All posts by Heather

About Heather

Heather is the Librarian II, Literacy and Readers' Advisory, with the Vaughan Public Libraries. Her job is to connect leisure readers and aspiring writers with the endless space of imagination and creation through words in all forms.  |  Meet the team

The Girl on The Train by Paula Hawkins

The Girl on the TrainIf you usually keep up with the new items from the Library, you may realize how many holds we have on The Girl on The Train by Paula Hawkins – a debut has been staying on the bestseller list for more than 10 weeks … a psychological thriller that makes you bite your nail and sigh about what people’s lives are actually like when you look further … I am sure the Gone Girl effect had greatly impacted the popularity of this new title, but the book does have its own merit … I was impressed with the lonely atmosphere that the author tried to set at the beginning … It’s a feeling that everyone can relate to once in while and the description is so true …

Actually, I requested the audiobook instead to get hold of the story faster – a good narrator can usually immerse you in the story’s atmosphere so deeply and make your reading experience unforgettable. Continue reading

US Conductors by Sean Michaels

US ConductorsI’ve just started the 2014 Giller winner US Conductors by Sean Michaels, but I know I will like it. Despite the musical instrument described in the book seems quite odd and ghostly to me at the beginning, it’s a beautiful and haunting story about music, love, spy, and science – if you have a 9-year-old son who loves science and technology, you can actually share some pages with him.

The book is based on the true story of Lev Termen, the Russian scientist, who invented the theremin player, and his “one true love,” Clara Rockmore. In the first half of the book, we learn of Termen’s early days inventing the theremin, and his arrival in the Jazz age New York. In the second half, the novel builds to a crescendo as Termen’s spy games fall apart and returns to Russia, where he is imprisoned in Siberia and later brought to Moscow to eavesdrop on Stalin. Throughout all this, his unrequited love for Clara remains constant and unflagging. Continue reading

Mount Pleasant by Don Gillmor

Mount PleasantMount Pleasant by Don Gillmor comes in very timely and relevant. It is set in Toronto under Financial Tsunami and the Occupy Movement. Harry Salter, a previous journalist who is now the part-time non-tenure politics professor, is obviously going through his mid-life crisis or even beyond – he needs to deal with his ballooning debt, his crumbling marriage, an unexpected/no emotion involved affair, his challenging son and his aging mother … how many troubles can someone endure all at once, and I haven’t even mentioned his father’s death yet – apparently his father’s death was his hope to get rid of his debt, but his supposedly millions of dollars inheritance turns out to be just a few thousands of dollars …

But problems will always be solved, yes … the black humour of the book does help your reading, too.

Continue reading