I read six books
in December.
The Blackwater Lightship by Colm Toibin
I’ve been a fan
of CM’s since reading Brooklyn (made
into a great film starring Saoirse Ronan, albeit with a slightly different
ending). This one is set in Ireland in the 1990s. Declan is dying, and that
brings together the women of his family – his sister, mother and grandmother,
between whom relations have been strained for a long time. He is so good on
family dynamics; for me though this book lacked the warmth and touches of
humour that made Brooklyn so
wonderful.
The Second Stage of Grief by Katherine Heyton
Read on Kindle. A police series set in New Zealand. I read the first in this
series last month and the second one was just as good. Gritty and page-turning:
Ngaire Blakes is
trying to put her life back together. The ex-cop resigned from the police after
a vicious assault left her battling PTSD. Dragged into a murder investigation,
she’s shocked to discover that all the evidence points to her.
Noreen and the Barclay Affair by Helen Dawson
Another book set in New Zealand, this time a children’s one
with a great cover – I pounced on it in a charity shop. However, the story
about Noreen, a girl who works in her aunt’s detective agency, was, I’m sorry
to say, dire. Implausible plot to say the least and the aunt is barely mentioned
– she is got out of the way in various unlikely scenarios so that Noreen can do
the ‘detecting’. Still like the cover though …
The Pen and Pencil Girls by Clare Mallory
Another children’s title and set in New Zealand, although
really it could be set anywhere. Six schoolgirls form a club to write and
illustrate stories. One of them is set the task of typing the stories up for a
competition. I learned to type myself on a manual machine with seven – seven – carbon copies (under the eye of
a very strict teacher) so could sympathise with the pains she took. The book
was first published in 1948; this edition is a reissue from the wonderful Girls Gone By Publishers.
Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend by Katarina Bivald
I’d read reviews of this and have long wanted to read it –
not knowing this, my dear d-in-l surprised me by giving me a copy which I
proceeded to read in a couple of sittings.
Sara is Swedish and has been made
redundant from the bookshop she has worked in for ten years. She has been
having correspondence with an elderly lady in a sleepy small town in Iowa which
culminates in an invitation to visit. Not to give too much away – but Sara’s
arrival and her love of books draws the town’s eccentric inhabitants together.
I love books set in small-town America and I liked all the booky references.
Sara’s slow-burning relationship with Tom was very believable. My favourite
character though was ‘Poor George’ and his fatherly longing for the daughter of
his faithless wife. Recommended …
The Virago Book of Christmas edited by Michelle Lovric
Curl up with a
tantalising volume that fives full rein to the seditious humour, peculiar
discomforts and exquisite social tortures of the season.
Some familiar and loved authors of mine here – Elizabeth
Goudge, Agatha Christie and Laurie Graham for example – and many new to me. Among
my favourite pieces was an extract from Winifred Foley’s memoir A Child in the Forest in which she –
eventually – comes to love her home-made rag doll. And one unexpected pleasure was
Jane Welsh Carlyle’s letter to a friend telling of ‘the very most agreeable party I was ever at in London’ where the
company included Charles Dickens doing conjuring tricks.
The problem with anthologies – and I am working my way
through The Virago Book of Food too –
is the discovery of new authors. So little time, so much to read …
On that note, a very Happy New Year to you.
I haven't read any of those!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading my blog, Patsy! As I said at the end of this post: so little time, so much to read ...
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