Shantaram-a-rama
Joy of joys! Somebody just brought in a copy of Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts… which is also on the Top 100 lists. Therefore I simply must read it. I will slowly make my way through it and let y’all know how I go. Its a doozie.
L’Yan
Filed under Awesome Aussie Authors, BOOKS, Books that deserve a look | Comment (0)Seen the Movie? Read the Book! (Maugham, The Painted Veil)
The most recent film of The Painted Veil came out in 2006, starring Edward Norton and Naomi Watts. The vibrant Kitty meets Walter, a quiet but intelligent young doctor. The two marry, but Kitty has an affair and Edward accepts a place as a sort of epidemiologist in China, which is in the middle of a cholera outbreak. The movie is quite stunning visually and the nasty, loveless relationship (at least one one side — as a Facebook user would say, it’s complicated) was reminiscient, at least for me, of another Maugham work, Of Human Bondage (that one was made into a charming and amusing film with Leslie Howard and Bette Davis).
The book is very… polite. Maugham is very much a product of his era (as all writers are), and in my (not terribly informed) opinion, that might be why his books are often dismissed as overwrought and sentimental. The latter is certainly true, but if you enjoyed the emotional interplay of the movie (which is really quite sophisticated at the same time as it is downright malicious), you’ll like the book.
Maugham’s plain prose was often criticised for being quite lowbrow, and this is easy to see, especially when you consider that in his time Modernism was first beginning to assert itself. It’s not hard to infer that Maugham was probably confused about his sexuality (for a public man of Maugham’s generation, being openly gay was impossible), and many of the relationships in his books are dysfunctional and overemotional.
If you liked the movie, I’d recommend that you give the book a go, especially if you like reading classics. Even with the subject matter there’s a sort of comforting quaintness in this book that you won’t get in many other writers of Maugham’s vintage.
-Agnes.
You can find this one, and some other Maugham (pronounced “mawm”, by the way) works, on our Classics shelf. We have whole shelf devoted to books that have been turned into films (and vice versa), too.
What do you think of Maugham?
Filed under BOOKS, Books that deserve a look | Comment (0)L’Yan’s continuing obsession with bad blurbs
I love terrible blurbs. Although they are often unhelpful when I am trying to categorise a book, they at least give me a good laugh.
How’s this for a phenomenally terrible blurb:
Shirley is a prostitute. She thinks she knows all her customers: the first-timers, the talkers, the lookers, the hard guys, even the occasional psychopath. But, Mr Fox is no ordinary customer: who ever heard of a punter who quoted T.S. Eliot or arranged meetings at the Tate? With their every encounter she becomes more and more confused. Is it just a scripted pick-up? Or perhaps some bizarre kind of God-game? Love-Act toys with the reader’s curiosity right to the very end. It could be a book about seduction and manipulation or truth and invention or desire and the end of desire. Or not. It is for the reader to discover where the conundrums of M.E. Austen’s taunting game can lead in a first novel of rare and compelling ingenuity.
Blurb from M. E. Austen’s Love Act, Black Swan, 1982
An entirely unhelpful blurb of “rare and compelling” stupidity. I love it.
Filed under BOOKS, Covers so bad we love 'em | Tags: bad blurb | Comment (1)The Dag’s Dictionary by Richard Glover
Excerpt from The Dag’s Dictionary by Richard Glover, published by ABC Books 2004:
Damn!nesia (damn nee’ zee ah) n.
An affliction by which you walk purposefully from one end of the building to the other, but forget mid-trip where you were going.
I suffer from this constantly.
JimmyD’s staff always get a laugh out of this book. We have a copy in stock right now for $11. But be warned: this book never sticks around very long!
I also like this one:
Liebry (ly’ bree) n.
A pile of unread but fashionable books placed on a coffee table in order to impress visitors.
L’Yan
This copy is now SOLD. Let us know if you are interested and we can putyou on our seeking list!
Filed under Awesome Aussie Authors, BOOKS, Books that deserve a look | Tags: Australia, dag, dictionary | Comment (1)Submit a review to JimmyDs and WIN.
Here at JimmyD’s we like to read, but we can’t read everything. Magda is a keen enthusiast of Scandinavian crime (and Fred Vargas, the French crimestress with the strange name), but my own (Agnes) favourite crime writers are Raymond Chandler and his contemporaries. L’yan knows a lot more about fantasy, but I for one wouldn’t know a David Eddings if it fell out of the sky and clocked me on the head (maybe I should do something about that, and I probably will, but after I investigate the hundred or so books and authors and series I mean to look into in the near future).
Here at JimmyD’s we like books, but we couldn’t possibly have time to read our way throuh every book in the shop, and there are people considerably more qualified to (say) tell us just what distinguishes a King Penguin from a boring old Penguin Classic.
Do YOU want to have your say? Submit a book review to JimmyD’s by commenting on one of our entries. Just tell us what you thought of a book in the comments, even — you don’t have to write something worthy of the New York Times Book Review, but of course if you can you’re more than welcome. The best book review (or comment) each and every month will receive a) our praise and b) a book voucher. Oh, and it’ll be displayed in pride of place in the window.
So what are you waiting for?!?! Get writing!
See the little speech bubble at the top right of the post, next to the title? Click that to leave a comment.
Filed under BOOKS | Tags: Your two cents worth - book reviews | Comment (1)Was dubious about Di…
Hi all! L’Yan here.
I would like to thank all the ladies who continually recommend Di Morrissey to me as a light read. Its taken me two and a half years but finally I have read some of her work.
Recently I have tried Monsoon, The Islands and The Reef. I wouldn’t usually have bothered reading more after Monsoon as I found the characters drab and the story dragging, but I warmed to The Islands and really have to admit that I quite liked The Reef.
Why these three titles? Why, because they are on the A&R/Dymocks top 100 of course! Otherwise how would I have narrowed it down? The blurbs really don’t tell you anything: if you compare blurbs, all the books seem to be the same. So I went with the recommendations. You really can’t trust a blurb.
What I disliked: her cliche male characters; some seemingly unnecessary chapters where nooothiiiing happens (I do not have the attention span for this!). What I loved: her strong female characters; her sense of the importance of the setting to both character and reader; and her descriptions of the landscapes (she is particularly emotive about Australia, which I love!).
I would recommend Di Morrissey to fans of Judy Nunn, Monica McInerney, current Kate Grenville and Geraldine Brooks. Aussie Aussie Aussie. Let me know if you can recommend anything else.
Filed under Awesome Aussie Authors, BOOKS | Tags: Aussie Author, Australia, di morrissey, landscape | Comment (0)Seeking: Mao’s last dancer by Li Cunxin
Do you have copy of this title that you want to sell or trade at JimmyDs Bookshop in Springwood. We have a customer waiting for a copy of this book right now.
If you have a copy that you are willing to recycle please phone on 4751 8010, email magda@jimmyds.com.au or bring it in to the shop. We buy and credit books in great condition
Covers so bad-Too many cooks

An all but ordinary cover except for the slain gingerbread man and the stained cooks knife. When the blurb on the back of a book includes words like; hot new romance, gorgeous homicide detective, pretentious boss and seamy sex scandals, you know that the book could have been written using a romance template no thesaurus required.
Magda
Seeking:Fearless Fourteen by Janet Evanovich
Do you have copy of this title that you want to sell or trade at JimmyDs Bookshop in Springwood. We have a customer waiting for a copy of this book right now.
If you have a copy that you are willing to recycle please phone on 4751 8010, email magda@jimmyds.com.au or bring it in to the shop. We buy and credit books in great condition
The Flying Emu and other stories by Sally Morgan

Twenty delightful stories for children about how the world began by the author of the wonderful autobiography ‘My Place’, where she told the story of her aboriginal ancestry and mother and her grandmothers experiences living in Western Australia.
This book is in lovely condition and the stories will delight young ones.