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The Tree of Hands is a 1984 suspense novel by the author Ruth Rendell. It …

Not sure about this

Content warning There will be spoilers

Terry Pratchett: Judgement Day (2013, Ebury Press)

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Alternately Discworld story and scientific explanation, this is a tried and tested format. It's also a little tired. This time we are thinking about science and religion (belief). The thinking about science is reasonable clear, while I am no science expert I am a keen hobbyist and read a lot, even so some of it wasn't that well explained. Belief, on the other hand, wasn't thought about at all, except that it is seen as irrational, and some very pointed examples of how this worked against the common good. As I read this in very short bursts, over a very long period, I probably have a more negative view, but it seemed to me that the story parts were rather contrived, and lacked the interest of the earlier books. Time to call it a day and not bother with book 5?

Still, just about worth a read.

Brian W. Aldiss: Hothouse (1984, Baen Books)

THE LAST DAYS OF MAN

Under a dying sun, monstrous sentient plants and carnivorous insects …

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It was a very long time ago that I first read Hothouse. I remembered a little about the world that the children initially find themselves in. The dumblers and running along the branches of the great banyan. I remembered Lily-yo and Gren, but beyond that I had forgotten much of the adventure.

This book is a science fiction classic and because it is such a good imaginative story set me reading science fiction for years. The story is set millions of years in the future when the rotation of the moon has slowed the earth to almost a standstill. The earth now has one face to the sun and one face from it (the dark side), just as the moon does with the earth. Vegetation has taken over, although a few insects and animals still exist - man included, the humans then are not like the humans now they have …

Philip Dick: The Man in the High Castle (1992, Vintage Books)

The Man in the High Castle is an alternate history novel by American writer Philip …

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Lots of effort is made to set up a very believable world in which the Axis powers defeated the Allies and split America into three. We follow the main characters through events that lead them to various conclusions. As tension heightens the narrative centres on a book, a work of fiction in which the Axis powers were defeated by the Allies and Britain and America divide the world between them, and how difficult it would be to live in that world. There are various twists along the way as the story of each character reaches a conclusion. The final twist though is left until the last few pages, and then we are left hanging.
No explanation of how it could be. Was it a figment of the characters imagination, a dream, or was it really true, and if so how could it be that the world was as the book …

Suzanne Collins: Hunger Games Trilogy Boxset (2010, Scholastic)

Mockingjay is a 2010 science fiction novel by American author Suzanne Collins. It is chronologically …

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Book 1 especially is a real page turner as we get inside the mind of a young woman forced by her circumstances to undertake a remarkable challenge so that she can continue to do what she has been doing for much of her life - protecting her family. Seeing events through her interpretations and hearing her thoughts (or memories as I suppose they really are) mean we have a very clear view of her character. The story takes us from her 'selection' through to the end of the 74th Hunger Games.
I remember hearing the author on a radio program saying something like "what Katniss does has consequences, which is why it is a trilogy and didn't stop at one book".
Certainly at the end of the first book you cannot stop, there are too many questions about what happens next. The second book though is not such a brilliant …

Tom Rob Smith: Child 44 (Leo Demidov, #1) (2009)

Child 44 (published in 2008) is a thriller novel by British writer Tom Rob Smith. …

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The very first thing to comment on is the style of the printing. Dialogue is not in quotes, but italics and preceded by a long hyphen. There are no chapters in the conventional sense, the book is split up into scenes (ready for the film?).
These things take a little getting used to, but if we put presentation aside and concentrate on content the message is very different. I have lived through the lies that came out of Soviet Russia and read a little about what it was like inside. At the start of the book we see the abject poverty that existed in Stalinist Russia. Whole villages are starving to death. The first scene is about children trying to catch a cat to eat, at a time when all the cats have long ago been eaten - where has this one come from? (That piece of background has been …

Terry Pratchett: The Shepherd's Crown (Tiffany Aching) (2015, HarperCollins)

The final Discworld novel.

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Having previously read and enjoyed almost all the Discworld books, I approached this one with some trepidation. Would it live up to the rest of the series, or would it be a disappointment, and therefore affect my memory of Discworld as a whole.
While not the funniest of the novels, that award goes to the early ones, it still has some great humour. This is mostly generated by the Nac Mac Feegles - always up for a fight, never up for thinking they provide the comedy and the muscle when it is needed. The story centres around Tiffany and the return of the Elves to our world, but things have changed. No only does Granny Weatherwax die early in the story, but the Discworld has progressed and we have trains.
In many ways it is a story about a young woman (don't dare call her a girl) maturing under difficult …

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It is a great title, perhaps the perfect one for a book of imaginative short stories about characters in the Bible. Although you can see that the characters were most probably there, they are not necessarily recorded - like the serving girl at the last supper. The stories are written so that the Bible story is not revealed until the very end. That leads me to a guessing game as I read each paragraph. Who is this? How will it tie in to the Bible? Of course all this is fiction and there are occasionally times when elements of the story break the belief and jar with my (supposedly) known facts. There is a mention of the game of 'not stepping on the cracks in the pavement', where my thought was that those people would never have seen a pavement. These are minor criticisms. Mostly it is the love and …

Adrian Plass, Jeff Lucas: Seriously Funny (Paperback, Authentic)

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I'm not sure if the title is a play on words, if it is then I have missed the joke. There are some very funny scenes portrayed, and there are some very serious and provocative discussions on the Christian life - should you decide to take them seriously at that point. The book is a series of letters between the two writers/speakers. I decided part way through that they had always been intending to publish them, but by the end I was not so sure. The tone is very easy going and friendly, and they take care to respect each others views and 'eccentricities'.
Its an enjoyable read, one quick similie that I particularly enjoyed described Christian's as postmen delivering the word of God to others and pointed out that postmen do not own the message, just deliver it carefully. If I were in the book there would now be …

Andrew White, Canon Andrew White: Vicar of Baghdad (2009, Lion Hudson PLC)

As the vicar of St. George's Church in Baghdad, the only Episcopalian church in Iraq, …

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The book only really comes alive when he is talking about St. Georges church. What has happened there is amazing and the writing is warm, with lots of personal detail. In the rest of the book there are too many things that cannot be spoken about because it would put people in danger if it were. It becomes a rather dry lists of people, meetings and journeys. The danger of the work is always present, and there is no doubting its importance to the future of the country. From the readers perspective there are some lovely word pictures. A group of Muslims from different traditions in a bus singing - but it is what is sung that is important. At times like that you get a real feel for the atmosphere.

Worth a read, but stick with it' the later chapters are better than the early ones.