Monday, April 30, 2012

Review of Vanity Fair


Vanity Fair is a novel without a hero or heroine. It's a novel about life, more especially life in 19th century England. It mocks the society of Britain and its follies.
We follow the lives of two main characters, two girls so different in character and approach, which makes this a fun time reading.
Rebecca and Amelia, we meet them for the first time when they are graduated from a finishing school and are headed back home. Amelia to a marginally wealthy family and Rebecca, who doesn't have a family of her own, follows her there and acts as her best friend and confidant.
The difference between the two is clear from the very start, where you have Amelia pining over a noble man not worthy her attention and Rebecca plotting to be the wife of Amelia's brother and so gaining the wealth she thinks she deserves.
Rebecca fails in her attempt and is send to be a governant of another wealthy family which she sends into ruin, merely to serve her own agenda. Two brothers want to marry her and she marries the younger one, Rawdon Crawley, thinking he being the favourite of their rich aunt, they'll inherite a large fortune upon her demise. She hadn't counted upon the stubborness of his aunt in denying their union and giving her fortune to Rawdon's brother.
In the end Rawdon sees his wife for the cunning fox she is and leaves her on her own. She regaines her bohemian nature and lives on the outskirts of decency trying hard to get back into the goodwill which ultimately lands her with Joseph Sedley, Amelia's brother.

On the other end of the story we have Amelia. After her family falls into ruin, she is cast out of society. George Osborne, the man she loves, has been forbidden by his father to continue his courtship and marry the poor girl. Upon insistence of his best friend, Captain Dobbin, he does marry Amelia and is being denied by his father. He joins the army against Napolean and gets killed in action.
Captain Dobbin, who fell for Amelia the first time he lay eyes on her, dedicated his life to make Amelia's life a little easier to bear.
Back with her parents in a small cottage in London, she sees her young son grow up and lives solely for him. When Dobbin reappears, she says she can't marry him out of respect of her dead husband. Captain Dobbin knowing George Osborne for the fellow he is, can't bear to tell the truth to Amelia and makes the best of the situation.
After a quarrel he decides he has wasted his life waiting on her and leaves. Amelia then realizes what a fool she has been and all ends well for them both.

I loved to read this book, and it's a novel of some size. It's a lovely story, that just grips you enough to keep on reading.
I symphatized with Amelia and Dobbin, couldn't wait what misschief Rebbeca was up to, when Captain Crawley would realize what a vixen his wife was. 

It took me some time to finish, but I blame that on poor time management. 
Invest some time and you'll be amazed how a novel without a heroine can get you to the edge of your seat. 
I truly tried to think of something negative to say about this book, but coming up blank I'm just saying that it isn't a Five star novel, for that I would need that hook that won't let me put the book down unless I really have to, but from me it's a solid FOUR star effort!

Personal rating: ****
Thickness: 912 pages
First published in 1848

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Review of The Laughing Corpse


First published in 1994.
Thickness: 301 pages
Read in dutch
Personal rating: 3 stars

In short
Harold Gaynor offers Anita Blake a million dollars to raise a 300-year-old zombie. Knowing it means a human sacrifice will be necessary, Anita turns him down. But when dead bodies start turning up, she realizes that someone else has raised Harold's zombie--and that the zombie is a killer. Anita pits her power against the zombie and the voodoo priestess who controls it. 

In The Laughing Corpse Anita will learn that there are some secrets better left buried-and some people better off dead... (www.goodreads.com)

My two cents 
I liked The Laughing corpse because it is what it is. Mindless reading fun. Books about vampires and other nasties are always easy to deliver and the Anita Blake series does just that for me. I've had problems with the twilight franchise because of the weak protagonist, but Anita is far from weak and does remind me of another great hero, Buffy Summers. Both emerged in vampires and both trying to cope with it.

In this volume Anita is trying to find a quite psychopathic zombie and it's animator. Meanwhile the master of the town is trying to lure her in as his human servant. On top of that a millionaire is moving to persuade her to  rise a zombie which will need a human sacrifice. A whole lot going on so the story line is never faltering and boring.

The title is a bit odd. A night club named the Laughing corpse is mentioned but plays an almost insignificant part. Also the zombie involved in lot of the story couldn't be described as laughing. But what's in a title? I liked the novel and I do recommend this to other vampire/zombie/ghoul lovers out there.

On to the next I'd say, although I'm going to read an Stephen King novel first!! :)

Check out these other reviews!!!