callmemadam: (Alan)


I see that today Talking Pictures is showing a film (1945) based on Dorothy Whipple’s novel They Were Sisters. It’s a bleak book, about three marriages. The least fortunate sister has a bullying husband, played in the film by James Mason. I’ve no idea what this film is like but Whipple fans (count me one), may be interested.

callmemadam: (reading)


This year I read 131 books. Of these 48 were by men and 83 by women.
Dead tree books: 86
Kindle books: 40
Read on iPad: 4

I borrowed twenty books from the library. Every year I resolve to use the library more. I’ll have to start using their online request system again (a pain due to the poor website), because I make too many fruitless visits in the hope of serendipitously finding something I want to read.

Books of the year? Not a great year but I’ve enjoyed these, in no particular order and not counting re-reads. Links to reviews or mentions.

Golden Hill , Francis Spufford. ‘A Tale of Old New York’
A Matter of Loyalty , Elizabeth Edmondson
The three spy thrillers by Mick Herron: Slow Horses, Real Tigers, Spook Street
This Boy , Alan Johnson
The Lie Tree , Frances Hardinge
Eleven Minutes Late. A Train Journey to the Soul of Britain , Matthew Engel
Because of the Lockwoods , Dorothy Whipple
What was Rescued , Jane Bailey
Leaving Berlin , Joseph Kanon
Bewildering Cares , Winifred Peck
Player One , Douglas Coupland
callmemadam: (reading)


Mary Wakefield, Mazo de la Roche
The Vanishing of Audrey Wilde , Eve Chase
N or M?, Agatha Christie
Because of the Lockwoods, Dorothy Whipple
Bertie’s Guide to Life and Mothers, Alexander McCall Smith
The Killing in the Café, Simon Brett
Hiss and Hers, M C Beaton
The Unpleasantness in the Ballroom, Catriona Macpherson
Number 10, Sue Townsend
A Summer at Sea, Katie Fforde
The Shell Seekers, Rosamunde Pilcher
Variable Winds at Jalna, Mazo de la Roche
The Z Murders, J Jefferson Farjeon
Over the Gate, Miss Read
thoughts )
callmemadam: (books)


List
Quite a short list but one of the books was 700 pages long!
The Warden, Anthony Trollope
The Lantern Bearers, Rosemary Sutcliff
The Far Cry, Emma Smith
House of Silence, Linda Gillard
High Wages
Pardonable Lies (Maisie Dobbs), Jacqueline Winspear
A Place of Secrets, Rachel Hore
The Historian, Elizabeth Kostova
Peter and Paul, Susan Scarlett (Noel Streatfeild)
A Red Herring without Mustard (Flavia de Luce), Alan Bradley
Barchester Towers, Anthony Trollope
Crooks Tour, Jane Shaw
thoughts )
callmemadam: (bookbag)


Boy, was I glad to finish The Far Cry by Emma Smith. I felt really grouchy for a couple of days at the start of the week and realised it was partly due to reading this depressing book. I saw the old Penguin copy at the market, thought it looked my kind of thing and snapped it up. I didn’t realise until I got the book home that the author is the same Emma Smith who wrote Maiden’s Trip, an account of women working the canals during the war.

Teresa, fourteen, dislikes everything she knows and fears everything she doesn’t, yet it’s hard to sympathise with a girl who has such a negative attitude to everything. She’s the late child of her father’s second marriage, has been deserted by her mother and lives with an aunt. When her father learns that his ex-wife is returning to England, he determines that she ‘shan’t have Teresa’ and in a whirl of activity he takes her to India to stay on a tea farm in Assam with her much older half-sister and her husband.

Almost every character is unhappy and the sister, Ruth, is not at all the woman her fond father imagines her to be. Teresa knows a few moments of freedom on the boat to India and later on a trip to the Naga hills but the return to normality is always painful for her. There is hope of a kind at the very end of the book but only because of two deaths. The one happy person in the book, Miss Spooner, is also the one we know least about as we never see inside her head as we do with the other characters. Oh, how it went on and on!
I’m so glad I didn’t fork out for the Persephone edition.

No such problem with High Wages by Dorothy Whipple, which I read quickly and was always glad to get back to. Although set in Lancashire it reminded me of Arnold Bennett with its small town setting and descriptions of shop keeping before and after the First World War. The heroine, Jane, starts as a shop girl but through intelligence, hard work and ambition, is able to start her own business, a little dress shop. It’s the trade details and the Lancashire voices which make this such an interesting read. Jane has social prejudice to overcome and sadly is undone by love. It’s an early book and not as good as Someone at a Distance or They were Sisters but I enjoyed it.

I’ve already mentioned that Linda Gillard has self-published her latest book, House of Silence as a Kindle-only offering. You can read what Linda has to say about it here. I bought the book and read it with glee. It’s very different from Star Gazing; at first you might think you’d got into a novel by Victoria Clayton. Gwen, independent but damaged by tragedy, meets and falls for Archie, a charming actor. She has no family, he seems not to like his, but she persuades him to take her to spend Christmas at what she believes to be his ancestral home, a large Elizabethan house in Norfolk. There she finds a household of eccentric women, an enigmatic gardener and a mystery. At first she is delighted by everything, then begins to feel that everyone, including Archie, is lying to her. The uncovering of the family conspiracy is slightly melodramatic but makes gripping reading.
callmemadam: (books)
There's nothing on television and no Test Match until Thursday and that means no knitting. So, I had plenty of reading time over the weekend.



A Proper Education for Girls, Elaine Di Rollo. *L This is a rollicking good read, which gets off to a promisingly gothick start. An enormous Victorian pile stuffed to the rafters with 'the collection' and elderly relatives. A bullying father, more than half mad. Twin sisters who've had an extraordinary education. A doctor with terrifying ideas on how to 'treat' female maladies like independence of spirit. Will both girls manage to escape? The publishers haven’t done the author any favours with the horrible cover. Ignore it; the book is good fun.



Delay of Execution, Hazel Holt *L
The trouble with the Sheila Malory mysteries is that I read them too quickly! In this one, Mrs Malory is appointed literary executor of an old friend. She plans to write a biography but discovers things about the late author which she thinks should not be printed. (Shades of Nicola Beauman and Elizabeth Taylor!) She is not the only one with an interest in suppressing the truth and the result is another murder for her to investigate.




Someone at A Distance, Dorothy Whipple *L
I could hardly put this book down. It starts with an unusually convincing description of happy, prosperous middle class family life. The sudden way in which it comes crashing down is brilliantly explained. It’s tougher stuff than you’d expect; the effect on the teenage daughter is heartbreaking, although she is as manipulative in her own way as the villainess of the piece. Odd Girl Out by Elizabeth Jane Howard (1972) has many similarities with this book.

These books all came from the library and if ever I see the Whipple on the sale trolley, I'll snap it up. How I regret now selling this lovely first edition of another of her books.



Still, I was hard up at the time. Oh, besieged? More work on the house has just started and there's a man downstairs.

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