September books
Oct. 2nd, 2007 07:03 amThe Closed Circle, Jonathan Coe. Brilliant. This is the further adventures of the characters in The Rotters’ Club and thank goodness some of the mysteries from that book are solved. Coe gets in so many sharp observations on modern life that it’s hard to believe he hasn’t actually been a Fleet Street journalist, an MP or a trade union official. Positively Dickensian.
Anne’s House of Dreams, L M Montgomery
Persuasion, Jane Austen
The Flower Patch among the Hills, Flora Klickmann. Plotting a whole post on Klickmann sometime.
The Queen and I, Sue Townsend. Alan Bennet’s The Uncommon Reader has been comprehensively reviewed and read on the radio but as I can’t get my mitts on it at the moment I turned instead to Sue Townsend’s fantasy, which I’d read at least twice before. I suppose both books are an extension of the dreams which so many people are said to have about the Queen. The interesting thing is that, as with Helen Mirren’s portrayal, the fictional queen just makes you admire the real one more.
Pilgrim’s Rest, Patricia Wentworth. A Miss Silver novel, first published 1948.
Ladies’ Bane, Patricia Wentworth
The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous, Jilly Cooper. One I’d missed and picked up for 50p. It is so much better than Wicked! The ending is positively nailbiting.
Anne of Ingleside, L M Montgomery
I’m finding Anne rather a pain and keep comparing her with Joey Bettany/Maynard. Both lively children with literary ambitions. Both marry doctors who are apparently inexhaustible, also perfect husbands and fathers and yet become very, very dull. Both always have help around when they need it. It’s the peripheral characters that make the Anne books fun to read. What would they be without Mrs Lynde, Rebecca Dew and Susan-at-the-helm?
no subject
Date: 2007-10-02 07:24 am (UTC)There's a few Flower Patch books on my shelves, but I haven't read them yet (it's the story of my life) although I have read some of her stuff in the GOP, which presumably was reworked into the books, so I may have read some of them without realising. They are very pretty.
How do you get on with Miss Silver? I like some better than others - I don't like the ones where it's obvious from the first whodunit, and we get to watch Miss Silver prove it, but I enjoy some of them a lot, more than Miss Marple.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-02 08:46 am (UTC)I have all the Flower Patch books and all but one of Klickmann's self-help books. I admire her enormously: her hard work, her nervous breakdowns, her common sense, her still writing in her eighties. I love all the detail in the books about the house and garden and as for her hats!
The first two Miss Silver books I read disappointed me after they'd been so highly praised by people who usually like the same books I do. I think I prefer ones written in the 1940s and I enjoyed both this month's. I'd never realised there were so many of them; picked up another half dozen at the local book fair on Saturday.
Just about to mail you, BTW.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-02 09:16 am (UTC)I know nothing about FK beyond the fact that she edited the GOP for a long time, but she sounds fascinating.