The Old Man and the Sea

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The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
Reviewed by Linda
📘📙📕

Depending on what mood you’re in, you could either be on one of two teams after reading this story: the throw the flipping fish back in the sea team, or team go old man! I was on the latter. Hemingway’s classic fable, set in Cuba, takes an old fisherman out on an overwhelming adventure into the Gulf Stream, where he battles with sharks, marlins, and flying fish – solo. Longing for his young companion, dreaming of lions, and speaking to himself throughout, this story is about patience, resilience, overcoming hardship, and remaining humble. This is a short and sweet classic, packed with plenty of lessons and parables to be learnt, and where better to read this, but in the birthplace of the Nobel Prize winning classic, in Cuba itself!

Linda Malek

I've always had the urge to set up a forum and voice my thoughts after each read, but never had the confidence to do so alone. 18 months ago, I got my fellow book-loving friends involved and formed The Candid Book Club! Aside from having an exponentially growing to-read pile and deteriorating shortsightedness, we've been lucky to have been invited to publisher events and have attended several talks with our favourite authors (Thank you and long may they continue!) To take a break from the pressures of PhD Chemistry, Jess and I exchanged books all the time and in my youth, I was that kid with the first editions of Harry Potter having already read Gulliver’s travels and some Charles Dickens. At work, my desk is a library and luckily for me I sit next to another bookworm Jack who entertains all the photo-taking. I'm suffering from a chronic case of wanderlust (age-related crisis) so books which are set as far away from home as possible tend to float my boat: Middle East, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Asia...you name it. But if it's got anything to do with Egypt then I'm all over it. So you get the drift...I read all the time, everywhere (on the tube mostly), everyday, a book a week, and very quickly I'm onto the next! And then sometimes there is a book that stops me in my tracks, makes me want to swallow the pages whole, and have it next to me at all times, with some sentences staying with me forever: Shantaram by David Gregory Roberts, anything by Khaled Hosseini, The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon, Stay With Me by Ayobami Adebayo (absolute gem of a woman), A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara, A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry, The Good Immigrant edited by Nikesh Shuklaand and anything by Naguib Mahfouz.

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The Automobile Club of Egypt