Afbeelding van de auteur.

Marele Day

Auteur van Lammeren Gods

15+ Werken 583 Leden 14 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Bevat de namen: Marele Day, Marelle Day

Fotografie: Courtesy of Allen and Unwin

Reeksen

Werken van Marele Day

Lammeren Gods (1997) 289 exemplaren
The Last Tango of Dolores Delgado (1992) 43 exemplaren
The Case of the Chinese Boxes (1990) 32 exemplaren
How to Write Crime (1996) 19 exemplaren
Mavis Levack, P.I. (2000) 15 exemplaren
The Sea Bed (2009) 12 exemplaren
Reckless (2023) 4 exemplaren
Shirley's Song: A Novel (1984) 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

The Year's Best Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy (1997) — Medewerker — 27 exemplaren
Lethal Ladies (1996) — Medewerker — 22 exemplaren
The Best Australian Stories 2011 (2011) — Medewerker — 16 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1947
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
Australia
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Ned Kelly Award (Lifetime Achievement Award, 2008)

Leden

Besprekingen

Sad historical biography - can't imagine how it must have felt to outlive six children and a seafaring husband - Marele Day has a go at describing the grief and also the good times of the Captain's wife's life.
 
Gemarkeerd
siri51 | 1 andere bespreking | May 10, 2018 |
Lambs of God gifts its readers with lush imagery, memorable characters, and a pervading undercurrent of myth and magic.

It wasn't a story I was expecting to like, not only because of its religious setting, but because once I started, it took about 50 pages before I was fully settled into its world. It's slow-paced, full of vivid descriptions, slightly contrived...yet Iphigenia, Margarita, Carla, and even Father Ignatius (who I found hypocritical and didn't like much at all) were too strange to ignore, too different to dismiss outright. I'm glad I kept reading.

Recommended if you want a story about three nuns, a priest and a dilapidated monastery, tempered with magical realism.

3.5 stars
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
flying_monkeys | 5 andere besprekingen | Jan 14, 2017 |
I picked this up accidentally at the library. What a pleasant surprise by this Aussie author! This is the story of three nuns living in solitary in a run-down monastery on an island. A priest, not knowing the ruins are inhabited, comes to assess the property. What follows is bordering on fantasy. Funny and touching with a good ending.
 
Gemarkeerd
LivelyLady | 5 andere besprekingen | Jan 8, 2014 |
In the first book a four book series Claudia Valentine is a private investigator in Sydney, Australia, in the late 1980’s. She’s called upon by an old acquaintance to investigate the death of her brother, Mark Bannister, who supposedly died from a heart attack. Claudia soon discovers a number of unsettling facts including the fact Mark had heroin in his system when he died and was writing a book before his death but had kept the content secret from everyone he knew. Her investigation takes into the seamier side of life in the harbour city and she’s soon rubbing shoulders with some nasty characters including the shadowy Harry Lavendar of the title.

I was surprised, a few months ago, to learn that in addition to the much loved female private eye series I have followed for years, Sara Paretsky’s V I Warshawski and Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone, there was an Australian-based series featuring a similar character. Despite being a fan of the genre for many years I’d never heard a peep this series which says something about my lack of investigative powers but says more about the paucity of publicity for Australian authors in their home country. On the basis that it is better to have discovered these late than never I thought I’d take a look.

The most noticeable thing about this book when judged by today’s standards is it’s length: 169 pages! Is it only 20 years ago that books didn’t have to be the size and weight of house bricks in order to be published? Amazingly within those few pages an entire story with a beginning, a middle and an end, manages to be told. And it’s a pretty good story too. The plot is logical and has the requisite twists, turns and surprises and Claudia’s investigation is depicted quite realistically. As is often the case with private eyes she uses a combination of friends in the right places and gut instinct to puzzle out whether or not Mark Bannister was murdered and who might have done such a thing and she gets into, and out of, some scrapes along the way. I was bemused by the fact that Claudia’s client never made an appearance after she initially hired Claudia (no worried phone calls were made nor any updates given) but that was the only ‘hole’ I noticed in the plot.

While the story was good, if fairly familiar for the genre, the writing of this book is in a separate class. I can’t think of a word to encapsulate it but it’s very, very good. It evokes a very strong sense of the location. I lived in Sydney at the time the book was set and I was transported back to that time and place by the words. At one point, Claudia is walking through the city noticing the changing nature of the landscape and she reflects
I tried to picture what all this had looked like a few short years ago but couldn’t. Like everyone else, I would accept it once it was a fait accompli, vaguely aware that the signposts of the city’s history and my own were being effaced, as if someone had gone through my photo album and replaced the photos of me with those of another child, more modern, better dressed.

I always marvel when someone can sum up the depth of a feeling so eloquently and so perfectly and there is a lot more of this throughout the book.

It saddens me a little to think I’m not the only Aussie more familiar with US and UK authors than I am with my own country’s literary heritage but I’m rather chuffed to have discovered this author even if it is long after she stopped writing crime fiction (she has written general fiction since this series ended though). If you like private eyes with a lot of guts and a sense of humour you could do a lot worse than track down this book.

My rating is actually 3.5
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
bsquaredinoz | Mar 31, 2013 |

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Statistieken

Werken
15
Ook door
5
Leden
583
Populariteit
#43,005
Waardering
½ 3.5
Besprekingen
14
ISBNs
91
Talen
4

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