On Sunday morning, I woke to an email from my library reminding me that quite a few books were due back within the next few days. Argh and aack! I had yet to start on two of them, and the third, the 1000+ J.G. Ballard collection, had some 400+ pages left to go!
With such impending doom looming above my head, I settled down to a day of reading (the husband was busy with work). I began with Kazuo Ishiguro’s
A Pale View of Hills and in a few hours, with some pineapple tarts and green tea fueling me through the read, I was done. I was quite moved by the book. And quite surprised that I read it in one sitting, without feeling the need to turn to something else more cheery (the main character is Etsuko, a Japanese woman whose daughter has committed suicide – this makes her reminisce about her life in Nagasaki when she was pregnant with Keiko). It is a quiet story, a little odd and unsettling, and leaves the reader with more questions than answers. But it was definitely worth reading. Especially if you remember (as I only just am doing so now) that this was Ishiguro’s first novel.
To take a bit of a break from that, I moved on to the next Sandman installment,
Season of Mists. I had an amazing time reading the previous book,
Dream Country, which was more of a collection of four different stories (I especially liked A Midsummer’s Night Dream) and was looking forward to Season of Mists, in which the Endless family comes together and Lucifer shuts Hell down.
That was followed by
In Other Rooms, Other Wonders by Daniyal Mueenuddin, a set of interlinked stories set in Pakistan. The stories each focus on different characters that are connected to a feudal landowner family, such as a desperate poor servant, the young mistress, the powerful farm manager. Almost all of whom are incredibly brilliant manipulators.
I’ve been wondering how these stories would read on their own. I think this book works very well because of the connectivity among the stories, which allows the reader to explore this world further, giving greater depth to each story, the more you read them.
(You can read one of the stories from In Other Rooms, Other Wonders online at the New Yorker.)
I reckon that was a pretty productive reading Sunday. What did you read this weekend?
Currently reading:
The Hakawati
by Rabih Alameddine
Food and Loathing: A Life Measured Out in Calories by Betsy Lerner
On Stanza on the iPod Touch: Lady Audley’s Secret
by Mary Elizabeth Braddon
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