callmemadam: (reading)
callmemadam ([personal profile] callmemadam) wrote2009-01-28 07:25 pm

It has been a quiet week in Lake Wobegon...



There's a thread running on a mailing list I'm on: 'Where did you first read that book'? I was reminded of one book in particular by Private Eye's Literary Review of Garrison Keillor's new book, Liberty. They hate it, of course; they only review in order to be nasty. The anonymous reviewer should at least acknowledge that the first book in the series has something going for it.

I was in Orlando, Florida, in bed in a swish hotel. I knew nothing about the book, the same edition shown here; American with '#1 National Bestseller' on the cover. A few pages in I got to, 'it would make a good picture, if you had the right lens, which no one in this town has got.' I laughed out loud and was converted. The same thing happened with the first Adrian Mole book, which I also started in complete ignorance. I shrieked when the dog came back from the vet's after having a pirate extracted from its paw (you have to have read the book) and there began another love affair. That would have been Christmas 1982, on the sofa. I still re-read Lake Wobegon Days and my current bed book is The Lost Diaries of Adrian Mole .

Any books linked forever with the place you first read them?

[identity profile] huskyteer.livejournal.com 2009-01-29 10:38 am (UTC)(link)
Lots of holiday ones: Henrietta's War in the Auvergne, The Venetian Affair in the Jura, Tintin in America in Cornwall.

And The Lost Continent in a corner of Russell & Bromley during the shoe sale.

[identity profile] callmemadam.livejournal.com 2009-01-29 11:28 am (UTC)(link)
And The Lost Continent
What, all of it?

ISTR you reading Red Rackham's Treasure waiting for the flight to Orlando. A book which strangely disappeared.

[identity profile] huskyteer.livejournal.com 2009-01-29 12:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I must have left it in the seat pocket. Don't worry, I have another copy now!