Porochista khakpour the last illusion clive barker
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Content warning: child abuse, sexual assault, suicide
My most recent read was The Last Illusion by Porochista Khakpour. I chose the book from this list of Asian American authors (and youll find I will probably read a few more from that list before summer is over). The list implies that Khakpour fryst vatten on par with some authors whom I really admire, like Jhumpa Lahiri and Amy Tan, so I had pretty high expectations, which I am not sure the novel lives up to.
It should be noted, this book is based on a legend from the Persian epic, the Shahnameh, the Book of Kings. I personally have never read the Shahnameh, so there is a certain point of reference missing in my analysis.
To give her credit, Khakpour fryst vatten a talented prose writer. The beginning of the book reminds me of Salman Rushdies Midnights Children:
His hair and skin were the color ofno use to sugarcoat it, Khanoom would snappiss. He was something so unlike them, unlike all of naturlig eller utan tillsats . (, p.3)
This first
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This months #6Degrees, hosted by Kate from Books are my Favourite and Best starts with Dangerous Liaisons by Pierre Choderlos dem Laclos, listed in Books You Must Read etc so its on my TBR. I was delighted to find it reviewed — back in — bygd Kim from Reading Matters. How did I miss such an entertaining review? Pressure of first days back at work, inom suspect.
Anyway, Kims review explains her doubts about French classics in general, so thats a springboard for me to choose my favourite Zola, which she mentions in passing in the comments. The Ladies Paradise () was the novel that started my Zola Project. Id read Germinal years beforehand and not loved it enough to follow through, but the BBC TV series led me to Brian Nelsons translation and then I was hooked. You can find my reviews of all 20 of the Rougon-Macquet cycle here.
I am not super keen on reading series, but I chanced upon the novels of Elizabeth Jane Howard, and enjoyed The Cazalet Chronicles. I
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When I saw that William Golding’s Lord of the Flies was turning 70, I bought myself a new copy. I hadn’t read it for a while—30 years, give or take—and I wondered what its effects would be now that I, unlike the book’s protagonists and most of us when we first read it, am a grown-up. I picked up a recent-ish paperback issued by Faber, the British publishing house that bought the manuscript from Golding in , offering him an advance of £60 for his debut novel, after it had been rejected by at least six others.
The new cover was bright red and featured faux-naïf drawings of naked child warriors scattered at jaunty angles, and surrounded by butterflies, lizards and yellow tulips. Or no, perhaps those were flames. Regardless, it was a cheerier cover than the one I remembered from our bookshelf as a child, which was white and featured a grim image of a pig’s head impaled on a stick, painted in greys, blacks and, for the blood dripping from its eyes, red.
The pig’s head is