Categories
Book Reviews Literature

Rose Tremain and Merivel’s Mid-Life Crisis

Categories
Uncategorized

The lovely greys and blues of Fair Isle

Categories
Uncategorized

The Gauguin Controversy

Categories
Uncategorized

Time for Lunch already?

Categories
Uncategorized

Make Time for eMozart,Art and a nice cup of Tea

Categories
Uncategorized

A Room with Another View

Categories
Film Literature

Interesting background to the Algerian Independence struggle

https://readingandwatchingtheworld.home.blog/

Categories
Uncategorized

Beautiful Light by the Sea

Categories
Uncategorized

Invisible Cities (1972), by Italo Calvino, translated by William Weaver

Wonderful work of the imagination. Brilliant!

Lisa Hill's avatarANZ LitLovers LitBlog

Invisible Cities is one of six entries for Italo Calvino (1923-1985) in 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die. The other five are

(Links on the titles are to Wikipedia.)

(1001 Books does not include The Complete Cosmicomics (1997), probably because it’s not a novel, it’s a collection of short stories, one of which…

View original post 1,334 more words

Categories
Uncategorized

The Crying Room (2023), by Gretchen Shirm

Sounds like some powerful and deep themes here and much of current interest.

Lisa Hill's avatarANZ LitLovers LitBlog

If anything in this review raises issues for you, help is available at Beyond Blue.


The Crying Room is Gretchen Shirm’s second novel: you can read my review of Where the Light Falls (2016) here. The novels share similar preoccupations: failures of communication, mismatched personalities and an enigmatic disappearance that leaves damaged people in its wake.  But though both novels are quiet, reflective meditations that reveal the inner worlds of introspective characters, The Crying Room begins with a striking evocation of the commodification of grief in our time.

The Crying Room is literally, just that.  Susie, who cries easily, is employed to monitor people who use it, who come in to shed their tears and then leave.  She intervenes only if someone comes in on three consecutive days because it is her job to determine whether or not these recurrent visitors would benefit from counselling sessions.  There is…

View original post 701 more words