Howdy, folks. It's a new month, and thus time for a new book thread.
I just finished reading Farthing by Jo Walton, which takes place in an alternate history where England signed a peace treaty with Germany in 1941 and America never entered the war. The novel takes place in 1949, where the Reich is firmly in control of Europe, America is heavily isolationist, Japan is uncontested in Asia, and the man who brokered the peace treaty with Germany has been found murdered in a countryside estate a couple of hours outside of London. Stylistically, Farthing alternates between a first person diary by a woman who was at the estate and a third person proceedural viewpoint by a Scotland Yard detective who's trying to sort out whether the motivations for the murder were political, Semetic, or both. It was a great read and I'm pleased to see that Walton has written two sequels set in the same world, which I'm looking forward to tracking down in the near future.
I'm about to head off to lunch where I'll start reading The Secret Pilgrim by John LeCarre, a post-Cold War look back at the career of Le Carre's celebrated spy George Smiley. I'll report back once I have some of the book under my belt.
FnordChan
I just finished reading Farthing by Jo Walton, which takes place in an alternate history where England signed a peace treaty with Germany in 1941 and America never entered the war. The novel takes place in 1949, where the Reich is firmly in control of Europe, America is heavily isolationist, Japan is uncontested in Asia, and the man who brokered the peace treaty with Germany has been found murdered in a countryside estate a couple of hours outside of London. Stylistically, Farthing alternates between a first person diary by a woman who was at the estate and a third person proceedural viewpoint by a Scotland Yard detective who's trying to sort out whether the motivations for the murder were political, Semetic, or both. It was a great read and I'm pleased to see that Walton has written two sequels set in the same world, which I'm looking forward to tracking down in the near future.
I'm about to head off to lunch where I'll start reading The Secret Pilgrim by John LeCarre, a post-Cold War look back at the career of Le Carre's celebrated spy George Smiley. I'll report back once I have some of the book under my belt.
FnordChan