Wednesday, 11 October 2023

The Quasi-Booky Book Group (Venue, by consensus, Star and Garter followed by Franco Manca)

Tuesday October 10, 2023

Present: Gill F (S&G only); Gill C, Carl, Nic

Dr Ruth Galloway progress: Carl 0; Gill F 2; Nic 11, Gill C 15

Thursday Murder Clubs: Carl 0 (must try harder!); Nic 3; Gill C 4

Our conclusions on the night: Gill C is the reading champ. Sarah Lancashire is a national treasure. The Tory party is a national disgrace. Book group is fun. We should do this more often.

Sunday, 8 October 2023

We may still be readers

August 22nd, 2023

Sabine recommends the Dr Ruth Galloway series by Ely Griffiths generally and selects the first - The Crossing Places - as a book group choice. Before we even meet to discuss that, Gill C has finished all 15 in the series. I lag behind on 11. Jen's done at least 2.

The Crossing Places may be a Turning Point. 

Saturday, 22 July 2023

The No-Book Book Group (Venue, Nic's choice: Oka, Kingly Court)

 July 19th, 2023

Present: Sabine, Gill C, Jen, Nic

No official books to discuss but we do love Joyce and Elizabeth et al. Are we a book group any more? Who knows? Who cares with food like this!

Thursday, 1 December 2022

#145 - The Mirror and the Light - Hilary Mantel (Choice: Gill C)(Venue: Pho, Covent Garden)

November 30th, 2022

Present: Nic, Nat, Jen, Sabine

Well, tying this date and venue to the book may be stretching things, given that few have ever finished it and Gill C, who subjected us to this (I mean chose this), wasn't present.

Who started this tome, I am not sure. Who finished it, many, many fewer. 

This may be the book that breaks Book Group. Whilst the first two books of this trilogy and Eight Months on Ghazzah Street (a previous LGAG read) were a delight, flowing prose carrying us effortlessly to the end, this is like wading through treacle. There's a tension to it, which comes from knowing what will happen to our "hero" but the prose is dense and difficult and much of it appears extraneous. Was Hilary too big and successful a name to edit any more? Will we ever read again? These questions haunted us. But we do know that Gill C uses it as a computer monitor stand. 

Thank goodness for Richard Osman, come to save us with our unofficial book group reads The Thursday Murder Club series. How we love Joyce and Elizabeth et al. We are reborn.

Saturday, 7 May 2022

#144 - Lessons in Chemistry - Bonnie Grams (Choice: Sabine)(Venue: Heddon Street Kitchen)

May 4th, 2022

Present: Jen, Gill C, Gill F, Sabine, Nic

Our first post-Covid meet-up. The restaurant was chaotic, the service almost non-existent, one of those times when you had to repeatedly beg and plead to be allowed to pay and get out. It was also one of the first times most of us had seen the calories on a menu - we weren't fans. Who really needs that when they are eating out?!

As for the book, it was very well received by those who had read it (all but me) and I adored it when I finally got caught up. The talk was brief so as not to spoil my experience. Gill F was "Gripped at the first page". Top marks. Everyone should have a SixThirty. The jury is out on the already announced Apple TV dramatisation. 

Pass the sodium chloride and let's get stuck into the food. 

Thursday, 30 December 2021

#143 - The Envoy - Edward Wilson (Choice: Nic)(No meeting)

Sometime in October 2021 

No meeting for this one and, possibly, not many readers. 

Sabine really liked it and rolled swiftly on to the next one. I also really enjoyed it - a good, old fashioned spy story. However, Gill C gave up on it and Gill F never started, speaking for many of us when she wrote "I have to confess to falling out of the habit of reading. But I plan a comeback tour in the very near future.".

Saturday, 11 September 2021

#142 - The Bell - Iris Murdoch (Choice: Jen)(Venue: Zoom)

September 9th, 2021

Present: Jen, Sabine, Gill F, Nic

I was on my own in supporting this one. I danced through the pages, loved her prose, revelled in the atmosphere she invoked of a different era (albeit one I am happy to have dodged). Yes, it is dated but  I was nonetheless enchanted by the tale. Others, less so. Jen disliked the “lazy” portrayal of the closed convent, Sabine the characters, Gill was in agreement. 

Saturday, 31 July 2021

#141 - Small Pleasures - Clare Chambers (Choice: Gill C)(Venue: Zoom)

September 9th, 2021

Present: Jen, Sabine, Gill F, Nic

My first draft said I hadn’t read this because everyone had panned it. Now I have to edit it. Damn Kindle - I can barely remember what I’ve read and what I haven’t! Well, it is either Kindle or old age. I am starting to feel like the protagonist in Elizabeth is Missing.  

Universally revered by everyone here and, via What’s App, by Nat who declared it a “9/10 book”, “slick”, “dry humour”, “identifiable” and “LOVED IT”. Now that I’ve worked out which book it is, I agree with everything she says. A heart-warming story of adultery, rape, and rail disaster. 


Friday, 23 April 2021

#140 - The Sell Out - Paul Beatty (Choice: Gill F)(Venue: Zoom)

April 22, 2021

Present: Sabine, Vanessa, Nic, Gill F, may be Jen?

Ok, so I am recapping (relatively) recent books in reverse order and now I realise THIS is the book everyone was hating, not the next one. I haven’t read this one because early reviews from the group were “unpromising”. 

Saturday, 27 March 2021

#139 - Elizabeth is Missing - Emma Healy (Choice: Nat)(Venue: Zoom)

Date: ? It’s a lockdown, people. Every day is the same.

Present: ?

People mostly felt frustrated by the repetition but I think that was probably, mostly, the point. Disappointed to miss the BBC adaptation with Glenda Jackson, I would like to see how they did it. For what it is worth, I rather enjoyed it but I was definitely in the minority.

Saturday, 27 February 2021

#138 - The Dutch House - Ann Patchett (Choice: Vanessa)(Venue: Zoom)

Some time in January, probably.

Present: who knows?

People generally enjoyed the book. Some more than others and some not as much as other Ann Patchetts. There was a futility to the lives, to the obsession, to the hold that the property had, the shadow that it cast, despite being made of glass, that made the book difficult. 

Saturday, 30 January 2021

#137 - Suzanne and Gertrude - Jeb Loy Nichols (Choice: Nic) (Venue: Zoom)

Sometime in December 2020 / January 2021

Present: me, Nathalie, beyond that, I cannot remember 

Nathalie found the female voice unconvincing. I wanted a pet donkey. That’s pretty much all I can remember. 

Saturday, 26 December 2020

#136 - Your House Will Pay - Steph Cha (Choice: Sabine) (Venue: Zoom)

Date: ? Did we even talk about it? Ah, yes but when, exactly, I couldn’t say. 

Present: ?

The trouble with Kindle is one only sees the title and the author once! Hence, albeit, that I initially couldn’t remember (writing in September 2021) this book, I then saw a What’s App saying I was ready to talk about it and it came flooding back. We all found this a powerful and uncomfortable and challenging read - not challenging to read, that is, but thought-provoking. 

Thursday, 29 October 2020

#135 - Hamnett- Maggie O’Farrell (Choice: Mark) (Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday October 26th, 2020

Present: Mark, Nic, Sabine, Gill C, Suza, Nathalie

A generally well received book, save by Jen who never got past the present tense narration. I struggled with that at the start too but found the story so interesting I had completely overlooked it by the end. 

The passage about the journey of the flea was called out for special mention by several attendees.


Wednesday, 9 September 2020

#134 - Wakenhyrst - Michelle Paver (Choice: Jen)(Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday September 9th, 2020

Present: Jen, Nic, Nathalie, Gill C

Sabine was in Munich after her mega drive and Gill F was in the pub. 

The rest of us were as one on how interesting, atmospheric and compelling the book was, and how frightful were the times depicted for young women. 

Another success for Jen, I think we will have to stop lambasting her choices now! She finally lives down Daniel Deronda! 

Wednesday, 19 August 2020

#133 - The Restraint of Beasts - Magnus Mills (Choice: Gill F) (Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday August 19th, 2020

Present: Gill C, Gill F, Nic, Suza

Suza’s WiFi struggled like a book group reading The Restraint of Beasts. Why didn’t they just come clean about the first accident?  We were fairly baffled by the whole thing but especially the ending. Were they building their own prison? Were they going to be sausages? 

We didn’t know and I am not sure we cared. 

Edit: Except Nathalie, who said, “I loved this one!”, “I thought it was so funny and could really conjure up the characters vividly” and “Ending was a bit weird though.” We can all agree with the last bit! 


Thursday, 16 July 2020

#132 - My Sister The Serial Killer - Oyinkan Braithwaite (Choice: Gill C)(Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday July 15th, 2020

Present: Gill F, Gill C, Jen, Sabine, Nic

A quick, easy, fun read and a frustrating tale of moral ambiguity. 

Thursday, 11 June 2020

#131 - Bel Canto - Ann Patchett (Choice: Doris)(Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday 10 June 2020

Present: Doris, Sabine, Gill F, Gill C, Nathalie, Jen, Suza, Nic

A favourite of Doris, who allegedly read it first on my recommendation. I think that must have been a false memory: nothing about the book rang a bell with me. 

I did enjoy it. Most of us did, except for the ending, which was declared “not credible” by Gill F and “too movie like” by Gill C. The relationship was clearly destined to failure and, although perhaps that was the point, it left us dissatisfied. 



Thursday, 7 May 2020

#130 - My Dark Vanessa - Kate Elizabeth Russell (Nathalie’s choice) (Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday 6 May 2020

Present: Nic; Doris; Jen; Gill F; Gill C; Vanessa; Sabine; Nathalie

A strong turnout for this one.

The book was universally praised despite the tough subject matter, which everyone agreed felt very real. We were simultaneously dismayed for and frustrated by Vanessa, prompting some discussion of what makes a victim a victim and the extent to which society can create a victim by telling someone they’ve been a victim. We debated Jacob Strane: was he appalled by himself? What did “I’ll ruin you.” mean? Did he try to restrain himself? Did the vasectomy mean she wasn’t the first? Was there anything different in his treatment of Vanessa versus the others? And the big question - was it a happy ending?

And as we continued to discuss in What’s App, Gill C summed it up:
“Definitely one that stays with you for a while whether you want it to or not.”


Wednesday, 15 April 2020

#129 - The Sirens of Titan - Kurt Vonnegut (Suza’s Choice) (Venue: Zoom)

Wednesday 15 April 2020

Present: Suza, Sabine, Jen, Gill C, Gill F, Nathalie,

Well, that was a divisive book. Some didn’t finish, some hated it, some just couldn’t care about it. I rather enjoyed it.

Perhaps the whole pointless, awfulness of it all just rather chimed with how I was feeling about the current political climate and the pompous smug sense of superiority unpinning Brexit and MAGA movements. I loved the idea that our greatest achievements on earth were merely intergalactic communications that we unwittingly built for superior beings. The immense harm Rumfoord was willing to inflict and the sacrifices he was willing to make (of other people) to break away from the old religions that are used by men (and it does tend to be men) to justify sacrifice (of other people) was horrifying but a world where it isn’t worth trying to please an apathetic god does seem desirable; it does seem to hold the promise of a less judgmental and kinder future.

Thursday, 9 April 2020

Our inaugural Covid 19 Lockdown Virtual Meeting

Wednesday 8 April 2020

Present: Gill F, Gill C, Jen, Sabine, Nic

Ostensibly our first lockdown book group was to discuss The Sirens of Titan but, as Suza was down with the dastardly virus, we just chatted over a glass of wine or bottle of beer. And what a tonic that turned out to be. So much so that this, in retrospect, was the first of our weekly Lockdown Support group meetings, which would be punctuated by occasional conventional book group meetings!

Nothing is out-of-bounds; we talk about wine, food, family, anxieties, political frustrations, anger, bread and sometimes books and we always finish smiling and happier than when we started.

Tuesday, 3 March 2020

#128 - Amateur: a Reckoning with Gender, Identity and Masculinity (Choice: Nic)

Tuesday 3 March 2020

Present: Vanessa, Sabine, Gill F, Gill C, Nic

Discussed at the same time and place as The Leopard, but very lightly as a couple of attendees hadn't finished (or started, as the case may be).

Gill C, as a white-collar boxer herself, had an obvious interest in this book. But it was Vanessa, half way through it, who encouraged Gill F to buy it and give it a go. 

So, will add to this review when all the results are in!

#127 - The Leopard - Giuseppe di Lampedusa (Choice: Vanessa)(Venue: Tasting Sicily Enzo's Kitchen, Panton St.)

Tuesday 3 March 2020

Present: Vanessa, Gill F, Gill C, Sabine, Nic

Slow and comically inept but friendly service, left us gathering, over a period of about 30 minutes, with no offer of drinks. However the food was really rather good: arancini; prawns with Pernod risotto; crab cakes; calamari; pumpkin; fennel and orange salad; mushroom risotto; a variety of patsas with pig cheeks, with prawns, with something else I can't remember ... all served "family style" (Corvid 19 be damned - we may have done elbow bump greetings but this book group still shares food!).

The family slide show of scenes from Sicily projected on to the back wall made this a great venue for the book discussion and, while everyone thought this was a tough read, most persevered and it wasn't universally loathed. We agreed that, with lots of atmosphere and not a lot of action, a more detailed knowledge of the place and time may have been useful to get the most out of "one of the most important novels in modern Italian literature" (Wikipedia) and "the 10 best historical novels" (The Observer). "I didn't finish it." (Nic)

I might try again. On the other hand, apparently, it is a superb movie ...

Tuesday, 22 October 2019

#126 - 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World - Elif Shafar (Choice: Sabine) (Venue: Kazan, Wilton Street)

Date: Tuesday 22 October 2019
Present: Vanessa, Suza, Nic, Doris, Gill F, Sabine

Suzanne's inaugural LGAG - two new members in two meetings! It felt like we were getting some momentum, though life has a habit of getting in the way and this was no exception.  Our next meeting (fingers crossed) will be March 3rd 2020.

The venue was most appropriate, the food was tasty and the table was surrounded on three sides by banquette, which made for convivial conversation.

The book was well received - novel and well-written - although the ending divided people. It seems I was alone in finding the whole concept horrifying (imaginative, well-written, compelling but horrifying). Are we really aware we are dead for over 10 minutes, alone with our thoughts and the knowledge that it is all over, just wondering if and when we'll be found. That time to consider, reminisce, regret seems horrendous and still haunts me.

Tuesday, 17 September 2019

#125 Dominion - CJ Sansom (Choice: Jen) (Venue: Munich Cricket Club, Westminster)

Date: Tuesday 17 September 2019
Present: Nic, Jen, Sabine, Gill C, Vanessa

Vanessa's inaugural LGAG meeting was a rowdy affair but that wasn't really Vanessa's doing - MCC was full of suits and had the atmosphere of a rowdy city boozer. The food was acceptable. The book, however, went down much more easily.

Wednesday, 19 June 2019

#124 The Awakening (Y Byw sy’n Cysgu) - Kate Roberts (Choice: Sabine) (Venue: Bryn Williams, Somerset House)

Date: Wednesday 19 June 2019
Present: Gill C, Jen, Sabine, Nic

A Welsh chef for a Welsh book - though we all read it in English. (I bought the Welsh but it's one for the - distant - future!).

The restaurant was hard to find and comprised of a succession of rooms which is challenging for the staff so service was friendly but a little inept. Orders were misunderstood more than once. However, everything that came out was absolutely delicious, especially the smoked salmon. Heading back this week (February 2020) with some fellow Welsh expats.

The book was a quiet, gentle novel conjuring another time and place.

Wednesday, 29 May 2019

#123 Mr Bridge / Mrs Bridge - Evan S Connell (Choice: Nic) (Venue: Paladar, SE1)

Date: Wednesday 29 May 2019
Present: Nic, Gill C, Sabine

The venue was a real winner - repeat visit for me, first time for Gill and Sabine. Gill was back on for her second visit on the Saturday night but I beat her because I was there for Saturday lunch!

Sadly, the book was not such a hit. As Mr and Mrs Bridge were companion novels, we split them so a few of us read each. Only Sabine, so far as I know, made it through both. Still, it certainly raised some emotions:

Gill F: I can’t do next week. I may have killed Mrs Bridge by then though.

Jen: I got to the end of the second page and was depressed so put it down and haven’t gone back.

Nic: I gather it isn’t the popular position but I thought it was quite wonderful albeit depressing: it felt so entirely real and conjured up a place and time I am very pleased not to be. Actually, made me quite tearfully thankful for all the women that broke out of those lives and fought for everything we have and can do today.

Sabine: completely agree – it seemed such a wasted life. No wonder they were all on Valium. Definitely worth reading Mr Bridge afterwards as a lot of things become clearer. And he really loved her and working all those hours was his way of showing her. Which of course she did not understand.

Sabine: I found it worth reading Mr Bridge too as it gives much more detail / back story.

Gill C: My local book shop asked if I wanted Mrs Bridge. I politely declined.

Sunday, 31 March 2019

#122 Home Fire - Kamilla Shamsie (Choice: Sabine)

Date: Unclear
Present: None

Almost an official choice - initially filler for our speedier readers but eventually read by most!

Doris: thought Home Fire was fantastic 
Gill C: It’s very good.

Wednesday, 13 February 2019

#121 Transcription - Kate Atkinson (Choice: Gill F) (Venue: Queen Street Dining Room)

Date: Wednesday 13 February 2019
Present: Sabine, Jen, Gill F, Gill C

Transcription is by turn charming, fascinating and mysterious and Kate Atkinson is one of those authors, like Hilary Mantel, who make it all seem so effortless as you surrender to them and follow willingly as they lead you by the hand wherever they want you to go.

I recommended it to our US legal team's book group when I made a guest appearance there later in the year.

The dinner was delicious.

Doris: Loved the book, will read more as I liked her prose. I also liked the different timelines.

Monday, 17 December 2018

#120 Little Fires Everywhere - Celest Ng (Choice: Sabine) (Venue: The 10 Cases)

Date: Monday 17th December 2018
Present: Gill C, Gill F, Nic, Sabine, (Jen, Alex, Cloddagh, Conn)

Also discussed at our Christmas gathering and, generally, the more popular choice. A rollicking good read filled with fascinating characters.

Nic: I raced through Little Fires.
Gill F: I raced through it too.

#119 Holding - Graham Norton (Choice: Jen) (Venue: The 10 Cases, Endell Street) Gill C, Gill F, Nic, Sabine, (Jen, Alex, Cloddagh, Conn)

Date: Monday 17th December 2018 
Present: Gill C, Gill F, Nic, Sabine, (Jen, Alex, Cloddagh, Conn)

This most festive of gatherings began at the rehearsal of Jen's choir - where highlights included Labi Siffre's So Strong as well as a selection of both well and lesser know carols - and moved on to The 10 Cases for pre-Christmas chat and Xmas Book exchange. Sadly, our singing superstar was unable to stay because children are not allowed however, the convivial staff looked the other way while we had a quick Christmas drink.

Doris summed up the book when she said: I enjoyed it, quick read but better than expected.

Wednesday, 10 October 2018

#118 They Were Sisters - Dorothy Whipple (Choice Gill C) (Venue: Foxlow, Clerkenwell)

Date: Wednesday 10 October 2018
Present: Gill C, Sabine, Nic

Praise for They were Sisters:

Doris: I enjoyed the book – worth persevering 

Nat: Yes, I’m really enjoying it too 

Gill F: I’m enjoying too 

Sabine: 445 pages is quite a big book – it certainly seemed quite a long read 

Doris: I kept hoping Geoffrey would meet a painful death. 

Sabine: that hope kept me reading too.


Wednesday, 4 July 2018

#117 The Story of Lucy Gault - William Trevor (Choice: Doris) (Venue: Mele e Pere, Brewer Street)

Date: Wednesday 4 July 2018
Present: Gill F, Doris, Jen

A slow, poignant book that took time to warm-up. Hopefully, dinner came out hot from the start (unless it was salad!) but I don't know because I wasn't there.

Nic: I didn’t like the book to begin with – I didn’t enjoy the language / style. But I did like the story and want to know how it resolved. I definitely got more into it. It was a bit Captain Corelli-ish in its futility but I quite like a sad ending  

Sabine: agree with Nic – I was waiting for the story to start for about 100 pages! Ending was melancholic but a happy one would not have worked. Liked the description of the minutiae of Irish provincial life. And the (always scary) reminder that small things can have a big impact.  

Gill C: I liked the book.  

Jen: I felt that it was a very English book, for all that it was written by an Irishman. It didn’t have the lyricism of Irish English. The characters were very flat; events happened to them, rather than they driving or having any influence other than the original action by the child Lucy. I enjoyed parts of it, but overall, disappointing.