Showing posts with label Simon Van Booy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Van Booy. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

The Illusion of Separateness by Simon Van Booy

I'm a huge unabashed fan of Simon Van Booy, so of course I had to request to be on the book tour for his latest book, a historical fiction novel called The Illusion of Separateness. The novel tells several stories, interwoven by time and space. Each story seems separate, but it is only the illusion of separateness which is finally revealed at the end of the novel.

I did find the novel a bit difficult to follow at times, and I think it would really have benefited from being read in one sitting (and at just over 200 pages, that's not an unmanageable feat) although I wasn't able to. What makes The Illusion of Separateness so easy to read though is the beautiful writing of Simon Van Booy, whose prose takes you into the world of a German solider who has had a bullet shot into his head, or a lonely British film director– each character in a different setting, in a different world, but ultimately connected.

It doesn't take Van Booy many words to say what is needed, and that's why I first fell in love with his writing through his incredible short stories. His words are brief, but passionate. Every once in awhile while reading it would catch me, a line I just had to write down, flawless and raw.
Love is also a violence, and cannot be undone.
This is a novel of beautiful characters and beautiful words. The Illusion of Separateness is complex and delicate, and at times I felt a bit muddled but what I constantly felt throughout was a connection to the text and to the people that inhabited it. I will definitely continue to pick up any future books from Simon Van Booy, and highly recommend that you do as well! 

Release Date: June 11, 2013  Pages: 224 Format: ARC
Source TLC Book Tours Publisher: Harper Buy It: Book Depository

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Everything Beautiful Began After: A Novel by Simon Van Booy

I loved Simon Van Booy's short story collections- loved- so it's fair to say I had high expectations of his debut novel, Everything Beautiful Began After, and fortunately they were not only met, but exceeded. Isn't it so incredible when that happens?

Everything Beautiful Began After begins one summer in Greece, when the lives of three strangers become intertwined forever. Each has come to Athens for a different reason, Rebecca has come to paint after years working as a stewardess, raised by her grandfather after her mother abandoned her and her twin sister when they were young. Floating in the world she hopes to find her passion in the heat of the city. After graduating from university, George has come to Athens to translate ancient languages. He spent his childhood at a boarding school and lacks connection to anything but language and alcohol. Henry, an archaeologist, has come to dig and unearth the secret worlds hiding underground. When they meet, the three lost and lonely souls of Rebecca, George and Henry become irrevocably entangled, their lives changed forever by one summer in the dusty city.

What is there to say about a nearly flawless novel, a book whose every second sentence you feel obligated to record, beautiful word following beautiful word in a way that doesn't seem possible, let alone human? Near the beginning of Everything Beautiful Began After, Van Booy writes:
"For the lost souls of the world, Athens is a place not to find themselves, but to find others like them."
This is exactly the Athens that George, Rebecca and Henry find. Each of them is broken in their own way, longing for something they cannot find. It is a book of heartbreak and loss, a book of beginnings and endings.
"You were unsure which pain is worse- the shock of what happened or the ache for what never will."
The only aspect of the novel I didn't enjoy at times was the use of the second person singular style (you) for portions of it. It comes across blunt at times and because it isn't consistent with the entire book felt abrupt when it did occur. Van Booy's prose is so smooth and lyrical that the "you" felt harsh and mismatched. I was also surprised, but intrigued, to notice that a portion of the novel is taken almost exactly from a short story published in The Secret Lives of People in Love, although I won't say which one for fear of spoiling part of the storyline. The excerpt fits smoothly within the context of the novel, and I suspect it was what inspired the story as a whole.

At one point in Everything Beautiful Began After, Van Booy writes:
"Language is like drinking from one’s own reflection in still water. We only take from it what we are at that time."
Perhaps it is only that I read this book at exactly the right moment, so that its flawless beauty and feelings of longing and desire could seep into my body, embed themselves into my cells, leave memories along my skin. But I doubt it. Even nearly a month after reading the book, I know that Simon Van Booy's debut novel, Everything Beautiful Began After, is beautiful from the first page and that is the truth, or as Van Booy calls it "a lie that everyone believes". Still, if the beauty of this book is a lie, it is one I want to be told again and again and again.

Release Date: July 5th, 2011
Pages: 416
Buy the Book
Source:
This review was a part of TLC Book Tours. Click here to read what other tour hosts thought. For the purpose of this review I was provided with a copy of the book which did not require a positive review. The opinions expressed in this post are completely my own.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The Secret Lives of People in Love: Stories by Simon Van Booy

The Secret Lives of People in Love is the debut collection of short stories by Simon Van Booy, which I picked up after reading (and loving) his second book, Love Begins in Winter. That's backwards of how I usually do things, but due to availability and wanting to get the books read in time for the book tour, I delved into Van Booy's second collection first. What this meant was that when I went to read The Secret Lives of People in Love, I was expecting the stories to be a certain way, and was surprised to find them quite different, although with the same incredible lyrical beautiful writing present in Love Begins in Winter.

The major difference between the two collections is the length of the stories, while Van Booy's first collection has 19 stories in, his second despite being of a similar length has only 5. The Secret Lives of People in Love contains stories of only 3 pages, with the longest being about 20 pages. What this means most of the time is that while the reader gets a rich look into the lives of the character, it is also a very brief look, in a sense that reminded me very much of Raymond Carver in What We Talk About When We Talk About Love (despite their writing styles being extremely different). This flash into an often gray and saddening world is both poetic and tragic in Van Booy's skilled hands.

There are too many stories to discuss each one individually, but overall I enjoyed them although there were definitely a few that didn't have much impact. The collection simply didn't have the consistent power that is present in Love Begins in Winter, perhaps because of the difference in length, meaning that the reader has so much less time to get to know the characters before they vanish. One story that I loved was "Apples" in which a shoemaker plants an orchard of apples in New York City to remember his daughter. Another one that stuck with me was "As Much Below as Up Above" in which a man narrowly escapes death and contemplates the demise of so many of his friends. 

Each story in this book was a soft moment in time, mean to be savoured instead of rushed. Ultimately, The Secret Lives of People in Love is a calm and quiet collection, filled with beauty although not- as I found Van Booy's follow up Love Begins in Winter to be- overwhelmed with it. I'm not always a fan of short stories, but I know that no matter the form I will be certain to pick up whatever Simon Van Booy publishes in the future.

Release Date: May 1st, 2007
Pages: 175
Buy the Book
Source:
This review was a part of TLC Book Tours. Click here to read what other tour hosts thought. For the purpose of this review I was provided with a copy of the book which did not require a positive review. The opinions expressed in this post are completely my own.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Love Begins in Winter: Stories by Simon Van Booy

I admit I picked up Love Begins in Winter: Stories by Simon Van Booy at the wrong time. What I mean is I picked it up when I was in bed, near sleep, thinking I'd just get a taste of the collection, read one story and fall peacefully asleep. From the very first sentence Van Booy had me hooked, and it didn't matter that what I thought were short stories were in fact near fifty pages in length, I made it through 2 of the 5 before finally being forced to sleep by heavy eyelids despite the fact that I didn't want to put down the book. I felt this way not because Love Begins in Winter is any kind of adventure thriller novel, the only adventure Van Booy delves into are those of the ordinary life and love.

Love Begins in Winter is a collection about meeting strangers, about beginnings, about fresh snow and new love. The title story appears first in the book and centres around an aging cellist who feels alone in the world since the death of his childhood companion. When he meets a woman who also suffered a great loss at a young age, the possibility of new life forms and grows between them. "Love Begins In Winter" was filled with beautiful phrases, word by word Van Booy made me fall in love, phrases such as "Grief is a country where it rains and rains but nothing grows. The dead live somewhere else- wearing the clothes we remember them in." and "Language is like looking at a map of somewhere. Love is living there and surviving on the land."

The second story in the collection was "Tiger Tiger", focuses on a doctor and her boyfriend, a man with parents whose marriage is on unsteady ground. He gives her a book written by their family doctor, and years later she picks it up only to realize the insight it has into her own life and the unexpected nature of love. Some of the excerpts from this book were quite intriguing, for example "Adult fears are idealized to the point where they become too big to fit through the hole they originally came through." Overall, it was probably my least favourite story in the collection though, as I found myself more emotionally distant from it than the other stories.

In the third story, "The Missing Statues", the love comes from a stranger and its impact radiates for years to come as the kindness of a gondolier is never forgotten by the man a young boy grows to be. In "The Coming and Going of Strangers", a boy falls in love with a girl he has never spoken to, a love that has no reason and yet is stronger than anything he has ever felt. The ending of the story was definitely a surprise, but the more I thought about it the more I felt it was perfect.

Love Begins in Winter ends with the story "The City of Windy Trees" in which a man travels to a new country to meet the daughter he never knew, the result of a one-night stand many years ago and the dream he never acknowledged. It is a touching story about redemption and what it feels like to move from a life alone to a life of love. The characters in Van Booy's collection are loners until they find love, although it doesn't always appear in obvious ways.

Ultimately, Love Begins in Winter was a beautiful and powerful collection from an author I will be certain to follow in the future. I already have his first collection of stories and his novel to read and I am excited to delve into more of his poetic writing. Although the title story was certainly my favourite, the others in the collection didn't disappoint my initial expectation. I may have read Love Begins in Winter in summer but it is the beginning of what I am sure will be a long lasting love affair with Simon Van Booy's beautiful prose.

Release Date: May 1st, 2009
Pages: 226
Buy the Book
Source:
This review was a part of TLC Book Tours. Click here to read what other tour hosts thought. For the purpose of this review I was provided with a copy of the book which did not require a positive review. The opinions expressed in this post are completely my own.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Simon Van Booy Short Stories, Only $1.99 Each

Simon Van Booy is the author of Love Begins in Winter, The Secret Lives of People in Love, Why We Fight, Why We Need Love, Why Our Decisions Don’t Matter, and the soon-to-be-released Everything Beautiful Began After. To celebrate the release of Everything Beautiful Began After, Harper is offering ALL Simon’s individual e-book short stories for just $1.99. A great one to start with is Love Begins in Winter, a perfect introduction to his writing.

Personally, I already own both his short story collections, but for those of you a little undecided about short stories, this is a great place to start with just one story at a great price. Here's where you can find the e-books.

Love Begins in Winter short story for $1.99

Amazon
Barnes & Noble

Google
http://books.google.com/ebooks?id=YrBNGRGokPkC&dq=inauthor:%22Simon+Van+Booy%22&as_brr=5

Have you ever read or heard of Simon Van Booy? Are you looking forward to picking up his first novel, Everything Beautiful Began After?