book: number9dream
author: David Mitchell
where: by the pool (still bragging)
who: Borrowed (by dad from the library)
This was my favourite book I read this trip (actually this whole vacation). Cloud atlas may be technically more impressive, but this story was unbelievable. I felt annoyed every time my stomach rumbled, because it meant I had to actually put this book down and focus on something else. It was the kind of book you didn't want to end ever. It was just so engaging and wonderfully written i never wanted this book to end but at the same time you can't wait to see how Mitchell is going to wrap all this up.
The basic premise is a young man trying to find his father, but where this journey takes him is unbelievable and unexpected. Eiji (the protagonist) manages to get into serious (and sometimes hilarious) hijinks. What impresses me most about mitchell is his ability to use literary devices I previously found trite, but he makes them work. In this case, he creates dream sequences and alternate imaginings of situations (poor phrasing, sorry about that) something that, up until now, I had a tendency to dislike (dream sequences less so. they work more frequently). I think i just might like everything that Mitchell does.
I feel like i don't even have that much to say about this book because I just loved it.
xoxo
ellebee
author: David Mitchell
where: by the pool (still bragging)
who: Borrowed (by dad from the library)
This was my favourite book I read this trip (actually this whole vacation). Cloud atlas may be technically more impressive, but this story was unbelievable. I felt annoyed every time my stomach rumbled, because it meant I had to actually put this book down and focus on something else. It was the kind of book you didn't want to end ever. It was just so engaging and wonderfully written i never wanted this book to end but at the same time you can't wait to see how Mitchell is going to wrap all this up.
The basic premise is a young man trying to find his father, but where this journey takes him is unbelievable and unexpected. Eiji (the protagonist) manages to get into serious (and sometimes hilarious) hijinks. What impresses me most about mitchell is his ability to use literary devices I previously found trite, but he makes them work. In this case, he creates dream sequences and alternate imaginings of situations (poor phrasing, sorry about that) something that, up until now, I had a tendency to dislike (dream sequences less so. they work more frequently). I think i just might like everything that Mitchell does.
I feel like i don't even have that much to say about this book because I just loved it.
xoxo
ellebee
