callmemadam: (reading)
This book was recommended by cornflower and as it deals with the writing of Bach’s St Matthew Passion, I was keen to read it. I consider the Passion to be the greatest musical work ever written (hardly an original view, I know), so I got stuck in. The story is told from the point of view of a boy, Stefan Silbermann, who comes from a famous family of organ makers. When his mother dies, he is sent away to school in Leipzig, to study music. The school is awful and he's bullied so unmercifully that he runs away. He has to go back but by a stroke of luck his voice and musicality have been noticed by the Cantor, as he always calls J S Bach. He becomes the principal soprano at the church, a cause of jealousy and more bullying. For a while, he moves into the Bach household: crowded and a place of constant music making. The Cantor helps him with his singing and organ playing and he learns the great man’s theories: work, work, work; get the fingering right and all else follows; breathe in the right places; praise God always in all that you play and sing. Bach’s work ethic was extraordinary and the descriptions of the menage, of the stern Lutheran faith of the people of Leipzig and daily life in the city are totally empathetic.

I was slightly disappointed that we didn’t get to the Passion until about two thirds of the way through the book but without what went before, we wouldn’t understand the writing of it so well. For instance, there’s a description of a botched public execution which seems gratuitous at first, until you see the parallels with the suffering of Christ and the theme of ‘blut’ which infuses the Passion. The music is difficult but the Cantor says it has to be, that all the musicians must be stretched by it. Nothing should be easy. In those days, women were allowed to sing opera but not church music, so the lead women’s roles were performed by boy sopranos like Stefan. It is first performed on Good Friday. When it ends, there is silence in the church; no one has ever heard anything like it. Imagine hearing it for the first time! Soon afterwards, Stefan’s year at the school is over and he returns home, leaving Bach’s daughter Catharina, with whom he’s in love. That’s all we know about Stefan until twenty-three years later, when he returns to Leipzig for the Cantor’s funeral and meets Anna Magdalena and Catharina again.

This is a brilliant book, which can be enjoyed by people who are neither musical nor religious, although it helps to be both.
digression and some music )
callmemadam: (reading)


The Prostrate Years, Sue Townsend
Acts of Faith, Adam Faith autobiography
Backroom Boys: the Secret Return of the British Boffin, Francis Spufford
Mrs Tim Carries On, D E Stevenson
Alice, Elizabeth Eliot
Caesar’s Wife’s Elephant, Margery Allingham
The Beauty King, Margery Allingham
The Doll Factory, Elizabeth Macneal
The Road to Grantchester, James Runcie
Love in a Cold Climate, Nancy Mitford
Don’t Tell Alfred, Nancy Mitford
The Strange Case of Harriet Hall, Moray Dalton
Currently reading this massive tome: A Certain Idea of France: The Life of Charles de Gaulle, Julian Jackson and in bed, Reasons to be Cheerful, Nina Stibbe
thoughts (long) )

New books

Apr. 11th, 2017 10:12 am
callmemadam: (reading)
The State of Grace, Rachael Lucas
A Very English Scandal, John Preston
Sidney Chambers and the Persistence of Love, James Runcie
I read all three courtesy of the publishers and NetGalley.



‘Sometimes I feel like everyone else was handed a copy of the rules for life and mine got lost.’ The words of the narrator, fifteen-year-old Grace, who has Asperger’s. The syndrome makes life difficult for Grace, her mother (father is away a lot) and her teachers. What I liked about this book and hope younger readers will like too, is that it’s so not an issues book about Asperger’s. Grace’s problems with school (nasty girls), boys (and a first kiss), home when things start to change and her ‘perfect’ sister gets into trouble, could be those of any teenager. Grace certainly does some silly things and it’s easy to see how people could get angry with her. Again, this could be any teenager. What I liked best about The State of Grace is that it’s funny. It’s published by Macmillan Children’s Books
the other two )
callmemadam: (Chrysanthemums)


Born Scared, Kevin Brooks. Full review I forgot to post last month
Holding, Graham Norton. Review soon
Secrets Can’t be Kept, E R Punshon
The Amazing Adventure of Jane Smith: A Golden Age Mystery, Patricia Wentworth
Today Will be Different, Maria Semple. Review soon *****
Sidney Chambers and the Forgiveness of Sins, James Runcie
Magpie Murders, Anthony Horowitz. Review soon
A Leap of Faith, Trisha Ashley
It Might Lead Anywhere, E R Punshon
A Chelsea Concerto, Frances Faviell
Currently reading:
Mozart, John Suchet
A Peacock for the Footman, Rachel Ferguson
reviews )
callmemadam: (Kindle)


One of today's Kindle deals is Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death by James Runcie.
The books are much better than the TV series.
callmemadam: (Kindle)
chambersperils

I’ve had a lovely time reading all three Sidney Chambers novels one after the other. Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death I re-read after watching the first episode of Grantchester, the TV series based on the book. I wanted more and the Kindle was my friend: isn’t it the ultimate in modern instant gratification that the desire to obtain a book can be satisfied within a minute?

Each book consists of several short stories, progressing through real time. Thus the first book begins just after the Coronation in 1953 and by the third we’ve reached 1963 and The Beatles. The stories are not the greatest puzzles in crime fiction; the pleasure of them lies in the character of Canon Chambers and the discussions of morality which permeate the books. Sidney tries to be a good priest and worries that his detective activities take him away from his calling. At the same time he can’t resist the excitement of each case as it arrives and sees it also as a seeking after truth. His friend Geordie, or Chief Inspector Keating, calls on him for help because his instincts are so often right and because people will reveal things to him that they wouldn’t to the police. His superiors in the Church are less keen on his involvement; they see his criminal investigations as damaging the prospects of preferment which should be the due of such a clever chap.

Is there any subject James Runcie can’t write about? His characters discuss theology, philosophy, music, art and physics. They quote poetry. In the Perils of the Night there’s an excellent account of a cricket match. I thought Lord Peter had my heart forever, but it would be easy to fall for Sidney Chambers. People do. It was rather naughty of the author, in the Problem of Evil to give away the plot of The Nine Tailors. Apart from that my only criticism of the books is that they’re too short.

chambersevil
callmemadam: (life on mars)
sidneychambersshadow

I enjoyed Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death when I read it way back. I see I didn’t write anything about it, due to having a broken wrist at the time. I’m currently hobbling about with Achilles Tendonitis; what is it about this book?

Sidney Chambers, the young clergyman who divides his time conscientiously between running a parish and teaching at Cambridge, yet is fond of drink and women, is an attractive character. So I was alarmed when I read the pre-show blurb for Grantchester, based on the first book in the series. ‘Gritty’? ‘ A ‘Ripper Street vibe’? I’ve never watched Ripper Street but it doesn’t sound my kind of thing at all. I just didn’t recognise James Runcie’s book from the description. I watched a recording yesterday evening (fancy putting it on against New Tricks)! There was even a ‘sex and violence’ warning before the programme.

I needn’t have worried. You might just as well put a sex and violence warning before an episode of Miss Marple. Why not sell it as a 1950s period piece about a sleuthing clergyman? Although James Norton doesn’t match the book’s description of Chambers physically, you could believe in him as a man people would confide in. I also liked Robson Green as Geordie, Sidney’s Police Inspector friend. OK, the producers have invented the odd character and altered the continuity of some events but it was all very pretty and I enjoyed it. The book is better and I’m now reading it again. I really must read the next two volumes.

sidneygeordie
callmemadam: (christmas)
carringtons

So far, I haven’t read any of the books I put aside for Christmas reading. The way things are going, I won’t believe in Christmas at all until I hear the carols from King’s on Christmas Eve. Here are two books I’ve been reading thanks to NetGalley: Christmas at Carrington’s by Alexandra Brown and Ten Lords A-Leaping by C C Benison.

Did anyone else watch the Channel 4 series Liberty of London? Rather disappointing, I felt; not as good as last year’s BBC 2 documentary Inside Claridges. Carrington’s, the family-owned department store in Mulberry-on-Sea, is also the subject of a reality TV show, one that is carefully planned and scripted by the producer. Georgie Hart, in charge of women’s accessories, finds herself for a giddying time a media celebrity enjoying fame and freebies. This is the third book about Carrington’s and I’m not the target readership for it. If you use expressions like ‘totes’ and ‘well jelz’, if you hyperventilate at the thought of a high end handbag and refer to the goods you sell as ‘merch’, if you think of nothing but gorgeous (preferably rich) men, this is just the book for you. I am being a little unfair because after all, I did finish the book, did find parts of it entertaining and enjoyed being behind the scenes in a department store. It is a fun Christmas read with a happy ending. There’s a lot of guilt-free cake gorging and even cake recipes! It really needed better editing. I can’t be doing with a ‘wedge of tissues’ instead of a ‘wodge’, ‘bollicking’ for 'bollocking’ or ‘Wedgewood blue’ for ‘Wedgwood’.

tenlords

Ten Lords A-Leaping is C C Benison’s third Father Christmas mystery. Father Tom doesn’t care for that title and asks people to call him ‘Tom’ or ‘Mr Christmas’. This book opens exactly as the title suggests, with the Leaping Lords, ten Peers who enjoy skydiving, jumping in formation to help raise money for Tom’s church. On this occasion, Tom and the PCC are also jumping, Tom landing with a badly sprained ankle. As a result, he is forced to stay at Eggescombe Hall, the grand home of Hector, Lord Fairhaven, who is one of the Leaping Lords. This introduces Tom to an incomprehensible tangle of family relationships; a family tree would have been very helpful. Soon afterwards he discovers the murdered corpse of another Leaping Lord in the Labyrinth. The victim was a thoroughly obnoxious character, so the list of suspects includes just about everyone in the house. As a priest, Tom finds people confiding in him and has to decide exactly what to tell the police. When there’s a second murder, things hot up and I really only got gripped by the book about 70% of the way through (I was reading it on the Kindle). Yet more complications are introduced, with mysteries and murders going back years and I found it all rather muddling. I wasn’t sure I really liked Tom very much; the nicest thing about him is his devotion to his ten-year-old daughter, Miranda. Her friendship with young Max, Hector’s extrovert sprog, provides the book’s only comic relief. The end of the book sets things up for the next one, which will obviously be called Nine Ladies Dancing. As a priestly detective, I preferred James Runcie’s Sidney Chambers. Ten Lords A-Leaping could have done with a little Britpicking, too.

homecorner

I picked Ruth Thomas's book up at the library because I liked the cover; as good a reason as any. Luisa McKenzie has failed her Highers, so instead of going to university as planned, she’s living at home and working as a teaching assistant. She doesn’t like the job much, nor is she any good at it. Hardly surprising, as the girl is dripping wet, so much so as to strain one’s patience. I started feeling like her poor, puzzled mother and kept looking out for the mental breakdown. By the end of the book it’s clear that this year in Luisa’s life is just a growing up interlude, and I looked back on the rest with a kindlier eye.
and now for something more Christmassy )

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