I read six books
in July, four fiction and two non-fiction.
Girl Sleuth: Nancy Drew and the Women Who Created Her by Melanie
Rehak
From Christian
Aid Booksale. From the back cover blurb: ‘Nancy Drew has survived the
Depression, World War II, and the sixties to enter the pantheon of American
girlhood.’ But the story of how the books were written is even more exciting
than the girl detective’s many adventures. The ‘author’ Carolyn Keene
<spoiler alert> did not exist.
Instead, Edward Stratemeyer thought up the storylines and formed a
syndicate of writers to whom he farmed out the work; when he died his daughter
Harriet took over.
This is really Harriet’s
story, and that of one of the writers, Mildred Wirt, who (long before word
processors) could turn in a manuscript in a matter of days. It was many years before
Carolyn Keene’s non-existence was admitted to by the Stratemeyers and there had
to be many subterfuges (eg when answering fan letters) to keep the secret. And in
telling the history of Nancy Drew, the author has also given an engrossing account
of women’s history over the decades.
The Wonder Spot by Melissa Banks
Sophie Applebaum
feels a bit of a misfit. We first meet her when she’s about twelve at her
cousin’s Bar Mitzvah and go with her through various (unsuitable) jobs and
various (unsuitable) boyfriends, visit her beloved brothers and not-so-beloved
grandmother, until we leave her in her early thirties, still not really sure of
her place in the world. I liked the episodic way this was told so that with
each chapter we have to fill in the gaps. I enjoyed the writing very much too.
The Curious Heart of Ailsa Rae by Stephanie Butland
I read Lost for Words by this author last July and
absolutely loved it, one of my favourite books of the year. So I was very keen
to read her new one and while I didn’t fall for it quite as much I would
certainly recommend it. Ailsa was born with a serious heart defect; now, in her
twenties, her life has been saved through having a heart transplant. In part
the book is told through a blog she has kept during and after her days in
hospital. Ailsa lives in Edinburgh and she finds herself involved in the
production of a Fringe Festival event, Romeo
and Juliet with tango … At the same time she is getting used to her new
heart, she’s wondering about getting in touch with her estranged father, and
there’s an unexpected new man in her life.
A Mother’s Goodbye by Kate Hewitt
I do like Kate
Hewitt (who also writes as Katherine Schwartz). This story is told in alternate
chapters, in the first person, by two women: Heather lives in a too-small house
in downtown New Jersey; her husband is injured and unable to work and they have
just found out that their fourth child is on the way; Grace works for an
investment bank, lives in a minimalist flat in New York, and is realising how
empty her life is. Under normal circumstances the two would never meet but …
well, find out for yourselves and remember to have a box of tissues handy.
Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict by Laurie Viera
Rigler
I usually avoid
Jane Austen spin-offs and the title of this one did not appeal but when I
flicked through I liked the look of it – and I thoroughly enjoyed it. ‘Jane
Mansfield’, a gentleman’s daughter in England in 1813, wakes up in Los Angeles
in the 21st century in the body of Courtney Stone. As she tries to realise what
has happened and who she really is, she must quickly get to grips with the
dizzying new world she finds herself in – I found it all very convincing. In
Confessions of a Jane Austen Addict
Courtney finds that she has gone back in time and is now Jane – look forward to
reading that at some point.
Edited by Mary F
Williamson and Tom Sharp
Christian Aid
Book Sale purchase. During the days of the Second World War when children were
being evacuated from cities to countryside, and from Britain overseas, Marie
Williamson in Toronto and her family welcomed into their home two boys they had
never met, children of a distant cousin in England. During the four years they
stayed – and they weren’t the easiest of lads – she faithfully wrote long
letters to their mother, which were found just a few years ago.
I found the
whole story fascinating. The boys could not have had a better foster family –
the editors of the book are, respectively, Marie’s daughter and the younger of
the evacuees. It was also a revelation to me that Canada too had wartime rationing
– in part that was because they sent so much in the way of food over to
Britain.
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