I love this time of the blogging year, when the "favorite books" lists start appearing. For blogs that I've only recently discovered, it's a chance to see what I've missed in earlier postings, as well as get a better sense of the reader behind the blog. For those I've been following all year, it's a great review and reminder of books I meant to add to my own lists (and quickly, before the TBR Double Dog Dare kicks in January 1st). I also enjoy looking back over my own year of reading. It's such fun mulling over the list, dithering over which books to include, wondering how many I can get away with listing. As I mentioned last year, I've never had a place to do this before, or frankly anyone who was interested! I'm still enjoying the novelty of that.
So here are my favorites of 2012, in the order in which I read them:
The Heir of Redclyffe, by Charlotte M. Yonge. I'd already read Yonge's The Daisy Chain, but The Heir made me see why she was one of the most popular authors of her day (and why Jo March was crying over the book in her attic)
Love, by Elizabeth von Arnim. I wasn't sure what to expect in this account of a May-December romance. It turned out to be a touching and sympathetic if unsentimental story of love in many forms.
Up the Country, by Emily Eden. Eden's letters chronicle a fantastic journey in the suite of her brother, the Governor General of India, on an official two-year tour of India, beginning in 1837.
Please Look After Mom, by Kyung-Sook Shin. A harrowing story of a family dealing with the disappearance of their wife and mother, it is also the first book I've read set in South Korea, which for me added to the story's interest.
The Oaken Heart, by Margery Allingham. This account of her small Essex village in the early years of World War II was written at her U.S. publisher's request, to tell American readers "exactly what life has been like down here for us ordinary country people during the war."
The Makioka Sisters, by Junichiro Tanizaki. I loved this saga of four sisters in 1930s Osaka, struggling to uphold their family's place in society and to find suitable husbands for two of them. It reminded me of both Jane Austen and Anthony Trollope.
The Innocents Abroad, by Mark Twain. His account of the first organized American tour of Europe and the Holy Land in 1867 is by turns satirical, cynical, sentimental, and xenophobic, but always entertaining. I enjoyed it so much that I've added some of his other travel writings to the TBR stacks.
No More Than Human, by Maura Laverty. This story of a naive but good-hearted Irish girl who travels to Spain in the 1920s as a "miss," a combined governess and chaperone, is (to borrow a phrase from Teresa's list over at Shelf Love) one of the books I most wanted to hand out on street corners, or at least buy for all the readers I know. If I had to pick a single favorite, it would probably be this one.
The Home-Maker by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. This extraordinary story of how a family in the 1920s copes when the father is injured and the mother goes to work is the second of my "street corner" books (and only the second Persephone I've added to my shelves). I also loved Fisher's Understood Betsy, and I know I'll be reading more of her work in 2013.
Jane Austen and Marriage, by Hazel Jones. I so enjoy books like this, which explore a particular aspect of life in Austen's time through her writings, including her letters and the Juvenalia, as well as incorporating her own experiences (see also Jane Austen and Crime, by Susannah Fullerton).
Isabel and the Sea, by George Millar. An account of a voyage by boat through the canals of France and along the Mediterranean coast to Greece just after the end of World War II, and an eye-witness account of the devastation and slow recovery.
Vanity Fair, by William Makepeace Thackeray. Why did I wait so long to make the acquaintance of Becky Sharp and William Dobbin? Probably because I don't know anyone outside the blogging world who has read this, so I had no one to tell me, "You need to read this."
Slowly Down the Ganges, by Eric Newby. This was the year I discovered Newby's entertaining and idiosyncratic travel writings, and of course I immediately started collecting them (a couple of which are still on the TBR stacks). I feel like I should mention Love and War in the Apennines, his account of life as a prisoner of war in World War II, but then I also have to include his wife Wanda Newby's parallel account, Peace and War.
Red Pottage, by Mary Cholmondeley. A Victorian pot-boiler, with wonderfully-drawn characters and a lovely friendship at its heart. Simon so aptly described it as "sensation fiction which is also very moving and also funny."
Seward, by Walter Stahr. A brilliant biography of a master politician, who lost the 1860 presidential nomination to Abraham Lincoln but accepted a place in his Cabinet, and became arguably America's greatest Secretary of State.
I've read so many great books this year, and I've thoroughly enjoyed sharing them here and on your blogs. Thank you again for reading along. I hope that 2013 brings us all just as many wonderful books, and friends to share them with.
"My tastes are fairly catholic. It might easily have been Kai Lung or Alice in Wonderland or Machiavelli -" ". . . Do you find it easy to get drunk on words?" "So easy that, to tell you the truth, I am seldom perfectly sober." -- Gaudy Night
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Civil war on the waters
War on the Waters, James M. McPherson
One of the Twitter feeds I've been following lately is Civil War Navy (@CivilWarNavy150), which is tweeting naval engagements and events as they happened 150 years ago. On December 27, 1862, for example, "USS Roebuck captured British schooner Kate trying to run into St. Mark's River FL carrying salt, coffee, copper, and liquor." I didn't know much about the naval side of the Civil War before I read Craig L. Symonds' Lincoln and His Admirals some years ago. I was reminded of it reading Amanda Foreman's A World on Fire, about Anglo-American relations during the war, since naval matters like the Confederate purchase of war ships from Liverpool shipyards, and the Union blockade of southern ports, had major diplomatic implications. Reading the daily tweets made me wish for a good overview of the naval war, to tie all of this together. My wish was promptly granted with this new book by the dean of Civil War historians, Dr. James McPherson. It is one of the volumes in "The Littlefield History of the Civil War Era," published by the University of North Carolina Press.
Dr. McPherson argues in his introduction that "the Union navy deserves more credit for Northern victory than it has traditionally received." The Navy made up only 5% of all the Federal forces, and the Confederate percentage was even lower, yet despite their small sizes, both had a major impact. As he states in his conclusion, the Union Navy did not win the war, but the war couldn't have been won without it. He notes that Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses Grant were quick to praise the sailors as well as the soldiers. Lincoln famously called them "Uncle Sam's Web-feet." McPherson points out that the Confederate Navy too has been unfairly overlooked. While the Rebels could not match Federal resources in ships, supplies or arms, they made good use of what they did have, and they developed new technologies like underwater mines (then called torpedoes) that sank many Union ships over the course of the war. Their British-built raiders, like the CSS Alabama captained by the dare-devil Raphael Semmes, cost Northern merchants a fortune in ships captured or sunk. In January of 1863 Semmes even lured a Federal warship, the USS Hatteras, out of Galveston harbor into the Gulf of Mexico, where he promptly sank her. (This was shortly after Federal forces had been driven out of Galveston in a battle on New Year's Day. I'm not sure how the city is planning to mark the 150th anniversary of the battle next week, but it may be a good excuse to drive the 50 miles down there.)
This book gives a good general overview of the naval war, from the operational side, and it was interesting to see the familiar events of the war from a very different perspective. McPherson introduces Gideon Welles and Stephen Mallory, the Union and Confederate Secretaries of the Navy, respectively, both excellent and dedicated administrators, but he does not spend much time on departmental matters. I would have liked to read more about Welles, who kept a famous diary of his time in the cabinet, written with a pen dipped in acid. There are passing references to clashes with the volatile Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, but the focus here is on the sailors. McPherson quotes frequently from letters and diaries, of both officers and crews, Union and Confederate, to give first-hand accounts of battles won and lost, and also of the daily toil of blockading, of convoy duty and of defense.
The Federal Navy's impact was felt early in the war, with the capture of forts on the Carolina and Florida coasts that shut down Confederate access to important ports. In April of 1862, Flag Officer David Farragut took his fleet up the Mississippi River to force the surrender of New Orleans, the largest city in the Confederacy and an essential port. Further north, Union gunboats captured river forts and even the city of Memphis. Army-Navy cooperation was crucial in the Vicksburg campaigns of 1862-1863 and the occupation of Mobile Bay in 1864. Perhaps the Federal Navy's greatest impact was in the blockade of the southern Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. A thin blue line, it was far from complete, and fast-sailing blockade runners continued to evade Union ships. But McPherson argues for its vital role in discouraging many merchants from even trying to import or export goods, and thus crippling the Confederate war effort. I was surprised to read that the South even imported its salt! As stocks dwindled, southerners set up sea-water distilleries in coastal areas, which Union boat crews gleefully raided to destroy the stills and the salt so laboriously produced.
I enjoyed this book, which is well-written and informative, as Dr. McPherson's books always are. I found his accounts of the battles generally easy to follow, though I appreciated the maps and diagrams. The illustrations showing battle scenes as well as various ships, their commanders and crews, with the frequent quotations from first-hand accounts, are important reminders of the human beings who sailed the ships, many of whom gave their lives for their country. In Lincoln's words, "Nor must Uncle Sam's Web-feet be forgotten."
One of the Twitter feeds I've been following lately is Civil War Navy (@CivilWarNavy150), which is tweeting naval engagements and events as they happened 150 years ago. On December 27, 1862, for example, "USS Roebuck captured British schooner Kate trying to run into St. Mark's River FL carrying salt, coffee, copper, and liquor." I didn't know much about the naval side of the Civil War before I read Craig L. Symonds' Lincoln and His Admirals some years ago. I was reminded of it reading Amanda Foreman's A World on Fire, about Anglo-American relations during the war, since naval matters like the Confederate purchase of war ships from Liverpool shipyards, and the Union blockade of southern ports, had major diplomatic implications. Reading the daily tweets made me wish for a good overview of the naval war, to tie all of this together. My wish was promptly granted with this new book by the dean of Civil War historians, Dr. James McPherson. It is one of the volumes in "The Littlefield History of the Civil War Era," published by the University of North Carolina Press.
Dr. McPherson argues in his introduction that "the Union navy deserves more credit for Northern victory than it has traditionally received." The Navy made up only 5% of all the Federal forces, and the Confederate percentage was even lower, yet despite their small sizes, both had a major impact. As he states in his conclusion, the Union Navy did not win the war, but the war couldn't have been won without it. He notes that Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses Grant were quick to praise the sailors as well as the soldiers. Lincoln famously called them "Uncle Sam's Web-feet." McPherson points out that the Confederate Navy too has been unfairly overlooked. While the Rebels could not match Federal resources in ships, supplies or arms, they made good use of what they did have, and they developed new technologies like underwater mines (then called torpedoes) that sank many Union ships over the course of the war. Their British-built raiders, like the CSS Alabama captained by the dare-devil Raphael Semmes, cost Northern merchants a fortune in ships captured or sunk. In January of 1863 Semmes even lured a Federal warship, the USS Hatteras, out of Galveston harbor into the Gulf of Mexico, where he promptly sank her. (This was shortly after Federal forces had been driven out of Galveston in a battle on New Year's Day. I'm not sure how the city is planning to mark the 150th anniversary of the battle next week, but it may be a good excuse to drive the 50 miles down there.)
This book gives a good general overview of the naval war, from the operational side, and it was interesting to see the familiar events of the war from a very different perspective. McPherson introduces Gideon Welles and Stephen Mallory, the Union and Confederate Secretaries of the Navy, respectively, both excellent and dedicated administrators, but he does not spend much time on departmental matters. I would have liked to read more about Welles, who kept a famous diary of his time in the cabinet, written with a pen dipped in acid. There are passing references to clashes with the volatile Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, but the focus here is on the sailors. McPherson quotes frequently from letters and diaries, of both officers and crews, Union and Confederate, to give first-hand accounts of battles won and lost, and also of the daily toil of blockading, of convoy duty and of defense.
The Federal Navy's impact was felt early in the war, with the capture of forts on the Carolina and Florida coasts that shut down Confederate access to important ports. In April of 1862, Flag Officer David Farragut took his fleet up the Mississippi River to force the surrender of New Orleans, the largest city in the Confederacy and an essential port. Further north, Union gunboats captured river forts and even the city of Memphis. Army-Navy cooperation was crucial in the Vicksburg campaigns of 1862-1863 and the occupation of Mobile Bay in 1864. Perhaps the Federal Navy's greatest impact was in the blockade of the southern Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. A thin blue line, it was far from complete, and fast-sailing blockade runners continued to evade Union ships. But McPherson argues for its vital role in discouraging many merchants from even trying to import or export goods, and thus crippling the Confederate war effort. I was surprised to read that the South even imported its salt! As stocks dwindled, southerners set up sea-water distilleries in coastal areas, which Union boat crews gleefully raided to destroy the stills and the salt so laboriously produced.
I enjoyed this book, which is well-written and informative, as Dr. McPherson's books always are. I found his accounts of the battles generally easy to follow, though I appreciated the maps and diagrams. The illustrations showing battle scenes as well as various ships, their commanders and crews, with the frequent quotations from first-hand accounts, are important reminders of the human beings who sailed the ships, many of whom gave their lives for their country. In Lincoln's words, "Nor must Uncle Sam's Web-feet be forgotten."
Saturday, December 22, 2012
A Christmas mystery in Devon
The Twelve Clues of Christmas, Rhys Bowen
I was lucky enough to hear Rhys Bowen speak at Houston's Murder by the Book soon after this book was published in early November, and to get my copy signed, but I saved it to read closer to Christmas. This year my holiday-themed reading has been mysteries and mayhem, and The Twelve Clues of Christmas fit right in perfectly.
This is the sixth book in the "Royal Spyness" series, set in the early 1930s. The main character is Lady Georgiana Rannoch, a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria who is 35th in line for the throne (a newly-born niece just bumped her down from 34th). Her father the Duke of Rannoch left the family saddled with gambling debts and death duties, and Georgie has no income of her own. Despite increasing pressure from her sister-in-law to marry, to get her off the family's hands, she has so far avoided the frequent fate of minor royals: marriage to an equally minor European prince, or service as lady in waiting to one of her elderly royal aunts. Instead, Georgie has attempted to make an independent life for herself in London. But she has discovered that her royal status, however minor, combined with her lack of qualifications, make finding work all but impossible. Her attempts have come to the attention of Buckingham Palace, though, and her cousin Queen Mary has asked her to take on some small commissions, some of which have involved her in murder cases. Yet in the end, Georgie usually has to return to the family home in Scotland and the complaints of her sister-in-law Fig.
As this book opens, she is contemplating the horrors of Christmas spent not just with Fig but also with Fig's even more unpleasant family. Then she sees an advertisement in The Lady: "Young woman of impeccable background to assist hostess with the social duties of large Christmas house party." Five days later, she is on her way to Devon, to Gorzley Hall in Tiddleton-under-Lovey. She arrives to find there has been an incident, a neighbor shot and killed in the Hall's orchard. The police believe it was an accident, though they can't explain why the man was up in a tree at the time. But then there is another death the next day, an elderly woman, living quietly with her two sisters. Georgie also learns that the house party is not exactly what is seems. As other deaths follow, the police dismiss them as accidents too, but she believes there must be a connection, and she draws on her previous detective work to investigate. At the same time, she joins her employer/hostess Lady Hawse-Gorzley in entertaining the house party with Christmas activities and games, in between sumptuous meals. Despite her growing sense of danger, Georgie can't help enjoying herself, far from the austerities of Castle Rannoch. To her delight, the guests include the Hon. Darcy O'Mara, the son of an equally impoverished Irish peer, who has shared several of her adventures and with whom she has fallen unsuitably in love.
I really enjoyed this book. Georgie is a great character and a very sympathetic one, and you can't help hoping that she will find her way to independence and happiness with Darcy (let alone escape from the awful Fig). The setting is such fun, combining a classic country-house murder in a small village with all the traditional holiday activities (there is an appendix that provides more information and even recipes). I spent a much less eventful Christmas in Devon myself many years ago, when my father had a teaching exchange at the University of Exeter. The story is also very clever, with quite an exciting denouement. As usual I missed out completely on the clues, including the title itself, but as usual I was having too much fun to mind. I look forward to seeing where Georgie's next adventure takes her - back to London, for a start.
I was lucky enough to hear Rhys Bowen speak at Houston's Murder by the Book soon after this book was published in early November, and to get my copy signed, but I saved it to read closer to Christmas. This year my holiday-themed reading has been mysteries and mayhem, and The Twelve Clues of Christmas fit right in perfectly.
This is the sixth book in the "Royal Spyness" series, set in the early 1930s. The main character is Lady Georgiana Rannoch, a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria who is 35th in line for the throne (a newly-born niece just bumped her down from 34th). Her father the Duke of Rannoch left the family saddled with gambling debts and death duties, and Georgie has no income of her own. Despite increasing pressure from her sister-in-law to marry, to get her off the family's hands, she has so far avoided the frequent fate of minor royals: marriage to an equally minor European prince, or service as lady in waiting to one of her elderly royal aunts. Instead, Georgie has attempted to make an independent life for herself in London. But she has discovered that her royal status, however minor, combined with her lack of qualifications, make finding work all but impossible. Her attempts have come to the attention of Buckingham Palace, though, and her cousin Queen Mary has asked her to take on some small commissions, some of which have involved her in murder cases. Yet in the end, Georgie usually has to return to the family home in Scotland and the complaints of her sister-in-law Fig.
As this book opens, she is contemplating the horrors of Christmas spent not just with Fig but also with Fig's even more unpleasant family. Then she sees an advertisement in The Lady: "Young woman of impeccable background to assist hostess with the social duties of large Christmas house party." Five days later, she is on her way to Devon, to Gorzley Hall in Tiddleton-under-Lovey. She arrives to find there has been an incident, a neighbor shot and killed in the Hall's orchard. The police believe it was an accident, though they can't explain why the man was up in a tree at the time. But then there is another death the next day, an elderly woman, living quietly with her two sisters. Georgie also learns that the house party is not exactly what is seems. As other deaths follow, the police dismiss them as accidents too, but she believes there must be a connection, and she draws on her previous detective work to investigate. At the same time, she joins her employer/hostess Lady Hawse-Gorzley in entertaining the house party with Christmas activities and games, in between sumptuous meals. Despite her growing sense of danger, Georgie can't help enjoying herself, far from the austerities of Castle Rannoch. To her delight, the guests include the Hon. Darcy O'Mara, the son of an equally impoverished Irish peer, who has shared several of her adventures and with whom she has fallen unsuitably in love.
I really enjoyed this book. Georgie is a great character and a very sympathetic one, and you can't help hoping that she will find her way to independence and happiness with Darcy (let alone escape from the awful Fig). The setting is such fun, combining a classic country-house murder in a small village with all the traditional holiday activities (there is an appendix that provides more information and even recipes). I spent a much less eventful Christmas in Devon myself many years ago, when my father had a teaching exchange at the University of Exeter. The story is also very clever, with quite an exciting denouement. As usual I missed out completely on the clues, including the title itself, but as usual I was having too much fun to mind. I look forward to seeing where Georgie's next adventure takes her - back to London, for a start.
Monday, December 17, 2012
A Christmas mystery in Melbourne
Forbidden Fruit, Kerry Greenwood
Aunt Agatha over at Death in the Stacks recently posted a list of mysteries with a Christmas theme or setting. That's the kind of thing that always sends me off to my own shelves, to see which of the books I have, or if I can add to the list. Among the latter is Kerry Greenwood's Forbidden Fruit. I took it off the shelf just to make sure I had the title right, but I ended up leafing through it. After reading a page here and there, and realizing that I'd forgotten some of the story, I added it to my own personal Christmas mayhem reading list.
This is the fifth book in Greenwood's series featuring Corinna Chapman, who runs a bakery, Earthly Delights, in Melbourne (I posted about the sixth book, Cooking the Books, back in March). A zaftig woman very comfortable with herself, Corinna lives above her bakery in a building that combines flats and shops, modeling an ancient Roman insula. The other residents, some of whom also own businesses in the building, sometimes involve her in mysteries. At other times she is drawn into helping her gorgeous boyfriend Daniel, a private investigator. The cases often involve missing persons and generally fall on the cozy side of the spectrum - though one of the residents is a dominatrix who runs a very select dungeon, one which Corinna and Daniel have visited on occasion, and Corinna's Melbourne has the problems of many cities, including a large homeless population.
This book is set during the Christmas season, in the midst of a very hot summer. The weather does not improve Corinna's slightly "bah humbug" approach to the holiday, particularly its commercialism and the endless carols playing everywhere (I complimented a bank employee today on the lack of carols in their branch). Daniel's case here involves a high school student who has vanished from her parents' home, where she has been sequestered since her pregnancy was discovered. Corinna also spends a lot of time in the bakery, where she and her apprentice Jason are turning out special holiday breads, cakes and muffins. As usual, I was left wishing for a version of Earthly Delights here in Houston.
As always, Corinna works out a solution to the case, but for me the real pleasure is in the characters and their interactions. I've said before that I'd love to sit down for a cup of tea with Corinna, to talk about favorite books and characters among other things. In this book she quotes Stephen Maturin; later she and Daniel spend an afternoon reading Terry Pratchett aloud (given the season, I'm sure they were reading Hogfather). I'm going to be very disappointed, when and if I ever get to Melbourne, not to find Earthly Delights in Calico Alley.
If you're looking for a little holiday mayhem in good company, to my mind you can't do better than Forbidden Fruit.
Aunt Agatha over at Death in the Stacks recently posted a list of mysteries with a Christmas theme or setting. That's the kind of thing that always sends me off to my own shelves, to see which of the books I have, or if I can add to the list. Among the latter is Kerry Greenwood's Forbidden Fruit. I took it off the shelf just to make sure I had the title right, but I ended up leafing through it. After reading a page here and there, and realizing that I'd forgotten some of the story, I added it to my own personal Christmas mayhem reading list.
This is the fifth book in Greenwood's series featuring Corinna Chapman, who runs a bakery, Earthly Delights, in Melbourne (I posted about the sixth book, Cooking the Books, back in March). A zaftig woman very comfortable with herself, Corinna lives above her bakery in a building that combines flats and shops, modeling an ancient Roman insula. The other residents, some of whom also own businesses in the building, sometimes involve her in mysteries. At other times she is drawn into helping her gorgeous boyfriend Daniel, a private investigator. The cases often involve missing persons and generally fall on the cozy side of the spectrum - though one of the residents is a dominatrix who runs a very select dungeon, one which Corinna and Daniel have visited on occasion, and Corinna's Melbourne has the problems of many cities, including a large homeless population.
This book is set during the Christmas season, in the midst of a very hot summer. The weather does not improve Corinna's slightly "bah humbug" approach to the holiday, particularly its commercialism and the endless carols playing everywhere (I complimented a bank employee today on the lack of carols in their branch). Daniel's case here involves a high school student who has vanished from her parents' home, where she has been sequestered since her pregnancy was discovered. Corinna also spends a lot of time in the bakery, where she and her apprentice Jason are turning out special holiday breads, cakes and muffins. As usual, I was left wishing for a version of Earthly Delights here in Houston.
As always, Corinna works out a solution to the case, but for me the real pleasure is in the characters and their interactions. I've said before that I'd love to sit down for a cup of tea with Corinna, to talk about favorite books and characters among other things. In this book she quotes Stephen Maturin; later she and Daniel spend an afternoon reading Terry Pratchett aloud (given the season, I'm sure they were reading Hogfather). I'm going to be very disappointed, when and if I ever get to Melbourne, not to find Earthly Delights in Calico Alley.
If you're looking for a little holiday mayhem in good company, to my mind you can't do better than Forbidden Fruit.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Happy Hogswatch!
Hogfather, Terry Pratchett
I find comfort in reading about other people's stressful holidays in the midst of my own. Though mine cannot compare with that of the families in Connecticut, or with those who are losing their jobs in these months, I learned this week that the apartment complex where I live has been sold to a developer, who will tear it down. We haven't heard officially, but we will probably have to move out in the next 30-45 days. I've already started looking for a new place for me, two cats, and far too many books. I'm lucky it's just me and the cats, that I don't have to worry about finding a place with good schools for kids, as some folks here do. But it's still going to be an anxious Christmas, and I can feel myself turning toward comfort books even more than usual.
Terry Pratchett's Hogfather is one of my seasonal Christmas books. If you aren't familiar with his work, he is probably best-known for a long series of books set on a world called the Disc, one with a lot of parallels to our own, which he uses to great satirical and comedic effect. Each book can be read on its own, but each book also draws on and then builds on a complicated backstory, familiarity with which gives Pratchett's jokes and allusions a deeper meaning. There are some stand-alone books, but also what I'd call subseries, centered on different characters. I particularly enjoy the books about Sam Vimes and the Watch, the police force in the great city of Ankh-Morpork; the two books about the reforming con man Moist van Lipwig; and those featuring the witches of the remote Ramtop mountains, including the apprentice witch Tiffany Aching.
One of my favorite characters shows up in almost every book: Death. Pratchett's version of the Grim Reaper is a tall skeleton in a black hooded robe, with glowing blue eye sockets, the obligatory sickle and a white horse named Binky. Death is an anthropomorphic personification and therefore he has (in Pratchett's words)
I find comfort in reading about other people's stressful holidays in the midst of my own. Though mine cannot compare with that of the families in Connecticut, or with those who are losing their jobs in these months, I learned this week that the apartment complex where I live has been sold to a developer, who will tear it down. We haven't heard officially, but we will probably have to move out in the next 30-45 days. I've already started looking for a new place for me, two cats, and far too many books. I'm lucky it's just me and the cats, that I don't have to worry about finding a place with good schools for kids, as some folks here do. But it's still going to be an anxious Christmas, and I can feel myself turning toward comfort books even more than usual.
Terry Pratchett's Hogfather is one of my seasonal Christmas books. If you aren't familiar with his work, he is probably best-known for a long series of books set on a world called the Disc, one with a lot of parallels to our own, which he uses to great satirical and comedic effect. Each book can be read on its own, but each book also draws on and then builds on a complicated backstory, familiarity with which gives Pratchett's jokes and allusions a deeper meaning. There are some stand-alone books, but also what I'd call subseries, centered on different characters. I particularly enjoy the books about Sam Vimes and the Watch, the police force in the great city of Ankh-Morpork; the two books about the reforming con man Moist van Lipwig; and those featuring the witches of the remote Ramtop mountains, including the apprentice witch Tiffany Aching.
One of my favorite characters shows up in almost every book: Death. Pratchett's version of the Grim Reaper is a tall skeleton in a black hooded robe, with glowing blue eye sockets, the obligatory sickle and a white horse named Binky. Death is an anthropomorphic personification and therefore he has (in Pratchett's words)
in some measure, human traits - like curiosity. He'll want to see what makes humans tick, being well aware of what makes them stop. It's a moot point if Death can have emotions, but he does appear to be sentimental. Certainly he seems to be increasingly uneasy in his role and has been known to bend the rules very slightly . . .In this book, the Hogfather, the Disc's version of Father Christmas, has gone missing, and Death is filling in temporarily for reasons of his own. His granddaughter Susan (who has a lovely complicated backstory and has inherited certainly family traits) learns of this and sets off to find out why, though he expressly warns her to keep out of it. The wizards of Ankh-Morpork's great Unseen University are also drawn into the mystery, which interrupts their usual Hogswatch program of feasting and academic squabbles. As always, in an entertaining and often hilarious story Pratchett has some serious things to say, in this case about the real meaning of holidays and celebrations, about poverty and injustice, about faith and belief, and about what it means to be human. And as always, it's as hard to stop after one Pratchett book as it is after one piece of Christmas candy.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Another visit to Bath
Persuasion, Jane Austen
One of the new books I'm most eagerly anticipating is What Really Matters in Jane Austen, by John Mullan. I've been enviously following Audrey's posts on her reading of it. I'd planned all year to re-read Persuasion for the Classics Challenge but never got around to it. Then the Bath setting of Georgette Heyer's Black Sheep made me take Persuasion straight off the shelf as soon as I'd finished it.
As much as I compare Heyer to Austen, I've never read their books back to back, and I was a little concerned that Heyer might suffer by comparison. But while she is no Jane Austen, I don't think she ever tried to be, and her books are perfect in their own way.
It has been a couple of years since I read Persuasion. Reading so much about the novels and Austen herself keeps the characters and stories fresh in my mind, as does the discussion on the Janeites listserv to which I belong. But in the end I am always drawn back to the novels themselves, to Austen's wonderful words. And, speaking for myself, I don't want adaptations, plays, films, or even audiobooks. All of those are interpretations of Austen, someone else's vision and version - and in many cases, additions to Austen's stories (do not get me started on Colin Firth skinnydipping, which I haven't actually seen but have heard about many, many times).
Though I don't know if I could pick a single favorite among Austen's novels, Persuasion would be at the top, with Emma and Pride and Prejudice. But Anne Elliot is easily my favorite of her heroines, "the elegant little woman of seven and twenty, with every beauty excepting bloom, with manners as consciously right as they were inevitably gentle. . ." Though she is not a wit like Elizabeth Bennet, she has a good sense of humor. Her principles are as strong as Fanny Price's, but she has the confidence and firmness Fanny lacks, while avoiding Emma Wodehouse's arrogance. Like Elinor Dashwood, she bears with a suffering sister while concealing her own heartache, even though Mary's infirmities are mostly imaginary. Of all Austen's heroines, she must be the greatest reader, of the greatest variety, or she could not recommend to Captain Benwick, on a moment's notice, "such works of our best moralists, such collections of the finest letters, such memoirs of characters of worth and suffering," not to mention the poetry they have already been discussing in such detail. In that, I think, she must mirror her creator. Anne is a likeable character and a sympathetic one. Her vain, spendthrift father Sir Walter and her condescending older sister Elizabeth have no use for her, and we judge them accordingly. (But then which of Austen's heroines has a perfectly happy home life, except perhaps for Catherine Morland? At least Anne does not have to suffer an Aunt Norris.)
I think her story is also the most romantic among Austen's heroines. She and Frederick Wentworth were very much in love when she was persuaded to break their engagement, at the urging of her godmother and friend Lady Russell, who objected to
Elizabeth over at The Bamboo Bookcase has been posting about favorite Christmas scenes in books, which got me thinking about Austen, since several feature in her novels. In Pride and Prejudice, the Gardiners come to spend the holidays at Longbourn, and they take Jane back to London with them when they return. In Emma of course there is the Christmas Eve dinner at the Westons, after which Emma is trapped in a coach with Mr Elton and forced to listen to his proposal. In Persuasion, we have a Christmas scene that could have come from Dickens or Alcott. When Anne and Lady Russell visit the Musgroves, they find
Persuasion was of course left unfinished at Jane Austen's death. It was edited by her brother Henry for publication with Northanger Abbey. I don't believe that the story we have now, as much as I love it, is the story that Austen herself would have published, if she had lived to complete it. She had already tightened up, and to my mind much improved, the story by editing out a scene where Captain Wentworth is sent to ask Anne if the rumors that she is to marry her cousin Mr Elliot are true. This famous "cancelled chapter" seems awkward and forced. Instead, we get the scene in the Musgroves' parlor at the inn, where Captain Wentworth leaves one of the world's greatest love letters for Anne. I think that Austen must have originally intended something different with the Mrs Smith-Mr Elliot-Mrs Clay subplot, since she makes a point of Anne planning to consult Lady Russell about it, but putting it off for a day. But that is all sheer speculation on my part of course, and it takes nothing away from my enjoyment of the wonderful book that we do have.
This Sunday I look forward to celebrating Jane Austen's 237th birthday with the Greater Houston JASNA chapter, and Janeites around the world!
One of the new books I'm most eagerly anticipating is What Really Matters in Jane Austen, by John Mullan. I've been enviously following Audrey's posts on her reading of it. I'd planned all year to re-read Persuasion for the Classics Challenge but never got around to it. Then the Bath setting of Georgette Heyer's Black Sheep made me take Persuasion straight off the shelf as soon as I'd finished it.
As much as I compare Heyer to Austen, I've never read their books back to back, and I was a little concerned that Heyer might suffer by comparison. But while she is no Jane Austen, I don't think she ever tried to be, and her books are perfect in their own way.
It has been a couple of years since I read Persuasion. Reading so much about the novels and Austen herself keeps the characters and stories fresh in my mind, as does the discussion on the Janeites listserv to which I belong. But in the end I am always drawn back to the novels themselves, to Austen's wonderful words. And, speaking for myself, I don't want adaptations, plays, films, or even audiobooks. All of those are interpretations of Austen, someone else's vision and version - and in many cases, additions to Austen's stories (do not get me started on Colin Firth skinnydipping, which I haven't actually seen but have heard about many, many times).
Though I don't know if I could pick a single favorite among Austen's novels, Persuasion would be at the top, with Emma and Pride and Prejudice. But Anne Elliot is easily my favorite of her heroines, "the elegant little woman of seven and twenty, with every beauty excepting bloom, with manners as consciously right as they were inevitably gentle. . ." Though she is not a wit like Elizabeth Bennet, she has a good sense of humor. Her principles are as strong as Fanny Price's, but she has the confidence and firmness Fanny lacks, while avoiding Emma Wodehouse's arrogance. Like Elinor Dashwood, she bears with a suffering sister while concealing her own heartache, even though Mary's infirmities are mostly imaginary. Of all Austen's heroines, she must be the greatest reader, of the greatest variety, or she could not recommend to Captain Benwick, on a moment's notice, "such works of our best moralists, such collections of the finest letters, such memoirs of characters of worth and suffering," not to mention the poetry they have already been discussing in such detail. In that, I think, she must mirror her creator. Anne is a likeable character and a sympathetic one. Her vain, spendthrift father Sir Walter and her condescending older sister Elizabeth have no use for her, and we judge them accordingly. (But then which of Austen's heroines has a perfectly happy home life, except perhaps for Catherine Morland? At least Anne does not have to suffer an Aunt Norris.)
I think her story is also the most romantic among Austen's heroines. She and Frederick Wentworth were very much in love when she was persuaded to break their engagement, at the urging of her godmother and friend Lady Russell, who objected to
a young man, who had nothing but himself to recommend him, and no hopes of attaining affluence, but in the chances of a most uncertain profession [the Navy], and no connexions to secure even his farther rise in that profession . . .So Anne gave him up, but she never forgot him. Then chance brings the now-Captain Wentworth back into her circle, and she finds her feelings unchanged. Initially he seems bent on showing her what she lost, flirting with young friends of hers and ready to marry one of them. But as the story unfolds, she sees hints that perhaps he is not as indifferent as he seems, and she cannot help hoping that what she now sees as her mistake eight years ago can be rectified.
Elizabeth over at The Bamboo Bookcase has been posting about favorite Christmas scenes in books, which got me thinking about Austen, since several feature in her novels. In Pride and Prejudice, the Gardiners come to spend the holidays at Longbourn, and they take Jane back to London with them when they return. In Emma of course there is the Christmas Eve dinner at the Westons, after which Emma is trapped in a coach with Mr Elton and forced to listen to his proposal. In Persuasion, we have a Christmas scene that could have come from Dickens or Alcott. When Anne and Lady Russell visit the Musgroves, they find
On one side was a table, occupied by some chattering girls, cutting up silk and gold paper; and on the other were tressels and trays, bending under the weight of brawn and cold pies, where riotous boys were holding high revel; the whole completed by a roaring Christmas fire, which seemed determined to be heard, in spite of all the noise of the others.Lady Russell finds it all a bit too much, telling Anne, "I hope I shall remember, in future, not to call at Uppercross in the Christmas holidays."
Persuasion was of course left unfinished at Jane Austen's death. It was edited by her brother Henry for publication with Northanger Abbey. I don't believe that the story we have now, as much as I love it, is the story that Austen herself would have published, if she had lived to complete it. She had already tightened up, and to my mind much improved, the story by editing out a scene where Captain Wentworth is sent to ask Anne if the rumors that she is to marry her cousin Mr Elliot are true. This famous "cancelled chapter" seems awkward and forced. Instead, we get the scene in the Musgroves' parlor at the inn, where Captain Wentworth leaves one of the world's greatest love letters for Anne. I think that Austen must have originally intended something different with the Mrs Smith-Mr Elliot-Mrs Clay subplot, since she makes a point of Anne planning to consult Lady Russell about it, but putting it off for a day. But that is all sheer speculation on my part of course, and it takes nothing away from my enjoyment of the wonderful book that we do have.
This Sunday I look forward to celebrating Jane Austen's 237th birthday with the Greater Houston JASNA chapter, and Janeites around the world!
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Completing the Classics Challenge
December brings us to the end of the Classics Challenge, hosted by Katherine at November's Autumn. I had never joined a challenge before when I signed up for this last November (along with the TBR Double Dare). I have really enjoyed participating, in reading the books and then considering different aspects of them through the monthly prompts. I've also enjoyed seeing what others have read, which has added some books to my TBR shelves. Thanks again to Katherine for hosting us!
I didn't manage to read everything on the list that I originally drew up for the Challenge (which fortunately didn't disqualify me) :
Now I'm off to collect my cool "challenge completed" button!
I didn't manage to read everything on the list that I originally drew up for the Challenge (which fortunately didn't disqualify me) :
- Jane Austen's Persuasion - which I'm currently re-reading.
- Anthony Trollope's The Three Clerks
- Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own - still on the TBR shelves.
- George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion
- Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Women - also still languishing on the TBR shelves.
- Jerome K. Jerome's Three Men on the Bummel
- Henry Fielding's Tom Jones - I made it to page 452 (of 871) before giving up - but I will finish it.
Now I'm off to collect my cool "challenge completed" button!
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Black sheep in Bath
Black Sheep, Georgette Heyer
After tracking a psychopathic killer through the streets of Lafferton in A Question of Identity, I wanted to read something calm and soothing. Georgette Heyer has been on my mind lately after reading various reviews, like Katrina's of Detection Unlimited and Claire's of the recent Heyer biography by Jennifer Kloester. The Heyer listserv I belong to just finished discussing one of my favorite books, The Talisman Ring, and is now looking at her wonderful minor characters, like Sir Hugh Thane. I've also realized that I need to get any re-reading done this month, before the TBR Double Dog Dare kicks off on January 1st.
Black Sheep is a story set in Bath. As it opens, Miss Abigail Wendover is returning home after several weeks spent caring for an older sister during her confinement and the illnesses of her other children. Still unmarried at 28, she shares a home with her eldest sister, Selina, and their 17-year-old niece Fanny, who has lived with them since she was orphaned in infancy. The only child of their eldest brother, Fanny is heiress to a considerable estate. Abby returns to find that in her absence, and under Selina's laxer surveillance, Fanny has met and fallen head over heels in love with a recent arrival in Bath, a young man named Stacy Calverleigh. Though of good family, he is known to be a gambler, and an unlucky one, whose family estate is mortgaged to the hilt. It is a matter of common gossip that he is hanging out for a rich wife, having already attempted like George Wickham to elope with one heiress. But Abby finds it impossible to break the spell that he seems to have cast not only over Fanny, but also over Selina, whose romantic heart yearns to see young love triumph.
Then a second Mr Calverleigh arrives in Bath, Stacy's uncle Miles, who was packed off to India twenty years ago after one too many scandals capped a disreputable career, one that saw him first expelled from Eton and then sent down from Oxford. He has returned now having made his fortune in trade. Careless in dress, casual in manner, he has none of his nephew's good looks or easy charm. Yet Abby finds herself drawn to him, to his ready understanding and even more to his cynical sense of humor (for Heyer's couples, a shared sense of humor is the most important element in a successful relationship). She hopes to enlist him in protecting her niece from his nephew, which becomes her excuse for spending so much time in his company. Though Fanny, caught up in her own love affair, is oblivious to her aunt's, Selina watches their growing intimacy with the gravest apprehensions. No well-brought-up young woman, and certainly not a Wendover, could possibly marry such a black sheep.
In the perennial discussions of which Heyer books are the best introductions for new readers, I would include this one. The Bath setting evokes Jane Austen, as the Wendovers from their house in Sydney Place visit the Pump Room, shop on the South Parade, and attend concerts in the New Assembly Rooms. It is not overloaded with Regency slang, as some of Heyer's books are, though I sometimes find the details on fashion equally confusing (Circassian or Cottage sleeves for a morning dress?). Unusually for Heyer, the narrative shifts between the different characters' points of views, which gives the reader insight and information not shared with the other characters. And this is one of Heyer's more romantic stories, centered around the two couples, Abby and Miles, Stacy and Fanny. Often in her books, the hero and heroine fall in love over the course of shared adventures, but we get only hints of it before a declaration in the last pages, as in The Talisman Ring or The Quiet Gentleman. I've actually read complaints about the lack of romance in Heyer's books! Here the focus is on the developing relationships, particularly between Abby and Miles. I much prefer the books where the hero and heroine genuinely like as well as love each other, in contrast to the books where they brangle and brawl their way to a happy ending, like Bath Tangle or Faro's Daughter. Published in 1966, Black Sheep has some similarities to Lady of Quality, Heyer's last novel, from 1972, but the two are not carbon copies, and I enjoy each for its own story.
After tracking a psychopathic killer through the streets of Lafferton in A Question of Identity, I wanted to read something calm and soothing. Georgette Heyer has been on my mind lately after reading various reviews, like Katrina's of Detection Unlimited and Claire's of the recent Heyer biography by Jennifer Kloester. The Heyer listserv I belong to just finished discussing one of my favorite books, The Talisman Ring, and is now looking at her wonderful minor characters, like Sir Hugh Thane. I've also realized that I need to get any re-reading done this month, before the TBR Double Dog Dare kicks off on January 1st.
Black Sheep is a story set in Bath. As it opens, Miss Abigail Wendover is returning home after several weeks spent caring for an older sister during her confinement and the illnesses of her other children. Still unmarried at 28, she shares a home with her eldest sister, Selina, and their 17-year-old niece Fanny, who has lived with them since she was orphaned in infancy. The only child of their eldest brother, Fanny is heiress to a considerable estate. Abby returns to find that in her absence, and under Selina's laxer surveillance, Fanny has met and fallen head over heels in love with a recent arrival in Bath, a young man named Stacy Calverleigh. Though of good family, he is known to be a gambler, and an unlucky one, whose family estate is mortgaged to the hilt. It is a matter of common gossip that he is hanging out for a rich wife, having already attempted like George Wickham to elope with one heiress. But Abby finds it impossible to break the spell that he seems to have cast not only over Fanny, but also over Selina, whose romantic heart yearns to see young love triumph.
Then a second Mr Calverleigh arrives in Bath, Stacy's uncle Miles, who was packed off to India twenty years ago after one too many scandals capped a disreputable career, one that saw him first expelled from Eton and then sent down from Oxford. He has returned now having made his fortune in trade. Careless in dress, casual in manner, he has none of his nephew's good looks or easy charm. Yet Abby finds herself drawn to him, to his ready understanding and even more to his cynical sense of humor (for Heyer's couples, a shared sense of humor is the most important element in a successful relationship). She hopes to enlist him in protecting her niece from his nephew, which becomes her excuse for spending so much time in his company. Though Fanny, caught up in her own love affair, is oblivious to her aunt's, Selina watches their growing intimacy with the gravest apprehensions. No well-brought-up young woman, and certainly not a Wendover, could possibly marry such a black sheep.
In the perennial discussions of which Heyer books are the best introductions for new readers, I would include this one. The Bath setting evokes Jane Austen, as the Wendovers from their house in Sydney Place visit the Pump Room, shop on the South Parade, and attend concerts in the New Assembly Rooms. It is not overloaded with Regency slang, as some of Heyer's books are, though I sometimes find the details on fashion equally confusing (Circassian or Cottage sleeves for a morning dress?). Unusually for Heyer, the narrative shifts between the different characters' points of views, which gives the reader insight and information not shared with the other characters. And this is one of Heyer's more romantic stories, centered around the two couples, Abby and Miles, Stacy and Fanny. Often in her books, the hero and heroine fall in love over the course of shared adventures, but we get only hints of it before a declaration in the last pages, as in The Talisman Ring or The Quiet Gentleman. I've actually read complaints about the lack of romance in Heyer's books! Here the focus is on the developing relationships, particularly between Abby and Miles. I much prefer the books where the hero and heroine genuinely like as well as love each other, in contrast to the books where they brangle and brawl their way to a happy ending, like Bath Tangle or Faro's Daughter. Published in 1966, Black Sheep has some similarities to Lady of Quality, Heyer's last novel, from 1972, but the two are not carbon copies, and I enjoy each for its own story.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
A killer's identity
A Question of Identity, Susan Hill
This is the seventh of Susan Hill's series of mysteries featuring DCS Simon Serrailler. I'm always glad to see the newest book advertised, knowing that I'll soon be back in the small cathedral city of Lafferton, with its echoes of Salisbury and Exeter, but also of Barchester. The story here, however, opens in Yorkshire in 2002, where Alan Keyes is on trial for the murders of three elderly women. All were killed in their homes, bungalows in a senior-citizen housing area, where he had worked at times on construction. To the shock of those in the courtroom, including the victims' relatives, he is acquitted on all three counts. As word of the verdict spreads rapidly, angry crowds gather outside the court building, and the police are forced to take Keyes into protective custody.
The story then jumps ahead ten years, to Lafferton, where we soon meet Rosemary Poole, who phones her daughter and son-in-law with the news that she has just qualified for a bungalow in a senior-citizen housing area. At that point, I had a pretty good idea what was going to happen, which didn't keep me from falling for a couple of Hill's red herrings. I don't want to say too much about the plot, to avoid spoilers. I've commented in previous reviews that Lafferton has had an unusually high number of serial killers in recent years, considering its small size. I was initially a bit disappointed that this book seemed to feature yet another one. But Susan Hill does something very intriguing with the protagonist of this story, which set my concerns at rest.
As much as I enjoy the mysteries in these stories, which Hill always brings to neat and logical conclusions, it is her characters that draw me back each time. Though this book like the others is listed as "A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery," he is one of the usual large cast, each with his or her own story, and the narrative shifts constantly among their points of view, allowing us to see events through different eyes. I really admire the way Hill manages this, keeping each story distinct, weaving some in with the main case that Simon is investigating, leaving others to run their own course. It's interesting that though these are mysteries, with the nominal central character a police officer, we don't learn much about his colleagues and subordinates; only a few are even identified by name. In that sense, I don't think of these stories as typical police procedurals - which is not at all a complaint.
Throughout the series, my favorite character has been Simon's sister Cat Deerbon, a doctor like their parents, now widowed and raising her three children. She has often been involved in his cases, and in fact she was almost a victim in the first book in the series. Here her story focuses on her work in the Imogen House hospice, facing serious budget crises, and on her family, where the conflicts between 14-year-old Sam and 12-year-old Hannah are escalating. She and Simon are both worried about their stepmother, Judith, who has become withdrawn and distant. They sense trouble in her marriage to their difficult father Richard, but she will not talk to either of them about it. Simon is involved in a difficult relationship of his own, and when Cat brings it up, he in turn shuts down. I was pleased to see that he is actually still in a relationship, given his history with women, but sorry to see that Hill again pulls the emotional rug out from under him. I did find myself wondering if Cat will ever consider dating again.
Another member of Cat's household (family, really) is Molly, a medical student who helps with the children and the house in exchange for room and board. In the last book, The Betrayal of Trust, she was brutally attacked and almost killed. Here she is still suffering from the aftereffects, struggling with depression and panic attacks, unable to cope with school. As sad as it was to see her suffering, it was refreshing to see a realistic portrayal of the trauma of violence. Too often, in books and television shows, characters who have been kidnapped, held at gunpoint, or who witness a murder seem completely unaffected, moving on to the next plot point, usually with a joke. I was also glad to meet Jocelyn Forbes again, who played such a key part in the last book, and to see where her story has taken her.
I really enjoyed this book. My only quibble is how long we'll have to wait for the next one. Now I'm off to read Jane's review on Fleur Fisher in her world, and Audrey's on books as food, which I had avoided for fear I'd inadvertently plagiarize their always-excellent posts.
I've just noticed that this is my 250th post, which doesn't quite seem possible. Thank you again for reading along.
This is the seventh of Susan Hill's series of mysteries featuring DCS Simon Serrailler. I'm always glad to see the newest book advertised, knowing that I'll soon be back in the small cathedral city of Lafferton, with its echoes of Salisbury and Exeter, but also of Barchester. The story here, however, opens in Yorkshire in 2002, where Alan Keyes is on trial for the murders of three elderly women. All were killed in their homes, bungalows in a senior-citizen housing area, where he had worked at times on construction. To the shock of those in the courtroom, including the victims' relatives, he is acquitted on all three counts. As word of the verdict spreads rapidly, angry crowds gather outside the court building, and the police are forced to take Keyes into protective custody.
The story then jumps ahead ten years, to Lafferton, where we soon meet Rosemary Poole, who phones her daughter and son-in-law with the news that she has just qualified for a bungalow in a senior-citizen housing area. At that point, I had a pretty good idea what was going to happen, which didn't keep me from falling for a couple of Hill's red herrings. I don't want to say too much about the plot, to avoid spoilers. I've commented in previous reviews that Lafferton has had an unusually high number of serial killers in recent years, considering its small size. I was initially a bit disappointed that this book seemed to feature yet another one. But Susan Hill does something very intriguing with the protagonist of this story, which set my concerns at rest.
As much as I enjoy the mysteries in these stories, which Hill always brings to neat and logical conclusions, it is her characters that draw me back each time. Though this book like the others is listed as "A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery," he is one of the usual large cast, each with his or her own story, and the narrative shifts constantly among their points of view, allowing us to see events through different eyes. I really admire the way Hill manages this, keeping each story distinct, weaving some in with the main case that Simon is investigating, leaving others to run their own course. It's interesting that though these are mysteries, with the nominal central character a police officer, we don't learn much about his colleagues and subordinates; only a few are even identified by name. In that sense, I don't think of these stories as typical police procedurals - which is not at all a complaint.
Throughout the series, my favorite character has been Simon's sister Cat Deerbon, a doctor like their parents, now widowed and raising her three children. She has often been involved in his cases, and in fact she was almost a victim in the first book in the series. Here her story focuses on her work in the Imogen House hospice, facing serious budget crises, and on her family, where the conflicts between 14-year-old Sam and 12-year-old Hannah are escalating. She and Simon are both worried about their stepmother, Judith, who has become withdrawn and distant. They sense trouble in her marriage to their difficult father Richard, but she will not talk to either of them about it. Simon is involved in a difficult relationship of his own, and when Cat brings it up, he in turn shuts down. I was pleased to see that he is actually still in a relationship, given his history with women, but sorry to see that Hill again pulls the emotional rug out from under him. I did find myself wondering if Cat will ever consider dating again.
Another member of Cat's household (family, really) is Molly, a medical student who helps with the children and the house in exchange for room and board. In the last book, The Betrayal of Trust, she was brutally attacked and almost killed. Here she is still suffering from the aftereffects, struggling with depression and panic attacks, unable to cope with school. As sad as it was to see her suffering, it was refreshing to see a realistic portrayal of the trauma of violence. Too often, in books and television shows, characters who have been kidnapped, held at gunpoint, or who witness a murder seem completely unaffected, moving on to the next plot point, usually with a joke. I was also glad to meet Jocelyn Forbes again, who played such a key part in the last book, and to see where her story has taken her.
I really enjoyed this book. My only quibble is how long we'll have to wait for the next one. Now I'm off to read Jane's review on Fleur Fisher in her world, and Audrey's on books as food, which I had avoided for fear I'd inadvertently plagiarize their always-excellent posts.
I've just noticed that this is my 250th post, which doesn't quite seem possible. Thank you again for reading along.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Daughter, wife, muse
The Pastor's Wife, Elizabeth von Arnim
When I started this book, I had only the vaguest idea of the plot: that the title character leaves her home in England to marry a German pastor. I expected it would draw on Elizabeth von Arnim's own experiences in meeting and marrying Count Henning von Arnim-Schlagenthin, and moving with him to Germany in 1890. As I read it, I kept thinking that I knew where the story was going, only to find myself mistaken, as the plot twisted off into a new direction. In the end, all my expectations were wrong - or perhaps I should say my presumptions. I was constantly re-evaluating the book as I was reading, which left me feeling off-balance. It was the oddest reading experience I've had in a long time.
Just a warning, there will be spoilers ahead.
I don't mean to give the impression that I didn't enjoy this book, because I did, very much. This is Elizabeth von Arnim at her sharpest and most satirical, and wickedly funny. The humor here reminded me of The Caravaners, one of my favorites among her books. But the central character of The Pastor's Wife is much more sympathetic than Baron Otto von Ottringel, who narrates The Caravaners and is neatly skewered throughout. I was drawn to Ingeborg Bullivant from the first page, walking down Regent Street on an April morning, delightfully alone. The elder daughter of the Bishop of Redchester in the west country, 22 years old, she lives a busy life in the Palace, acting as her father's secretary, representing her sofa-bound mother on social occasions, and chaperoning her sister Judith to parties and dances. She owes her unprecedented freedom to dental problems that required a specialist's care. Her family wanted her restored to health and activity as soon as possible, so her father sent her off to London with £10 and instructions not return until she was better, even if it took a week or ten days.
It took the dentist no time at all to extract the problem tooth, leaving Ingeborg free for the day in London. She is considering how to spend her 24 hours before catching the train home when she sees a poster outside an office: "A Week In Lovely Lucerne, Seven Days For Seven Guineas." Hardly stopping to think, she walks into the office and pays her fee, for a tour leaving the next day. Good for her, I thought. Here is her declaration of independence, from father and Palace. She will find a new life opening up for her in Lucerne.
Well, yes and no. On the train to Dover, she is seated across a person who is obviously a foreigner. When they fall into conversation, she learns that he is Robert Dremmel, a Lutheran pastor who proclaims that his real vocation is manure (to the shock of their neighbors). He has devoted himself to scientific agriculture, to improve the poor soil of eastern Prussia, where he lives. As the tour continues, Herr Dremmel finds himself falling in love with Ingeborg, in part because (trained by her father) she is an excellent listener, "intelligent without argument, a most comfortable compound..." Though he has never seriously contemplated marriage before, he soon decides that he will marry her. She is taken aback by his proposal, she dislikes what she terms his "clutchings," and she is not in love with him. Robert simply talks over all her objections and arranges a formal betrothal ceremony. In one of my favorite scenes, he slips a note under Ingeborg's door to inform her that the ceremony will take place the next morning: "Since no man can be betrothed alone, it will be necessary that you should be there." However, not knowing which is her room, he put identical notes under eight doors, and seven women find their way to the room before Ingeborg. She arrives determined to say no, but she is overwhelmed by the witnesses and Robert's calm assumption of their engagement.
She returns to Redchester to break the news of her betrothal to a Lutheran pastor from east Prussia, and all hell breaks loose in the Palace. As painful as the events are for Ingeborg, they are great fun to read. Von Arnim saves some of her sharpest knives for the Bishop, "handsome as an archangel, silvery of head and gaitered of leg," who is furious over her rebellious and undutiful behavior, which will deprive him of his unpaid secretary. (The separation from a daughter goes unremarked.) Her mother will not help her. Though perfectly well, she spends her days on the sofa. Early in her married life she "discovered in it a refuge and a very present help in all the troubles and turmoils of life, and in especial a shield and a buckler when it came to dealing with the Bishop." Ingeborg's younger sister Judith has just become engaged to the Master of an Oxford college, a man her father's age, who will soon (in the Bishop's mind) leave her "the most magnificent of widows." If Judith seems unenthusiastic about her own coming marriage, she joins her father in disdaining Ingeborg's. To show their displeasure, her parents and Judith effectively shun Ingeborg. After a week of such treatment, it is hardly surprising that she welcomes Robert's arrival in Redchester. His ardent courtship seems to offer her love, a life outside the narrow confines of the Palace, and in response her feelings toward him grow warmer (though she still dislikes the clutching).
They are married by the Bishop in the Cathedral at Redchester and set off for Robert's Prussian home, a small village called Kökensee. At this point, I expected perhaps a story of adjustment, both to marriage and to Germany. I wondered how a daughter of an Anglican palace would learn to be a Lutheran pastor's wife. I thought that this might become the story of how Ingeborg, like Elizabeth von Arnim, eventually found her way to her own German garden. Well, yes and no. Ingeborg is not the first to find a great difference between a courting suitor and a husband. Once back on his home soil, Robert reverts to his vocation of scientific agriculture, locking himself into his study to to carry out his experiments with grain and manure. He is kind to Ingeborg when he notices her. He alternates Sunday services between the two churches in his parish, preaching one of the 26 sermons that he keeps on hand, rotating them through each year (the parish particularly enjoys the annual Advent sermon on the slaughter of pigs, anticipating their Christmas sausages). His parishioners are quite satisfied with their disengaged shepherd, and they make it clear to Ingeborg that they don't need "Frau Pastor" trying to practice good works among them.
Ingeborg finds herself with few responsibilities, and her first summer in her new home is one of glorious freedom. She wanders through the woods and the fields, she luxuriates in flowers and birds and berries, she takes a punt along the shore of a neighboring lake. As the winter closes in, curtailing her expeditions, she learns that after many false starts, she is pregnant with her first child. The news brings Robert to tears of joy. Aha, I thought, a new chapter of her life opening up. Deprived of her parents' love and care, with a husband mentally and physically absent, she will find joy in motherhood, in her children, perhaps her own "April, May and June babies." Wrong again.
After a difficult pregnancy, as Robert grows impatient with her illness and her increasing size, she almost dies during a botched delivery. She suffers an injury nursing the child, a boy named for his father, and she struggles for months with postpartum depression. When she finally recovers enough to notice the baby again, she is dismayed not to feel the love that everyone tells her is a mother's highest and best feeling. She is equally dismayed to find that, just as she is feeling herself again, making plans to return to her walks, her punt, to introduce the baby to the wonders of the world, she is pregnant again. The cycle repeats itself five more times in the next six years, though only her second child, a daughter, survives with Robertlet. This section makes for grim reading. Von Arnim herself had five children, and she writes plainly of the difficulties and dangers of pregnancy and childbirth. Though not explicit in today's terms, it is franker than I expected of a book published in 1914. I would not recommend this book to a woman in her first pregnancy.
Ingeborg's doctor intervenes after the sixth pregnancy ends with a second still-born child, sending her off with a nurse to a sea-side resort. She returns after four months, recovering in mind and body. But she knows that her complete recovery requires more. She steels her courage to ask the astounded Robert if "this wild career of - of unbridled motherhood" might end? Immured in his laboratory, Robert might not have much use for a wife, but he does have one, and he absolutely rejects the idea that Ingeborg could refuse to "live with her husband as his wife." At one point he goes up to their bedroom
One day, paddling down the lake in the punt, she meets a celebrated English artist, Edward Ingram, who is staying with the local count's family. Finally, I thought. Here is someone who will love Ingeborg as she deserves, and rescue her from her small Prussian life. Wrong again. Ingram is instantly attracted to her, or to an idea of her, as "a perfect little seething vessel of independent happiness, bubbling over with your own contentments." Despite his fame, he is restless, driven by his art yet fearing that he is wasting his talents on society portraits. Separated from his wife, he is a notorious womanizer who soon tires of his conquests. Ingeborg knows nothing of the seedier side of his life. She admires his work and relishes the chance to talk with someone so cosmopolitan. As they continue to meet and to talk, she does not realize that he is falling in love with her, taking his extravagant compliments as teasing. His compliments go on and on and on, as he proclaims her his soul-mate, his life-force, his muse. He sketches her constantly, with growing power, and he repeatedly declares that he must paint her. But he can only paint her in his studio, in Venice, and he begins a campaign to convince her to come with him to Italy. It is her duty, he tells her, to help him create the masterpiece that her portrait will be.
This is where I began to have trouble with the story. I could accept that Ingeborg, having lived a constrained life both in Redchester and Kökensee, might not be able to see through the flattery, to see Ingram for what he really is. I can certainly understand how much she has wanted someone to talk to all those years, and how strongly she feels the lure of travel itself, particularly to Italy. But I had a hard time accepting that a bishop's daughter and a pastor's wife would agree to travel to Italy with another man, convincing herself that it is just a trip with a friend, while at the same time deceiving her husband to think she is only going on a shopping trip to Berlin. Yet this self-delusion has quite entertaining consequences: Ingeborg has no idea she is running away with Ingram. He keeps trying to seduce her, but she is completely distracted with the novelty of travel, with the new scenes opening before her. To his disgust, she even tries to send Robert postcards along the way, to share her joy with him. When Ingram finally makes the situation clear, Ingeborg is horrified, Staying with Ingram never ever crosses her mind. Her one thought is to get safely back to Robert. But will he welcome her back, or will he rather punish her for her great sin?
I think that Elizabeth von Arnim meant Ingeborg to be a sympathetic character, through whom she explores the limited roles available to women at the time. Ingeborg tries to be faithful to her roles as daughter, wife and mother, despite the difficulties that she faces, and to do her duty cheerfully. Ingram offers what might seem like wider horizons, but eventually she realizes that they come at a steep price, the end of her marriage. The reader knows, as she doesn't, that she also risks finding herself abandoned when his infatuation wears off. Though it is unclear when this story is set, by the time it was published in 1914, women in Britain and North America were finding more opportunities for education and careers, as they would in even greater numbers after the Great War ended. Will those years bring change to Kökensee, to Ingeborg's life? Will she still be able to find happiness in her essentially solitary life in a small backwards Prussian village? I want to think so, but she deserves so much more.
When I started this book, I had only the vaguest idea of the plot: that the title character leaves her home in England to marry a German pastor. I expected it would draw on Elizabeth von Arnim's own experiences in meeting and marrying Count Henning von Arnim-Schlagenthin, and moving with him to Germany in 1890. As I read it, I kept thinking that I knew where the story was going, only to find myself mistaken, as the plot twisted off into a new direction. In the end, all my expectations were wrong - or perhaps I should say my presumptions. I was constantly re-evaluating the book as I was reading, which left me feeling off-balance. It was the oddest reading experience I've had in a long time.
Just a warning, there will be spoilers ahead.
I don't mean to give the impression that I didn't enjoy this book, because I did, very much. This is Elizabeth von Arnim at her sharpest and most satirical, and wickedly funny. The humor here reminded me of The Caravaners, one of my favorites among her books. But the central character of The Pastor's Wife is much more sympathetic than Baron Otto von Ottringel, who narrates The Caravaners and is neatly skewered throughout. I was drawn to Ingeborg Bullivant from the first page, walking down Regent Street on an April morning, delightfully alone. The elder daughter of the Bishop of Redchester in the west country, 22 years old, she lives a busy life in the Palace, acting as her father's secretary, representing her sofa-bound mother on social occasions, and chaperoning her sister Judith to parties and dances. She owes her unprecedented freedom to dental problems that required a specialist's care. Her family wanted her restored to health and activity as soon as possible, so her father sent her off to London with £10 and instructions not return until she was better, even if it took a week or ten days.
It took the dentist no time at all to extract the problem tooth, leaving Ingeborg free for the day in London. She is considering how to spend her 24 hours before catching the train home when she sees a poster outside an office: "A Week In Lovely Lucerne, Seven Days For Seven Guineas." Hardly stopping to think, she walks into the office and pays her fee, for a tour leaving the next day. Good for her, I thought. Here is her declaration of independence, from father and Palace. She will find a new life opening up for her in Lucerne.
Well, yes and no. On the train to Dover, she is seated across a person who is obviously a foreigner. When they fall into conversation, she learns that he is Robert Dremmel, a Lutheran pastor who proclaims that his real vocation is manure (to the shock of their neighbors). He has devoted himself to scientific agriculture, to improve the poor soil of eastern Prussia, where he lives. As the tour continues, Herr Dremmel finds himself falling in love with Ingeborg, in part because (trained by her father) she is an excellent listener, "intelligent without argument, a most comfortable compound..." Though he has never seriously contemplated marriage before, he soon decides that he will marry her. She is taken aback by his proposal, she dislikes what she terms his "clutchings," and she is not in love with him. Robert simply talks over all her objections and arranges a formal betrothal ceremony. In one of my favorite scenes, he slips a note under Ingeborg's door to inform her that the ceremony will take place the next morning: "Since no man can be betrothed alone, it will be necessary that you should be there." However, not knowing which is her room, he put identical notes under eight doors, and seven women find their way to the room before Ingeborg. She arrives determined to say no, but she is overwhelmed by the witnesses and Robert's calm assumption of their engagement.
She returns to Redchester to break the news of her betrothal to a Lutheran pastor from east Prussia, and all hell breaks loose in the Palace. As painful as the events are for Ingeborg, they are great fun to read. Von Arnim saves some of her sharpest knives for the Bishop, "handsome as an archangel, silvery of head and gaitered of leg," who is furious over her rebellious and undutiful behavior, which will deprive him of his unpaid secretary. (The separation from a daughter goes unremarked.) Her mother will not help her. Though perfectly well, she spends her days on the sofa. Early in her married life she "discovered in it a refuge and a very present help in all the troubles and turmoils of life, and in especial a shield and a buckler when it came to dealing with the Bishop." Ingeborg's younger sister Judith has just become engaged to the Master of an Oxford college, a man her father's age, who will soon (in the Bishop's mind) leave her "the most magnificent of widows." If Judith seems unenthusiastic about her own coming marriage, she joins her father in disdaining Ingeborg's. To show their displeasure, her parents and Judith effectively shun Ingeborg. After a week of such treatment, it is hardly surprising that she welcomes Robert's arrival in Redchester. His ardent courtship seems to offer her love, a life outside the narrow confines of the Palace, and in response her feelings toward him grow warmer (though she still dislikes the clutching).
They are married by the Bishop in the Cathedral at Redchester and set off for Robert's Prussian home, a small village called Kökensee. At this point, I expected perhaps a story of adjustment, both to marriage and to Germany. I wondered how a daughter of an Anglican palace would learn to be a Lutheran pastor's wife. I thought that this might become the story of how Ingeborg, like Elizabeth von Arnim, eventually found her way to her own German garden. Well, yes and no. Ingeborg is not the first to find a great difference between a courting suitor and a husband. Once back on his home soil, Robert reverts to his vocation of scientific agriculture, locking himself into his study to to carry out his experiments with grain and manure. He is kind to Ingeborg when he notices her. He alternates Sunday services between the two churches in his parish, preaching one of the 26 sermons that he keeps on hand, rotating them through each year (the parish particularly enjoys the annual Advent sermon on the slaughter of pigs, anticipating their Christmas sausages). His parishioners are quite satisfied with their disengaged shepherd, and they make it clear to Ingeborg that they don't need "Frau Pastor" trying to practice good works among them.
Ingeborg finds herself with few responsibilities, and her first summer in her new home is one of glorious freedom. She wanders through the woods and the fields, she luxuriates in flowers and birds and berries, she takes a punt along the shore of a neighboring lake. As the winter closes in, curtailing her expeditions, she learns that after many false starts, she is pregnant with her first child. The news brings Robert to tears of joy. Aha, I thought, a new chapter of her life opening up. Deprived of her parents' love and care, with a husband mentally and physically absent, she will find joy in motherhood, in her children, perhaps her own "April, May and June babies." Wrong again.
After a difficult pregnancy, as Robert grows impatient with her illness and her increasing size, she almost dies during a botched delivery. She suffers an injury nursing the child, a boy named for his father, and she struggles for months with postpartum depression. When she finally recovers enough to notice the baby again, she is dismayed not to feel the love that everyone tells her is a mother's highest and best feeling. She is equally dismayed to find that, just as she is feeling herself again, making plans to return to her walks, her punt, to introduce the baby to the wonders of the world, she is pregnant again. The cycle repeats itself five more times in the next six years, though only her second child, a daughter, survives with Robertlet. This section makes for grim reading. Von Arnim herself had five children, and she writes plainly of the difficulties and dangers of pregnancy and childbirth. Though not explicit in today's terms, it is franker than I expected of a book published in 1914. I would not recommend this book to a woman in her first pregnancy.
Ingeborg's doctor intervenes after the sixth pregnancy ends with a second still-born child, sending her off with a nurse to a sea-side resort. She returns after four months, recovering in mind and body. But she knows that her complete recovery requires more. She steels her courage to ask the astounded Robert if "this wild career of - of unbridled motherhood" might end? Immured in his laboratory, Robert might not have much use for a wife, but he does have one, and he absolutely rejects the idea that Ingeborg could refuse to "live with her husband as his wife." At one point he goes up to their bedroom
to end the matter by the shortest possible route to reason. He would have it out even to the extent of severity and have done with it. He was the master, and if she forced him to emphasize the fact he would.Ingeborg escapes the threat of marital rape by having taken refuge in the children's room. Again, I wondered how this would have read in 1914. Some must have taken Robert's side, in his traditional view of marriage and wifely duties, but surely there must have been women who saw themselves in Ingeborg's situation. Again, it is the doctor who intervenes, speaking plain truths to Robert, and telling Ingeborg,
"Your one duty now is to keep well in body and mind, provide your two children with a capable mother and your husband with a companion possessed of the intelligent amiability that springs from good health . . . I will not allow you to turn him, who deserves so well of fate, into that unhappy object a widower."Unfortunately for Ingeborg, Robert shows no interest in an amiable companion who will not perform her wifely duties. He ignores her even more persistently than before. Her two surviving children are round phlegmatic things that show no interest in games or outdoor activities. They patiently endure their mother's kisses and hugs but give no affection in return. They much prefer going to school, which means they can board with their German grandmother, who has never approved of her English daughter-in-law. Neither wife nor mother, Ingeborg must make a life for herself. Feeling uneducated and provincial, she embarks on a regimen of reading, and she also immerses herself again in nature.
One day, paddling down the lake in the punt, she meets a celebrated English artist, Edward Ingram, who is staying with the local count's family. Finally, I thought. Here is someone who will love Ingeborg as she deserves, and rescue her from her small Prussian life. Wrong again. Ingram is instantly attracted to her, or to an idea of her, as "a perfect little seething vessel of independent happiness, bubbling over with your own contentments." Despite his fame, he is restless, driven by his art yet fearing that he is wasting his talents on society portraits. Separated from his wife, he is a notorious womanizer who soon tires of his conquests. Ingeborg knows nothing of the seedier side of his life. She admires his work and relishes the chance to talk with someone so cosmopolitan. As they continue to meet and to talk, she does not realize that he is falling in love with her, taking his extravagant compliments as teasing. His compliments go on and on and on, as he proclaims her his soul-mate, his life-force, his muse. He sketches her constantly, with growing power, and he repeatedly declares that he must paint her. But he can only paint her in his studio, in Venice, and he begins a campaign to convince her to come with him to Italy. It is her duty, he tells her, to help him create the masterpiece that her portrait will be.
This is where I began to have trouble with the story. I could accept that Ingeborg, having lived a constrained life both in Redchester and Kökensee, might not be able to see through the flattery, to see Ingram for what he really is. I can certainly understand how much she has wanted someone to talk to all those years, and how strongly she feels the lure of travel itself, particularly to Italy. But I had a hard time accepting that a bishop's daughter and a pastor's wife would agree to travel to Italy with another man, convincing herself that it is just a trip with a friend, while at the same time deceiving her husband to think she is only going on a shopping trip to Berlin. Yet this self-delusion has quite entertaining consequences: Ingeborg has no idea she is running away with Ingram. He keeps trying to seduce her, but she is completely distracted with the novelty of travel, with the new scenes opening before her. To his disgust, she even tries to send Robert postcards along the way, to share her joy with him. When Ingram finally makes the situation clear, Ingeborg is horrified, Staying with Ingram never ever crosses her mind. Her one thought is to get safely back to Robert. But will he welcome her back, or will he rather punish her for her great sin?
I think that Elizabeth von Arnim meant Ingeborg to be a sympathetic character, through whom she explores the limited roles available to women at the time. Ingeborg tries to be faithful to her roles as daughter, wife and mother, despite the difficulties that she faces, and to do her duty cheerfully. Ingram offers what might seem like wider horizons, but eventually she realizes that they come at a steep price, the end of her marriage. The reader knows, as she doesn't, that she also risks finding herself abandoned when his infatuation wears off. Though it is unclear when this story is set, by the time it was published in 1914, women in Britain and North America were finding more opportunities for education and careers, as they would in even greater numbers after the Great War ended. Will those years bring change to Kökensee, to Ingeborg's life? Will she still be able to find happiness in her essentially solitary life in a small backwards Prussian village? I want to think so, but she deserves so much more.
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