Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson

The owner of the lovely Cowbridge Bookshop (John McLean) recommended Treasure Island as a book for younger teenage boys when I went in just before Christmas.  Now I am not a teenage boy and nor am I a lover of all things pirate (though I do love the pirate language option on Facebook - how can you not?!) but I read it anyway.


One of the most gripping books I've read in a long while.  Short chapters, beautifully written characters and plot twists that kept me on my toes.  I think the best aspect though is the way the mental images have stayed with me.  I can still see Jim Hawkins hiding in the apple barrel or sailing the Hispaniola around the northern tip of the island.  Of course there's a map at the beginning and I'm a sucker for a book with a map.

My only gripe was that the version I read had an introduction by Eoin Colfer which was a bit of a spoiler.  I'm trying to make myself read introductions as sometimes they add an extra depth to a story that you may not otherwise see (at least not at the speed I read).  However Eoin discussed at least two moments of intense atmosphere in the book, which when I got there were not as atmospheric as promised.  Inevitable I suppose as rarely is anything as good as the hype.  On reflection though, the atmosphere stayed with me so maybe he was right after all. 

I did particularly like the end notes in the same edition (probably aimed at schools and those teenage boys in particular) with a tour of the Hispaniola and suggestions to make up pirate names for my friends.  The obvious way in which this book is the basis for every pirate story every created since is also not lost.

Monday, 15 November 2010

Short Stories

I am not a big fan of short stories but I seem to keep finding them.  This time it's Maeve Binchy's "This Year It Will Be Different".  I wanted something light, not chicklit and comforting to act as the filling in a sandwich of thrillers.  So far I have only read the first story.  It was good.  Set the scene well for a novel.  I was quite looking forward to seeing how Julie would cope over the years with her step-daughter.  However it seems that Binchy decided that after one nice moment with a step-daughter we had been led to expect was pretty hard work, that everything would be OK.
Apparently one of the short stories has been made into a major film.  I do sometimes think that short stories are an author trying out ideas.  Sometimes they are superb.  Last year I read Sophie Hannah's "The Fantastic Book of Everybody's Secrets" and the first story in the book was amazing.  I was kept guessing until the very last sentence which made me exclaim out loud so surprising it was!  The rest were a little bit of a let down.  However it did lead me to find some of her novels in the library which have been amazing.  More on those later.
Back to these Maeve Binchy short stories.  As I progress they are growing on me.  All well written and a little bit like having a box of tiny but perfect truffles to eat (rather than a massive bar of cheap chocolate).