Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford

A New York Times bestseller!

Henry Lee is still mourning the death of his wife when he learns that the belongings of Japanese Americans hidden in the basement of Seattle’s Panama Hotel for decades have been discovered. Henry is drawn to the basement, and what he’s searching for there opens a door he thought he had closed forever. The story switches back and forth between 1986 and the 1940s, when a 12-year-old Henry attending an American school (he’s “scholarshipping” as his father likes to say) meets another international student working in the school kitchen. Keiko is Japanese American, the enemy according to Henry’s father, but the two become best friends before her family is imprisoned in one of the relocation camps.

This book does a phenomenal job exploring the history and attitudes of this time period, and Ford’s portrayal of Seattle’s ethnic neighborhoods is amazing. But really, the thing that pulled me into this novel the most was the richness of the relationships — Henry and Keiko, Henry and his father, Henry’s mother and his father, and Henry and his own son. HOTEL ON THE CORNER OF BITTER AND SWEET looks at the best and worst of human relationships, the way we regard others, the way we find ourselves reenacting our relationships with our parents with our own children, the choices we make along the way. Mostly, though, this book reminds us that there is always room — and time — for forgiveness and redemption.

Available in BLRC: F FOR

Belle of the Desert by Alan Gold

Editors Choice – Historical Novel Society.

In 1888, 20-year-old Gertrude Bell is presented to Queen Victoria.  Gertrude is introduced to the Middle East two years later where she falls in love with the Third Secretary, who proposes to her. Since he’s far below her family’s financial status, her father withholds his consent. Gertrude returns home brokenhearted.

Gertrude travels extensively, learns Arabic, publishes several books, and becomes an expert on Middle East affairs. She meets T.E. Lawrence, who impresses her with his knowledge of Arabia. At the start of WWI, she is appointed to the Arab Bureau in Cairo and proposes a scheme to unite the various Arab tribes to fight on the British side against the Ottomans.

While this is a historical novel, Gold has done a brilliant job in setting up the plot and in covering both the Arab and Western points of view. Readers will hasten to learn whether Gertrude and Lawrence will be successful in their mission. And will Gertrude’s dream of uniting the Arab tribes to fight on the British side come true? Also, what happens at the end of WWI? The obstacles and jeers that Gertrude faced from the chauvinistic officers of that era, and her appropriate responses, are shown vividly. A superb account of a historical woman.

Avaialble in BLRC: F GOL

If You’re Reading This, I’m Already Dead by Andrew Nicoll

Otto Witte is an old man. The Allies are raining bombs on his city and, having narrowly escaped death, he has come home to his little caravan to drink what remains of his coffee (dust) and wait for the inevitable. Convinced that he will not see the sunrise, he decides to write the story of his life for the poor soul who finds what’s left of him come the morning.

And it’s quite a story. Years earlier, when he was in either Buda or Pest, working in the circus, a dear friend showed him a newspaper article: Albania was searching for a long-lost Turkish prince to be the new king. The Turkish prince was the image of Otto…

A plan was formed; adventure, disaster, love and sheer, unabashed hope followed.

If You’re Reading This, I’m Already Dead is a joy to read; accomplished and full of the warmth, honesty and lightness of touch for which Andrew Nicoll is known and loved.

Dark Palace by Frank Moorhouse

“Dark Palace” is Frank Moorhouse’s sequel to “Grand Days.” At the beginning of World War II, the League of Nations collapses, throwing the lives of its staff into limbo. Edith Campbell Berry, newly married to journalist Robert Dole, likewise finds herself unmoored as her marriage collapses, her future as a diplomatic becomes unsure, her alcholism becomes pronounced, and her former lover, Ambrose Westwood, returns into her life.

The book becomes a kind of journey into the middle part of a person’s life: the book is an even greater series of vignettes than “Grand Days” reflecting Edith’s lack of a personal storyline, if one can put it that way. She travels back to her home in Australia to visit family and friends, but finds herself unable to reintigrate there. The book ends in San Francisco at the opening ceremony of the new United Nations–an organization that pointedly excluded, for political reasons, the involvement of former League of Nations employees.

This novel is a very profound study of a life temporarily without direction. A brilliant, heartbreaking book.

 

The Red House by Mark Haddon

An dazzlingly inventive novel about modern family, from the author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time.

Richard, a wealthy doctor, invites his estranged sister Angela and her family to join his for a week at a vacation home in the English countryside. Richard has just re-married and inherited a willful stepdaughter in the process; Angela has a feckless husband and three children who sometimes seem alien to her. The stage is set for seven days of resentment and guilt, a staple of family gatherings the world over.
The Red House is a literary tour-de-force that illuminates the puzzle of family in a profoundly empathetic manner — a novel sure to entrance the millions of readers of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.

Available in BLRC: F HAD