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Thursday, 12 January 2023

Three Book Review - The Mummy by Anne Rice, The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman and Empty Planet – The Shock of Global Population Decline – by Darrell Bricker and John Ibbitson

 The Towering Pile: The Mummy by Anne Rice

 

The Mummy by Anne Rice 

If you want to know how the film franchise of the same name should have started; how the sand would feel, the heat and the adventure, then try this romp on for size. Anne Rice wrote this in 1989 as a film script but because the producers "wanted to change everything." She explained, "I think I went off to create that book just to spite them, I was so furious.” This supernatural adventure is set in the early twentieth century and is the story of the murder of an archaeologist, Lawrence Stratford, in the presence of one of the greatest Pharaohs ever to have lived – Ramses II. The trouble is the great king comes to life and tries to avenge the murder. What follows is Anne Rice at her best, adventurous, ambiguous and genuinely romantic. She is a marmite writer who some fall in love with and others cannot stand. For the very reason of why she wrote it, I can imagine her being quite furious at her typewriter, it is a rollicking read. This has an Agatha Christie vibe for the setting, ambiance and time-frame; a classic horror flavour for the heroes (being the Immortal King and others) and an ambiguous set of love and sexual intrigues that mixes with mythic, expansive storytelling covering literally thousands of years. It is a romance of sorts but set with such a balance that you can describe it as romantic horror but where the monsters aren’t wrapped in badly tightened bandages

 

 

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman  

 

How should a children’s book begin? First imagined by the author in 1985 while watching his son at play on his tricycle in a graveyard, of course its starts with a long blade, a dark night and three deaths. The only member of the targeted Family to escape is the baby who, by turning towards the graveyard at the end of the road, survives and is adopted by the inhabitants of God’s Acre. The book is about Bod growing up, his adventures within and outside the graveyard, the skills he learns from the inhabitants both dead and undead. Each chapter is a short story, covering two years after the preceding chapter. Bod is pursued by Man Jack and four other members of the Jacks of All Trades tasked to finish the job but he also has his protectors. American Library Association described it as "delicious mix of murder, fantasy, humour and human longing", noting its "magical, haunting prose". It is simply a tour de force of imagination, magical writing and Family filled with ghosts, ghouls and other supernatural beings. Kirkus Reviews awarded it a starred review, claiming that, "this needs to be read by anyone who is or has ever been a child". Read when I was well past childhood and enjoyed so much that I have returned again and again.

 Empty Planet: The Shock of Global Population Decline: Amazon.co.uk ...

Empty Planet – The Shock of Global Population Decline – by Darrell Bricker and John Ibbitson

 

Written by an award-winning journalist and leading international social researcher this was a real eye opener – the kind that drives your significant other to the end of their patience because you are quoting entire pages to them in shock and surprise.

There is growing evidence that rather than an exponential increase in population we are already on the path to an irretrievable global decline. The authors back this with research, measured opinion and observations and while this may sound like an ideal – less people, more sustainability, better planet – the road with be filled with disruption - political, social and existential. As the population ages, with fewer offspring, worker shortages follow and greater demands on health care and social services.

There are curious observations – how education leads to fewer children. That once a threshold has been passed it appears no social manipulation (literally paying people to have children with extra health care/paternity leave/tax breaks) changes the downward track.

This sounds like a dry subject, so colour me surprised when I went through 240 pages (36 additional pages showing their research papers/references) in three days – all this while quoting most of the book to my partner.

The outcome looks inevitable. The book is rigorously researched and a compelling, accessible read. Our future as a species appears set in the long term – what seems to be malleable is how we travel that road.


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