graylodge_library's reviews
1465 reviews

The Home Crowd Advantage by Ben Aaronovitch

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3.0

Considering I have zero interest in sports, I wasn't particularly excited about this, but thankfully it's not sports-heavy and instead deals with magical trouble. Another reference to Ettersburg as well.
Tobias Winter - Meckenheim 2012 by Ben Aaronovitch

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3.0

The first story that is set after the events of Rivers of London, and it's a look into how magic is dealt with in Germany. I'm curious to see if this will play out somehow in future books. Hopefully so, because this feels like an introduction to something and raises more questions than anything. Clearly taking an apprentice is a breach of some kind of arrangement that we learned in the first book, but what happens now?
A Dedicated Follower of Fashion by Ben Aaronovitch, Ben Aaronovitch

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3.0

The Deplorables continue the parade of small glimpses of great side characters, but the protagonist and his friends and whatever they had going on kind of left me cold. The basement part was great, though, and I couldn't really tell where the story was going.
Rivers of London Vol. 7: Action at a Distance by Andrew Cartmel, Ben Aaronovitch

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2.0

The story is nothing exciting (even bland in some respects), but doing it in comic form at least brings a nice variety to the series detours. Too bad the art is hit-and-miss. Some panels are fine, some have bland backgrounds, and some have characters that are indistinguishable from each other or have strange indistinguishable expressions. Hopefully, it just means a drop in quality and isn't a continuous thing with the comics.
People in the Summer Night: An Epic Suite by Frans Emil Sillanpää

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5.0

 Despite the page number, this is all about great themes: love, hate, ignorance, death, birth. During two summer days and nights a group of people is introduced, whose stories form separate atmospheric scenes. Yrjö 'Nokia' Salonen struggles with his inner turmoil and lovelessness, young couple Helka and Arvid enjoy their time together, Santra needs tenderness while her husband Jukka wanders around drunk, Hilja and Jalmari are expecting their third child, a lonely artist ponders his role as a father and the old matriarch of Teliranta remembers her girlhood through her grandchild Helka.

The mood is lingering, like the gentle breeze of wind on a sizzling hot summer day, and the tenderness of a Finnish summer night can only be understood by those who have experienced it. Some moments are so beautiful they almost make you cry.

My favourite character of all these is absolutely Nokia, a blonde haired pretty boy who tries out the life of a... Well, I don't know how to translate this. You know, a man who balanced on the logs and guided them along the river. Anyway, Nokia makes a mistake, and in the end the anxiety and (sexual) frustration lead into a very touching scene.

One thing that goes through the whole book is an erotic charge, that apparently appalled the people of 1930s Finland (Sillanpää was a bit of a rebel I think). Maybe now this doesn't evoke the same kind of reaction in a reader, but the subtle hints by the right choices of words are for me the thing that makes this novel an even greater emotional experience.

Oh, and I'd really like to see the 1948 Valentin Vaala film. I usually (with one or two exceptions) hate old Finnish movies with their wooden actors, child-like actresses, and unintentionally amusing vibe. This, however, might be another exception. Just because of the beautiful Martti Katajisto, and because I hear the mood has been realised really well.
The Complete Jack the Ripper by Donald Rumbelow

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4.0

While Rumbelow presents the different obscure rumours that surround Jack's stories he doesn't speculate with them too much. He just shows facts as they are. I was also surprised how much details have been able to find out about the people involved. Would recommend this to everyone who want a comprehensive case-book about the famous murders but not to those who just need to have an introduction. As I said, the book includes lots of details. Warning should also be in order : couple of mortuary photographs of Catherine Eddowes are graphic so sensitive people should skip those I think.
To a God Unknown by John Steinbeck

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2.0

I very like much the descriptions of nature Steinbeck has produced but the characters are still very 2-dimensional. Maybe it's just me but I want to see the characters in my mind and unfortunately in this one the images were even more shattered than in Grapes of Wrath.
Ramses: The Son of Light - Volume I by Christian Jacq

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3.0

Probably my first novel about ancient Egypt and it was great.
The Rice Mother by Rani Manicka

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3.0

I liked the way the author had constructed the book. The story was told little by little by different characters and the theme of the Rice Mother continued throughout. Also, the descriptions of foods of all sorts made the story somehow more warm and humane (although being a huge lover of Indian food this opinion may count as a little partial).

What I didn't like was the lack of character development and lack of their distinctive voices. Towards the end everything seemed a bit forced and I can't say I was totally pleased with the outcome but there were parts where I was almost about to cry.