Nice read, three narrators who all live in one village. The ways of the countryside and how they each see and inhabit it.
Nice read, three narrators who all live in one village. The ways of the countryside and how they each see and inhabit it.
#LittenMail from @Tamra ⭐
Thank you so much, I can't wait to dive in 😺 The dust cover blurbs are terrifically intriguing!
The descriptions and observations of the natural landscape are beautiful and something I really love in a book. But I wasn‘t invested in the characters, they felt flat. Maybe it just wasn‘t the right time for me to read. I bailed just over 100 pages in. Sigh.
#ruralsetting #aprilbookshowers I've tried to capture images of 2 bks set in the countryside- the melissa harrison was beautifully written with a story of the tensions in rural society. The Ross Raisin was a brilliant picture of a damaged young man in a Yorkshire farm, dark but if you know the north yorks moors you will recognise areas.
Both really good reads + im instantly thinking of another one!
You are invited to visit my blog to see my favourite books so far this year: http://lindypratch.blogspot.ca/2016/06/best-fiction-so-far-in-2016.html?m=1
"As the sun rose slowly over Jack's head a hawthorn in the hedge behind him felt the light on its new green leaves and thought with its green mind about blossom."
It opens with a car accident. Then takes the reader back over one spring month through the events leading up to the crash. There is an unhappy middle-aged couple, a homeless wanderer, and a young guy trying to figure his life out. A quiet book that explores life in a rural English village
Currently reading this book set in a rural community over the course of one spring month. It opens with an accident: "two cars, spent and ravished, violence gathered about them in the silent air".