D’you reckon it’s pronounced Niff-en-EGG-er or Niff-eng-er?
There are only so many times you can ignore a book recommendation, especially when something you had dismissed as a schmaltzy romance is recommended by a dude who writes stories about zombies. So, adding Adam Marek to the list of people who had recommended The Time Traveler’s Wife finally tipped me over the edge. Plus, with a film version currently in cinemas, there was limited time left before somebody unwittingly spoilt it for me.


Audrey Niffenegger - The Time Traveler’s Wife
Publication date: 2005
Publisher: Vintage
Price then: £6.99
Price now: a copy of No Logo by Naomi Klein
Purchased from: swapped via Read It Swap It

From the synopsis: “The extraordinary love story of Clare and Henry, who met when Clare was six and Henry was thirty-six, and were married when Clare was twenty-two and Henry thirty.”

Judging by the time I have spent with my head in its pages in recent days, I should have adored The Time Traveler’s Wife and, in many respects, I did. I cared about the characters’ fates from the very start, their situation was somehow believable despite clearly being utter nonsense, and the novel was structured so that I just had to keep reading. Niffenegger is a gifted storyteller, without her prose being distracting in any way. With some of my favourite authors, I find myself looking away from their books after a particularly astute phrase or paragraph and forgetting about the story while I think about how amazing they are. With this book, it was all about Henry and Clare and their story which, ultimately, is a schmaltzy romance.

No matter how smoothly the story rattled forward, and how much I cared about the outcome, once I’d finished it I couldn’t help thinking that it all seemed just a little bit contrived. SPOILER ALERT. When Henry dies, it’s in the arms of his wife as their friends and family countdown to the New Year, rather than one day when he was doing the dishes. When he meets his daughter in the future one time, her teacher allows her to leave her school excursion to spend time with him, even though he’s been dead for five years and could well be a child rapist. For every person who won’t believe in time travel until they see conclusive proof, there are two others who just kinda go “oh right, I get it.” And the bit at the end where Clare is 82 and is embraced by her long-dead husband? I’m sorry, but Niffenegger totally put that shit in to add value to the film rights.

That said, I haven’t really been able to put it down.

--Tagged under: audrey niffenegger--

Today’s life lesson: there is always somebody wanting to read about Britpop

It’s inevitable that we occasionally make bad choices in life. Sometimes these involve calorie intake, sometimes they are to do with credit cards, or tattoos; other times you wish you hadn’t decided to have sex on a futon without adequate cushioning for the lower vertebrae. Every so often, you might make a bad choice when browsing in a bookshop and buy something featuring dragons purely because it was included in the 3 for 2 offer.

Do not panic!

You can totally offload all your shit at Read It Swap It, a site which allows you to exchange second-hand books with readers across the UK. (BookMooch is a similar service.)

I joined up a few weeks ago, and promptly listed a few of my more unloved books, including a collection of Seamus Heaney poems that was the catalyst to my dropping out of my English degree in 2004, and a quasi-political look at the 1990’s Britpop phenomenon. As I was listing them (you do it by ISBN, so it’s super-quick), I was like ‘who the fuck is still interested in this crap?’ but lo, within twenty-four hours I’d had a handful of requests. There are some crazy people out there.

When one of your books is requested by a user, you log in to browse through their list of available titles, and once you confirm a choice you both trot happily off the the Post Office and send your books using second-class post. Obviously, if everything they’ve got on offer is a bunch of crap, there is a handy ‘bunch of crap’ button that you are free to click. As a new user, you are limited to the number of requests you can make, but then, it’s taken me about a week to finish the first chapter of Money by Martin Amis, so it’s not like there are enough hours in the day anyway.

So, since joining up in mid-June, I’ve received these little beauties:



Douglas Coupland - Microserfs (1996)

This is about staff at Microsoft, and the back cover has the synopsis and blurb in little gray windows. It’s like when you watch Hackers and all their graphics are from like, the beginning of time. Before computer dudes learned how to put rounded corners on shit anyways.

Herman Hesse - Gertrude (1973)

I’ve never read any Hesse before, and I thought this would be as good a place as any to start, especially since the name Gertrude always makes me think of gooseberries, and I really like gooseberries.

Nick Hornby - How To Be Good (2001)

There is a copy of this book in every second-hand bookshop in every town in the world. I hope this is not a bad sign, but I could only resist it for so long.

Laurie Lee - Cider With Rosie (1964)

Can it possibly be as good as Cider With Roadies by Stuart Maconie?

Somerset Maugham - The Moon and Sixpence (1961)

This baby’s got a really pungent booksmell. Also, Somerset is a really cool name.

Iris Murdoch - The Unicorn (1970)

I read The Sea, The Sea by Iris Murdoch and really enjoyed it, so I reckon this is a pretty safe bet. There Bond-girl-with-binoculars cover image may yet be a candidate for The Thumb Galleries.

Audrey Niffenegger - The Time Traveler’s Wife (2005)

I’ve lost count of the number of times this book has been recommended to me.

Ali Smith - Girl Meets Boy (2007)

This is a reworking of some story about a dude called Ovid, but it’s by Ali Smith so it could feasibly be a reworking of a crate of steaming dog shit and it would still be amazing.

--Tagged under: read it swap it--

--Tagged under: ali smith--

--Tagged under: iris murdoch--

--Tagged under: somerset maugham--

--Tagged under: laurie lee--

--Tagged under: nick hornby--

--Tagged under: herman hesse--

--Tagged under: douglas coupland--

--Tagged under: audrey niffenegger--

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