Category: BOOK LISTS AND REVIEWS

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  • The Conversation – Should Joan Didion’s therapy notes to her husband about their daughter have been published?

    The Conversation – Should Joan Didion’s therapy notes to her husband about their daughter have been published?

    Gemma Nisbet, Curtin University

    Joan Didion died, aged 87, in 2021. When a new volume of her diaries was announced, anticipation was high: her personal nonfiction is the foundation of her formidable literary legacy. But as details emerged, readers began to question the ethics of its publication.

    Billed as offering “astonishingly intimate” insights, Notes to John recounts conversations with Didion’s psychiatrist between December 1999 and January 2003. It draws on a series of letters addressed to Didion’s husband, fellow writer and frequent collaborator, John Gregory Dunne.

    And it is not only Didion and Dunne’s lives that are revealed in the book’s pages, but also their only child’s. Indeed, Didion had begun her therapy sessions at the urging of her then-30-something daughter, Quintana, who was experiencing an acute mental health crisis and struggling with alcohol addiction.

    As the short, unattributed introduction notes, the book draws from “a collection of about 150 unnumbered pages […] found in a small portable file” near the author’s desk after her death. (Other contents included “a list of guests at Christmas parties” and “computer passwords”.)

    This material went on to form part of the Didion/Dunne archive at the New York Public Library, with “no restrictions” on access. But it has been reported that Didion did not leave specific instructions for how it should be handled. The trustees of Didion’s literary estate, literary editor Lynn Nesbit, and two of her longtime editors, Shelley Wanger and Sharon DeLano, made the decision to publish.

    At least some those close to her have subsequently expressed disquiet about its publication. Numerous reviewers have confessed to feeling “discomfited” and voyeur-like while reading.

    Would Didion have wanted us to read this book? And should it have been published if not?

    Ethics of posthumous publication

    Posthumous publication has long been a source of literary controversy. There is no shortage of examples of work published against an author’s wishes after their death.

    Lolita author Vladimir Nabokov, Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez, 19th-century poet Emily Dickinson and – perhaps most notoriously – novelist Franz Kafka are among the prominent writers who left explicit instructions for their unpublished work to be destroyed following their passing, only for it to later appear in print.

    Sometimes such issues arise even when the author is still living. The 2015 publication of Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman – marketed as a sequel to her only other published novel, the 1960 classic To Kill a Mockingbird – sparked concern that the then-elderly Lee had been coerced into reversing her long-held stance that she would never publish again.

    The controversy was heightened by the fact Go Set a Watchman received decidedly mixed reviews. In some readers’ eyes, its publication tarnished both Lee’s literary legacy and the reputation of To Kill a Mockingbird’s heroic lawyer, Atticus Finch, who is depicted as less than righteous in Go Set a Watchman.

    This suggests the way such debates are often weighed in terms of public opinion. As Didion herself once observed:

    This question of what should be done with what a writer leaves unfinished goes back to, and is conventionally answered by, citing works we might have lost had the dying wishes of their authors been honored.

    We are, then, perhaps more receptive to potentially unauthorised posthumous publications if the result is a literary masterpiece. We may feel less forgiving when the work is of less certain quality.

    The role of the writer

    Didion did publish her own thoughts on this subject. A near-lifelong devotee of Ernest Hemingway, she criticised the posthumous publication of work left unfinished when he died in 1961.

    In a 1998 New Yorker article, she noted Hemingway’s disdain for such practices, quoting a letter he’d written in 1952 to an author working on a book about his early career:

    Writing that I do not wish to publish, you have no right to publish. I would no more do a thing like that to you than I would cheat a man at cards or rifle his desk or wastebasket or read his personal letters.

    Didion also saw in Hemingway’s famously precise prose style further evidence of the wrongheadedness of such endeavours. Hemingway was a writer for whom seemingly minor points of grammar, syntax and punctuation were deeply consequential. As Didion wrote,

    This was a man to whom words mattered. He worked at them, he understood them, he got inside them.

    In her telling, the power of his writing arose from his exacting control over his craft: over what was included, but also what was left out. To make decisions on such matters without the input of the author was, she argued, nothing less than “a denial of the idea that the role of the writer in his or her work is to make it”.

    A matter of style

    Like Hemingway, Didion was a master stylist, known for the crystalline elegance of her prose and her investment in questions of writerly craft. There can be a mistaken tendency to think of autobiographical writing as straightforwardly confessional – simply opening a vein onto the page – but this was never Didion’s way.

    Even when her writing felt emotionally raw and self-revelatory, it was always finely wrought, informed by those lessons from Hemingway about the power of deliberate omission. This was, after all, a woman sufficiently private that she kept her treatment for breast cancer secret for years from everyone but Dunne.

    Many of the hallmarks of Didion’s writerly style are present in Notes to John: the fragmentary quality, the clarity of her prose, even snakes as recurrent image. But in recounting this emotionally fraught subject matter at little temporal remove, she becomes direct to the point of bluntness.

    At one point, for example, Didion’s psychiatrist praises her “extraordinary insight” into her relationship with her own mother. She responds:

    Extraordinary or not […] it’s not much help in just getting on with life. It’s even counterproductive, considering that my mother is now 89. It’s not as if we’re going to resolve anything by confronting this.

    Of course, it soon becomes apparent Didion’s relationship to her mother is highly relevant to how she has parented her daughter. If, as one of Didion’s most widely quoted lines puts it, she wrote to “find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means”, in Notes to John, that process is seemingly very much a work in progress.

    All of this contributes to the sense of reading something not intended to be published in anything like its current form – and thus not yet rising to the status of masterpiece. Didion would go on to write about at least some of this subject matter in later books, particularly 2011’s Blue Nights, which chronicles her grief after Quintana’s death in 2005, less than two years after Dunne’s passing. But the way this material is handled in Blue Nights is markedly different.

    Where Notes to John moves in a chronological fashion through time, Blue Nights mimics the workings of memory with its non-linearity. Notes to John feels, formally speaking, like exactly that: a series of notes or journal entries covering a specific span of time. Blue Nights, however, takes advantage of the expansive, hybrid possibilities of the essay to cast its net wider and tell a fuller story about love, parents and children, guilt and grief.

    Notably, in Blue Nights, Didion does discuss Quintana’s diagnoses with conditions including borderline personality disorder, but largely elides the specific nature of her addiction. In Notes to John, it is faced head on and discussed in detail.

    Didion was a writer known for her obliqueness – for her mastery of what the Irish writer Brian Dillon calls the essayists’ “sidelong glance”; that is, a way of illuminating difficult subject matter by approaching it indirectly.

    Notes to John’s forthrightness is thus a contrast to Didion’s classic nonfiction. There, her narratives often proceed by a logic of association, asking readers to make connections via metaphor and to fill in the gaps to see how this relates to that.

    In the space of a single chapter in Blue Nights, for example, Didion goes from recounting Quintana’s wedding day to recalling the family’s home in suburban Los Angeles to reflecting on the process of getting a New York driver’s licence when they later moved east.

    There’s discussion of a psychiatric text about suicide from the 1930s, a quote from the ancient Greek playwright Euripides, and the image of Quintana in 2003, “in an induced coma, breathing only on a respirator” during “the first in a cascade of medical crises that would end twenty months later with her death”.

    This mode of storytelling is quintessential Didion. It can give rise to accusations of ambiguity or evasiveness – charges levelled at her work more than once. But it also has the potential to protect an author and the people around them as they share intimacies, keeping them firmly in control of what is revealed, and not.

    Marital eavesdropping

    Notes to John is also troubled by a question of intended readership. One of the people responsible for its publication – Didion’s agent Lynn Nesbit, also one of her literary trustees – has acknowledged this material “wasn’t written to be published”. Its title makes clear it was written for an audience of one: for Dunne.

    This is also evident stylistically, in its second-person narration directed at a “you” so familiar with the people and events it mentions that Didion doesn’t need to explain throwaway references to “the Nick narrative” or someone called Marian. Footnotes have been inserted to clarify that the former refers to Dunne’s strained relationship with his older brother, while the latter was Quintana’s boss at a magazine. Their presence emphasises that we are eavesdropping on intimate martial conversations.

    The portrait of Didion that emerges is thus startlingly vulnerable: we see her frailties, anxieties and doubts – particularly regarding her and Dunne’s parenting of Quintana, who they adopted as a newborn – far more directly than in her other published writing.

    Perhaps there is value in this: another of Didion’s literary trustees, her longtime editor Shelley Wanger, has said she hoped the book’s unguarded quality would offer a corrective to Didion’s somewhat chilly public image.

    I can also see that Didion’s candour may provide comfort to readers dealing with similar difficulties. Notes to John has much to say that is resonant and truthful about depression, anxiety, addiction and the grinding difficulties of supporting a loved one through such challenges.

    “You and your husband are going through hell,” Didion’s psychiatrist tells her during a discussion of “a hard weekend” in which she and Dunne had worried for Quintana’s safety. “You can only love her,” the doctor says. “You can’t save her.”

    Ethical responsibilities

    I am less inclined to agree with those who suggest the ethical ramifications of publishing this material are less relevant because Didion, Dunne and their daughter are no longer alive to suffer the pain or embarrassment of exposure.

    Life writing scholar G. Thomas Couser has argued that while death could “seem to suggest utter invulnerability to harm” when it comes to being written about, it may actually “be the state of ultimate vulnerability and dependency”, given that the deceased can offer neither consent nor self defence.

    From this perspective, Notes to John’s depiction of Quintana is particularly troubling. Readers gain an intimate view of what must have been some of her most vulnerable moments as she struggles with addiction and mental ill-health.

    We watch – through the eyes of her loving, fretful and perhaps overprotective mother – as she fumbles, relapses and at times, says things to her parents it seems likely she’d have lived to regret.

    We see mother and daughter’s extreme closeness, perhaps even codependency (“You and Quintana had been for too long two people in the same skin,” the doctor observes).

    We also see Didion’s guilt at what she regards as her culpability for her child’s inability to cope with life, in part for the way she has projected her own at-times debilitating anxieties onto her. “I had always been afraid we would lose her,” Didion admits.

    All of this frequently makes for devastating reading. But it also gives the clear sense that Didion recognised her daughter as what Couser terms “a vulnerable subject” – and so strove to protect her, in her published writing as in her life.

    Frozen in time

    Notes to John peters out in January 2003, following Didion’s account of a fractious joint psychiatry session with Quintana.

    As readers, we know how things will end: with a woman mourning both her husband and daughter, and turning to writing to try – as she always has – to make sense of it all. In the pages of these journals, however, she is frozen in time: “I was trying to keep her alive,” she says of Quintana. “Because she was killing herself day by day.”

    Should Notes to John have been published? Or should it have been left to the relative obscurity of the archive, where it would have been read by Didion scholars, biographers and super fans, rather than a potential audience of millions?

    From an ethical standpoint, I think the latter option would have been more defensible. But it’s also true that this revealing, raw and often hauntingly moving little book will stay with me – in large part for the complex portrait of Didion’s guilt and devotion to her daughter that it reveals.


    If this article has raised issues for you, or if you’re concerned about someone you know, call Lifeline on 13 11 14.The Conversation

    Gemma Nisbet, Lecturer in Professional Writing and Publishing, Curtin University

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


    Why is this article here?

    Joan Didion’s On Keeping A Notebook from her first work of nonfiction, Slouching Towards Bethlehem, was the first published writing from a recognised writer that affirmed, for me, the practice of keeping a notebook. I’ve kept a notebook (wishing for this one) since I started high school; it’s one of those things I feel I must do.

    Although I’ve never read any of her books (every time I visit my favourite second-hand bookshop, which is actually not a bookshop, but that’s a story for another time, anyway, I always wish that I’ll find a Joan Didion book among the mess of books, but so far I haven’t found one), I’ve read enough samples of her books on Amazon that I feel like I know her; what I’ve read so far makes me want to read more of her writing.

    Notes to John was published posthumously earlier this year. The book consists of a collection of her journal entries from her therapy sessions in the early 2000s, which were discovered in a file drawer after her passing (click here to read a sample of the book). When I saw this article on www.theconversation.com, and with permission to republish articles for free, I took the opportunity to share it here. I hope you enjoy it.

    Featured image from Canva

  • Ripples in the Lake by May Coates

    Ripples in the Lake by May Coates

    This book left me nostalgic for an age of innocence, a time when romance books were romantic. A time so far removed from the filth that now passes for romance in books.

    Ripples in the Lake is a throwback to a time when Mills & Boon romances were peopled with virtuous heroines and arrogant but gorgeous heroes. This is the first book by May Coates that I’ve read; according to Amazon, she’s had only two books published so far. (Amazon affiliate links are included here!)

    My Goodreads review

    Ripples in the LakeRipples in the Lake by May Coates
    My rating: 2 of 5 stars

    When I first saw the cover of this book at the second-hand bookshop I frequent, it immediately took me back to my high school years (90s), when I first read Mills & Boon books. The Mills and Boon books I read were set in the 1970s and 1980s, and like this one, are what is now called ‘clean romance’, which is almost its own genre if you read a lot of reviews and book samples on Amazon, like I do.

    Coates follows the tried-and-tested formula set for Mills & Boon authors: Girl meets boy, they disagree about some nonsensical thing or other, despite the boy’s rudeness, the girl falls hopelessly in love with him. Coates makes this a May-December romance, and while the romance is clean, the plot is vague, and the two main characters are a little incomplete.

    The story is about Helen, a twenty-one-year-old orphan, who applies for a matron-housekeeper post at a boys’ boarding school. However, the school bursar, Ward Prescott, thinks she is too young and inexperienced for the job.

    Set in Oakfield, a boys’ boarding school in England, the story benefits from Coates’ description of the scenery. The boarding school reminded me of the Meadowbank School for Girls from Agatha Christie’s Cat Among the Pigeons, with its busy school life.

    There were a few incidents where Helen, despite her youth and inexperience, displayed almost superhuman strength and quick thinking that saved lives. I got the feeling that Coates was trying too hard to turn Helen into an angel on earth figure, but this only served to give her a facade that could melt away on a hot summer’s day.

    There’s a lot of telling and a lot less showing, and the point of view changed so abruptly between all the characters that it made me dizzy. It’s a short story and a quick read; you can easily finish it in a few hours.

    I recommend this book for fans of clean romance who want to revisit their favourite Mills and Boon books of yesteryears.

    View all my reviews

    Your thoughts

    Have you read this book? Please share your thoughts in the comments.

  • The Chalk Man by C. J. Tudor

    The Chalk Man by C. J. Tudor

    This was Tudor’s debut novel, and she’s gone on to write a few more. She’s been compared to Stephen King. In The Chalk Man, Tudor very carefully mentions Harlan Coben as the writer the narrator is reading, and I think she wanted to make that connection in the reader’s mind.

    Caution: This post contains Amazon affiliate links. I might earn a commission if you buy anything through these links.

    The Chalk ManThe Chalk Man by C.J. Tudor
    My rating: 3 of 5 stars

    Be warned, this review contains spoilers!

    Tudor credits some friends who gifted her little girl coloured chalks for her birthday for this thriller. Hmmm, it sounds like a wild, crazy, creepy leap from a girl’s birthday party to a story where a teenage girl is murdered and her head and limbs are hacked off.

    There’s a birthday party, although it’s for one of the teenage boys, Gavin or Fat Gav, as his friends call him. And someone, an anonymous someone, leaves a bucket of coloured chalk as a birthday gift for Gavin. This is important because the narrator (it’s in first-person point of view), Eddie, mentions this gift as a possible beginning of all the troubles.

    In my opinion, all the troubles began when the pastor or reverend at the local parish seduced and impregnated one of the local teenage girls. But of course, Eddie wasn’t to know that until much later.

    As in life, actions have consequences is the theme running through this book. And most of the characters do some very bad things. The story weaves back and forth between 12-year-old Eddie and 42-year-old Eddie. You’ll see either 1986 or 2016 written at the top of the page whenever Eddie narrates a story from the appropriate time.

    My favourite character from this book is Mr Halloran, and I wish the author had done more with him. He seemed like a gentle, caring man.

    Overall, I liked the book. There’s talk that it’ll be made into a film. I wonder who’ll play Mr Halloran.

    View all my reviews
  • Casting the First Stone by Frances Fyfield

    Casting the First Stone by Frances Fyfield

    If there’s one book you shouldn’t read, this would be it. Caution: This post contains affiliate links. I might earn a commission if you buy anything through my Amazon affiliate links.

    Casting the First Stone (Diana Porteous, #2)Casting the First Stone by Frances Fyfield
    My rating: 1 of 5 stars

    Regret. That’s how I felt after reading this book. Regret that I’d read it. Regret that I’d bought it in the first place. Regret that someone somewhere thought that it was worth publishing, and in hardcover, with a misleading dust jacket, no less.

    And the dust jacket is misleading. From the image of that old house by the sea, which gives one a C. J. Tudor-Stephen King feel, and a glowing review from The Times (is that The Times of London? Or what Times is that?) which leaves me wondering if the reviewer actually read the book, it says, “Frances Fyfield is an original…she writes with such persuasive beauty and emotional subtlety”. What in-the-confusing-narrative does that even mean?

    Speaking of narrative, the point-of-view jumps from one character to another, often without any warning; I sometimes had to read through the previous sentence to find my place and make sure I hadn’t missed anything.

    There is a lot of subtlety about the entire book, so much so that you’ll be hard pressed to find any story at all, apart from a loose plot about once-strangers-now-half-siblings reuniting. And they reunite through their so-called knack of collecting paintings which they call ‘art’.

    This book is not ‘a haunting, seaswept psychological thriller’ that some (Hachette) claim it to be. It’s supposed to be a sequel to Fyfield’s previous book ‘Gold Digger’, and continues to tell the story of one Diana Porteous, a thief, who ends up marrying the old man whose house she tries to burgle.

    Reading that bit there about Diana becoming Mrs Thomas Porteous after she tried to burgle his house reminded me of the 2015 American action-sci-fi film Ant-Man, where Scott Lang tries to burgle Dr Hank Pym’ house and ends up helping him and his daughter. Anyway, in ‘Casting the First Stone’, old man Porteous (Thomas) is now dead, and Di (as she’s known to her odd friends) is grieving.

    Di’s character sounds rather pathetic to my ears. Okay, they all sound rather pathetic. Maybe, pathetic is not the right word, maybe false is more appropriate. Yes, they sound false to my ears. They don’t sound true at all. All of them, even Patrick, Thomas Porteous’ young grandson.

    I think the story would have worked better for my taste if it was written differently. As it is, it’s like a play written in such a way that it sounds like the characters are speaking over each other.

    I don’t recommend this book at all. Only read it if you got it for free from someone and you’ve run out of things to read.



    View all my reviews

    If, after all that, you still want to read this book, you can buy it on Amazon through my affiliate link. If, like me, you enjoy a riveting psychological suspense story, I recommend The Chalk Man by C. J. Tudor.

  • The Witch Hunt of Pittenweem – Fictionalised in ‘The Darkest Shore’ by Karen Brooks

    The Witch Hunt of Pittenweem – Fictionalised in ‘The Darkest Shore’ by Karen Brooks

    The Darkest ShoreThe Darkest Shore by Karen Brooks
    My rating: 3 of 5 stars

    This book reminded me of Burial Rites by Hannah Kent, another historical fiction set in a forbidding place where women had fewer rights than men or none at all. While the description of the place and location was beautifully written, it was repetitive in parts. And there was a word or two which I doubt they would have used in 1700s Scotland, like the ‘f’ word.

    View all my reviews
  • Are These Photos Yours? Found in a Secondhand Book

    Are These Photos Yours? Found in a Secondhand Book

    Did you know that there’s an online community of readers who post about things they’ve found in secondhand books?

    And there are numerous blog posts from libraries to bookshops talking about items, some valuable, some historical, and some plain odd, that most of their readers have found in secondhand books. From J.R.R. Tolkien’s notes on an illustrated map, to thousands of dollars in cash, and snacks.

    Take a good look and let me know in the comments section if you recognise or know any of these people.


    I had no idea that a #foundinabook community existed until I found two photographs in a secondhand copy of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Two Towers. I bought the book at Bargain Box, Main Street, Nadi Town. Since they don’t keep records of who or where they buy the books from, I searched online on how to find the right owner and return the photos to them.

    I’ve posted about this on X and on Instagram, but it seems the people who post with that hashtag #foundinbooks simply want to show everyone else what they’ve found, but are not serious about returning the items.

    I think photographs are precious because they are tangible reminders of a time and place in your life. That’s why I want to return these photos to their owners. I will happily mail them and take care of the cost, as long as it’s to the rightful owners.

    And I’m appealing to you, dear reader, please, look at the photographs shown above, and let me know if you recognize or know any of the people you see there. Let me know either in the comments section, through the contact form, or email me directly on support@singularfaith.com

    Have you found anything in a secondhand book? Share your find or your link to your social media post about it in the comments section.

  • A Touch of Flame by Jenny Robertson: A Reflective Review of Contemporary Christian Poetry

    A Touch of Flame by Jenny Robertson: A Reflective Review of Contemporary Christian Poetry

    A Touch Of Flame

    Compiled by Jenny Robertson
    Published by Lion Publishing plc
    First edition 1989
    ISBN 0-7459-1509-4

    This post contains affiliate links

    Summary

    A Touch of Flame is a collection of over a hundred poems by contemporary Christian poets, compiled by Jenny Robertson, a poet, writer, children’s author, and playwright based in Edinburgh.

    Introduction

    In her introduction, Jenny Robertson writes what we all know poetry to be: ‘Poetry is for everyone, but poetry is not just a spontaneous out-pouring of words. It is a craft. A poet is a wordsmith who structures the raw material of experience into something as tangible as a piece of pottery, or a new-made loaf; something as mysterious as a melody.’

    The poems in this anthology draw us into the depths of mystery—not only the mystery of melody, but of the divine itself: the otherworldly, supernatural God who became man.

    The Poems

    The works are grouped into nine themes, which, when you read them carefully, are like meditations on the birth, ministry, death, resurrection and ascension of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ. The poems speak for themselves. I’m quoting below some lines from the poems that stood out to me.

    Nativity

    ...Anger, ache will come again,
    And yet each night when drops of calm descend
    Will open out a room within my heart
    Where God can talk,
    Fashion a peace, and find my soul once more.
    - from 'Peace' by Rayne Mackinnon, page 21

    Incarnation

    When countless raindrops crawled upon the roof
    Like millions of live insects, God lifted up
    My aimlessness and gave it purpose. Now
    It is night-time; a wind runs thru the dark
    And raindrops bounce
    Upon its surface. ...
    - Prayer, by Rayne Mackinnon, page 38

    Commonplace

    Today, the sun lord; banishing the commonplace.
    Crocks and cupboards, pots and pans - all aglow
    With borrowed brilliance. ...
    - April Sunlight: Kitchen Muse, by Alice Fairclough, page 51

    Laughter And Tears

    Bad Balaam beat his ass a thumping crack
    But she called back, condemned his cruel attack:
    'You've beat me Balaam, bruised my bony back -
    Your size six boots will surely have to walk.'
    Now Balaam never knew his ass could talk.
    - Bad Poem About Balaam, by Chris Porteous, page 69

    Landscape

    My experience is different.
    Roots were dragging me under,
    I could not grow for the heavy clinging.
    - April 16th, by Tessa Ransford, page 84

    Beatitude

    May a strong guardian
    Stand at the door
    With sword and olive branch.
    - The Guardians, by George Mackay Brown, page 108

    Way Of The Cross

    He left the deadly body, fired by love,
    that ghostly flame, whose nature he would learn
    though quickly his most willing flesh must burn.
    - The Fire, by John Bate, page 129

    Resurrection

    The sad mountain where in a gale of grief,
    cut by scourge and lance to the quick of the heart
    you weathered for us the dark storm of tears,
    tears for the things of men and for their follies
    unshed, unsaid in our dumb heart's blocked fountain.
    - Sequences, by Kevin Nichols, page 150

    A Touch Of Flame

    flame which my longing fans
    "ignis existuans",
    body, mind, soul of me
    purify utterly;
    naught would content my mind
    more, than that purge to find!
    - St John Of The Cross, At Ubeda, by H.O. Brian O'Neill, page 168

    Let This Book Speak to You

    Poetry, prayer and worship go together. This book brings new words, phrases and ways to express and articulate your love for God.

    Reading A Touch of Flame helped me realise the power of words and sparked my love for poetry. This is one of the best Christian poetry books for spiritual growth. I strongly recommend you read this book.

    A Touch of Flame is more than just another faith-based poetry book, these are inspirational Christian poems about Jesus Christ. These poems will deepen your faith.

    Where to Find the Book

    I bought A Touch of Flame at Bargain Box on Main Street in Nadi Town nearly ten years ago, and it’s stayed with me ever since. If you’re not visiting Nadi, you can still get your copy online on Amazon using my affiliate links below, or at your favourite bookshop.

    Amazon: A Touch Of Faith, by Jenny Robertson.


    Photo by Siteri (May 2025). Designed in Canva

  • Tuesdays With Morrie

    Tuesdays With Morrie

    Tuesdays With MorrieTuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom
    My rating: 2 of 5 stars

    It was okay. What bothers me is that the author, Albom, makes it sound as if he is the only one who knows Morrie and doesn’t even try to speak to Morris’s wife, children or care-givers to try and get a more rounded sense and picture of the man.

    Anyone who has nursed a sick loved one, especially, one who knows they’re dying, knows that it’s one of the hardest things to do in the world. Not only because of the physical discomfort that often accompanies such an ordeal, but also the mental effects of the ordeal on both the patient and the caregiver.

    Furthermore, the lessons sprinkled throughout the book have no back-story, and no clarification on how anyone can apply those lessons in their lives. It would have been far more interesting if Albom had explored them further and had written more about how Morrie arrived at them through his, Morrie’s, own life experiences.


    Get the book from Amazon through the links below

    For the best of Mitch Albom 5 Books Collection Set – Click Here


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