If I had R50 for every blogger who stops writing for months and months and then publishes an exciting 'Hi folks!' post, apologising for the absence of content and promising mended ways, I could hire someone to read to me.
But, surprise, surprise - this is one of those.
Having not posted a review on this blog since April 2013 (tho I have still been reading and posting reviews elsewhere), I'm back. Woohoo. (Hi Mom and Dan.) And I have some interesting books to review. Starting now...
Expect: The New Girl (SL Grey), Jerm Warfare (Jerm), the 2014 Guinness Book of World Records, the latest Karin Slaughter and Lee Child (I forget their names), and Death of the Demon (Anne Holt). Whew.
A collection of regular-ish book reviews and blog posts by copywriter and editor Tiffany Markman, who reviews for Penguin Books, Pan Macmillan, Women24 and JoziKids - and lives, works, writes and reads in Joburg, South Africa.
29 October 2013
26 April 2013
Two great new (ish) bios!
1. Why I Left Goldman Sachs – Memoir by Greg Smith
Greg Smith
is the author of the financial world’s most well-read breakup letter. You
probably read it: the New York Times
op-ed that Greg used to resign from Wall
Street’s Goldman Sachs, where he claimed the culture was "toxic and destructive".
(If you didn't, it's called 'Why I Am leaving Goldman Sachs' and you can read it here.)
The book is Why I Left Goldman Sachs, and it’s fascinating. Greg takes us
on his personal 12-year journey through the firm, unpacking the sins of the
world's most powerful bank (from letting clients place mistaken orders that net
GS millions to switching its recommendations about whether to buy or sell
options on European banks in the middle of the European debt crisis.) I loved
every minute of reading it.
Disclosure: Greg Smith is a distant cousin of mine, by marriage. He's also a seriously good guy. And I really liked his book, which is well-written, interesting and hugely insightful for readers who know the markets well or who can't distinguish between a hedge fund and a hedgehog.
Disclosure: Greg Smith is a distant cousin of mine, by marriage. He's also a seriously good guy. And I really liked his book, which is well-written, interesting and hugely insightful for readers who know the markets well or who can't distinguish between a hedge fund and a hedgehog.
2. Jane Raphaely Unedited – Autobiography by Jane Raphaely
It’s frank. It’s funny. And it’s as much a slice of
SA history as anything I’ve read lately. Jane
Raphaely Unedited is also a recipe for success, especially if you love your
career almost as much as you love your children.
Chairman of leading media
company Associated Magazines and
publisher of famous titles O, The Oprah
Magazine, Marie Claire
and Cosmopolitan, Jane
tells the story of her underprivileged early life in Stockport, England, and
her arrival in South Africa, where she became a feisty, eloquent thorn
in the side of the verkrampte
Publications Control Board.
This book is, as another reviewer has said, “a
rollicking adventure”.
Calculated in Death (JD Robb)
Available from all good bookstores and on the Kindle
Hmmm. I’m a long-term fan of JD Robb
(even though I hate the writing of
her alter ego, Nora Roberts). To prove to you the extent of my fandom, here’s
the evidence: I named my cat Dallas, after Lieutenant Eve Dallas, Robbs’
protagonist.
Buuut… Robbs’ writing is starting to
annoy me lately, for four reasons:
a) It’s getting very formulaic.
Something bad and bloody happens, in
one of Hot Hubby’s empire of locations. Eve, despite constantly battling her
own inner demons, enlists Hot Hubby, her faithful sidekick Peabody, the
tea-drinking Dr Mira and the usual assortment of allies. She then allows Hot
Hubby to choose her clothes/deck her out for a function she doesn’t want to go
to, force her to eat and sleep, have jaw-dropping sex with her on the shower
floor/in the pool, and provide genius assistance in catching the bad guy. Whose
ass she (literally) hands to him before sending him off-planet for, like, ever.
b)
The sex scenes are dreadful.
“When she rose over him, her skin
gleaming in the last red lights of the dying sun, he was beyond speech. Now her
fingers linked with his, and she took him in. She bowed back, her body a slim
and lovely arch of energy, and it shuddered, shuddered, as his did. Then she
shifted her gaze, fixed her eyes on his. And rode.” – Portrait in Death
Seriously? It’s all getting a bit 50 Shades for me. And before you ask,
no, I haven’t read it. But I’ve been told that there’s lots of “She shattered
into a million pieces.”
c)
Eve Dallas thinks in phrases.
“Six hours before, she'd killed a
man, had watched death creep into his eyes. It wasn't the first time she'd
exercised maximum force, or dreamed. But it was the child that haunted her. The
child she hadn't been in time to save. The child whose screams had echoed in
the dreams with her own.” – Naked in Death
I’m
getting a bit bored with the way Eve’s inner monologue moves; specifically, the
constant and repetitive use of sentence fragments to add drama. She grumps,
grumbles, whines, deflects and generally behaves like a massive curmudgeon,
only showing a small sense of humour while being ravished by Hot Hubby. Boring.
d)
The futuristic stuff is dwindling.
The early books had great detail
about cars that fly and weird GM foods and crazy fashion. The later ones,
specifically Calculated in Death, is a bit short on it. Which is a pity.
Because if I’m going to read 37 books set in and around the year 2060, you’d
better believe I’m going to need some awesome tech stuff to keep me interested.
If you’re going to read this book, despite my indictment, you should
know the plot:
A dead woman lies at the bottom of
the stairs. Mugged, apparently. But Eve and Peabody find blood inside the apartment building, and
evidence of a hit. Problem is, Marta, the vic, isn’t the ‘sort’ to be on a hit
list. She’s a boring, well-to-do accountant. Eve enters Roarke’s world of big
billionaire business to find the money trail.
Guilt (Jonathan Kellerman)
Available from all good bookstores and on the Kindle
Now this is crime fiction!
Kellerman never misses. Yes, he’s written 28
Alex Delaware novels, but each one is different. And while Alex (and his
cohorts, to be fair) has his particular quirks, we see different facets of his
character each time.
This, Kellerman’s latest offering,
begins with an expectant mom who’s renovating her yard when she finds a blue
metal box in the soil. There’s a baby’s skeleton in it.
Alex and his partner, Los Angeles Police Lt. Milo Sturgis, begin to hunt for clues to the infant’s identity, but the bones of another baby emerge in a nearby park. Together with the corpse of a 20-something woman, killed by a gunshot.
The three must be related, but how and why? The detective and
psychologist delve sixty years into the past, to explore a former hospital with
a dangerous staff and reputation.
Expect the usual brisk
investigation, with the calm, cool and seldom-ruffled Alex bantering with the
grouchy, touchy, binge-eating Milo. Expect a series of tense and detailed
scenes and evocative dialogue. Expect the entrance of Hollywood and its own
dramas. And expect a case so heart-rending that brings even Alex to tears.
Oh, What a Tangle! (Anita Pouroulis)
This review was originally published on zaparents.com.
I’ve said
this before: book reviewers get jaded. We’re lucky enough to receive new books
often; to regularly get to open cardboard boxes filled with the smell of
freshly published paper.
So there’s usually little to make us squeal with delight – until we get into the book itself, that is.
So there’s usually little to make us squeal with delight – until we get into the book itself, that is.
Hoo-boy. The universe was just waiting to see what I would do when it sent me all four
of Anita Pouroulis’s debut titles, packaged in a gorgeous re-usable purple
satchel. I squealed. No jokes. But, let’s
get to the details, shall we?
What’s it about?
I selected Oh, What a Tangle! that very night, for
my littlie’s bedtime story. Moms, if your kid has curly hair or hates having his/her
hair brushed, buy this book. Because little Kiki’s ‘crowning glory’, horribly
neglected in favour of activities that are more fun, soon turns into an actual
birds’ nest.
How does it look?
The illustrations
are spectacular; the work, I’m told, of student illustrator Monika Filipina
Trzpil, who is completing the Master of Arts (MA, Children's Book Illustration)
programme at Anglia Ruskin University in the UK.
How does it read?
The words
are lovely. It all rhymes and the general flow is melodic. I may be alone
in this, but a bedtime story that rhymes (even when it’s a long-ish one) is easier
and more pleasant to read.
Aside: For me, as a writer, the cadence of
the writing and rhyme does feel a little erratic in parts (my husband, also a
writer, has moaned that it doesn’t scan perfectly) – but my kidlet and I still
love the book, and its unusual vocab, so who cares?
What else?
And then,
there's the app! Oh, What a Tangle!
is available in the iBookstore, the App Store and for Google Play. We've 'played' it once or twice, and it's cool. Having apps to
complement the bedtime experience is great, especially since my toddler ikes to see her favourite characters everywhere.
Just one more thing
Anita
Pouroulis is an ex-South African living in Spain. The pluses for us, as SA readers,
are that her stories use the more UK/SA ‘mum’ and other lingo and that her apps feature delightful British-accented narration. What a lovely change!
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