måndag 31 december 2018

Time Forgets... Farewell 2018



‘Funny, outrageous, touching, intimate, gorgeous’ ...



                                                           Yiruma  Time Forgets



Best Books of 2018  according The Guardian




The beautiful prose grabs you while the story makes you sad, optimistic, moved and intrigued from beginning to end. And it has a great ending. It tackled a serious subject with wit, mirth and intelligence. A real page turner without being too taxing and heavy. Easy to read and follow the story without the need for a dictionary by your side. A simple story with a solid message behind.    
                             





Quietly beautiful. No book has ever told such a simple story in such a way, following the existence of the two main characters as they roll in and out of each other’s lives like waves on a beach.
                                                    




”The Healing Next Time” by Roy McFarlane

Roy McFarlane’s The Healing Next Time (Nine Arches) begins with an epigraph from James Baldwin’s interrogation of American racism in The Fire Next Time: “God gave Noah the Rainbow sign, no more water but the fire next time.” McFarlane’s “New Millennium Journal” convincingly connects race and class violence to global capitalism and the war on terror. He asks what makes healing possible when “Noah’s Ark of community cohesion / wasn’t made for the fire that was to burn.”
                           




Fire and Fury by Michael Wollf

“It’s worse than you imagine. An idiot surrounded by clowns.” It says much for 2018 that those words could describe any number of political scenarios but they’re actually attributed to a leaked memo about Donald Trump, supposedly representing the views of his disillusioned then economic adviser Gary Cohn and quoted in Michael Wolff’s bestselling book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House (Little, Brown). The unfolding car crash inside the White House has proved fertile ground for publishing, if nothing else, with Wolff’s partisan but highly readable account being followed this autumn by Bob Woodward’s Fear: Trump in the White House. The latter is so scrupulous about avoiding editorial judgments and letting the facts speak for themselves that it reads less like a book than like the notes for one, consisting of sequences of detailed reporting barely joined by a narrative. But both paint a similarly appalling picture of a dangerously thin-skinned man with the concentration span of a toddler, whose own aides – and in Wolff’s reading particularly, own family – still can’t quite believe he managed to get elected. 

                                    


”Melmoth” by Sarah Perry

This story is very well told. Astonishingly dark, rich storytelling, exquisitely balanced between gothic shocks and emotional truthExquisitely written, and gripping until the very last page, this is masterpiece of moral complexity, asking us profound questions about mercy, redemption, and how to make the best of our conflicted World.
                                                     






... because i'm just a soul whose intentions are good



                                                                              ... På återseende



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TnIdAPGrKmc
                                                                        Yiruma       Farewell


 Med aldrig sinande vänlighet





Ðeno

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