The Secret of Father Brown – G.K. Chesterton
Thoroughly amiable, utterly absurd and cheerfully entertaining mysteries. I’ve only one Father Brown book left to go, sadly.
My musings on what I've read since January 2006.
Thoroughly amiable, utterly absurd and cheerfully entertaining mysteries. I’ve only one Father Brown book left to go, sadly.
I’ve never come across this style before, a stream-of-consciousness written in the third person. Combine this eccentric decision with the use of demotic Glaswegian, liberal use of the f word and a unique way with paragraph breaks and you get something…pretty compelling actually. Not quite enough to justify 370 pages of essentially plotless book, but certainly highly memorable.
This argues that wisdom is the greatest thing a man (sic) can possess, and that God is the source of it. In parts the poetry is breathtaking.
So it’s only a 15 line poem of terrified submission to a wrathful God, but it’s a book of the Bible, so it still counts, OK? It still counts.
There are so many great English comedies from the 1930s, and this faux diary of a harried middle class woman dealing with financial worries, the servant problem and generally keeping up appearances is a classic of the type. It would be easy to make the central character unsympathetic, but an underlying sense of quiet desperation and a surprisingly progressive political agenda keep the reader onside.
Quirky is a double-edged adjective, but this book is quirky in a good way. Basically a depiction of small-town Australian community, the plot hangs on the unlikely love story between two middle-aged outsiders visiting the town for apparently contradictory reasons. I particularly like the randy butcher, Freddy Chang.
Looking at the online reviews of Donna Tartt’s second novel after the blockbusting (and ace) The Secret History, many of them complain that it doesn’t have an ending. Actually, the narrative pulls off the same trick as Orson Welles’ masterpiece Touch of Evil, in that the story opens with a murder mystery but by the end the resolution of the mystery has become incidental to the tale’s central concerns. It worked fine for me.