Photo de l'auteur

Claire Fuller

Auteur de Swimming Lessons

9 oeuvres 2,760 utilisateurs 174 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Claire Fuller is the author of Our Endless Numbered Days which won the £10,000 (A$20,438) Desmond Elliott Prize for new fiction. This was her debut novel. (Bowker Author Biography)

Comprend les noms: Claire Fuller

Crédit image: Originally uploaded by user

Œuvres de Claire Fuller

Swimming Lessons (2017) 783 exemplaires
Our Endless Numbered Days (2015) 777 exemplaires
Bitter Orange (2018) 573 exemplaires
Unsettled Ground (2021) 474 exemplaires
The Memory of Animals (2023) 143 exemplaires
Responsible Adult 1 exemplaire
Πικρό καλοκαίρι (2019) 1 exemplaire
Terre Fragile (2024) 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Critiques

This isn't going well. I think the story itself promises well. Ingrid disappears from the lives of her husband and daughters' lives when the younger daughter is only 11. She leaves behind a long series of letters hidden in among the books her husband Gil obsessively collects. In these long letters she minutely recounts details of her love affair with Gil, and her marriage, remembering with apparent total recall conversations from years ago. Really? I don't like any of the characters.

To persist, or not to persist? We'll see.

Next Day: reader, I persisted. All the comments I've already made hold good, and I finished the book. Fuller is a good observer of human foibles: our ability to say one thing and mean another, to dissemble, and to be all too blind or all too willing to see the faults of others. But I found the characters tiresome, and I was glad to finish the book. Two stars or three. Oh OK. Three then.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Margaret09 | 53 autres critiques | Apr 15, 2024 |
A novel no doubt inspired by Lockdown, in which our young heroine is incarcerated in a hospital as part of a drugs trial which isn't completed because the world at large goes into melt-down as a result of an untreatable variant of the virus rampaging round the world. Whilst there, another participant introduces her to the Revisitor, a device which allows her to re-experience her past life, which has been full of drama and error. It's all a bit odd as a device for flashback. As are her letters to H, revealing whose identity would be a spoiler alert. Unsatisfactory, uninvolving, with too many plot-lurches, this is far from Fuller at her finest.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Margaret09 | 8 autres critiques | Apr 15, 2024 |
2 and a half. A dreary tale full of intense characters.
½
 
Signalé
Mercef | 31 autres critiques | Mar 30, 2024 |
There’s a new virus decimating the world. It’s commonly called the dropsy virus as it causes swelling throughout the body It appears to be incredibly deadly.

But there’s hope – a biotech company has devised a promising vaccine. The only downside is that it hasn’t been tried on humans yet – and with the testing including infection with the virus after vaccination, not many people are volunteering. The reward is huge; the company will pay volunteers an almost unimaginable amount of money.

Neffy, a former marine biologist with a special interest in octopuses is disgraced and deeply in debt, so she volunteers. The vaccine makes her sick; the virus challenge makes her even sicker. But when she slowly comes back to consciousness, a person provides her with food and drink. She is not alone in the world.

When she has fully recovered, Neffy is told that the vaccine trial was stopped due to the bad reaction she had. She is the only one of the volunteers that completed the trial and now probably immune to the virus. But while she was ill, the virus mutated again to an even more horrific version affecting the brain. Earth’s population seems to have succumbed. Besides Neffy, there are four other people confined within the research center who didn’t receive the vaccine. All the staff fled when the virus became really bad. There is a limited amount of food and a generator within the center that continues to work.

One of the volunteers is there because he needed money to rework his spectacular invention that can take people back inside their memories. It’s not time travel - but it is a way to revisit people and events in your memory. It only works for certain individuals and it is not reliable as to exactly what memory you will revisit. It works for Neffy and the machine’s inventor; the downside is that is highly addictive to spend time with those one has lost.

In the beginning of the end, gangs robbed, raped and pillaged and packs of roaming dogs attacked victims and tore up bodies. The four non-vaccinated volunteers witnessed these events from the windows of the secure center and are terrified to go out although now it seems deadly quiet on the street. As food runs low, they pressure Neffy to go outside to forage. The generator fails. Although there is viral protective gear within the center, no one volunteers to accompany Neffy.

Even as secrets within the center are revealed it’s clear they can no longer stay.

Apparently the author started writing this before Covid struck. Many of the scenarios such as passengers not being allowed to disembark from a airplane will bring up memories of our own pandemic.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
streamsong | 8 autres critiques | Mar 1, 2024 |

Listes

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Joanne Harris Contributor
Marina Lewycka Contributor
Sarah Hall Contributor
Adam Thirlwell Contributor
Rula Lenska Narrator
Mark Meadows Narrator
Chigozie Obioma Contributor
Tomiwa Edun Narrator
Leo Nickels Cover designer

Statistiques

Œuvres
9
Membres
2,760
Popularité
#9,295
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
174
ISBN
88
Langues
8
Favoris
1

Tableaux et graphiques