#BookReview El Hacho by Luis Carrasco @Epoque_Press

El HachoAbout the Book

El Hacho is a timeless evocation of inheritance, duty and our relationship to the landscape that defines us.

Set in the stark beauty of the Andalusian mountains El Hacho tells the story of Curro, an olive farmer determined to honour his family tradition in the face of drought, deluge and the lucrative temptations of a rapidly modernising Spain.

 

Format: ebook, paperback (82 pages)      Publisher: Epoque Press Publication date: 15th February 2018     Genre: Literary fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find El Hacho on Goodreads


My Review

I fell in love with olive farmer, Curro, and his wife (his equal in industry and enterprise) and their wonderful mutually supportive relationship. “She met him on the terrace and fussed over his aches and took his satchel and rough palms in hers and worked her thumbs into the knots and kissed the split and broken nails…”   Find someone who cares about you in the way they do about each other and you’ll be a happy person. When he entered the house his wife was wearing the worry of her love.

Their simple life is depicted with such clarity I felt I could smell the coffee brewing, the almonds roasting and the bread baking. And how’s this for making your mouth water? “[He] soaked a crust of moist warm bread with oil and split a ripe tomato upon it with a grind of pepper and a pinch from the salt bowl.”

The El Hacho of the title refers to the mountain that overlooks the village. To Curro, though, it’s more than just a topographical feature but something to be respected and preserved. “To tear down that mountain would be to rip the heart from this village… El Hacho is our version of the name they give to a mountain that watches over the people that live in its shadow, that protects them from those that would turn them out… We don’t own it, we are just its guardians, and for a very short time.”

Curro watches in despair as the long drought threatens his livelihood and that of surrounding farms. Never in my born days can I remember it so intense so late, he said despairingly. It’s like God himself has abandoned this valley to the devil and refuses to turn the wheel to winter.” In an example of one of the wonderful descriptions of landscape and weather in the book, Curro sees the land around him “heave a singular, terrible, beseeching lament for rain.”

There’s a saying that ‘it never rains but it pours’ and when the drought does end it does so in the most dramatic way. “He saw the horizon beyond the eastern valley invaded by great shapeless towers of purple-black thunder heads streaked upon their hulls with sulphuric yellow light. They heaved across the sky in frothing anger and the groaning of the thunder began to clap in pearls of shocking weight.” Once more Curro must singlehandedly battle the forces of the natural world arrayed against him.

El Hacho is a simply but beautifully told story of overcoming obstacles and of never giving up. You can read an extract from the book and make up your own mind here.

I received a review copy courtesy of Epoque Press.

In three words: Gentle, uplifting, authentic

Try something similar: Sunset Song by Lewis Grassic Gibbon

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About the Author

Luis Carrasco lives and writes in Gloucestershire. He was inspired to write El Hacho after falling in love with the people and natural beauty of the Sierra de Grazalema whilst living in Andalucia. He is currently working on his second novel.

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#BookReview Joan Smokes by Angela Meyer @SarabandBooks

Joan SmokesAbout the Book

Winner of the inaugural Mslexia Novella Award (2019).

She used to be someone else, but now she’s arrived in Vegas, where she can start again. It won’t do to let the past leak in. It’s the Sixties now. She’s going to become … Joan. She makes a list: Buy a new dress (fitted, floral). Dye her hair (dark). Curl it. Buy red lipstick. Buy cigarettes and a lighter, too: Joan, she decides, is a smoker. There’s no need to dwell on why she’s here, what went before. She is just moving forward, one foot in front of the other, becoming that new person. Joan. This city of flashing neon, casinos and shows is full of distractions. Finding a job will be quick and easy. Things to do. New people to meet. A clean sheet. She’s certainly not thinking about Jack, or … No. Not anymore. Her new life starts right here, right now.

Format: Paperback (76 pages)                 Publisher: Saraband
Publication date: 5th December 2019   Genre: Literary Fiction

Purchase links*
Amazon.co.uk | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Joan Smokes on Goodreads


My Review

Who is Joan? Or rather, who is the woman who currently calls herself Joan, seemingly just the latest in a series of assumed names and characters? Like an actress playing a role, our narrator considers what someone called Joan would do. How would she dress, what colour would her hair be, what car would she drive? She knows for sure she would smoke. Yes, Joan smokes. As she muses at one point, her life is ‘a fabrication, a performance’.

It seems though that however far she travels there are things she can’t leave behind. Joan muses, ‘How does the mind learn to let things go?‘ prompting the reader to wonder what is it she’s trying to let go of: traumatic memories, past actions, emotional ties? As details of Joan’s relationship with the troubled Jack are gradually revealed, we understand more why she asks ‘Was there passion without pain?’

The book is characterized by spare, sharp prose and acutely observed descriptions of people, objects and places. For example, I loved Joan’s first impression of the Las Vegas strip: ‘The lights make sound in her eyes. On one sign: the soprano crescendo of pink. On another, a swooshing fan of green-blue.’

Despite being less than eighty pages, Joan Smokes packs a powerful emotional punch with its haunting story of rejection, loss and trying to start over.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of Saraband and Ruth Killick Publicity.

In three words: Taut, intense, acutely-observed

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Screen-Shot-2019-05-13-at-13.34.13-wpcf_345x237About the Author

Angela Meyer is an exciting new talent: a debut novelist whose short stories has been published in Best Australian Stories, Island, The Big Issue, The Australian, The Lifted Brow and Killings. By day she works as a publisher for Echo, an imprint of Bonnier Publishing Australia, where she has identified and published international bestsellers including The Tattooist of Auschwitz.

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