2 April 2014

30 Day Book Challenge - Day 02

Make sure to pop over to Erin's blog and join in too.

Day 02 - A Book That You've Read More Than 3 Times

The Secret Garden

Now this is a tricky one as I generally don't re-read books. There is only one book I can think of that I've read more than once which is The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett. It is a  magical tale of two children who become unlikely friends and discover a secret garden within the grounds of their home together. I first read this book as a child of 11 or 12 and recently re-read it and discovered so many things I had forgotten and an entire new level of intrigue that I hadn't found as a child.

30 Day Book Challenge - Day 01

While scrolling through my twitter feed the other day I noticed that Erin, from Erin's Choice, was running a 30 Day Book Challenge this April and thought it sounded brilliant! There is a question or topic, all book related, posted each day, that I'll be blogging about. Make sure to pop over to Erin's blog and join in too.

Day 01 - The Best Book You Read Last Year

We Need to Talk About Kevin

I read a lot of good books last year, Touching the Void by Joe Simpson, Life of Pi by Yann Martel, Monument 14 by Emmy Laybourne and The Dead Heart by Douglas Kennedy all ranked very high but the stand out book from my 2013 reads has to be We Need To Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver.

As a Parent this book scared the heck out of me! You follow Kevin, a mass murderer who killed 9 people at his school just before his 16th Birthday, and his Mother all the way from before he was conceived, through his birth, childhood and adolescence right up to his committing of the crime and his prison time. The story follows this Mother and Son's awkward relationship and is written through the eyes of Kevin's Mother in letter's that she writes addressed to Franklin, Kevin's Father.

It was a brilliantly written book that made me return to the 'nature vs nurture' debate and question whether people can be inherently evil or if it's something that they learn. It also made me query the Mother's viewpoint; was Kevin really as she described and only she saw the real him? Or was it that she always saw, and brought out, the worst in him?