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Reviews & Recommendations

6 Degrees of Separation: From Room to The Toymaker

Melinda Tognini April 1, 2017 7 Comments
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Welcome back to Six Degrees of Separation, the bookish meme where Kate from booksaremyfavouriteandbest nominates the title of a book, and we link it to six others in whatever random ways they seem to connect.  Each person’s chain will look different, and that’s half the fun – so join in and see where your links lead.

This month’s starting book is Room by Emma Donoghue, a book that’s been made into a motion picture, and one I’m not sure I can bring myself to read, because of its subject matter.

According to Goodreads, Room seems to have polarised readers, with reviewers either loving it (4 or 5 stars) or loathing it (1 star). Some felt the 5-year-old narrator was genius and others felt the voice couldn’t be sustained.

Lost and Found by Brooke Davis also has a naive narrator, 7-year-old Millie, as well as a cast of other quirky characters I grew to love.

Brooke Davis recently teamed up with Sam Carmody, author of The Windy Season, to talk about their books and writing processes. The two were actually housemates while they wrote these books.

The Windy Season is set in a West Australian fishing town, and was compared to Tim Winton’s Breath in one review; however, I immediately though of one of Winton’s other books, Dirt Music, which is also partly set in a fishing town on WA’s coast.

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Tim Winton has a lecture theatre named in his honour at Curtin University, as does Elizabeth Jolley, who is the subject of one essay in Winton’s latest book, The Boy Behind the Curtain.

My link to The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne is probably evident. This book is set in Berlin in 1942 at the height of man’s inhumanity to man – and we’re back to naive narrators who polarise readers, with either 1 or 4 stars in reviews, and very little in between.

Like The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, Liam Pieper’s novel, The Toymaker has a story line linked to the Holocaust, although it’s partly set decades later in Australia, and contains a twist I didn’t see coming.

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I started with a book dealing with traumatic events and naive narrators, moved to life on the West Australian coast and ended up dealing with the Holocaust, an horrific period in history, and a demonstration the terrible potential for destroying our fellow human beings.

Over to You

I’d love to know where Six Degrees of Separation leads you, so join in by including your chain in the comments, or post on your own blog. Hopefully you’ll end up somewhere more uplifting than my chain!

Next month (6 May 2017), the chain will begin with The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas.

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Previous 2017 Perth Writers Festival Wrap Up
Next Australians at War: Recommended Reading (Non-Fiction)
Melinda Tognini

story-gatherer & mentor

Related Posts
6 Degrees of Separation: From The Book of Form and Emptiness to Jack’s Island August 6, 2022
On My Bedside Table: July 2022 Roundup July 26, 2022
6 Degrees of Separation: From Wintering to Homecoming July 5, 2022

7 Comments

  1. raehilhorst says:
    April 1, 2017 at 12:33 pm

    Hi Melinda, I just placed the Boy in the Striped Pyjamas on hold at the library. I loved Brooke’s book and The Toy Maker. Afraid I am not a fan of Tim Winton’s x

    Reply
    1. Melinda Tognini says:
      April 1, 2017 at 10:23 pm

      Hi Rae, I highly recommend not reading the reviews of The Boy in the Striped Pajamas … let yourself make up your own mind without the influence of others – and then let me know, as I’d love to chat about it.

      Reply
  2. Kate W says:
    April 2, 2017 at 2:55 pm

    Argh! So many thoughts about your chain I could write a whole blog post in response 😀

    I found Room to be both gut-wrenching and wonderful at the same time. Either way, it was memorable and while I wouldn’t give it five-stars, I certainly found the narrator compelling.

    Alas, not so much with Lost & Found – a book I thought I’d love but actually found quite distressing…

    I ‘enjoyed’ The Boy in the Striped PJs – obviously enjoyed is the wrong word, but I’m sure you know what I mean. Years after reading it, elements of the story stay with me. Unfortunately I lent my hardcover copy to someone (notable because it had a plain cover and no blurb, so you didn’t really know what it was about) and I never got it back. All of the hard copies now have a blurb…

    I read Pieper’s memoir, so keen to see what he does with fiction.

    Reply
  3. Brona says:
    April 2, 2017 at 4:34 pm

    We both managed to include Dirt Music in our chains this month 🙂
    http://bronasbooks.blogspot.com.au/2017/04/6degrees-april-2017.html

    Reply
    1. Melinda Tognini says:
      April 2, 2017 at 8:38 pm

      That’s unusual for us to have the same book appear – we ended on very different notes though, didn’t we?! I thoroughly enjoy seeing the different directions each chain lead. Thanks for checking my out, and for leaving your link (which I would have found eventually, and although I still have trouble leaving a comment, know that I read and enjoy yours regularly).

      Reply
  4. Kathryn Gossow says:
    April 4, 2017 at 4:57 am

    I almost put the Boy in the Striped Pajamas but went in a different direction!

    Reply
    1. Melinda Tognini says:
      April 4, 2017 at 5:41 am

      I wonder if that would be considered the Sliding Doors effect within Six Degrees of Separation?

      Reply

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    Thanks, Davida! Heading over to check out your chain now (I'm a bit late this month).
    In 6 Degrees of Separation: From Wintering to Homecoming
    Lovely chain here. I don't know any of these books.
    In 6 Degrees of Separation: From Wintering to Homecoming
    I would love to know what you think once you have finished them - I always love seeing your perspective on the books you read x
    In 6 Degrees of Separation: From Sorrow and Bliss to Lost and Found

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    • 6 Degrees of Separation: From Wintering to Homecoming
    • One-Word Creative Prompts #2
    • 6 Degrees of Separation: From Sorrow and Bliss to Lost and Found

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