Tag: Choice

Ruth Ware – The Lying Game | Review

Title: The Lying Game

Author: Ruth Ware

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 458

Rating 4/5

 

The Lying Game is probably my favourite of Ruth Ware’s books, but perhaps that’s just because I’ve read a few of them now and so I’ve started to develop a taste for her. It could also be that this is her most recent, which I believe is the case, although I could also be wrong.

Then there’s the fact that this doesn’t really feel like a thriller, even though that’s technically what this is. That’s because while there is a backstory with a death in it, so much of it takes place in the present day that really the book is all about the relationships between the main characters and the way that their shared experience has changed each and every one of them.

I also liked the idea of the lying game, which was played between the girls when they were students and in which you scored points for lying to people and getting them to believe things that weren’t true. You scored bonus points if it was someone particularly odious or an unusually implausible lie, and while I myself wouldn’t have played it (because I don’t like lying and I suck at it), it was the kind of thing I could imagine teen girls playing.

 

 

One of the problems that I often have with books like these is that I’m able to guess who committed the crime and why they did it, but it’s not as simple as that here because it’s not even clear whether a crime has been committed, at least to begin with. I also liked how Ware was able to capture the whole small town vibe, to the point at which the locals and their gossip played a pretty important role in the story line.

All in all, I’m happy that I read this one, and I’m particularly glad that I enjoyed it because it was picked out by my cat, and so I’m relieved to find that he does in fact have good taste. This is the third of the four books that he picked that I’ve read, and I’ve given each of them four stars. That bodes well for The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham, which was his fourth choice.

So if you’re new to Ruth Ware, consider giving this one a go, and if you’re not new to her and you’re looking to read more then definitely pick it up. I didn’t really find any faults with it and I can be pretty picky, so that should say a lot. I just hope you like it as much as I did. Go read it!

 

 

Click here to buy The Lying Game.


Stephen King – On Writing | Review

Title: On Writing

Author: Stephen King

Type: Non-Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 368

Rating: 5*/5

 

Stephen King - On Writing

Stephen King – On Writing

 

I’ve been a fan of Stephen King for the best part of ten years now, and while I’ve known about this book for a while I’ve been putting it off. I think it’s because it seems like such an obvious choice for me to read that the fact that I hadn’t was somehow offputting and I just left it until the problem got worse and worse and eventually I could no longer ignore it.

I ahouldn’t have waited so long. This book is weird but in a good way, a fascinating cross between a how-to book on the subject of writing from the master himself and a memoir that details how many of his most well-known books came about. In many ways, I’m glad that I waited a while to read it because it meant that I’d read a lot of the books that he talks about writing, and that made this one feel much more exciting and engaging.

Don’t be fooled into thinking that this is only of interest to those who have an interest in both writing and the work of Stephen King, though. You could pick this up as your first book of his and still enjoy it whether you’re a writer or not, but you’re going to enjoy it so much more if you’re a writer or even if you just have a passion for the English language. In fact, it could even work well if you’re a film maker or in some other related art. Anything to do with telling a story.

All in all then, I still can’t believe that I waited so long to read this but I’m happy that I finally got to it. I had a kind of fear that I’d read this and it would so fundamentally change my approach to writing that it would make everything I’ve done in the past irrelevant. It didn’t do that, which is good, but it has given me plenty of ideas that I’m looking forward to putting it into practice. I feel like the stuff on agents is less relevant now, though.

 

Stephen King

Stephen King

 

Click here to buy On Writing.