Check out my free ecourse Ignite Your Passion for Reading: Fall in Love With Books!
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Better Than Dreams

  • About Me
  • Archives
  • Courses
  • Newsletter
  • YouTube
  • Unlucky in Lockdown
  • Christmas Book Finder
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • Vimeo
    • YouTube
You are here: Home / Archives for slice of life

slice of life

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: Cold Water, by Gwendoline Riley

15th August 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This short book (149 pages) is not so much a story as a snapshot of the life of its protagonist, 20 year old Carmel McKisco, an ambitionless daydreamer working in a bar in Manchester. It is difficult to describe the plot as there really isn’t one. Carmel wanders around meeting different people and describing those she already knows, and the most action comes when she goes on a sort of pilgrimage to find the singer from a band she loved as a teenager.

In this book style is the substance: the characters are well drawn, the atmosphere is gloomy yet beautiful, everything is tinged with poetry – but nothing much actually happens, the novel is more about capturing Carmel’s life at this stage and her development as a person. If you absolutely require action in novels to enjoy them, don’t bother with this one.

I did enjoy reading this book and I will probably read it again – but I liked it for the descriptions more than anything else: I found Carmel a frustrating protagonist, because she didn’t seem to want to do anything will her life besides maybe go to live in Cornwall, and I felt like nothing big had really changed by the end of the book.

However, I do think it is the right length – any longer a book and it would need a plot to hold my interest, and the style would stop being so powerful on its own. It is well paced as it is.

I would recommend this book anyone looking for a short, atmospheric book to slip into for a couple of hours (if that), so readers who don’t mind novels without strong plot lines, give this a try.


The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: atmospheric, book review, books, Gwendoline Riley, slice of life

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2

Primary Sidebar

Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

Explore By Category

Explore By Date

Search

Footer

Privacy Notice
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in