Life Is Sweet At Kenilworth Books

April 23rd, 2010

Kenilworth Books, is to offer its customers an evening with a delicious difference this summer.

 Sponsored by Galaxy chocolate, the bookshop will be hosting a ‘Girls Night In’. Chocoholics are invited to satisfy their taste with home-made truffles and wine, test their knowledge on a chocolate-themed quiz and hear an introductory talk on the history of chocolate from local historian and Kenilworth Books team-member, Tamsin Rosewell.

 If that doesn’t tickle their taste buds enough, they will also get 10% of all full-price merchandise in the shop during the evening.

 Kenilworth Books’ owner, Frances Smith said:

‘Perhaps our customers are more used to an evening’s conversation with an author, but we thought this was a fun opportunity not to be missed. Tamsin will be offering us an insight into the complex and often surprising history of chocolate. She has also prepared for us a chocolate quiz which will entertain even the most knowledgeable of our customers.

 ‘This is going to be a great evening for anyone interested in history – or just for anyone who likes chocolate!’

 The event will take place at 7.00pm on Thursday 1st July at the Kenilworth Bookshop in Talisman Square. Tickets to the event will cost ₤2.50 and can be purchased from Kenilworth Books. Tickets are limited, so book early.

Warwick Books Book Group

April 13th, 2010

wolf

On 19th April 2010 we met to discuss “Wolf Hall” by Hilary Mantel.  This book won the 2009 Man Booker prize for literature and has had rave reviews, not least from Louise Blake of Kenilworth Books who thinks it is among the best books she has read.

The book tells the story of the rise of Thomas Cromwell in the court of Henry VIII.  Born the son of a cruel and often drunken blacksmith, Thomas is loved by the other members of his family, particularly his sister Kat and her husband Morgan Williams, and with Morgan Williams’ help, he escapes his closed in life.  Using his sharp intelligence, ear for language and skill with numbers, Cromwell becomes the favourite of Cardinal Wolsey.  Showing  a good understanding of politics, he is able to sidestep trouble when it appears on the horizon without losing his credibility.  He wins favour with both King Henry and Anne Boleyn, seeing the weaknesses of both without losing sight of their determination to get their own way  Although a master of political intrigue and not above using bullying tactics, the Thomas Cromwell of Mantel’s book remains a likeable and basically honest character, showing both love and loyalty to his friends.

The group were very divided about the book.  It is very long and several members of the group were unable to finish it.  Mantel’s style was disliked by some of the group.  Conversation and also reported speech are often written without conventional punctuation.  This makes it hard to follow who is speaking, who is merely thinking and who is replying.  This confusion is not helped by the number of characters called Thomas.  For others, this style, once it became familiar, added speed and excitement to the text and the story fairly races along.  For lovers of historical novels, the book covers the familiar territory of Tudor times in a novel way, from the point of view of a character who has often been almost overlooked by the writers of school textbooks.

 Those of us who enjoyed the book will recommend it to their friends, and indeed it is among the best sellers in both Warwick Books and Kenilworth Books.

 Our next meeting is on Wednesday 19th may at The Punchbowl pub in Warwick.  We are reading “Three cups of Tea” by Greg Mortenson.

Independent Bookseller of The Year Awards

March 24th, 2010

Independent Bookseller of The Year Awards

We are really pleased that we have been shortlisted for the Gardners Independent Bookseller of the Year Award for the Midlands & Wales region. The contenders in our region are

1 Scarthin Books
2 Jarrold’s Book Department
3 Warwick Books
4 Blandford Books
5 The Chepstow Bookshop
6 Mostly Books

The winner will compete against the other regional winners for the prestigious title  ’Bookseller of The Year’. It’s nice to be shortlisted and we’ll tell you if we get any further!

Warwick Books Book Group

March 23rd, 2010

We met at the Punchbowl pub on Wednesday 24th March.  We had read, “Thursday Night Widows” by Claudia Pineiro.  This was the third book in our selection of non-British Crime writers.  Calling this a crime novel is perhaps slightly misleading – a mystery novel would probably describe it better.

 Life in “The Heights”, a gated community, country club and golf course, just outside Buenos Aires, is totally artificial.  The people who buy the select houses there have to be financially successful and wanting to lead a Hollywood style existence.  Once they have purchased a property, any new arrivals gradually lose touch with their previous lives and even their families.  They become almost oblivious to the problems and abject poverty of the world just outside their doors.  Entrance into the heights is via electronic gates, or past armed security guards.  Everything is artifice.  Even the boundaries between the properties are hedges made to look as if they have been there for generations, and the demarcation between property gardens and the golf course is marked only by a change of grass type.

 The book opens with a strange incident in which three men who frequently meet together on Thursday nights are found dead at the bottom of the pool belonging to “El Tano”.  El Tano is a charismatic and powerful man who lives in one of the best houses in the community.  Usually, while the men meet, their “Thursday Night Widows” also do things together – but not always and not on this occasion.

 The book then moves back in time and describes the events leading up to the fateful night from the point of view of four wives – the three whose husbands have drowned and a fourth whose husband came home early from the gathering.

 Pineiro describes the claustrophobic atmosphere within the community, exposing it for its shallowness, artifice and almost prison-like status.  There has been a backlash in Argentina against such communities. A visiting Spanish architect, Jordi Borja who teaches urban planning at the University of Barcelona criticized gated communities calling them, “the negation of cities”.  Claudia Pineiro is obviously among these critics, and shows, with this book, that the effect of such communities have on their members cannot necessarily be shaken off even when the inhabitants leave and return to “normal” life in the city outside.

 Most members enjoyed this book more than “A Paris Enigma” except Maureen, who had enjoyed the tangled web and complexity of that one. It was an easy read and interesting, especially for those of us who knew little or nothing about these communities. We liked the characters, particularly the teenage children who are more or less ignored by their parents because of the “safety” of their environment.  We would recommend it as a light, holiday read

 Our next meeting is to be on Wednesday 21st April at 6.00pm at the Punchbowl.  We are reading the prizewinning, “Wolf Hall” by Hilary Mantel. Set in England in the 1520s, Henry VIII is on the throne but has no heir; Cardinal Wolsey is his chief advisor; Thomas Cromwell is Wolsey’s clerk. Cromwell is a briber and a bully, an expert at manipulating people and events, and his ruthless ambition will affect politics far and wide. ‘Mantel’s ability to pick out vivid scenes from sources and give them life within her fiction is quite exceptional’ (London Review Of Books). We are really looking forward to this one!  (By the way, Frances will probably not be at the meeting, but is definitely reading the book).

The Diagram Prize For The Oddest Title of The Year

March 18th, 2010

The Diagram Prize For The Oddest Title of The Year

Collectible Spoons
of the 3rd Reich

James A Yannes
Afterthoughts of a
Worm Hunter

D.W.T. Crompton
Governing Lethal Behavior in
Autonomous Robots

Ronald C. Arkin
The Changing World
of Inflammatory Bowel
Disease

Ellen Scherl,
Marla Dubinsky
Crocheting Adventures with Hyperbolic Planes
Daina Taimina
What Kind of Bean Is
This Chihuahua?

Tara Jansen-Meyer
 

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