The Terrible Privacy Of Maxwell Sim

Book Name : The Terrible Privacy Of Maxwell Sim
Author : Jonathan Coe 


What is it about : The story followed Maxwell Sim, our hapless, awkward and confused protagonist as he entered into mid-life as a divorcee, department store post-sales manager with a deflated ego and the recipient of a poorly formed childhood. We witnessed Max stumbled upon pieces of his old life and made connections with a new one as he traveled from Australia to the south of England as a toothbrush sales person, ending up in a hospital with hypothermia in Scotland. When all was said and done, Max found truth, confidence, self-esteem and his true self.

Some thoughts after having read the book : As an avid reader of books of all genres, I quickly noted the multi-themed and the numerous suspiciously casual and incoherent walk-in roles as the hallmark of a writer conjuring up (cooking up) a good old spin with all the bits and pieces from his notebook of weird and wonderful facts which he came across from his daily life. That, of course, was not to trivialise his tremendously successful attempt to underlie all these colorful characters and events with strong, moving and human insights and undertone in the story of Max; the writer never wavered from the central plot of Max's (and every reader's) eternal quest of : who am I ? The ending was somewhat disappointing and I felt the author should have left it off with Max waving a gentle goodbye and saying a silent "thank you" to the Chinese woman and daughter as they disappeared in the Fairlight Beach (outside Sydney) sunset for having started his quest to find his true self.

Would I recommend this book to you : Apart from the rather "bolted-on" and to me, inappropriate anti-climax ending, this book would be one of my top 10 to take to a desert island, for a two weeks vacation. Laugh and cry along with Max over his life, friends and events which shaped him and at the same time, perhaps reflect upon our own lives and find the answer to that eternal question : do I know who I am ? Highly recommended !

Omega Point

Book Name : Omega Point
Author : Don Delillo


What is it about : The story jumped from an art museum showing the film "Psycho" with Norman Bates, Mother and Janet Leigh (because as stated in the book, nobody remembered the victim's name) in R-E-A-L-L-Y S-L-O-W motion as an art piece, to a retired secret war adviser being interviewed in a remote "ranch" somewhere in the American wilderness which ended with the mysterious disappearance of the adviser's daughter. The ending of the book returned back to the museum showing the Psycho film.

Some thoughts after having read the book : Mesmerising, sure ! There were beautiful sentences and sublime philosophies throughout the book; the disappearance of the daughter in the middle of "somewhere south of nowhere" was eerily haunting and the portrayal of a slow moving film "Psycho" (shower scenes and all) in a museum was mind-boggling. By the way, Omega Point was not some military target or operation but the self-styled description of a mental state about consciousness.

Would I recommend this book to you : Described by critics as "structurally satisfying", "demands slow and attentive reading and re-reading", "severely thoughtful" and "one of his least cryptic". So there, an arty book for the purists may be; hot non-stop actions seekers should look elsewhere.

Innocent Blood

Book Name : Innocent Blood
Author : P.D.James


What is it about : Philippa, the strong-willed and independent minded adopted daughter of the Palfreys, decided on her 18th birthday to track down her blood mother. With a bit of digging around, remember that this novel was written in the 1980s', so no short cutting by using Internet search engines, she discovered to her amazement that her blood mother Mary Ducton was the murderer in the infamous Ducton Murder where a teenage girl was raped and strangled. The story then switched to the father of the murdered teen, Scase, who became obsessed with revenge and decided to stalk the recently released Mary Ducton, with a knife handy. The story built up to a crescendo, almost till the last page, when all matters were settled.

Some thoughts after having read the book : The story line was painstakingly strung out, the details full and vivid, the conversations mostly plausible and the plot patiently built. Few vocabularies were repeated, so not only a crime novel at the peak of its art but also English essays writing at its best - the author had to be one of the Sunday Times Crossword Puzzles contributors. One point I found highly critical and dissatisfying was the cry for sensationalism in the Epilogue where Philippa confided in Scase of her "incest" with Maurice Palfrey, her adopted father; that was just an un-necessary red herring and kind of ended a great book with a warped and twisted tangle of mind - I just could not understand why did the author put that in ?

Would I recommend this book to you : It had been a long while since I last got glued to a great book and totally immersed in the story and the day to day affairs of the stalker, the stalked and the by-standers and the complexity in the emotional upheaval and the study in human relationship of trust, deception and the tricks of memory. So whether you read the book for its excellent English, methodical story plotting or insights into the complex human psychology, I would greatly recommend this book.