Showing posts with label London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label London. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2011

The Map of Time a novel by Felix J. Palma

I picked up this book because it had great cover art and an interesting title.  These seemed to promise a grand adventure of some kind, perhaps fantasy or science fiction, with a strong dash of steam punk and some interesting characters.  Does selecting a book this way make the reader shallow and unthinking?  When the book becomes something completely unexpected, does the reader have reason to be angry or disgusted?  In truth, friends, when was the last time that you read something that induced so much introspection and self-doubt?  If you knew that the subject was time-travel and the book’s characters included H.G. Wells, Bram Stoker and Joseph Merrick, wouldn’t you expect a bit of a romp?  A quick glance at the readers’ comments on Amazon show that some folks hated this book for the very reasons I have mentioned here: it wasn’t exactly what they expected.

 At first, the pace of this novel is so slow that one is tempted to abandon the book.  A young man contemplating suicide on the opening page is still alive and still suicidal on page 75.  The book is 600 pages; you may begin to question your stamina.   Suddenly, the perspective changes, the pace quickens, the story focuses on new characters, and the narrator steps out of third person voice to make sly jokes.  What is the author doing?  Well, dear reader, he is toying with you.
All authors manipulate their audiences.  This is why we come to fiction.  We allow someone else to temporarily direct the narrative, to bend our perceptions in a particular direction and perhaps even to subtly affect our values.  Mr. Palma insists on underlining that fact, yanking back the curtain that ordinarily conceals the writer to show you the man behind it, pulling levers and turning gears.  Why does he risk alienating the reader?  He is showing us the very heart of his novel: the complex relationship between what we experience, what is real and where our imaginations take us.
If you are patient and willing to take the journey the author proposes, you will be rewarded.  There is adventure, true love and yes, time travel.  Mild-mannered and unassuming, H.G. Wells emerges a hero.  Palma has said of his book:
Apart from entertainment, I would like to leave the reader with the idea that the imagination can make our lives more beautiful.
The more I read, the more riveted I became.  Will The Map of Time have the same effect on you?  As it says on page one:  “Your emotion and astonishment are guaranteed.”

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Sister by Rosamund Lupton

      This debut novel by British author, Rosamund Lupton, is a mystery which builds incrementally, relentlessly and brilliantly to its well plotted and harrowing conclusion!
     At the opening of the book, I was slightly disoriented as Lupton plunges the reader headlong into the story. But, in short order, you come to understand that Bee's younger sister, Tess, has gone missing and is later found dead. Was it a suicide as the police surmise, or was it a murder? Bee flies from New York to London and tries to uncover what happened.
     As the police become more thoroughly convinced that Tess took her own life, Bee's intuition and her close lifelong bond with her sibling
inform her differently. Much more than a mystery story, Lupton expertly weaves together a wider context of both familial and romantic love, well developed characters, and surprisingly, the politics of medical research to create an engrossing book.
     Though by no means a light read, I finished this book in two days, dying to know how it would turn out! If I were rating it with stars, I'd give it 5 out of 5.