Monday, 15 June 2020

"The Whisper Man" by Alex North

The Whisper Man

By Alex North


Amazing first crime thriller by the writer
Any story which involves a child kidnapping is always a horror for me.  This is the same story whereby random people believe they have a right to snatch away little kids from their parents for their own fun.  A single parent, father of a sweet and innocent boy goes through a lot at all times including the passing away of his partner and fight to continue with his life.  As if this is not enough, a monster comes in their lives and shatters it to the core.  At the same time we have the story of another man who apparently caught a monster responsible for committing a similar crime but still lives in its shadow.  There are some crimes which even seasoned officers are not able to shake off.    

Creepy and Captivating
A spine tingling story which sends shivers across your body all the time while reading.  You can actually start hearing whispers here and there while you are reading this book.  It is tough to shake off the effects of the crime committed in this book and it is also tough to even imagine the mentality of such people in this world.  The book has got many twists which I like a lot for such a story.  This book was creepy for me since the beginning since it involves crime related to a child.  The writing is simple and flowed well.  The good thing is also that all those surprise twists converge in the end and make a satisfying closure to the story.  The biggest twist is the corpse moth which plays such a big part in solving the case.  So much later in the book I understand the cover and it is so well placed.  

Multiple twists and likable characters
The writer has been able to keep the attention of the reader at all times.  Multiple themes run throughout - challenging relationships, grief of loss and obviously a child killer running in the town.  I specifically love the part where the writer brings forward a day from the dead mother into the child's life and ties it to his current day actions.  Everything from the house to the poem he used to rhyme has got a history.  The book shows life from the perspective of Tom, Jake as well as the grandfather Pete.  All have their own flaws and flaws in maintaining relationship with the other.  The main story or plot centers around child abduction and murder stretched across a time period of decades.  The writer has written the short and small stories inside is a beautiful fashion leading to one of the most fastest read ever.    

Few Excerpts 

"Courage is not the absence of fear.  Courage requires fear" 

"If you leave a door half open, you'll hear the whisper spoken.
If you play outside alone soon you won 't be going home.
If your Windows left unlatched, you'll hear him tapping at the glass.
If your lonely, sad, and blue, the whisper man will come for you."


Overall Review:  5

Grip Factor:      5
Writing Style:   5 
Engaging Plot:  5
Characters:        5
Satisfying End: 5




Thursday, 4 June 2020

The Starless Sea by "Erin Morgenstern"

The Starless Sea

By Erin Morgenstern


Great expectation and magical writing but falls short
After reading "The Night Circus", I had great expectations from this book.  The author does have a good style of writing which takes your places.  Reading one of her books is actually like going into a daze which is slowly taking you away to a different world and tickling you with its secrets.  This book does follow through on a lot of aspects specially when we start getting into the detailed description of the magical space.  A person finds a book in the library and while reading it he finds that the multiple stories in that book contains one story from his life also.  An incident which happened in his past is portrayed in the book as a story.  How?  Things certainly are promising in the beginning of the book and you feel looking forward to a lot happening.  However, most of the time, I was just lost.  There were many places where even trying to figure out what is happening was an effort.  

Non Existent Plot and lacks substance
The book does not seem to have a story to be very frank.  I did not understand the reason and the purpose of anything that happens.  It seems the writer started writing something and got sidelined and just wrote something to complete the book.  This book lacks a purpose.  Now I am all in for magic and mythical spaces and life behind painted doors, but there needs to be some substance to it.  Apart from that, it would have been better if so many stories did not go on at one point.  It is tough to keep track specially when everyone is just doing things and there is no purpose behind any action by anyone.   

Lovely and magical aesthetics and dream like world
The things which I like the best is a harbor full of books from floor to ceiling.  I wish I could get access to such a place which has so many books to read.  The add-on making it even more wonderful is an invisible kitchen which sends you things to eat.  Comfortable sofas, fire, books and yummy food to eat.  This is my dream place.  Only thing in this book is that it is too magical and it gets destroyed in the end.  Only thing I thought at that time was what happened to those books.  

Few Excerpts
Few areas that I love in the book after which I started to get lost.  

"Once, very long ago, Time fell in love with Fate"  Stories are meant to be told but indeed the one who tells the story makes a big difference on how people take it.  

As long as there have been bees, there have been keepers.  So true yet sounds trivial.  


Overall Review:  3 

Grip Factor:     3
Writing Style:  4
Engaging Plot: 2.5
Characters:       2.5
Satisfying end: 3


Wednesday, 22 April 2020

The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris

The Tattooist of Auschwitz

by Heather Morris


This is a story of a young boy separated from his family and thrown in a German concentration camp.  As soon as he arrives, he secretly promises to himself that he is not going to die in this place.  He faces hunger, death, deceit but, stays strong and lives.  There are just few things which act as ray of hope for him but he clings to them tightly throughout.  Lale is the Tatooist at Auschwitz, someone who takes people's identity from them and instead gives them numbers for life.  A mere young prisoner, by sheer luck and determination gets turned into the Tattooist. His desire to live and defeat death is what gets him through.

Among the many books I have read on Holocaust, this story is more about hope.  Hope that two individuals keep in their heart all along their three years at a concentration camp.  Hope is something which brings Lale to his love Gita together and they starts dreaming of a future.  This book on the one hand describes the atrocities that prisoners had to bear at the Nazi concentration camps and on the other, is full of the positive energies from both Lale and Gita.  How they are able to survive during and after war and make a small world for themselves in this big world?

I would have liked the story better if it had much more details and had it been more descriptive.  It seems at places a hasty story telling is being done and there is a rush by the author to reach the end.  I wish it was not such a short story.  Every stage seemed to end very quickly.  The story itself is responsible for all the acclaims to this book.

In the end I only have one thought for this book as well as for the said event in history - 

"How can a race spread out across multiple countries be considered a threat?  So much so that it is made a mission to be looted, killed and destroyed.

GoodReads Review:  https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3139400198

Overall Review: 4

Grip Factor:       3.5
Writing Style:    2.5
Engaging Plot:   4
Characters:         3.5
Satisfying end:   4

Friday, 17 April 2020

"Night Train to Lisbon" by Pascal Mercier, Barbara Harshav (Translator)

"Night Train to Lisbon"

 by Pascal Mercier, Barbara Harshav (Translator)


If you are living a life which is by the standards of the world a satisfying life, why would you leave it.  Even if you leave it would you just leave as if all in past was nothing?  How many people can do that?  The main character of this book does just that - gets up on a whim, leaves everything he is doing since past 30 years, takes a ticket to a new city and starts to find out about the life of a person he just read about.  He leaves his career, his home, his books and just goes away.  More important is the factor that he closes the previous chapter in his mind as well.  Leaving something physically and completely shutting down from your past emotionally is a brave thing to do.  That too if you do it on a whim and  without any plan for the future.  He does come back later though but not as the same person.

It is a difficult book to read and takes a lot of time.  Each and every sentence has got depth and you need to go back and read it again to get the context.  There were some times when I had to leave the book, close my eyes and literally think about what is written to completely understand it.  The start of the novel is better as it gives a lot of hope for what is to come next.  The beginning adds a certain charm, mystery and romance to the character and you look forward to the future.  However, as the book builds it loses its charm and you need to struggle to proceed.  There were many instances where I had to stop myself from skipping ahead.  In the middle it also tries to bring back the same charm factor by talking about the revolution and the role played by several characters in the same.  However, it fails to make any impression.

This book is certainly not for everyone.  If you like a fast pace, you wont like it. If you want to be challenged then go ahead.  For me it was exhausting and I completed it since I wanted to know the journey.

Disclaimer:  You need plenty of time to read this book.  Reading it and understanding it are two separate activities and you have to really put your thoughts in focus to get what the author is trying to say.

One important message which I like in the book:
"The real director of our lives is accident - a directory full of cruelty, compassion and bewitching charm" 


Goodreads Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3285432079

Overall Rating:      3

Grip Factor:           3
Writing Style:        3.5
Engaging Plot:       3
Characters:            3
Satisfying End:      3.5

Wednesday, 25 March 2020

"The House by the River" by Lena Manta, Gail Holst-Warhaft (Translator)

"The House by the River" 

by Lena Manta, Gail Holst - Warhaft (Translator)


This book is a sweet, cute story about 5 girls from a small village in Greece.  How they despise their village, their little house, the river and crave to get out and see the world.  Every girl gets a chance to live an adventure in her life, they get chances to see  the world and lives life to the fullest.  However, each of them reaches a certain point in her life and after that they long for their roots - The same house by the river.  A very emotional story of the mother and her 5 girls.  Their home is the only constant in life and the mother has made sure that each of them knows whatever happens in their lives, this home will always be open to them. 

Even though the five girls are sisters and have been born and brought up in the same house in a village, their lives and fate are so different from each other. The book has got all the elements - romance, mafia, Africa, murder, suicide, remorse and even war.  A total masala book if I say in Indian context.  The best thing I like in the book is the reference to the river.  Each girl is tied to the river closely and that is what brings them back. It was a simple and quick read not taking much of my times in terms of processing or analyzing or thinking.  Everything was straight and clear.  This story does remind us one fact of life - never forget your roots and always stay connected.  

Overall Rating: 3.5

Grip Factor:    3.5
Writing Style:  3.5
Engaging Plot: 3.5
Characters:       3.5
Satisfying End: 3.5

GoodReads review:  https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3014372466 



Saturday, 21 March 2020

"The 7 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle" by Stuart Turton

"The 7 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle"

by Stuart Turton


For a moment you feel this book is about Evelyn second, you feel this will actually include a new birth as a new person every day.  Is it the same or some new mystery totally and completely out of  this world? You will know when you read this book.  It is a murder mystery mixed with a fantasy. A little confusing in the beginning but you get a hold when you push a little ahead.  It also goes flat at some places in the middle and those are the times when you need to force your self to proceed.  But at most  of the times you are always on the edge and since the behavior of the character keeps changing you keep focus on each and every one of them.  I have read several mysteries but nowhere have I been so desperate to understand what is happening.  

Looking back in time to things such as Lantern, Horses, Stable master feels different and you feel you are in whole another world.  While reading this I could have been easily transported into some period drama or play.   I started liking this book once I finished around 20% of it.  I liked the story line and the concept a lot.  It seems all characters are puppets who are being pushed and pulled by an invisible hand and you just keep racking your brains on what will happen next and who will do it.  It does require a lot of attention though.  The many names get confusing after a while and you forget who was who.  Many times I have actually gone back to refer who was this person in the past.  

The story is such that you feel the whole plot is actually work of devil himself.  To top it all the devil is making everyone go through all horrors again and again and also taking notes while doing it.  Period drama, mystery, sitting on edge --- an attempt at Agatha Christie and not a bad one.   

Few sections that I like in the book which hold so true in everyday world. 
"Tomorrow can be whatever I want it to be which means I can actually look forward to it.  Instead of being something to fear, it can be a promise I make myself"  "You can forget everything but how can you forget yourself.  Looking at yourself for the first time can be disappointing""How lost do you have to be to let the devil lead you home" 

Overall Rating: 4.5

Grip Factor:        4.5

Writing Style:     4
Engaging Plot:    5
Characters:          3.5
Satisfying End:   4

  

Wednesday, 11 March 2020

"The Paris Architect" by Charles Belfoure

The Paris Architect

Charles Belfoure


The book proves one thing for sure - Howsoever bad people are there in the world, somewhere or the other you will find good souls.  A story of an architect who builds hiding places for Jews in regular houses in the middle of world war Paris.  WW II affected many people not only in Germany but also all the countries which were occupied by Germany.  This story is about Paris and its Jew/non Jew population.  How an architect who is originally not interested in the Jew cause gets himself aligned to saving them and how he stays away from the eyes of the German police is the whole story. 

You live your lives a certain way and work towards achieving and attaining all sorts of possessions.  A good house, clothes, friends, jobs, kids etc... At the end it is only the lives of your kids and yourself that matters.  Post German occupation Jews in Paris take refuge in hiding places designed by this architect to save their lives.  There are few things which I like in this story - there is no sob story or sad story behind any characters action.  Everyone is aware of the consequences and goes ahead with the plans for hiding places as a choice.  At the beginning Lucien is only looking for money which is hard to earn during war time, however later on he starts getting a kick out of creating more innovative hiding places and gets more attached to the cause.   

This is a balanced story and talks about both the views.  It does not show any side in bad light, although there are bad and good people everywhere.  The way the story goes is also intriguing, it keeps our minds and focus on what can be the next move or what can be the next hiding place.  Who is getting benefited, what happened to the person who hid there.  The author has certainly made sure this book stays a page turner.  I certainly like the fact that it stayed with the architect and the hiding places designed by him.  Luckily for us it does not go away to other Jew Causes and issues/concerns and that is why I like the story. 

Overall Rating: 4.5

Grip Factor:            4.5
Writing Style:         4
Engaging Plot:        4.5
Characters:             4
Satisfying End:       4 

GoodReads Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3226737354

"The housekeeper and the Professor" by Ogawa Yoko

 "The Housekeeper and the Professor" by "Ogawa Yoko" Overall Rating:     5* Grip Factor:           5* Writing Style:    ...