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Now that summer is here (in the northern hemisphere, anyway), what is the most ‘Summery’ book you can think of? The one that captures the essence of summer for you?

(I’m not asking for you to list your ideal ‘beach reading,’ you understand, but the book that you can read at any time of year but that evokes ‘summer.’)

It’s hot here, but not as hot as other parts of the world – but too hot for me anyway. Actually, this morning it’s dull but the forecast is for sun later on. Nothing came to mind when I read this question – no book leaped up to remind me of “the essence of summer” . Maybe it would be the books I read on holiday, but this question is not about “beach reading”.

Then my husband came up with a perfect answer (why didn’t  I think of it?) – Forever Summer by Nigella Lawson. This is a beautiful book full of recipes that you can eat all year round reminding you of summer even in the darker days of winter. I love Nigella’s books as much for her writing as for her recipes:

Summer then, is an idea, a memory, a hopeful projection. Sometimes when it’s grey outside and cold within, we need to conjure up the sun, some light, a lazy feeling of having all the wide-skied time in the world to sit back and eat warmly with friends. I’m not talking about creating some overblown idyll of perpetual Provencal summer, but of extending that purring sense of sunny expansiveness.

In this book are recipes for pasta dishes, salads, Spanish, Italian, Eastern Mediterranean recipes and so on – wonderful desserts, ice creams and summer drinks. Imagine The Ultimate Greek Salad, Red Mullet with Sweet and Sour Shredded Salad, followed by Figs for a Thousand and One Nights, Slut-Red Raspberries in Chardonnay Jelly, Arabian Pancakes with Orange -Flower Syrup, or Margarita Ice Cream!

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Teaser Tuesdays – Company of Liars

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Teaser Tuesday is hosted by MizB at Should Be Reading.

Share a couple or more sentences from the book you’re currently reading. You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your ‘teaser’ from €¦ that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given!

And please avoid spoilers!

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Another teaser from Company of Liars by Karen Maitland:

It was not easy dancing in the graveyard. The dancers tripped over humps and banged into wooden crosses and  stone markers, but by now everyone was so merry on the free ale, cider and mead that they roared with laughter each time someone fell over. (page 79)

Musing Mondays – Library Borrowing

Musing Mondays (BIG)Today’s MUSING MONDAYS post is about library borrowing€¦

Do you restrict yourself on how many books you take out from the library at a time? Do you borrow books if you already have some out? Do you always reborrow books you don’t get to?

I don’t restrict my borrowing – the library does that for me! We’re allowed to borrow up to 15 items, but as my husband doesn’t use up his allocation I can have more using his ticket. But right now I’ve only got 14 books out. I’ve been trying to catch up reading from my own unread books, but the library is so convenient (ten minutes away by car) that I usually visit once a fortnight or so. I don’t wait until I’ve read all the books I have on loan but each time I go I take some books back and usually bring home more than I returned.

What is so good about borrowing books is that I can look at them in more detail that in a bookshop. Sometimes if I really like a book I’ll then buy a copy. If I haven’t read a book before it’s due back, sometimes that’s because I’ve decided not to read it and then I return it. Other times it’s because I haven’t got round to it, so I renew it. I can renew books on-line up to four times, provided no one else has reserved it, after that you have to take the book and have it re-issued. If someone has reserved it you can reserve it again without charge – pretty good really.

Sunday Salon – Crime Fiction

Since May, in an attempt to catch up with reading books I already own, I’ve been avoiding buying any more books. If you don’t count the secondhand copy of The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey that I bought for 20p off the trolley at the hospital I stuck it out until last weekend when I  gave in and bought three books.

Well, I went in Waterstones for a coffee and so I had to browse the books. It would be a sad day if I ever come away from a bookshop without even wanting to buy one book, but that just doesn’t happen. This time there were plenty I could have bought but I restricted myself to three. I didn’t pick them for their covers but when I realised they are practically the same colours I thought there’s obviously a theme here. They’re all historical mystery/crime fiction and two of them are books that have been on my wishlist for a while.

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The first two books have been on my wishlist for ages.

I have started to read Company of Liars, which is set in 1348 at the time of the Plague. Nine strangers brought together on Midsummer’s Day (which is today!) travel together through England trying to escape the plague. The group includes Camelot, the relic- seller, a one-armed story teller, a strange, silent child and a painter and his pregnant wife. They each have a secret and it’s not just danger from the plague that threatens them.

The Death Maze (published in the USA as The Serpent’s Tale) is Ariana Franklin’s second book featuring the Italian doctor, Adelia Aguilar. Set in the 12th century Henry II is on the throne and when his mistress Rosamund Clifford dies a painful death by poisoning, his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, is the main suspect. Henry sends for Adelia to investigate.

The third book, A Secret Alchemy by Emma Darwin, attracted me because it’s about the Princes in the Tower, believed to have been killed by their uncle Richard III in 1483. I’m sure there are many books on this subject; I’ve read just two – a novel, The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey and a non-fiction book The Princes in the Tower by Alison Weir – both of which are extremely good. I was also drawn to this book by the author’s name – Emma writes a blog which I’ve been reading recently – This Itch of Writing.

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Tey’s The Daughter of Time is probably the best historical mystery novel I’ve read so I’m hoping The Franchise Affair will be just as compelling reading as The Daughter of Time.  This one is crime fiction in which a lawyer defends two women accuse of kidnapping and is based on the real life 18th century case of Elizabeth Canning. Our local hospital has been a good source of secondhand books for me recently – there are trolleys of books for sale in all the waiting areas – and the waits have been long!

And to round off, my current Agatha Christie book is The Thirteen Problems, a satisfying collection of stories of unsolved mysteries, featuring Miss Marple. The first stories are told at Miss Marple’s house on Tuesday evenings after dinner and then the setting moves to Colonel and Mrs Bantry’s house (who feature in The Body in the Library) where a slightly different group of guests including Miss Marple, entertain each other with tales of mystery and murder.

Catching Up On Reviews

weekly-geeksRecently I’ve got behind writing reviews of books I’ve recently finished reading, so this Weekly Geeks topic is just right for me.

1. In your blog, list any books you’ve read but haven’t reviewed yet. If you’re all caught up on reviews, maybe you could try this with whatever book(s) you hope to finish this week.

2. Ask your readers to ask you questions about any of the books they want. In your comments, not in their blogs.

3. Later, take whichever questions you like from your comments and use them in a post about each book. Link to each blogger next to that blogger’s question(s).

4. Visit other Weekly Geeks and ask them some questions!

These are the books I’ve not reviewed yet. Please ask me any questions about them.

  • Knots and Crosses by Ian Rankin
  • A Judgement in Stone by Ruth Rendell
  • The Birthday Present by Barbara Vine (I wrote a bit about this after I’d started to read it. I wasn’t too enamoured at that stage, but it did improve and I finished it. I need to update my thoughts somewhat.)
  • Jane Austen: a Life by Claire Tomalin

Where Are You?/Teaser Tuesday

 

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  It’s Tuesday, Where Are You? is hosted by an adventure in reading.

 Where are you? I’m in Kilmington in Devon, at the Midsummer Fair. The year is 1348. It’s grey and cold, the birds are silent, but the place is full of  villagers, people buying and selling, looking for work or for wives or husbands, thieves on the lookout for any purse they can steal, drunkards, gangs of boys rushing about, jugglers, pedlars shouting their wares, minstrels playing on fife and drums, children screaming and laughing in a jostling noisy crowd.

teaser-tuesday

Teaser Tuesday is hosted by MizB at Should Be Reading.

Share a couple or more sentences from the book you’re currently reading. You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your ‘teaser’ from €¦ that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given!

And please avoid spoilers!

Today’s teaser is from page 17 of Company of Liars by Karen Maitland:

The merchant pointed, his hand trembling. ‘Morte bleue, morte bleue’ he yelled, his voice rising hysterically, then summoning up what few wits he still possessed, he screamed, ‘He has the pestilence!’

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This is a novel of the plague and medieval intrigue.