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

 

tuesdaywhereareyou 

  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!’

company-of-liars

This is a novel of the plague and medieval intrigue.

Musing Mondays – Award Winning Books

monday-musingToday’s MUSING MONDAYS post is about award winning books€¦

Do you feel compelled to read prize-winning (Giller/Booker/Pulitzer etc) books? Why, or why not? Is there, perhaps, one particular award that you favour? (question courtesy of MizB)

I don’t feel at all compelled to read prize-winning books – interested yes, but not compelled. For years the only prize I followed was the Booker, but I’ve only read a few of the winners and shortlisted authors, so it hasn’t really had much impact on my reading.

Recently I’ve become interested in the Orange Prize for Fiction.  When I saw a list of all the books long-listed between 1996 and 2009 on Kimbofo’s blog Reading Matters I realised that I’ve read 26 of them – not many but more than I would have thought.  

I didn’t read any of them because they were longlisted or prize winners, in fact I was completely unaware of that when I read them. I read them because they attracted me, either because I’d read other books by the authors or because I thought they looked good.

The ones I’ve read are shown in bold and the hyperlinks take you to my reviews. The other books are books I own that I haven’t read yet.

Alice Sebold The Lovely Bones
Anita Shreve The Weight of Water – shortlist
Ann Patchett Bel Canto – winner
Ann Patchett The Magician’s Assistant – shortlist
Anne Enright The Gathering
Anne Tyler Digging to America
Audrey Niffenegger The Time Traveler’s Wife
Barbara Kingsolver The Poisonwood Bible – shortlist
Beryl Bainbridge Master Georgie
Carol Shields Unless – shortlist
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Half of a Yellow Sun – winner
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Purple Hibiscus – shortlist
Hilary Mantel Beyond Black – shortlist
Jane Gardam Old Filth – shortlist
Jane Harris The Observations – shortlist
Joyce Carol Oates Middle Age
Joyce Carol Oates The Falls
Kate Atkinson Case Histories
Kiran Desai The Inheritance of Loss – shortlist
Lily Prior La Cucina
Linda Grant The Clothes on Their Backs
Louise Welsh The Cutting Room
Margaret Atwood Alias Grace – shortlist
Margaret Atwood Oryx and Crake – shortlist
Margaret Atwood The Blind Assassin – shortlist
Margaret Forster Over
Marilynne Robinson Gilead
Marina Lewycka A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian – shortlist
Pat Barker The Ghost Road
Rachel Cusk Arlington Park – shortlist
Sadie Jones The Outcast
Samantha Harvey The Wilderness
Siri Hustvedt What I Loved
Stef Penney The Tenderness of Wolves
Sue Gee The Mysteries of Glass
Tracy Chevalier Girl with a Pearl Earring
Valerie Martin Property – winner
Zadie Smith On Beauty – winner

Sunday Salon – In which I Ramble on about Books

tssbadge1Yesterday I finished reading Jane Austen: a Life by Claire Tomalin. I’m going to write more about it in a separate post because today the sun is shining and soon I’m going out for the morning.

There are many books written about Jane Austen – thousands of volumes and tens of thousands of articles so why a write any more? But Claire Tomalin’s biographies are always excellent and this one is no exception. She writes that Jane Austen

is as elusive as a cloud in the night sky.

jane-austen-tomalinAnd yet she has written such a clear account, quoting from original sources – letters and diaries, that I now know so much more about Jane Austen than I did before. Inevitably it has made me keen to re-read her novels as soon as possible.

But that won’t be today, or tomorrow as I’m still reading those two mammoth books shown in the sidebar – When the Lights Went Out and After the Victorians. I read a little from these most days, and of the two I’m enjoying After the Victorians more. Yesterday I read about the power of the press, in particular of Lord Northcliffe over the Government in the run up to the First World War. He was both loved and loathed. Rudyard Kipling, writing for his cousin Stanley Baldwin when Leader of the opposition, likened the power of the press to “that of a harlot”.

Kipling is a fascinating character and by one of those strange coincidences that often happen his name cropped up again this morning when I was reading Geranium Cat’s post on his story Thy Servant the Dog. This then prompted me to pick up and read a couple of Kipling’s Just So Stories – How the Whale Got His Throat and How The Camel Got His Hump. I like his poem with that one – If we haven’t enough to do-oo-oo We get the hump, although I can’t go along completely with this verse

The cure for this ill is not to sit still,

Or frowst with a book by the fire;

But to take a large hoe and a shovel also,

And dig till you gently perspire.

I did the digging yesterday and much prefer sitting and reading a book!

Finally just a word or two about Angels and Demons by Dan Brown. I’m re-reading this after watching the film last Wednesday. I first read it years ago and had forgotten the detail so I enjoyed the film without that annoying thought “that’s not how it is in the book!”  But my husband had only finished reading it the day before so he knew that’s not how it is in the book!  I’ve given up expecting or even wanting films of the book to be the same as the book.

Collecting Trade Cards

When I was little I loved looking through my father’s collection of cigarette and trade cards and I collected the cards out of tea packets. Recently I came across an old box containing these cards and have now spent a nostalgic time looking through them again. There are all sorts of sets including those produced by W D & H O Wills, John Player and Brooke Bond Tea to name but a few.

Here are a few examples:

Stanley Matthews
Stanley Matthews

Stanley Matthews, who was born in 1915,  played for Stoke City, was a schoolboy international and also played for England. I’m not sure of the date of this card but it only refers to him playing in the 1934-35 season against both Wales and Italy and the photograph is obviously of him as a very young man. He went on to become one of the greatest English footballers, playing until he was 50! He was knighted in  1965.

The card is no.28 out of 50 in the W D & H O Wills (cigarette manufacturers) series of Association Footballers. You could get an album to stick them in from tobacconists at one penny each.

weathervane001
A Simple Weather-Vane

I think this Weather-Vane is fantastic and would love to have one. Another old W D & H O Wills card, in the Household Hints series the instructions for making it are on the reverse and you need a T-piece and three pieces of iron gas-piping , a steel rod, stout wire to make the letters and sheet metal for making the cat and mouse.

Hector - The Rat
Hector – The Rat
 
Hector the Rat is in a series of Space Exploration cards issued by Lyons Maid. The information on the reverse tells that Hector, the hero of French scientists was shot into space on February 222 1961 at Hammaguir in the Sahara, in the nose cone of a 23 ft long Veronique rocket. For the trip he wore a specially designed space suit. Hector was recovered safely and four weeks later became the father of four!

The Brooke Bond Tea cards issued many sets such as British Butterflies,  British Wild Animals,  and British Wild Flowers. The picture card album for the cards were available from your grocer – price 6d. I particularly like the Famous People series, such as this one of Charles Dickens depicting characters from his books:

Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
 
I don’t have many cards in this series – the others are George Bernard Shaw, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Augustus John, John Logie Baird, David Livingstone, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Pat Smythe, General George Gordon, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Sir Edward Elgar.