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November Monthly Recap

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I’ve been a bad, bad blogger. While Book Worm has been busy reading and reviewing, I’ve been swamped with work and barely reading. So it’s time to get back on our regular schedule and publish some of the reviews that have been sitting waiting for me. We’ll start off with our monthly recap.  Find out which books were favorites and which were duds for the month of November. We’ll end our wrap up with a glimpse of what’s coming up in December.  Read more

Non 1001 Book Review: Ensnared by Rita Stradling

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Book Worm has been quite busy reading while I’ve been wallowing in self-pity about my recent work schedule and number of projects due. She recently finished this book and is here with her review. Keep reading to see what she thought. Read more

Non 1001 Book Review: Gnomon by Nick Harkaway

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 Book worm is getting us back on track with our blog schedule with a book that might be good enough to break my reading slump. Check it out.

Gnomon by Nick Harkaway
Published in: 2017
Reviewed by: Book Worm  and/or Jen
Rating: ★★★★★
Find it here: Gnomon

This ARC was provided by Random House UK (via NetGalley) in exchange for an honest review.

Synopsis from Goodreads: Gnomon, which took Harkaway more than three years to complete, is set in a world of ubiquitous surveillance. Pitched as “a mind-bending Borgesian puzzle box of identity, meaning and reality in which the solution steps sideways as you approach it”, it features: a detective who finds herself investigating the very society she believes in, urged on by a suspect who may be an assassin or an ally, hunting through the dreams of a torture victim in search of the key to something she does not yet understand; a banker who is pursued by a shark that swallows Fortune 500 companies; Saint Augustine’s jilted mistress who reshapes the world with miracles; a refugee grandfather turned games designer who must remember how to walk through walls or be burned alive by fascists; and a sociopath who falls backwards through time in order to commit a murder.

Book Worm’s Thoughts: I love a novel with a twisted timeline and a story that messes with your head, and boy does this book do that. From the moment I read the first sentence I was hooked. I felt like Alice falling down the rabbit hole and the more I read, the more deeply I feel in love with the book.

At over 700 pages it took me a while to read, but when I got to the last 20% I didn’t want the book to end. Then I was hit with the anxiety what if, after all this build up, the ending is a let down? Don’t worry it wasn’t! I really felt the time I invested in reading this book was paid back by the amazing world to which Harkaway transported me.

I can’t really say much about the plot because the joy of this book is immersing yourself in each narrative and trying to catch the points where they overlap and the clues hidden within. I think I missed a lot of clues and I won’t claim to fully understand the book but that didn’t stop me loving it.

The other things I loved are the observations about people and their relationship to books and the ways in which books were connected to life. Here are a few quotes I can’t resist sharing:

“The human condition is most accurately chronicled in pulp, I think. The ugly and ordinary lusts, the contradictory drives, are all ignored by more self-consciously poetic writers striving to peel away the dross to reveal the inner person who of course exists only as the sum of the dross.”

“These books exist, one sometimes thinks, only in the rumour and desire they excite.”

“People will be very alarmed, and in his experience they always feel better knowing there’s a bookshop open” TRUTH

While I loved this book I know there will be people who won’t love it so here are a few warnings: 1) Harkaway loves making you work. Don’t expect an easy read. The writing can be convoluted and very detailed I have seen a lot of reviews calling the book boring because of the level of detail; 2) If you want a book you will understand, forget it. I am not sure anyone will truly understand it, and those who claim to will all have their own different understanding (in my opinion); and 3) The criticism of modern politics is very blunt (like a hammer) and it’s clear where Harkaway stands (if you voted for Trump or Brexit be prepared to be offended).

Who would like this book? I would recommend this to those who like a longer more in-depth read that makes you think and question yourself. I would say if you loved 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami or The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell you will love this as it has the same feel as these (well it did for me).

Want to try it for yourself? You can find a copy here: Gnomon

We want to hear from you! Have you read this book? What did you think? 

Beer and Book Pairing: The Resurrection of Joan Ashby

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Our contributor, Nicole is back with a beer-book pairing. Check it out…

Published in: 2017
Reviewed by: Nicole
Rating: ★★★
Find it here:  The Resurrection of Joan Ashby

I got an email from Goodreads, but they said it was from A.M. Homes telling me I needed to read this book. I love her, so I listened. I knew it was a marketing ploy, but A.M. Homes!

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