It’s the summer of 1975, and the UK is sweating through a heatwave. Maggie’s mother has recently died and her father is in the USA, so the thirteen year old girl goes to live with her grandfather, Arthur, whom she calls Pop, and his dog, Blowbroth, in Sutton Coldfield. Pop’s raison d’etre is the approaching annual pub quiz, which he hopes to win so he can impress a woman. Maggie is a quiet child, but helps him train, following her grandfather from pub to pub…

…and that’s about it. There is painfully little plot to this novel, and the revelations about the characters do not make up for it for me. The writing contains some great imagery, and evokes the smoky, hot atmosphere really well. The various characters in the village are believable. Pop is very well characterised. Maggie, on the other hand, isn’t. She doesn’t seem like a real thirteen-year-old girl. There are no hormones, no periods, she doesn’t express any desire to meet other people her age. The action follows her, but is always about other people. She is meant to be the central character, but the novel’s title is very telling – the story is really about her grandfather. Maggie is an neutral observer, she lacks opinion, a character of her own. She doesn’t even wonder about her own future, something I would imagine would be a prime concern for a young person who has just lost their mother. I could understand her silence if she was traumatised – but she doesn’t appear to be that way either.

This is very well written. But when I was done, I wondered what the point was. The climaxes of the storyline are scenes with little impact upon the characters. It’s a slice of life – but I wonder why it was sliced, what the author wanted to tell us. It reminds me of a lot of short stories that I have read and not got on with. My brain seems to need a proper plot to cling to, most of the time, otherwise I just won’t “get” the story and will find it ultimately frustrating.

I would only recommend this book if you want to read some nice description as I didn’t get much out of it at all. If you do get more out of those plotless short stories than I do, you might enjoy this. Let me know what you think!

The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, British, Kitty Aldridge, review, slice of life, teenage protagonist in literary fiction

Book Review: Acorna’s Children: Second Wave, by Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough

10th May 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This book is the ninth book in the series begun with Anne McCaffrey and Margaret Ball’s “Acorna the Unicorn Girl” and the second in the continuation series, Acorna’s Children, following on from the original books centred around Acorna. The original Acorna books are a must-read if you are to completely understand the setting for these books, as very little background information is given in this novel, and events and characters from the previous stories are referred to frequently. You will also need to read the first in this series, “First Warning”.

In “Second Wave” the plague is no longer killing people but will start to attack in a new way. Khorii’s parents, Acorna Harakamian-Li and Aari, along with their friends Captain Jonas Becker, RK (Roadkill) the cat and Maak the android are in quarantine, still infected with the plague organisms which only Khorii can see. She sets off with her cat Khiindi, and her android brother Elviiz to try to find out how the plague works, but all does not go to plan, with interruptions from new friends, space pirates, Marl Fidd, and the arrival of Khorii’s twin sister, Ariinye or for short Ariin, who was stolen from Acorna’s womb before they were born.

And it all has something to do with Khiindi, who is clearly not just an ordinary Makahomian Temple Cat…

I would say that the characterisation is just as shallow in this book as in the others, and overall the characters are a bit too nice although some interesting people appear in this book – I wish they had been developed in more detail.

The plot gets more exciting yet complicated. It can be hard to keep track of what Khorii and her friends are meant to be doing as opposed to what they actually end up doing instead for a while every journey they take. This is why I give this book three stars rather than the four “First Warning” received from me.

I would recommend “Second Wave” and the rest of this series for mid-teenagers most as the principal characters are around that age themselves. The ending of this book is left open for the story to be concluded in the third and last novel in the Acorna’s Children series, “Third Watch”.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: AMC, Anne McCaffrey, book review, books, Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, fantasy, review, science fiction

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