Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Monday, 27 January 2014

The Goldfinch and The Cuckoo's Calling

Aside from both having birds in the title, Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch and Robert Gailbraith's The Cuckoo's Calling have other similarities, so I've therefore decided to lump my review of them together.

The plot in a sentence:
Donna Tarrt, The Goldfinch: On the cusp of adulthood, Theo Decker loses his mother, but gains a painting by  the Dutch master, Carel Fabritius.   
Robert Gailbraith, The Cuckoo's Calling: When famous supermodel Lulu Laundry suddenly dies, private detective and former solider, Cormonron Strike is hired by the model's grieving brother to investigate her death.


Both novels were highly anticipated, The Goldfinch is Tartt's first book in 11 years, and Gailbraith is a pseudonym for J.K Rowling (possibly worst kept secret ever). So the first question is did they live up to hype? In a word, yes.

Although Donna Tartt's bibliography is small, but they are all contemporary classics, and beautifully written. The Goldfinch is no exception, populated by Tartt's usual cast of intellectual eccentrics and charming wastrels.   The Cuckoo's Calling is a more confident and accomplished novel than Rowling's first post-Harry offering, The Casual Vacancy, writing under an alias was obviously liberating.  Crime thrillers are also a genre that suits J.Ks style and ability write tightly plotted narratives. The characters seemed more believable than in The Casual Vacancy, were they occasionally tipped into charactertures.  Cormonran Strike, despite is ludicrous name, is a likeable character, who offers competition to other fictional maverick  detective such as Lee Child's Jack Reacher.   

If you are thinking of buying either of these novels, I'd recommend you purchase the ebook version. As both are long and heavy. Plus I think they are both currently cheaper to buy on amazon kindle, I bought mine for £1.99, though I suspect the price has now gone up. 

If you are trying to chose between the two, I think The Goldfinch is the better and more memorable read. I've read some unfavourable reviews of The Goldfinch on amazon (and some good ones) and feel I should defend the book. Yes, it is long, sometimes slow and Tartt will sometimes use pages and pages of description to arrive at a singular point , but that's what I loved about the book. You can see the care and consideration, the story revolves around the theft of a painting and Donna Tarrt uses words as brush strokes to craft a masterpiece of storytelling. She writes how I wish I could. The Goldfinch is one of those book that's more about the journey than the destination, perfect for curling up and reading at a leisurely pace. A novel that should be read, savoured and enjoyed rather that hurried through on the commute when your mind is elsewhere. If you're after something less challenging and faster paced, give The Cuckoo's Calling a chance instead. 
Carel Fabritius, The Goldfinch (picture source

  

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Sylvia Pankhurst at the Tate Britain

London, Visit, UK, art gallery, exhibition, Tate Britain, Vauxhall, scaffolding, repair,  Millbank, free, day trip, building, s
The Tate Britain- it's undergoing a bit of a facelift at the moment. 
I am a proudly proclaimed feminist, but I wasn't aware that as well as being a major campaigner for women's rights, Sylvia Pankhurst was also an artist. Running until March 2014, the Tate Britain has a free exhibition on Sylvia Pankhurst's work.

Pankhurst's art mainly focused on the lives of working-class women, and was a usefully propaganda tool in arguing that women's working conditions and pay should be improved.

bookandcuppa, book and a cuppa, book&cuppa,, book and a cuppa, Sylvia Pankhurst art, photograph, feminist, working woman, tate Britain, UK, London, visit, exhibition
Sylvia Pankhurst- domestic servants 
 Pankhurst also designed badges, banners and flyers for the WSPU, often incorporating the 'angel of freedom'. Also on display is the various badges that would be awarded to suffragettes, for membership or for stays in the notorious Holloway prison.

feminist, propaganda, suffragette, tea set, teacup, green and purple, angel of freedom, exhibition, Sylvia Pankhurst, women's rights, vintage, Tate Britain, London, day trip, visit
suffragette tea set,  with the 'angel of freedom' in the WSPU colours of green and purple  
If you do pop in to have a look around the gallery and the exhibition, I also recommend you have a walk down by the river when your done, London really is the best place just to stroll around.

London, Vauxhall bridge, Thames, MI6 headquarters, walk, Tate Britain, Millbank, visit, tourist, UK
Vauxhall bridge and MI6 headquarters