Tag: Ironic

Rupi Kaur – The Sun and Her Flowers | Review

Title: The Sun and Her Flowers

Author: Rupi Kaur

Type: Poetry

Page Count/Review Word Count: 256

Rating 3.5/5

 

 

I honestly wasn’t expecting to enjoy this book anywhere near as much as I did. Kaur gets a bad rep for being an “Instagram poet” and because the content of basically all of her stuff is about relationships and feminism, but I don’t see how either of those are inherently bad things.

True, I didn’t much like the illustrations and I did start to flag with it towards the end, but I think that’s only natural when you’re reading so much poetry on the same theme. On the other hand, I really like it when poets build up a picture with just a few words, and I think Kaur is pretty good at that. In that respect, her work actually reminds me a little bit of a sort of feminist Charles Bukowski, which is almost ironic. I suspect they’d both take umbrage at that comparison.

All in all then, I was pleasantly surprised by this, and while it’s far from my favourite poetry collection, it was a lot better than I thought it was going to be and to be honest, above average when compared to pretty much all of the poetry I’ve ever been sent for review for my book blog. The difference is that I sought this one out, or at the very least I picked it up from a charity shop because I saw it. Yeah.

 

 

Click here to buy The Sun and Her Flowers.


Peter James – The Perfect Murder | Review

Title: The Perfect Murder

Author: Peter James

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 168

Rating 4/5

 

 

This is basically something between a short story and a novella that acts as a pretty good standalone to introduce you to Peter James and his work. Originally published as part of the Quick Reads scheme, it was presumably successful enough that it earned publication in its own right.

I was actually expecting it to be longer than it was, but a big chunk of it turned out to be taken up by an excerpt of Dead Simple, which I’ve already read. But the story itself was good, even if the perfect murder didn’t turn out to be quite as perfect as the perpetrators had initially envisioned.

All in all, it was pretty good and I’d be up for going to see the stage play adaptation of this which apparently exists. It’s just a pretty good crime novel with an ironic title following fallible characters.

 

 

Click here to buy The Perfect Murder.