Saturday 22 February 2014

Blackberry Wine


Layman’s alchemy, the magic of everyday things, that’s what Blackberry Wine is all about. A pleasant, smooth and enjoyable story told from the point of view of a wine bottle

Published in 2000 after her smashing bestseller Chocolat, Joanne Harris revisited many themes from that first novel, the most central of which is “magical realism”. It’s not fantasy in the strict meaning of the word, but her stories have a thread of magic weaved through them that, whether you choose to embrace it or dismiss it, you will nonetheless savour it.

Narrated by a Fleurie ’62, a vintage bottle of wine from the year Jay Mackintosh was born, Blackberry Wine follows the story of Jay, a once-successful writer who hasn’t been able to write anything of value since his breakthrough novel fourteen years earlier. Jackapple Joe was the only bestseller he wrote and it was based on his childhood adventures during three summers he spent in the Yorkshire town of Kirby Monckton. Joe Cox, or Jackapple Joe, was the old eccentric man Jay had met during those three summers and who had disappeared abruptly at the end of them. He was the one who taught Jay about the simple magic around us in everyday things.

At the age of 37 and suffering from writer’s block, Jay, on a whim, buys an old farmhouse in the French country side hoping to escape from his life and his demons. With him he takes his typewriter and six bottles of wine, called “The Specials”, the only thing he salvaged after Joe disappeared.

As Jay works on rebuilding the old farmhouse he also rebuilds himself and begins to explore the village of Lansquenet and its people. Gradually, the sceptical residents of the village begin to accept him as one of their own and among them and in the bottles of The Specials he finds the magic and inspiration that help him pour out page after page of what could become his new novel.

Over the course of 400 pages, Joanne Harris takes us back and forth exploring Jay’s life today in his old house and the fictional French village of Lansquenet and his childhood in Yorkshire with Joe. Little by little the story comes together as Jay faces his demons and once again embraces the magic in his life.

Blackberry wine is one of those stories that you want to keep going back to. Through her prose, Joanne Harris achieves for you, the reader, the same simple magic her characters talk about so that when you finish Blackberry Wine you will feel elevated and satisfied without knowing why. “Layman’s alchemy. The magic of everyday things.”

Joanne Harris has a thing for food. She has written 16 novels and two cookbooks! Her three novels, Chocolat, Blackberry Wine and Three Quarters of The Orange, are known as The Food Trilogy. She is at her best when describing flavours and the different feelings and moods those flavours evoke in her characters as well as he readers.

A story about childhood nostalgia, a writer’s journey a French village and the secrets of its townsfolk, Blackberry Wine will not disappoint. A delicious read that will go down easily.

 

About me




Hi, my name is Mohammed Refaat and, chief among many things, I am a writer.

My passion for the written word has been brewing for years but I only started putting pen to paper (or typing on a word processor) a year ago. In addition to blogging, I am working on my first novel and I write short stories in my spare time.

My passion about the written word does not end their. I am also something of a book addict and hoarder! This also led to my writing a monthly book review column called BIBLIO in Society Magazine (The Gulf Times in Qatar)

I live in the Gulf state of Qatar with my wife and three-year-old daughter and when I'm not writing or reading, I work as a sales rep for a major pharmaceutical company.

I started this blog as a means to stay in touch with my readers and other book lovers, so if there is anything you would like to read about on this blog or if you would like to get in touch with me please use the form below. Also I would like to hear about suggestions you may have for my monthly book review.

Thank you very much!
Looking forward to hearing from you, dear reader.

M.Refaat


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Wednesday 5 February 2014

The Book Thief


     The Book Thief, among other things, is a tribute to the love of books and the power of words set on a backdrop of Nazi Germany. Oh, and it’s narrated by Death.

     Written by Australian author Markus Zusak and first published in 2005, The Book Thief has won numerous awards and was listed on the The New York Times Best Seller list for over 230 weeks.

     The book follows the story of Liesel Meminger, a German girl born in 1929 and, during the events of this story in World War II Germany; she is in her early teenage years. From the opening scenes we see that she is sent to live with a foster family and right before that she witnesses her younger brother’s death. That is when Death first meets Liesel.

     Having Death as a narrator made for a very interesting point of view, and I was impressed by how the author was keen on showing how Death only knew things that he witnessed himself and didn’t use Death as a narrator just to make it easy for him, the author, to describe things or give back stories.

     The story takes a close look at what it meant to be a German citizen, in Nazi Germany, while not actually accepting Nazi practices. But don’t let that deter you from picking up this book just because you are not interested in this particular angle of things because this story is about so much more. Nazi Germany is no more than a backdrop to tell a tale of human suffering and human endurance in the face of calamity and distress.

     Liesel forges a very strong bond with her foster father, Hans Hubermann, who, among many life lessons he bestows upon Liesel, teaches her to read. She starts stealing books to find solace and meaning among all the suffering she is living through. Cold, hunger and violence are things she witnesses regularly just as we complain about heat and humidity in the summer.

     Hans Hubermann, for me, was an even more interesting and touching character than Liesel. Up until the final pages that was! Because that was when Liesel’s story all came together in one fine, moving ending. Hans is a great father figure, and being a father myself, I was deeply touched by the scenes with him and Liesel together as he comforted her, played with her and just plain was being a father to her, and I am sure any father who reads this book will agree too.

     There is a medium-sized ensemble of characters, which doesn’t make it hard to follow, but not all of them are as developed and engaging as Liesel and Hans.

     The book pulls you into the story pretty quickly but close to half-way through it slows down. I must admit, at that point, I wasn’t liking the book much. But the language was easy and it read quickly so I kept going. By the final one hundred pages or so, I was rewarded for my perseverance. I read through them with no interruptions, blocking out all sounds around me. I smiled. My eyes welled up and, for a reason still unknown to me, I felt changed by this story of this little book thief. And people, when a book leaves you with a feeling that you are not the same person you were before reading it, then that is a good book.
     The Book Thief is available in paperback and runs a little over 550 pages, but the ease of the language will make it quite a quick read; it took me less than a week to finish.


     This book review first appeared in Society Magazine, distributed monthly with The Gulf Times in Doha, Qatar. Check out their PDF archive here.

Saturday 1 February 2014

Facebook Can Give Writers Hypertension! A Writer's Side of The Story


     I found this post on one of my friend's Facebook wall. It's in Arabic, but the gist is simple:
"This is what I feel like doing to the person who has nothing to do but pick out spelling and grammar mistakes in my posts"

     Long story short, that guy, picking out the mistakes, probably shares the same sentiment towards you!

     I for one know that when I pick out such mistakes, it is usually done with great self restraint, which is why I fear that too much Facebook might give me high blood pressure. Facebook among other things of course!

What was the weirdest editing you had to make for someone on social media networks??