Six Degrees of Separation: From Never Let Me Go to A Fear of Dark Water

Six Degrees of Separation is a monthly link-up hosted by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best. Each month, a book is chosen as a starting point and linked to six other books to form a chain. A book doesn’t need to be connected to all the other books on the list, only to the one next to it in the chain.

This month’s chain begins with:

Never Let Me Go

When I read Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro in 2006 I thought it was very chilling and disturbing in its implications. I didn’t know what it was all about before I read it, so when I realised it quite took my breath away. I noted this quotation ‘… you’ve been told and not been told.’ And as I don’t want to give away the plot all I’m saying is that this book is about love, friendship and memory.
The Remains of the Day

My first book is another book by  Kazuo Ishiguro, The Remains of the Day, a book that I liked much more than Never Let Me Go. I read it years ago and have also seen the film of the book, with Anthony Hopkins as Stevens, the aging butler at Darlington Hall, looking back on his life. It’s a sad and moving book about life between the two World Wars. Stevens reminisces about his relationship with Darlington Hall’s housekeeper, Miss Kenton and his unspoken feelings for her.

Another book with the word ‘day’ in the title is The Day of the Lie by William Broderick. This is the fourth of his Father Anselm books – a series I love, although this is not my favourite book of the series. It is set in post-Second World War Poland, covering  the early 1950s, the early 1980s and the present day. Father Anselm’s old friend John has asked him to investigate who had betrayed  Roza Mojeska. She had been part of an underground resistance movement, had been arrested and tortured by the secret police. Like his other books this is a complicated and layered book, delving into the past, uncovering secrets and revealing crimes.

Schindler's ListSchindler’s List by Thomas Keneally is also set in Poland – Nazi-occupied Poland during the Second World War. I haven’t read this book yet, although I have watched the film directed by Steven Spielberg more than once. It’s an unforgettable story, all the more extraordinary for being true. Oskar Schindler, a German business man risked his life to protect and save the lives of more than a thousand Jews. The book based on numerous eyewitness accounts. It won the Booker Prize in 1982.

The Secret RiverThe Secret River by Kate Grenville was  shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2006. It completely captivated me when I read it in 2012. It’s historical fiction  following the life of William Thornhill from his childhood in the slums of London to Australia. He was a Thames waterman transported for stealing timber in 1806. It’s about his struggle for survival after he was pardoned and became a waterman on the Hawkesbury River and then a settler with his own land and servants. It’s beautifully written and raises several issues ‘“ about crime and punishment, about landownership, defence of property, power, class and colonisation.

Standing WaterAnother book set in Australia, but this time in the present day is Standing Water by Terri Armstrong. It’s a fascinating story set in and near the fictional town of Marrup in the Western Australia Wheatbelt, an area suffering from drought ‘“ there’s been no rain for a couple of years. I was completely engrossed in this book, which is about friendships, sibling rivalry, parent/child relationships, and love and betrayal. The characters are convincing and the setting is superb. I could feel the heat, see the landscape, the farms, the plants, birds and the Dog Rock, a huge rock overlooking a panorama of flat land below its sixty foot height, with tiny caves at its base.

A Fear Of Dark Water (Jan Fabel, #6)Which leads me to A Fear of Dark Water by Craig Russell, the last link in the chain. The water in this book is the result of a massive storm that hit Hamburg, flooding the city, just as a major environmental summit is about to start. This is crime fiction – a serial rapist and murderer is still at large in the city and when the flood waters recede a headless torso is found washed up. I thoroughly enjoyed this fast paced and complex, multi-layered crime novel that kept me guessing right to the end.

From Never Let Me Go to A Fear of Dark Water took me from a disturbing view of the future to a disturbing view of the present via the UK, Poland, Australia and Germany. Where does your chain take you?

 

16 thoughts on “Six Degrees of Separation: From Never Let Me Go to A Fear of Dark Water

  1. This is so clever, Margaret! And the books you’ve chosen are excellent selections, I think. I agree with you about The Secret River – a stunning book, in my opinion. And I want to read some Ishiguro.

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  2. What a great chain and, like all great six-degree chains, it’s added to my TBR list. The last three sound especially good.

    If I were to start a chain from your final book it would lead me to The Storm by Margriet de Moor, (Carol Brown Janeway translator). Have you read it? It’s a novel based on an actual disaster in the Netherlands.

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  3. The problem with these posts is that I always end up wanting to read all the books! However, I have recently acquired The Secret River, so I’ll content myself with that…

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  4. I too have been surprised and delighted at how differently everyone’s mind works and what different directions of travel the degrees of separation took for every reader!

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  5. Every time I read posts on this meme I start working out my own chain… and then talk myself out of getting involved! I would certainly have started like you on this one, Margaret, with The Remains of the Day, which I love. But where would I go from from there…? (I must not get started; I must NOT!)

    The books you’ve chosen sound riveting. And the tbr list grows yet again 😉

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  6. Enjoyed your links Margaret, and particularly that like me, your first was to another Ishiguro. There are two authors there I’ve never heard of, William Broderick and Terri Armstrong. I need to check them out.

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  7. That’s a very cool, thoughtful chain. Never Let Me Go is a very powerful book and sobering, and Remains of the Day is elegiac. Apart from those two, I haven’t read any of the other books on your chain, but I do own Schindler’s List. Someday, when I am feeling strong, I will read it.

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  8. Thanks for joining in!

    And confession time: I haven’t read Schindler’s List OR seen the movie… I think I was overseas when the movie came out in Australia and then somehow, it has passed me by all these years.

    Worse still, I haven’t read The Secret River. I feel like it’s a large omission from my Australian reading. I did see the ABC miniseries though, and loved it. Must remedy the situation in 2017.

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