African authorsSunday Salonworld literature

Sunday Salon reading horizons

sundaysalonOne of the regular features on the The Readers podcast is Reading Horizons where Simon and Thomas talk about what they have been reading, what they are reading at the time of the show and what they may very well be reading next. Listening to their recent episode got me thinking about my own reading horizons.

In recent weeks I’ve been making some small inroads into my world literature project with A Parachute Drop by Norbert Zongo, a writer from the small land-locked African state of Burkina Faso; The Spinning Heart by the Irish author Donal Ryan and The Book of Gaza, a collection of short stories by ten writers from the Gaza strip.

What I’m reading now is a wonderful novel from 2013 by the Irish writer Maggie O’Farrell, Instructions for a Heatwave. Set against a background of a summer of unusuallly high temperatures for the UK, it shows how a family is thrown into crisis by the sudden disappearance of its patriarchal figure. His three children are summoned to support his wife as efforts are made to find him. It soon becomes clear however that they are also lost, floundering amid problems of disintegrating marriages and sibling relationships. All of them are harbouring secrets. I’ve loved every other book I’ve read by O’Farrell. This one is one of her best.

I’m also reading a curious book by Qaisra Shahraz, an author born in Pakistan though raised in England. The Holy Woman, which is her debut novel, examines the tension between the desire for freedom and the pressure to conform felt by women in Pakistan. It features a woman renowned for her beauty who dons a Burqa and immerses herself in a life of celibacy in obedience to the will of her father. The writing style is rather lacking in finesse but the concept of the Holy Woman is interesting enough to keep me reading.

As for reading horizons, I have a few of the Booker longlisted novels waiting my return to the UK. A colleague from Korea has also given me a book which apparently was a huge best seller in South Korea and then wowed readers in North America – it’s called Please Look After Mom, by  Kyung-Sook Shin. It’s about a devoted mother who becomes separated from her husband when they are travelling from their rural home to visit their grown up children in Seoul. I’d never heard of this author or the book but it seemed that it garnered a lot of praise when it was published in 2011 – the Times Literary Supplement called it “captivating…  nostalgic but unsentimental, brutally well observed.. a sobering account of a vanished past.”  Sounds just the thing for my return flight home…..

BookerTalk

What do you need to know about me? 1. I'm from Wales which is one of the countries in the UK and must never be confused with England. 2. My life has always revolved around the written and spoken word. I worked as a journalist for nine years then in international corporate communications 3. My tastes in books are eclectic. I love realism and hate science fiction and science fantasy. 4. I am trying to broaden my reading horizons geographically by reading more books in translation

8 thoughts on “Sunday Salon reading horizons

  • I am intrigued by what you say of The Holy Woman. Looking forward to hearing more about it!

    Reply
    • The concept is interesting but the writing is a bit over-egged….

      Reply
    • I can imagine the panic you experienced – bad enough to know your mum is missing but being powerless to act until you had reached home made this even worse. Luckily it ended all fine. I loved the idea of your mum being so blissfully unaware of the mayhem she had caused.

      Reply
  • I loved the Maggie O’Farrell. I read it when it first came out and then it turned up on one of my book group lists earlier this year and stood up to a second reading really well – not something that is always the case.

    Reply
    • You told me it was fabulous and you were so right…..I just wish I wasn’t so tired at the end of the day and I could read more of it.

      Reply
  • The breadth of your reading is so expansive. Your blog continues to impress me.

    Reply
    • Ah, thats a nice comment to read at the end of a long day. thanks for the confidence booster Barbara

      Reply

We're all friends here. Come and join the conversation

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from BookerTalk

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading