Sunday 27 September 2020

Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes.

 Charlie Gordon is 32 years old and has low intelligence. He is offered an operation to make him smart. Follow Charlie through his progress reports to learn how he got on.


I was put onto this novel when I read Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon. She referred to this book time and time again throughout her novel.


Flowers for Algernon is considered by many readers to be a classic and it won the Nebula award in 1967.


This novel was written in 1966 and the language used reflects the time. Books today would never dream of using these words about disability but older readers will have used them daily in all innocence.


I love first person narratives but I thought this novel got off to a poor start because of the phonetic spelling. This was due to Charlie’s low intelligence and he even poked fun at his own ignorance and lack of punctuation. Then I decided to read it “in character” like the nutter on the bus and went with the flow. Following Charlie’s operation he became smart and his writing quality increased to that which you would expect from an award winning book.


I did not think the plot was brilliant, perhaps enough for a 60 minute television drama. This science fiction was sad in places and it is an emotional read. However, I do not feel that it deserves ALL the acclaim many readers have given this book OR to win a book award. I thought this novel was an OKAY 3 star read but certainly NOT a classic that many readers consider it to be. Normally I have plenty to say about a book but this was like reading the FREE Metro newspaper. For my impressions to be limited to “sad in places and it is an emotional read” shows that Flowers for Algernon did NOT rock my boat.


I made highlights on my Kindle as usual and here is the very best and most impressive quote I can give you from the whole book…


How strange it is that people of honest feelings and sensibility, who would not take advantage of a man born without arms or legs or eyes - how such people think nothing of abusing a man born with low intelligence. It infuriated me to remember that not too long ago I - like this boy - had foolishly played the clown.


Flowers for Algernon was written in 1966 and is available as an Amazon Kindle eBook.

Sunday 20 September 2020

Murder At The Rocks by Jill Paterson.

 Laurence Harford is found murdered outside his business in Sydney, Australia. Detective Chief Inspector Alistair Fitzjohn is on the case to solve the crime.


This novel is the second in the series but can be read as a stand-alone. Sadly it is very similar to the first novel in the series. Again the novel is split between the police investigating the crime and a family member, this time the victim’s nephew, getting to the bottom of this cosy mystery.


In this pedestrian tale we once again have Alistair Fitzjohn pottering about in his gardening gear and lots of coats being taken off. Oh yes, we have lots of cars pulling away from the curb - funny that, never thought they would be parked in the middle of the road, yet Jill must remind her readers that cars can park along a “kerb”. Thankfully later on Jill reveals that car wheels are fitted with “tyres” rather than those misspelled American rubber things they call tires.


Also like in the first book, The Celtic Dagger, we have the inclusion of dodgy accountants, blackmail and paintings. Again there is plenty of repetition, this time I noticed far too many people asking “Can I help you?” and whenever the police knocked on a door the conversation went “Mr Surname?” and the other person replies “Yes, I’m First Name - Surname” every time it became a bore. Then every single hot drink any character had was “steaming” - good grief Jill, watch out my girl, contents may be hot! Not forgetting there were an awful lot of people who “hovered” in a doorway, thank goodness it was not a typo making the locations clean by being hoovered!


I found Murder At The Rocks to be a disappointing and predictable piece of easy reading that was a POOR dull read. There were no special police skills OR any WOW! Factor. I think the plot was mundane and typical of an afternoon television drama. This was a second rate novel that gets just 2 stars from me.


Murder At The Rocks was written in 2013 and is available as an Amazon Kindle eBook.


Sunday 13 September 2020

The Celtic Dagger by Jill Paterson.

 University Professor Alex Wearing is found murdered in his study. Can the police find out who and why somebody killed him?


This cosy mystery is set in Australia. The whole story is quite soft. It is not a regular police procedural but more the quest for the victim’s brother James to find out all that had been going on.


The blurb for this novel on Amazon and Goodreads is very well written and marks this book out to be a gripping read. However, the actual book failed on it’s promise and became a second rate read.


The Celtic Dagger is light reading with nothing cutting edge or unusual happening. This story just rolls along as the mystery unravels, more laid back on the sofa, than edge of your seat.


Two little things niggle and become repetitive, coats are taken off and cars pull away from the curb. Two common everyday actions, no mystery or significance there. Yet again I read about another coat being taken off and another car pulling away from a curb. Strange because Jill was born in Yorkshire, UK and I had to pinch myself with her non-British spelling of kerb.


I found The Celtic Dagger to be a tame, gentle, luke warm, run of the mill mystery that became an OKAY, 3 star read.


The Celtic Dagger was written in 2010 and is available as an Amazon Kindle eBook.

Monday 7 September 2020

The Beautiful Cure by Daniel M. Davis

 The Beautiful Cure explains all the research that has been done so that the reader can understand how the human immune system works. Daniel M. Davis is Professor of Immunology at the University of Manchester, so it is great to get accurate information rather than old wives tales.


I found this to be a very informative and interesting book. It covered in tremendous detail how the immune system works and also how scientists work with all their conflicts, so bad that many can’t stand to be in the same room together.


Daniel leads the reader steadily through the research undertaken through the years in a delicate way so that you learn in a similar way to the scientists of the day. This was a great way for Daniel to write his book because it is accessible to everyone. You do not need to be a medical or scientific person to enjoy and understand this book. I left school at 16 and have nothing to do with health or science. My usual reading genre is crime/mystery/thriller. So why did I buy this book? Okay, it was featured on the Kindle Daily Deal, reduced from £4.99p down to just 99p. With the current coronavirus pandemic I wondered how the human immune system actually worked, having heard so much about herd immunity.


This book blew me away, really firing my imagination. I eat, drink and walk around totally unaware of the internal universe inside my body. Daniel explained all about the many different cells, triggers and balances and how they deal with disease, germs and viruses. The human immune system is complex and even leading edge science does NOT understand it all. But just knowing a little blows your mind away. How can such a powerful immune system happen when we were conceived from 2 microscopic organisms? An immune system that runs like a very powerful computer network. An immune system that works in the background with the person unaware of the changes taking place within their cells.


I liked how Daniel explained the differences between innate and adaptive immunity. I also liked learning about different cells, the genes within them and how immune responses were turned on and off. The Beautiful Cure is a very thought provoking book that I wish some of my germophobic workmates would read. There was lovely discussion of things that readers can do which will increase or reduce their immune system.


I thoroughly enjoyed reading The Beautiful Cure and took a lot away from this book. Daniel does not shy away from the realities of laboratory research. He was very frank and open about the HUGE number of mice bred and killed so that we can understand how biology works. I found this an OUTSTANDING book, so it gets 5 stars from me.


The Beautiful Cure was written in 2018 and is available as an Amazon Kindle eBook.

Tuesday 1 September 2020

Desert Water: Farewell London by Alexander Ezike.

 Desert Water is the memoir of a young Nigerian man who came to Britain in 2011 on a student visa. Read this interesting story of his experience of life in Nigeria and his move to the UK.


Desert Water is a very personal tale in which Alexander lays bare all the mistakes he made in Nigeria and Britain. He starts his memoir off by detailing his life in Nigeria, with all it’s poverty and violence. Alexander explains the differences between tribes, cultures and religions in an easy, light and understandable way.


I loved reading his impressions of Britain as I often wonder what passengers arriving from Africa boarding my coach think of life in Britain. It made me smile when Alexander wrote…


Finally the bus arrived and one after the other we entered through the first door in a civilized and cultured manner.


...Alexander uses American English spelling for his memoir but reading the dialogue it is so easy to imagine his accent as like watching Gina Yashere, the stand up comedian, on television when she mimics her Nigerian parents.


I found it very interesting how Alexander viewed London during his stay in 2011 and 2012. He has that funny young person thing of navigating by postcodes and mentions them as a figure of speech, for example…


247 Gipsy Road, London SE27 9QY


...And like most foreign passengers boarding my coach, complains about feeling cold! Although British people are obsessed with talking about the weather, Africans always seem to complain about feeling cold. Then Alexander reveals the unseen parts of London, the homeless, the poverty and illegal immigrants being exploited by a whole range of people taking advantage of their lack of legal status. This is a whole new world to Alexander, best summed up by his shopping visit…


The next day, I went shopping at “PRIMARK” which is the most famous clothing company in the UK, Primark is best known for selling quality accessories and clothing wears at cheap and affordable prices. I knew I had to look good on stage, so I released 15 pounds from my account and bought a shirt and jean trouser.


...Yes, that will make your average British reader chuckle. Alexander is young and makes many mistakes and has a poor choice in friends. He meets many different girls along the way but Alexander fails to find true love. He does however impress many people with his singing under the stage names of Johnny Blac and Kool Daddy. I was surprised however when Alexander wrote…


After one week, I had performed in four different clubs in Manchester and made a total of 800 pounds. Though it was a paltry sum of money but I was grateful to God for the grace to be paid as an underground musician.


...These were not long sets but just a few songs as part of a show by many other musicians. That seems to be big money for a part-time underground musician, what I would call a hobby artist.


I found Desert Water to be a refreshing memoir to read because Alexander is not a celebrity or a success story but an average man in the street who has to live with the mistakes of his past. I am pleased he has put his story into the public domain and even if it does not sell, I am sure any children he later fathers, will love the story behind their dad. Desert Water is a GOOD read, so gets 4 stars from me.


Desert Water was written in 2014 and is available as an Amazon Kindle eBook.