Sunday Salon – Today’s Books

This morning I’ve been reading The Border Line by Eric Robson, of interest because we live near the border – the one between England and Scotland. This is the account of Robson’s walk following the border line from the Solway Firth to Berwick-upon-Tweed. It’s also interesting because Robson includes anecdotes, snippets of history and personal memories as well. For all the disputes over the border and the reivers’ raids there is a similarity between English and Scottish Borderers:

For more than four centuries the Borderlands were seen as the scrag end of their respective countries, the frayed edges of monarchy. English borderers and Scottish borderers at least had that much in common. The Border was a remote battleground where national ambitions could be fought over. Northumberland, Cumberland and Westmorland were excluded from the Domesday Book. They were regarded as a military buffer zone. They became a bearpit. (page 51)

The Reivers were romanticised by Sir Walter Scott,  who gave them ‘the spit-and -polish treatment’ and a ‘romantic bearing and heroic stature.’ Robson also sheds light on the derivation of words, such as ‘reiver’: a ‘reef” in Old English meant a line, a Shire Reeve was a man who protected boundaries, thus the reiver raided across the Border Line. ‘Blackmail’ has two possible derivations – greenmail was agricultural rent and blackmail was money taken at night, or protection money. Alternatively it could be that it came from the fact that the reivers blacked their armour to ride as shadows in the moonlight (page 49).  I prefer the alternative derivation.

Then I moved north of the Border Line into Scotland with my reading and finished Ian Rankin’s book The Falls, a book I first read a couple of years ago. I wrote about it at the time and I haven’t much to add to that post. The Falls combines so much of what I like to read – a puzzling mystery, convincing characters, well described locations, historical connections and a strong plot full of tension and pace. Rebus has morphed in my mind into a combination of the actors who’ve played him – John Hannah and Ken Stott – and his creator Ian Rankin. But there is no doubt that the books are far superior to the TV productions. The next Rebus book I’ll be reading is Resurrection Men.

Friday Finds

Friday Finds is  hosted by Should Be Reading.

I have just one ‘find’ this week. I’ve only recently discovered how good Alexander McCall Smith’s Isabel Dalhousie novels are. There are seven in the series and I’ve read just two of them so far. The latest one in the series is due out in September. It is:

The Charming Quirks of Others

Description from the publishers Little, Brown Book Group:

Isabel Dalhousie, Edinburgh philosopher and curious observer of the behaviour of her fellow man, is approached by a friend at a local boarding school that is planning to appoint a new headmaster; an anonymous letter has arrived suggesting that one of the shortlisted candidates has a compromising past. But which one is it? Isabel is once again drawn into an investigation, and finds herself exploring dilemmas of human weakness and forgiveness. She turns to her fiancé Jamie for advice, but he too appears to have something to hide . . .

That gives me time to catch up reading the others in the series before this one is published (links to Alexander McCall Smith’s website):

  • The Sunday Philosophy Club
  • Friends, Lovers, Chocolate
  • The Right Attitude to Rain – read
  • The Careful Use of Compliments – read
  • The Comfort of Saturdays – waiting to be read
  • The Lost Art of Gratitude
  • Booking Through Thursday – Now or Then

    btt button

    Do you prefer reading current books? Or older ones? Or outright old ones? (As in, yes, there’s a difference between a book from 10 years ago and, say, Charles Dickens or Plato.)

    About half the books I’ve read this year are current books – published within the last ten years. The other half date from the 1930s to the 1990s, the oldest being Why Didn’t They Ask Evans? by Agatha Christie. I also like older books by authors such as Jane Austen, the Brontes, George Eliot, Tolstoy, Thackeray and Dickens. I can’t say that I have a preference either way as I like to vary my reading. Sometimes I want to read older books and sometimes modern ones.

    As for ‘outright old’ books I have read a few, books like the Cloud of Unknowing, Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations, and Dante’s Divine Comedy, which I haven’t finished yet! Coming forward a bit in time I also like Shakespeare, but prefer to see the plays, rather than read them. Thinking about this post has reminded me that I’ve been meaning to read Don Quixote for ages. My copy was published in the 1920s and I think I’d like a more modern translation, which would be an appropriate combination of old and new. Has anyone any suggestions about which one to choose?

    Sunday Salon – Reasons for Not Reading

    I’ve been thinking about books I own but haven’t read yet and wondering why I haven’t  even though some of them have been sitting on my bookshelves for a long time.

    There are a number of reasons, apart from the fact that I keep getting more books before reading all the ones I’ve already got. They are:

    • Books that are part of a series and I haven’t read the earlier ones – such as Ian Rankin’s Exit Music
    • Books everyone else raves about and I can’t get into such as Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell
    • Books that are just so big, like A S Byatt’s The Children’s Book
    • Classic books – The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
    • Books I’ve forgotten I’ve got – like Portrait of an Unknown Woman by Vanora Bennett – I don’t even remember seeing it before!
    • Books bought  to make up a 3 for 2 offer – such as Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier
    • Books by an author I like, but haven’t got round to reading yet – The Death Maze by Ariana Franklin
    • Non fiction books that require concentrated time devoting to them – such as Jonathan Dimbleby’s Russia

    Looking at them today I’d like to reading them all as soon as possible – well, maybe not Cloud Atlas for a while – I’ve started it twice in the past.

    TBR Challenge Update

    I see that Emily and others have written progress updates on her Attacking the TBR Tome challenge.

    This was my original list – I’ve only read two so far.

    1. The Day Gone By, by Richard Adams (autobiography)
    2. One Good Turn by Kate Atkinson
    3. The Children’s Book by A S Byatt
    4. The Country Life by Rachel Cusk
    5. Helen of Troy: a novel by Margaret George
    6. The Rose Labyrinth by Titania Hardie
    7. Ghost by Robert Harris
    8. Slipstream: a memoir by Elizabeth Jane Howard
    9. Rivers by Griff Rhys Jones
    10. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson
    11. The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson
    12. Mollie Fox’s Birthday by Deirdrie Madden
    13. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel €“ read
    14. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    15. Eden’s Outcasts: the story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father by J Matteson
    16. Be Near Me by Andrew O’Hagan €“ read
    17. Map Addict by Mike Parker
    18. Resistance by Owens Sheers
    19. Corvus: a Life with Birds by Esther Woolfson
    20. Being Shelley: The Poet’s Search for Himself by Anne Wroe

    I still want to read these books and the reasons I haven’t yet is that I keep coming across other books that I want to read too, my mood has changed since I made the list, books in the library have caught my eye or others have written about books that sound so good I’ve read those instead. The other reason is that as soon as I add a book to a list it becomes an ‘ought to read book’ and no longer so appealing. It seems that putting a book on a list often means that is where it stays – on the list.

    But I did give myself the option of reading other books from my TBR piles and have done quite well with that, reading another 12 books, all of which I owned before December 1st 2009:

    1. Drood by Dan Simmons
    2. Let it Bleed by Ian Rankin
    3. Black and Blue by Ian Rankin
    4. The Pale Horse by Agatha Christie
    5. Can Any Mother Help Me? by Jenna Bailey €“ see also here
    6. The Hanging Garden by Ian Rankin
    7. The Warrior’s Princess by Barbara Erskine
    8. Dead Souls by Ian Rankin
    9. The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey
    10. Why Didn’t They Ask Evans? by Agatha Christie
    11. Hearts and Minds by Amanda Craig
    12. Faithful Unto Death by Caroline Graham

    So a total of 14 books in all, so I think I’m not doing too badly really and I do intend to read more off the original list before the end of the year.

    Emily’s challenge was not to buy any books until you’ve read 20 TBR books and I knew I couldn’t do that.  I have bought some books, and I have been totally unable to not borrow books from the library – more than half the books I’ve read this year have been library books.

    Library Loot

    It’s been a while since I did a Library Loot post. This is my latest haul from the Mobile Library that called round this morning (as usual click on the photo to enlarge):

    I really appreciate the mobile library service, the van stops just along the road from our house and has a varied, if small selection of books. I chose:

    • The Lighthouse by P D James, an Adam Dalgleish mystery, set in an imaginary, remote island off the Cornish coast.  It’s been a few years since I read one of P D James’s books – I hope it won’t disappoint.
    • Have Mercy On Us All by Fred Vargas. I haven’t read any of his books before. According to the blurb on the back cover this is ‘an unusual and eccentric thriller’  and Adamsberg is ‘one of the most fetchingly weird detectives … a bit like Morse, but much more French.’ That’s odd as Morse isn’t a bit French!  I’m not sure I’ll like it, but that’s the beauty of library books – I don’t mind giving up on them. On the other hand, if I buy a book that’s very disappointing.
    • The Scent of the Night by Andrea Camilleri, an Inspector Montalbano Mystery. I’ve read one of his before which I enjoyed, so I have high hopes for this one.