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review 2020-05-06 21:57
How Mirka Caught a Fish - Barry Deutsch,Hansen Literary Agency

For more reviews, check out my blog: Craft-Cycle

Another fantastic adventure in Hereville. I really enjoy this series, especially the blending of reality and fantasy as well as the folklore elements.

As these books have progressed, it has been interesting to see Mirka's relationships with her various family members, especially her siblings, and her stepmother always filling an important role within the story. Watching Mirka learn and mature and grow has been such a wild adventure in the best of ways.

This book was perfectly beautiful with a lovely ending that really tied the whole story together. As with the other books, the illustrations were amazing. I really love these strange adventures filled with magic, trickery, suspense, and battles of wits.

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review 2020-04-16 16:21
How Mirka Met a Meteorite - Barry Deutsch

For more reviews, check out my blog: Craft-Cycle

Another wonderfully odd adventure with Mirka and her siblings. The thing I really love about this series is that I never quite know what is going to happen next. Every page is a surprise. It is so unique and out there that it's in no way predictable.

This book picks up right where the last one left off (which I especially enjoyed given that I was thrown off by how abruptly the first one ended). It tells the tale of Mirka's run-ins with the troll, the witch, some bullies, and a meteorite.

As with the first one, the artwork is lovely. I enjoyed the simple color pallet and intricacies in the illustrations.

Also, the knitting. I just love the knitting. It is such a fun, creative aspect that runs through the stories. It really ties everything together, so to speak, and I love how the stories in this series always come full circle.

This series does such an amazing job blending fantasy and reality, fact and fiction. It presents various aspects of life in an Orthodox Jewish community and twists them all of up into a fantastic, magical journey into the unexpected. The book very much reads like folklore with descriptions of daily tasks superimposed with magic and mystery.

A wonderful read. I am looking forward to the third book.

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review 2020-04-12 16:22
Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword - Barry Deutsch

For more reviews, check out my blog: Craft-Cycle

An odd adventure story that proves you can find wonders in the most unexpected of places. I really enjoyed the mashup of reality and fantasy elements. The book seamlessly incorporates aspects of life in an Orthodox Jewish community in this fascinating story of a fierce heroine, trolls, and epic battles.

The simple coloring did not take away from the intricate artwork, interesting dialogue, and splendid use of light and shadow. It was so easy to get caught up in this story.

Mirka is such a fantastic character- brave, quick-thinking, and not without her flaws. While the book ended a bit abruptly for me, it did make me instantly want to read the next one. Well played. 

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review 2020-04-07 15:02
"Homefront", by Jill barry
Homefront - Jill Barry

“Homefront” tells the story of a young woman whose life changed for ever when Britain declared war on Germany in 1939. This wartime romance is about families pulling together and the struggles their loved ones were risking on the front line.

The synopsis sounded right up my alley, I love this time in history and never get tired of reading WW11 wartime stories, not knowing this author I thought it was an opportunity to do so and gave “Homefront” a go.

This novel is definitely an undemanding read that dilly-dally a lot. But if you love a homey type of story this may tickle your fancy. The story is smooth, the language is restrained and we find a pleasant ending. I think most readers will give the novel a pass.

But on the other if you are an avid reader you will be quite disappointed in the lack of depth and substance in the plot. Nothing exciting happens: no conflicts, no fights, no one gets hurt, the people get along just fine and romance lacks imagination. This is one boring novel for anyone who loves a story with lots of movement, twists and turns , in “Homefront”, we have none, every move is predictable, action where is it? Suspense, yep, you guessed it: none. “Homefront” is penned in a straightforward style, using a stilted dialogue, a bunch of cookie-cutter characters.

In all, not a bad read but not my cup of tea. I think this novel would be more suited for novice readers than a mature audience.

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review 2020-03-22 11:17
Sometimes it's hard to be a Lakota woman
A thousand moons - Sebastian Barry

Thanks to Faber and Faber and to NetGalley for offering me an ARC copy of this book, which I freely chose to review.

I read Barry’s Days Without End, loved it (you can read my review here) and couldn’t resist when I saw his next novel was available. This story follows on from the previous one, and it shares quite a few characteristics with that one. Although I’ve read some reviews by people who hadn’t read the previous novel and said that they felt this one could be read on its own, I wouldn’t dare to comment on that. Personally, because the story follows closely on from Days Without End, and it refers to many of the characters we had got to know there, I’d recommend readers thinking about taking up this series to start by reading the previous novel.

This story, like Barry’s previous book, is a historical novel, in this case set in Tennessee shortly after the American Civil War. In the previous novel we followed two characters, Thomas McNulty (the first person narrator) and John Cole, through their adventures as actors, Indian hunters and soldiers, and learned that they had adopted a young Lakota girl, Ojinjintka, renamed Winona; in this second book we hear the story from Winona’s point of view. The couple of men have settled down now, and the fact that this is not only a woman’s story, but the story of a Native-American woman, means that her ambit of action is much more restricted and despite her efforts to take control of her own life, she’s often at the mercy of laws and circumstances that consider her less than a human being. Although she is loved by her adoptive parents and the rest of the extended family she lives with, that is not a general state of affairs, and if life had treated her badly as a child, she also suffers a major traumatic event here, as a young woman. No matter that she is educated (she keeps the books for a lawyer in town), strong-willed, and determined. She is either invisible (just an Indian girl) or a creature to be abused, vilified, and made to take the blame for other’s crimes. That does not mean what happens to her does not reflect the events in the larger society (we do hear about racism, about lynching, about corruption of the law, about Southern resistance…), but we get to see them from an “other” point of view, and it creates a sense of estrangement, which I suspect is intended by the author. While Thomas and John were outsiders themselves and always lived in the fringes of society, Winona’s position is more precarious still.

I have mentioned some of the themes of the novel, and others, like family relationships, race, gender, identity (Winona remembers a lot about her life as a Lakota, and the memories of her mother in particular bring her much comfort and strength), and the lot of women also play an important part in the novel. There is also something of a mystery running through it, as there are a couple of crimes committed early on (one a severe beating of an ex-slave living with Winona’s family in the farm, and the other one her assault) and Winona spends much of the novel trying to clarify what happened and to get justice, one way or another, as the authorities are not going to intervene because neither of them are important enough. Although she turns into something of an amateur detective, this is no cozy mystery or a light adventure novel, and there are plenty of harrowing moments in it, so I wouldn’t recommend it to people who are looking for cheerful entertainment.

The characters are as fascinating as those from the previous novel, although we get to see them from a totally different point of view. It Thomas was the guiding consciousness of Days Without End, Winona’s voice (in the first person) narrates this fragment of the story. We get to see things from her perspective, and that also offers us an opportunity to reevaluate our opinion of the characters we already knew. We also meet some new characters, but because of Winona’s status (or lack of it), we are put in a difficult position, always feeling suspicious and expecting the worst from those we meet, because she has no rights, both because she is a woman and because she is an Indian woman. Her voice takes some time to get used to. She has been educated, but a bit like happened with Thomas in the previous novel, her speech and thoughts are a mixture of vernacular expressions and lyrical images. She is sometimes confused and can’t make sense of what is happening around her, and at others can show a great deal of insight. When she reports the dialogue and words of others —although she is quite an astute observer of others’ behaviour —, all the people she mentions talk pretty much the same, no matter how educated they are, and farm-hands and judges cannot be told apart from the way they speak. Although I felt for Winona at an intellectual level and was horrified by the things she had to go through, perhaps because of the estrangement I mentioned and of the style of the narrative, I didn’t find it as easy to connect at an emotional level. I liked her and I loved her insights and some of her comments, but I didn’t feel as close to her as I did to Thomas in the first book.

The writing is beautiful and poetic at times, while at others it can be difficult to understand due to the mental state of the character and to her peculiar style. It reminded me of the stream-of-consciousness narration typical of modernist writers in the early years of the XX century. Winona’s thoughts jump from one subject to the next, and although the story is told in chronological order, memories of her time with the Lakotas and flashbacks from her trauma keep interfering in the narrative. This is not a particularly fast novel or a page turner in the traditional sense, as it meanders along, with exciting and horrifying scenes intermixed with scenes of domesticity and everyday life. I confess to having to go back and forth at times to make sure I hadn’t missed anything, but it was worth it.

I highlighted many parts of the novel, but I’ll share a few samples (note that this is an ARC copy, so there might be some changes in the published version):

I wonder what does it mean when another people judge you to be worth so little you were only to be killed? How our pride in everything was crushed so small it disappeared until it was just specks of things floating away on the wind.

You can’t be a geyser of tears all your life.

‘She got to have some recompense in law,’ said Lige Magan. ‘An Indian ain’t a citizen and the law don’t apply in the same way,’ said the lawyer Briscoe.

Only a woman knows how to live I believe because a man is too hasty, too half-cocked, mostly. That half-cocked gun hurts at random. But in my men I found fierce womanliness living. What a forturne. What a great heap of proper riches.

I’ve seen some reviews who felt the ending was disappointing or unbelievable. I’d have to agree that there is something of the Deus ex machina about the ending, but overall I liked where the story ended and would like to know what happens next to Winona, to Peg (one of my favourite new characters), and to the rest of the characters.

Would I recommend the novel? It is a fascinating book, and one lovers of Barry will enjoy. I advise anybody interested in this historical period and eager to read this author’s work  to start with the previous novel, as I found the style of this one more challenging and more difficult to follow, and having an understanding of the background of the characters helps put it into perspective. As I usually do, I’d recommend readers to check a sample of the novel before deciding to purchase it, but give it a good chance, as it does take some time to get used to the style, and the story is well-worth reading and persevering with. I will definitely be looking forward to the next novel.

 

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