Showing posts with label Attachments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Attachments. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 February 2015

Attachments: Rainbow Rowell




I found myself picking this up after reading Eleanor & Park. It was my second journey into the Rainbow Rowell world and I had high expectations. 

The book follows 20 something Lincoln who is perpetually incapable of growing up. He has never quite got out of education and nor has he got over childhood sweetheart. Back home, living with his mother, he has taken up a job as part of a security team, working nights for a newspaper. In a pre 2000 world where the internet is still a novelty, he is set to guard the ever abused, e-mail system. It is through this that he learns of Beth and Jennifer, two women whose e-mails are constantly flagged thanks to their weakness for procrastination and off topic conversation. Lincoln finds himself scanning their e-mails more often than he should and he all too quickly becomes a secret third party to their conversations.  But it is more than that, feelings develop and he soon begins to wonder if a relationship could ever be possible. 

To start with I found this to be a very give or take book. I dipped in and out of it whenever the fancy took me but I didn't feel an overwhelming need to read it as quickly as possible. About one third of the way through however, that all changed, and I pretty much inhaled the rest of it. Overall it was easy to follow and a joy to read, it was littered with good wit and snippets of romance. The role of friendship and love was dealt with in an original and unique way and it was a refreshing take on a topic that one may consider to be overdone in the literary world.

The book alternated between e-mail exchanges between Beth and Jennifer and Lincoln's own storyline. I liked the different approaches to telling a story, the half formed images that an e-mail gives, leaving a lot unsaid and open to interpretation. I liked how the reader saw Beth and Jennifer just as Lincoln did and such I was able to form my own opinions of them, untainted by his own. The characters had a god sense of humour and were likeable but also incredibly normal. 

I liked that despite this being a chick lit of sorts, the main character was in fact a man. The genre is one typically dominated by women fawning over men, it was nice to see the tables turned and it worked incredibly well. The loneliness and lack of direction that Lincoln feels is something that most people can relate to in some form. The characters of Beth and Jennifer were equally relatable and each of the three characters represented different aspects of the perils of adult life and responsibility. 

This book is cute and witty, there is a good splash of friendship and romance without it being gushy or overly sweet. It is an easy read and one that I really enjoyed. Would I recommend it? Of course I would! 

Let me know if you have read it or any other Rainbow Rowell books!

Eilidh



Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Book Haul



January is over and I thought I would do a quick round up of the books I bought in the last month. I don't know when I will get round to reading them but they are piled high on my bedside table ready for any spare moment I have. 


The Miniaturist 
Jessie Burton

This has a beautiful cover and I managed to pick up the hardcover copy which had been rereleased when it was named Waterstones book of the year.

Do No Harm
Henry Marsh

From what I have heard, this is a book about what it is like to be a brain surgeon, it sounds really interesting and was a Sunday Times Bestseller so I can't wait to pick it up!

Attachments 
Rainbow Rowell

A couple of weeks ago I read Eleanor & Park which led me to ordering a couple of other Rainbow Rowell books. I loved Eleanor & Park so I have high expectations. 

Fangirl 
Rainbow Rowell

This was another book I picked up in my post Eleanor & Park binge.


H is for Hawk
Helen Macdonald

This is not at all the sort of book I would usually pick up but I had seen a lot of people talking about it so I thought I would give it a go. 

A Meal in Winter
Hubert Mingarelli

This book is only 138 pages long, I tend to avoid short books because I hate it when a good book ends too soon, but upon reading the blurb, I couldn't stop myself from buying it.