The Book Whisperer

jottings, musings and recommendations of an incurable bookaholic

And the winner is…… February 24, 2011

Filed under: Ellen Wood — The Book Whisperer @ 4:23 pm
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We have a winner!

Firstly, I’d like to say a massive thank you to all who entered  my giveaway which was part of the first ever Literary Blog Hop Giveaway hosted by the lovely Judith at Leeswammes.

There were 168 entrants and many of these were first time visitors to my blog – welcome! :)

The winner chosen by random.org was #148 which is:

Andrea

 

 

Andrea chose the book East Lynne by Ellen Wood. I really hope you enjoy, Andrea – it’s a fabulous book!

I hope Judith decides to run one of these giveaways again as I already have 3 more books in mind that I want to offer next time around and look forward to sharing those choices with you soon :)

 

My favourite books of 2010 January 1, 2011

 

This was so difficult to narrow down – SOOOOO difficult! But narrow it down I have and here are the top 10 books I read in 2010:

 

East Lynne by Ellen Wood

“For about three weeks I felt like I was living in the middle of a Victorian soap-opera. There was murder, betrayal, divorce, disguises and death and all this set among a backdrop of stately homes and horse-and-carriages. What’s not to love?”

 

 

Corrag by Susan Fletcher

“It is truly one of the most beautiful and lyrical books I have ever read.”

 

 

Dog Boy by Eva Hornung

“The story is alternately shocking, pitiful, heartbreaking, tender, joyful and fascinating. I fell in love, smiled, cried and hoped. To live with this group of animals for a few days was a privelidge and one I won’t forget easily.”

 

 

Mornings in Jenin by Susan Abulhawa

“Although this book is only 330 pages long, it felt like an epic to me. I have spent 60 years with this family, watching them love, loose, fight, cry. I’m going to miss them. I cried at the end – not just because of their story but because of all the other thousands of peoples story – real people.”

 

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell

“This book has it all: class conflict, politics, religion, women’s rights and passion! It makes you think, it makes you reflect on what was and it makes you ponder how we got from there to where we are now. We smile with them, we cry with them.”

 

The Likeness by Tana French

“I just loved this book, I found that I couldn’t and put it down, nor did I want to. Despite the size of the book, I never once felt like it was too long; on the contrary I could have gone on reading for several hundred more.”

 

 

The Snowman by Jo Nesbo

“The whole book, for me, pacey and gritty and just not wanting to put the damn thing down. If you enjoy crime / thrillers / whodunnits then you will LOVE this!”

 

 

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

“I feel like I have lost friends now I have finished this book.”

 

 

 

Room by Emma Donoghue

“Room is both brilliantly written but also gripping: it took hold of me from the first page and never let me go until the end.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Crossing Places  & The Janus Stone  by Elly Griffiths

“So what do you do when you’re busy, busy, busy and you’re brain is crying out for a book that will allow you to slip inbetween the pages from one life into another with complete ease?”

(OK, so I’m cheating here but I had to include them both as I read the first two books in a new series this year and fell in love with it - roll on the next books!)

 

Have you read any of these? What do you think to my 2010 favourites?

 

  

 

 

BBAW: Forgotten Treasure September 16, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Ellen Wood,Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 8:56 am
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Todays Book Blogger Appreciation Week theme is “forgotten treasures” and is aimed at bringing attention to books that we wish would get more exposure.

I have thought long and hard about this because I could quite happily have showcased at least 5 books I wish were read more widely read but after much deliberation I have decided to go with a good old Victorian sensation novel:

East Lynne by Ellen Wood

I read this book about 6 months ago and it has instantly become one of my all-time favourites. I read it alongside other books and it actually took me about 3 weeks to finish but that was partly because I wanted to savour every word. Whenever I came back to this book, I felt like I was settling down to watch my favourite soap opera: there was murder, betrayal, divorce, disguises and death and all this set among a backdrop of stately homes and horse-drawn-carriages. What’s not to love? When the novel was first published in the 1800′s, it was serialised in a weekly newspaper. How I would have waited with baited breath for each new edition to hit the news- stands!

 

 

You can read my full review of East Lynne here to find out more about the plot but in summary I loved the dramatic story-lines and the fact that you can almost hear the swish of the stage curtain at the end of a chapter and the “DUN DUN DUUUUUUUN”!!!

If you’ve never read any Victorian sensational novels before then this is a great place to start – it’s fun, engaging and really easy and accessable to read so don’t be put off by the fact that it’s a Victorian classic if the likes of Hardy and Eliot don’t float your boat.

I wish this book was better known – it really is a cracker!

 

Have you read any Victorian sensational books? Which ones are your favourites? Have I tempted you to give this one a go? 

 

 

Who fancies a little nosey at my bookshelves? July 30, 2010

Welcome to my crib

I thought I’d take you on a little tour of my lovely books and their homes. I recently bought two new bookscases as Mr Whisperer was getting fed up of seeing toppling piles of books at every corner and books behind books behind books on my creaking shelves. 

Up the stairs and two huge bookshelves greet me at the top

These are the two new ones which had to go at the top of the stairs as there isn’t enough room anywhere else. It’s a good job we have the house on the market as we’re running out of room. This view is coming up the staircase. 

Ta daaaaaa!

And here are the bookcases themselves. I had hours of fun piling, sorting and re-sorting my books onto these. They may look like randomly placed books but believe me, they make perfect sense to me. 

Choices, choices….

These are my two shelves full of books that have been sent to me by publishers and authors that haven’t been read yet. Actually, these photos were taken a couple of weeks ago so there is more to add. I hesitated about including this photo in case publishers think I have enough and don’t send me any more so here’s a little caviat…”There is no such thing as too many books! What doesn’t get read today may well get read tomorrow so keep ‘em coming!” :)  

My review copies.......all screaming for attention!

I heart Richard Parker

Check it! *flicks fingers* 

Ever since reading Life of Pi I have become obsessed with tigers hence my collection of lovelies on top of the two book cases in my office.  

The three bottom shelves on the left-hand case are all books I have on readitswapit.com where I get loads of my books from. I only swap out the ones I don’t want to keep (i.e. haven’t enjoyed, have enjoyed but won’t re-read etc). I have had some great swaps on that site. 

Bookcases in my office & my beloved Richard Parkers!

Books and a Turkish wall-hanging

  This was my original bookcase from when I lived in a one-bedroom flat years ago and didn’t have any more room. Now it lives in the hallway under my gorgeous wall-hanging from Turkey and an orchid from my parents-in-law. 

Bookcase in the hall

Pride of place

Some of my faves on display

These are the books that are in my living room and I expect guests to gasp and coo at (frankly, if they don’t they’re not welcome in my house anyway. Tsk.) These are some of my favourite ever books: classics like Jane Eyre, The Woman in White and East Lynne on there and also some of my faves like The Secret History, The Magus, Wild Swans, Five Quarters of the Orange, Memoirs of a Geisha, Girl with a Pearl Earring etc and others that are just downright good reads like We Need to Talk About Kevin, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, The Time Travelers Wife etc etc.

 

Did you enjoy your tour of Chez Whisperer?

 

 

Half Year Review July 7, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Ellen Wood,Jo Nesbo,Susan Fletcher — The Book Whisperer @ 8:48 am
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Instead of the normal end of month review I have decided to do a half year review this time as I have now been blogging for 6 months so this is a bit of a milestone for me.

  January
1) Invisible I (The Amanda Project) by Stella Larson
2) The Diaries of Adam and Eve by Mark Twain
3) The Cradle Will Fall by Mary Higgins Clark
4) Soulless by Gail Carriger
5) Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin
6) Corrag by Susan Fletcher
7) Shakespeare’s Truth by Rex Richards
 

February
8) Mornings in Jenin by Susan Abulhawa
9) The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters
10) All Pets Go To Heaven by Sylvia Browne
 
March
11) The Hanging Valley by Peter Robinson
12) Far From The Land by Thomas J Rice
13) You Belong to Me by Mary Higgins Clark
14) In a Dry Season by Peter Robinson
15) East Lynne by Ellen Wood
16) The Snowman by Jo Nesbo
17) The Victorian Chaise-Longue by Marhganita Laski
18) Let me Call You Sweetheart by Mary Higgins Clark
 
April
19)Blueeyedboy by Joanne Harris
20) A Woman’s Life by Guy de Maupassant
21) Moonlight Becomes You by Mary Higgins Clark
22) Retribution by Jilliane Hoffman
23) Fever of the Bone by Val McDermid
24) Part of the Furniture by Mary Wesley
25) Say Goodbye by Lisa Gardner
 
May
26) The Little Boy Lost by Marghanisa Laski
27) Sunlight on Cold Water by Francoise Sagan
28) North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell
29) The Second Time Around by Mary Higgins Clark
30) The Shadow of Your Smile by Mary Higgins Clark
31) The Land of the Living by Nicci French
32) The Japanese Lover by Rani Manicka
33) Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw
34) The Camomile Lawn by Mary Wesely
 
June 
35) Day and Night by Anita Diamant
36) Caedmon’s Song by Peter Robinson
37) The Help by Kathryn Stockett
38) Caught by Harlan Coben
39) The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill
40) The Weight of Silence by Heather Gudenkauf
41) True Things About Me by Deborah Kay Davies
42) The Weight of Water by Penelope Evans
 

Most looked at book reviews

Mornings in Jenin by Susan Abulhawa

Blueeyedboy by Joanne Harris

The Shopaholic Series by Sophie Kinsella

 

The most looked at Author Interviews  

Gail Carriger (author of Souless, Changeless & Blameless)

Becca Fitzpatrick (author of Hush Hush and Crescendo)

Kathryn Stockett (author of The Help)

 

The most looked at general posts

The Best Book Club Reads EVER!!!

Guilty as charged, Mi’ Lord!

Can you spot the difference?

 

My favourite books in the last 6 months

This was so hard to do! I have read quite a lot of great books so far this year and I have loved them for different reasons. After much deliberation and trying to pick 3 from different genres (literary, classics, crime/thriller) I have come up with the following. All three were amazing and I can highly recommend them all:

Corrag - Susan Fletcher

Corrag by Susan Fletcher

East Lynne - Ellen Wood

East Lynne by Ellen Wood

The Snowman - Jo Nesbo

The Snowman by Jo Nesbo

 

What have beenyour favourite books so far this year?

 

 

Book Review: East Lynne by Ellen Wood March 22, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Ellen Wood,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 4:20 pm

  What Amazon says:

“‘Coward! Sneak! May good men shun him, from henceforth! may his Queen refuse to receive him! You, an earl’s daughter! Oh, Isabel! How utterly you have lost yourself!’ When the aristocratic Lady Isabel abandons her husband and children for her wicked seducer, more is at stake than moral retribution. Ellen Wood played upon the anxieties of the Victorian middle classes who feared a breakdown of the social order as divorce became more readily available and promiscuity threatened the sanctity of the family. In her novel the simple act of hiring a governess raises the spectres of murder, disguise, and adultery. Her sensation novel was devoured by readers from the Prince of Wales to Joseph Conrad and continued to fascinate theatre-goers and cinema audiences well into the next century.”

What I thought:

Eat your heart out Wilkie Collins. What a fantastic book this is! I just loved every minute of it (and there were a LOT of minutes – for some reason it took me an age to read). For about three weeks I felt like I was living in the middle of a Victorian soap-opera. There was murder, betrayal, divorce, disguises and death and all this set among a backdrop of stately homes and horse-and-carriages. What’s not to love?

I can’t understand why this book is not better known or held in higher esteem. Hallelujah for Oxford World Classics reviving this book (with a fab cover too). I haven’t read anywhere near the amount of Victorian classics that I want to yet but for me, this ranks among my favourites now. Classed as a sensational novel in the 1800’s when it was written, this book was serialised in a weekly newspaper. How I would have waited with baited breath for each new edition to hit the news- stands!

The books main character is Lady Isabel Vane who lives at East Lynne (a grand stately home) with her Father. When her Father, the Earl of Mount Severn, dies and his debts are discovered Lady Isabel is proposed to by the lovely young lawyer, Archibald Carlyle (much to the heartache of one Barbara Hare who, unbeknown to Archibald, is in love with him). Lady Isabel and Archibald seem happy together and go on to have three children, but all the while Archibald is helping Barbara Hare to clear her brother’s name for a murder that was committed some years ago and for which he escaped the scene of the crime and hasn’t been seen since. With all the clandestine meetings between Archibald and Barbara, Lady Isabel is overcome by jealousy and in the heat of the moment abandons her entire family for a man of very dubious character. I don’t want to say too much else for fear of spoiling the book for anyone, but needless to say that this is most definitely not the last we see of Lady Isabel (or the “cad” she ran off with). With misinterpreted conversations gallore, hushed secrets and christmas-cracker disguises this book gallops along with you not daring to let go.

I can honestly say that, for me, there was not a dull moment in this book. It is very accessible and easy to read, even for those who find Victorian literature hard going, and long though the book was, I was sad when I came to the end.

I think I can honestly say that the sensational novels of the Victorian era are becoming my favourites, having also loved Lady Audley’s Secret (Mary Elizabeth Braddon) and The Woman In White (Wilkie Collins). I love the dramatic story-lines and the fact that you can almost hear the swish of the stage curtain at the end of a chapter and the “DUN DUN DUUUUUUUN”!!!

Fabulous book. Highly recommended! Why oh why is this book not better known???

 

 
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