The Book Whisperer

jottings, musings and recommendations of an incurable bookaholic

The Classics Club March 8, 2012

5 years to read the classics

A blog I love (and only discovered a few months ago) called A Room of One’s Own has decided to start a Classics Club and I am LOVING this idea!

The rules are pretty flexible but basically you have to list 50 or 75 or 100 classic books that you want to read in the next 5 years (these can be changed at any time – which is great for me ‘cos I am fickle ;) ) and you have 5 years to read them. There are so many classics that I really want to read and I am loving the timeframe as it means I don’t have to panic-read them all this year (or fall off the wagon as I don’t think it will be do-able).

Jillian (A Room of One’s Own) has also set up a private group on Goodreads for all those who are joining in the Classics Club to share links and posts and reviews etc.

So after much thought and deliberation, here is my (initial) list of books I want to read. I have gone for sixty as that equals one per month for the next 5 years which I think should be more than do-able.

 

 

  1700′s (4)

The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole

Les Liaisons Dangereuses by Choderlos de Laclos

The Monk by Matthew Lewis

The Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe

 

 

  1800′s (31)

Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy

Jude The Obscure by Thomas Hardy

The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy

Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell

Sylvia’s Lovers by Elizabeth Gaskell

Shirley by Charlotte Bronte

The Beth Book by Sarah Grand

Aurora Floyd by Mary Elizabeth Braddon

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

Cousin Bette by Honore de Balzac

Germinal by Emile Zola

Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe

David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens

The Odd Women by George Gissing

Eight Cousins by Louisa May Alcott

Rose in Bloom by Louisa May Alcott

Heidi by Johanna Spyri

The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas

Rachel Ray by Anthony Trollope

Can you Forgive Her? by Anthony Trollope

Armadale by Wilkie Collins

Hunger by Knut Hamsun

Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

Persuasion by Jane Austen

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain

Esther Waters by George Moore

The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald

Complete Short Fiction by Oscar Wilde

The Picture of Dorian Grey by Oscar Wilde

 

 

  1900′s (25)

The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton

Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

Where Angels Fear to Tread by E M Forster

Peyton Place by Grace Metalious

East of Eden by John Steinbeck

Travels with Charley by John Steinbeck

The Grass is Singing by Doris Lessing

The Mad Ache by Francoise Sagan

The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

The Vet’s Daughter by Barbara Comyns

The Distance Between Us by Dorothy Whipple

Mariana by Monica Dickens

Justine by Lawrence Durrell

Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell

The Call of the Wild by Jack London

Captain Corelli’s Mandolin by Louis de Bernières

84 Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff

Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitchell

Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons

The French Lieutenant’s Woman by John Fowles

Daniel Martin by John Fowles

The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham

The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver

  Will you be joining us?

  Any of the ones above an absolute mus-read-right-now?

 

A Bookish Tour of Paris (Part 1) March 7, 2012

Filed under: Authors,Emile Zola,France,French,Historical,Tatiana de Rosnay,Victor Hugo,War — The Book Whisperer @ 7:20 pm
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Pain au chocolat for breakfast! YUM!

Ooh là là…

I mentioned a couple of weeks ago that I was going to Paris for 4 days as  present for my 40th birthday (last year): I’m back now after having had the most fantastic time and wanted to share with you some of my trip as there are so many lovely bookish landmarks in Paris:

Mr Whisperer and I stayed in a gorgeous little Parisien appartment in Bastille right next to a patiserie where we got pain au chocolats and croissants each morning to go with our coffee overlooking  a little courtyard. Although we were only a couple of minutes walk from the metro we decided to spend our few days there cycling round Paris instead. Cycling is THE ONLY way to see Paris! You get to see all the bits you don’t travelling by metro and places that you would never have time to see all on foot. It was so easy to get around and we came across places we wouldn’t normally have this way. To top it all it was so much fun!

The first day we went on an organised cycle tour with Bike About Tours which took us to places more off the beaten track (rather than the big well known sites that we can all get to on our own). I can highly recommend this company if you go to Paris.

 

 

Sarah’s Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

The first place we stopped on the tour was the Jewish memorial in Le Marais which I was really keen to see as I had read Sarah’s Key only last year. This is part of The Roundup and we stopped at a boys school where 400 Jewish children were forceably taken and sent to the camps.

Amber our tour guide next to the wall of names of those who had helped hide or save Jewish people in France in WW2

I really enjoyed Sarah’s Key (particulalry the historical part of the story) as I hadn’t heard of The Roundup before then. I also watched the film that came out at the end of last year which I can highly recommend too.

 

  Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

The next part of the tour took us to Victor Hugo’s house which is part of Places des Voges. It was once a royal residence and is now split into homes which hardly ever come onto the market (apart from one about 6 years ago for 25.5 million Euros!). We didn’t actually go into the house (although you can) but it was exciting for me to see the author of Les Miserables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame (neither of which I have read yet although both are on my radar).

Victor Hugo's house

 

  The Belly of Paris by Emile Zola

We then went on to an area of Paris called Les Halles which used to host the biggest and oldest market in Paris. The market is the setting for Zola’s book The Belly of Paris. It doesn’t exist in the same place anymore (in fact it is now just a busy junction with shops and fast food places) but what I did find interesting is the poison shop that still remains all these years later. The market was rife with the pitter-patter of tiny paws so there was a shop selling rat poison right next to the market which still has the stuffed bodies of rats from 1925 hanging in the window.

 

Cute!!

 

  Keep a lookout for the next stops on the bookish tour of Paris – coming soon :)

 

 

Greenbanks by Dorothy Whipple January 26, 2012

In three words:

Charming, family, WW1

 

 

What I thought:

I had seen a few reviews of this book recently as it is a newly re-published book by Persophone so when I caught sight of this small, battered and stained copy languishing on the shelves of my library (also apparantly neglected as it has only been checked out twice in four years) I knew it had to come home with me.

What a wonderful and charming book this is. Written in 1932, Greenbanks tells the story of the Ashton family spanning from around 1910 to 1925. It is centered around the house, Greenbanks, in the Lancashire village of Elton, and revolves mainly around Louisa Ashton, Mother and Grandmother. Louisa has five (very different) children who have all started to make their own way in the world too and so Louisa dotes on her 4 year old Granddaughter, Rachel. Greenbanks may be a lovely, beautifully written book about a family in a grand old house but there is plenty of room for sibling rivalry, illegitimate births, divorce, tyranical fathers and heartache. In fact all these are done so well that I was in awe of how well Whipple understood human emotion such as depression, jealousy, shame and love.

The book is set at during the early part of the last century when ideas and ideals are shifting and in particular Whipple explores the changing roles of women at this time. Louisa is the gentle, kind head of Greenbanks (after her philandering husband dies) but her daughters are exploring new territories that are still thought of as a huge embarassment to the gossiping folks of Elton. Daughters Letty and Laura both carving out new paths for themselves and lodger Kate Barlow still lives the shame and stigma of having an illegitimate child all those years ago. Granddaughter Rachel, much to her Father Ambrose’s profound disappointment, is intelligent and is desperate to continue her studies at University when she grows up, but Ambrose wants a dutiful daughter who will greet him at the door and “take his hat”.

The character of Ambrose Harding is actually one of my favourite characters despite his prigishness and I found him (unintentionally on his part) very amusing:  he is so old-fashioned and is constantly baffled as to why people don’t behave the way he expects and wants them to.

 

“And he did not believe in all this education for women; in fact, he considered knowledge definitely unbecoming to them. It destroyed their charm; they did not listen so well if they knew too much.”

 

“That’s what this modern education did for them. These modern girls, smoking, riding motor-bicycles, flying airplanes, breaking speed records; they would do anything for notice. What else could it be for? Men did these things for the love of them, to try them out, or to advance knowledge, experience, but women did them for notice, just to get into the papers, to be made a fuss of.”

 

The quotes made me laugh, especially when I think of how times have changed now. But even with Ambroses sexist rants I could still sympathise with him to a degree as he was born in an age where men were head of the house and no one (especially a wife or daughter) would ever question him. His three other children (all boys) were a huge disappointment to him also as they didn’t follow the direction he wanted them to follow and went their own way; Ambrose felt unloved and and couldn’t understand why. Such a brilliantly drawn character.

A final quote that made me laugh (because it could have been me saying it) Iwas when Letty who in frustration cries:

 

“”Is there something wrong with me?” she asked in alarm. “This is no more than other women have to put up with. Why don’t I like housekeeping?”"

 

Verdict: I highly recommend this gorgeous book. Perfect for a Sunday afternoon with a cup of tea (or in the bath, or in the postoffice queue….pretty much anywhere really). Loved it!

 

  Have you read anything by Whipple? Which others do you recommend?

 

The Resurrectionists by Kim Wilkins October 23, 2011

In three words:

Spooky, gothic, graveyard

 

What I thought:

I first heard about this book last year when I was doing my Dare You Read It? series over the Halloween period. It was recommended by Helen at She Reads Novels as a spooky / scary book and as I tend to enjoy the a lot of the same books as Helen I decided to hunt down a copy. I managed to find a second hand copy as the book had actually gone out of print, but it is now available on Kindle via Amazon for anyone who wants to give this a read.

This gothic horror starts with Maisie, an Australian musician with a successful career and loving boyfriend, who is disillusioned with life and decides to go to England to see her maternal Grandmother, Sybil, whom she has never met, who lives in a remote cottage in Yorkshire by the coast. Maisie’s mother is dead set against her going and then confesses that her Grandmother actually died 3 months ago which makes Maisie even more determined to go, to find out about where Sybil lived and what she was like.

When she arrives in Solgreve, Yorkshire in the winter, Maisie soon discovers that not only was her Grandmother not at all liked but that, apparently, neither is she. A wall of silence and unfriendlyness greets Maisie in the little village (including a very cold introduction from the village Vicar) so Maisie sets about trying to clear Sybils cottage and discover what she can about her past. The only person that is remotely nice to her is a young man called Sasha (who is part gypsy and used to help Sybil in her garden) whom she meets when he brings Sybils old cat back round.

It’s not long before things begin to go bump in the night in this remote little cottage. Maisie is unnerved by the cat who takes up the same post on top of the washing machine every night to stare out, unblinking into the night, but not so much as when she sees a shadowy figure by the trees at the back of the cottage that is staring straight back at her.

Maisie soon discovers a diary dating back to 1793 that, upon reading it, starts to give her clues to what is going on and what makes the inhabitants of the village of Solgreve behave the way they do.

This book is choc full of chills, thrills and surprises. There was one particular point when Maisie and a friend are alone in the cottage one night when things take a horrifying turn, that literally had me on the edge of my seat. Yes, there were parts of the book where I really had to suspend my disbelief (but then this is horror fiction) but overall it was a great October read and perfect for the RIP challenge.

Verdict: Fans of gothic, horror and suspense are sure to like this book. Don’t expect a literary masterpiece but if it’s thrills and chills you’re after then look no further.

 

I read this book as part of the RIP Challenge

 

Day 28 – A book I loved that nobody else did September 27, 2011

Housekeeping…

Strictly speaking, this can’t be a book that nobody else loved as it won the Orange prize in 2003 but the reason I have picked it is that when we read it at my old book club when it first won, out of the twenty or so members I was the only one who liked this book.

Property is set in the USA deep south in the mid 1800′s and Manon is the wife of an adulterous slave owner which leads to very sad consequences. Despite the subject matter, I found this book a gripping read and I loved the voice of Manon (who had moments of sarcasm which really appealed to my sense of humour). I can’t really remember much more about this book as it is 8 years since I read it but I do remember being really surprised by everyone in my groups reaction.

 

  Have you ever loved a book and been surprised by other peoples negative reaction?

 

 

Day 27 – A book I love that deserves to be better known September 26, 2011

 Bewitching…

Although I can think of lots of books that I wish more people would read, this challenge was quite an easy one for me as I can’t understand why more people don’t read this book. When I read it in January 2010 it instantly became a favourite and I passed it on to my mum who read it, fell in love with it and has read it again since: in fact it is now her all-time favourite book (and she is as much as a reader and book-lover as I am).

The book I am referring to is called Witch Light, although when I read it in hardback it was called Corrag. Here is my review from back then:

“Rarely does a book bewitch (pardon the pun) and mesmorise me quite so much as this one. It is truly one of the most beautiful and lyrical books I have ever read.

The story is narrated by Corrag, a 16 year old girl who is awaiting being burned at the stake for being a witch in 17th century Scotland. Corrag is visited in jail by Charles Leslie, an Irish Jacobite who wants to prove that the recent massacre in Glencoe was the work of the soldiers under William of Orange. Corrag is English and has run away “north and west” at the command of her mother who is about to be hung for also being a witch. Corrag takes the old and beaten horse of a cruel neighbour, a grey mare who becomes her best and only friend, and spends the next year living off the land and making her way north-west where she arrives in Glencoe. At first the clan is wary of her, but over time they welcome her into the fold although she still lives in her self-made little hut on the moor.

What is magical about this book is Corrage’s voice. She lives, breathes and dreams nature and the land around her. Every tiny thing is spoken of with such love and passion and she notices everything – a dew drop on a leaf, the changing colours of the rocks through the day, the silver sand as the grey mare gallops over beaches in the moonlight. The way she narrates is lyrical and equistite and the world she inhabits makes you feel like you can breathe again. Despite her life so far and her hardships, she has such a capacity for love and kindness for eveyone she meets.

Through her visits from Charles Leslie, Corrag tells her life story from her birth through to the night her friends were slain in a Scottish valley during a blizzard. Each person is wary of the other at the beginning – Leslie returns daily as he is waiting for details on who was behind the massacre (believing it to be the new King) and Corrag is determined that her life will not be forgotten. After several weeks they find a strange comfort in each other and a friendship is born. Corrag has found companionship in her final days and Leslie learns to see whe world through fresh eyes.

I honestly just loved this book. It has now become a firm favourite and I am sorry it has ended. I have never read any of Susan Fletchers other two books but I will now be seeking them out.

Highly, highly recommended!”

I really, really hope that I have persuaded you to read this book – I can’t rave about it enough.

 

  What book do you think we should all be reading?

 

 

The Unseen by Katherine Webb September 19, 2011

In three words:    

Murder, deception, secrets

What I thought:

I read Katherine Webb’s The Legacy last year and loved it so I had high hopes for her new book The Unseen. Like The Legacy, this book also had dual storylines, one set in 1911 and the other in 2011, and the present day was used as a vehicle to help us unravel exactly what had happened 100 years ago. I am seeing these types of books (non-linear) all over the place at the moment and I am growing really bored with them; however, just like last time, Webb pulls it off brilliantly.

The Unseen is centred around a vicarage in 1911 where Hester Canning lives with her vicar husband. She is desperate for a child but Albert doesn’t seem at all interested in her, despite being a loving husband in any other room apart from the bedroom. Hester’s desire and curiosity about what exactly should be going on under the duvet provided a few giggles (not at her – poor thing – but as to how innocent those days were). During the summer of that year, the Cannings receive two new people in to their house, which sets off a chain of events that will ulitmately result in murder. The first is Cat Morley, who has just been released from jail in London for being a suffragette (although the rumour mill in rural Berkshire where the Cannings live) have her down as a murderer, fornicator etc the minute she arrives. Cat is a fantastic character and I warmed to her very much. She is dissatisfied with her lot in life and doesn’t understand why your birth dictates your station in life. She wants to do things and see things and is very ahead of her time. Often, while reading this book, I tried to imagine how I would have been in those days too: I am not one for holding my tongue if I feel something is wrong or unjust, and I really felt for Cat and her desire to make a change. The other newbie into the Canning household was Robin Durrant who was a slimey, work-shy, snake of a man who had Albert wrapped around his little finger and managed to disrupt the whole household. Back in 2011, Journalist Leah tries to fit together the pieces of what happened that summer through letters and journals found.

Despite, what it says on the cover, this is not really a story of the supernatural at all. It is more a tale of the huge gap between the classes and the sexes, with mystery and intrigue to hook us in. Yes, there is a murder but it is right at the end, and there are other revelations that come to the fore at the end that have been building nicely for a while too which is ultimately what makes this story so compelling. The atmosphere is really well created and the characters are so three-dimensional that I either loved them or hated them (I love it when an author can do that – there is nothing worse that not caring one way or another about a character). I loved Cat and Hester, despised Albert and Robin and just adored Sophie Bell the cook!

Verdict: Another belter from this author and I eagerly await whatever she comes up with next.

 

(Source: I bought a copy of this book for myself)

 

  Have you read anything by Katherine Webb yet? Are you going to try her books?

 

Day 12 – A favourite historical novel September 11, 2011

I’m Henry VIII I am, I am… ♪ ♫

 

I must admit to having a little crush on the Tudors. All that feasting, snobbery, coruption, jousting, ruthlessness and beheading – fantastic!

At almost 1000 pages (and pretty small print) this book is not a quick read but having said that, I was so engrossed in the story that it did take me only about 10 days to read. Sometimes when I invest time in reading a really long book I feel so damn pleased with myself by the time I get to the end of it that I may think it’s better than it is. Not so with this book; it’s worth every page. The story of Henry VIII is told by his “fool” Will Sommers and charts Henry’s life from before birth to after his death. So much research and period detail has gone into this book and I have read that it took Margaret George over 10 years to write. It really is such a great book and even if  you haven’t read anything about the Tudors since you were at school this is a great refresher. It assumes no knowledge of those times but isn’t patronising. I never once felt lost or out of my depth; just engrossed in a page-turning book.

 

  Which other historical novels should I be reading?

 

 

Day 5 – A favourite non-fiction book September 4, 2011

Chinese Whispers…..

Every now and then I become obsessed with a particular country or culture and devour as many books about that place as I can. Some years ago it was China (I still love reading books set there) and in 2004 I was even lucky enough to go there on holiday which was amazing.

I have chosen Wild Swans by Jung Chang as my favourite non-fiction book. This is the most incredible story I have ever read : it starts in 1909 and follows 3 generations of women in the same family, starting with Chang’s grandmother who was concubine to a warlord, then her mother who was a fervent party member and then on to herself and her own time during the Cultural Revolution in Mao’s China. If this had been a work of fiction I would have rolled my eyes on so many occasions about Chang’s over-active imagination, but you know what they say about fact being stranger than fiction – that is certainly true here; you seriously couldn’t make this stuff up. This book is shocking, astonishing, brutal, beautiful, gripping and moving and I urge you to read it.

  What non-fiction books do you recommend?

 

Book Review: Far To Go by Alison Pick August 5, 2011

In three words:

Moving, powerful, emotional

 

What I thought:

Once in a while a book comes along that unexpectidly blows you away. This is that book.

Far to Go is set in Czechoslovaki in 1938, just before the outbreak of WW2. Pavel and Anneliese Bauer live with their 5 year old son, Pepik, in a suburban appartment in the northern region of Sudetenland. They own a factory, they have money, enjoy nights in at the theatre and employ a live-in nanny, Marta, to look after their son. They have a life – a good one – that is until the Nazi occupation and annexation of their homeland.

What I found really worked with this book is that we were shown an ordinary family - secular Jews in fact – which I believe added to the confusion of why they were being persecuted; they were just like their friends, their neighbours, their colleagues; they celebrated Christmas, they didn’t follow the customs of the Jewish faith. The fact that they were secular Jews also allowed the author (and reader) to try to understand and question how the war would impact their lives – while Anneliese was eager to shed thier history, Pavel found himself becoming increasingly fervent and proud of his heritige. Another person struggling with her own questions and feelings was Marta the nanny who, despite not being Jewish herself, had to listen to gossip and speculation about the family she lived with and loved and even horrified herself by randomly thinking comments like “dirty Jew” in her head. Marta is really the central character in Far To Go and her actions and decisions have repercussions on the Bauer family that she would have never seen coming; but again we are left to question – what would we have done?

Far To Go deals with a period of history that I was not so familiar with: Czechoslovakia before the war. The characters we are walking hand in hand with through the pages have no idea what is coming:  they’ve never had cause to distrust or suspect their best friends before, they don’t understand why they have to give up their businesses and livelihoods, they don’t see  why they should have to leave their homes and they certainly have never heard of death camps before. This is all to come; this is the future and they are living in ignorance of what awaits them.

Once Pavel and Anneliese  have relented and moved to Prague (while they still can) they become increasingly aware that they have to send Pepik away on the Kindertransport to a family in the UK to look after him “just for a few weeks or months”.  The scenes on the platform are heartbreaking. The gentleness of the narritive and the lack of melodrama in Far To Go doesn’t mean that these aren’t some of the most emotionally powerful pages I have ever read. I don’t have children and yet to put myself squarely in the book with those parents at that moment just about broke my heart; it’s  almost beyond comprehension. I could see their little faces at the window, alone and not understanding why they were being sent away.

www.childrenwhocheatedthenazis.co.uk

There is no room for flowery prose in this book; it’s sparse and no words are wasted. The empathy I felt for each person in this book, however, was so palpable I could almost taste it – it’s a gifted writer who can make a reader feel as they do here without relying on sensationalism and melodrama. You will question every one of the characters actions; you will ache for them, you will hope for them knowing that there is no hope, you will close the book and know that they were just a few people out of 6 million. Six million!

Verdict: Wow. Just wow. Highly, highly recommended.

(source: I received this book for review from Headline Review)

 

 

Mummy Whisperer reviews: The Tenth Gift by Jane Johnson October 14, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Globe Trotting,Historical,Jane Johnson,Morocco — The Book Whisperer @ 12:30 pm
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This is the second of Mummy Whisperer’s reviews.

The Blurb:

“On a Sunday morning in July 1625, Barbary pirates sail into a quiet Cornish bay and storm the church. Their loot: sixty men, women and children, kidnapped and bound for northern Morocco, where they are to be sold in the thronging slave market of the Souq el Ghezel.

Amongst them is Catherine Anne Tregenna, a talented young embroiderer. But as her diary reveals, Cat is anything but the subservient and compliant slave that her captors were expecting – and as the coast of England fades from sight, adventure beckons in the East …

In an exclusive London restaurant, a gift is given that will change Julia Lovat’s life. The antique book of Jacobean embroidery delights her, but when she settles down to read it more closely, she unexpectedly discovers within its foxed and faded pages the extraordinary diary of a young Cornish girl, calling to her from across the centuries…

The stories of these two women are destined to converge in an extraordinary and haunting manner.”

 

  What Mummy Whisperer thought:

This is another book based on historical fact. Yes, I really love my history! I had already read White Gold by Giles Milton, a non-fiction book, so I knew about pirate corsairs from Morocco taking white slaves from Cornwall by force back to north Africa. The author, Jane Johnson, was in Morocco researching the story of a distant ancestor kidnapped by Barbary prirates when the idea for this novel came to her.

The Tenth Gift is the story of two young women. Cat Trepenne, a servant in the 17th century household of Lady Harris of Kenegie, Cornwall, and Julia Lovatt living in the present day whi is given a book “The Needlewoman’s Glorie” as a bitter-sweet parting gift from her lover. The Needlewoman’s Glorie containing diary entries written on each page had been the propery of Cat Trepenne which she had on her when she was captured. Julia’s quest is to uncover the story of Cat takes her on a journey to Morocco.

I really enjoyed this book although the first part was a bit slow. But once the author started describing the raid on Cornwall, the subsequent journey and life of the white slaves in Morocco and Julia’s quest, her research and enthusiasm came to life. The book was an interesting and colourful, exciting read based on well researched material and the author’s own life – she is now married to a Moroccon!

 

 Have you read this book? Can you recommend any others about this period or set in Morocco?

 

 

Mummy Whisperer reviews: By Fire, By Water by Mitchell Kaplan September 30, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Globe Trotting,Historical,Mitchell J Kaplan,Spain — The Book Whisperer @ 9:55 am
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A big welcome!

Please all welcome Mummy Whisperer to my blog for her first ever review!

Mummy W loves reading as much as I do; in fact she and Daddy W are entirely responsible for my love of books. I have such fond memories of them reading to me as a child and I love nothing better than meeting up with my Mum for a cup of coffee and a chat about what we’re reading and nipping into bookshops to top up our mounting collections.

Due to my mounting review copy pile, I have asked both my parents to pick anything that they think they may fancy from my shelves to help me out and this is the first book my Mum picked. This book was sent to me directly from the author and I have every intention of reading it myself too.

What Mummy Whisperer thought:

By Fire, By Water by Mitchell James Kaplan is a very good read if you enjoy fiction based on historical fact.

Louis de Santángel, chancellor to King Ferdinand’s and Queen Isabel’s court, is from a family of ‘conversos’. His Jewish heritage makes him a target of the Chief Inquisitor of Aragon and he is implicated in his murder as he reconnects with his family’s Jewish faith. He meets and falls in love with Judith Midgal, a clever and enterprising Jewish woman and as his friend, Christopher Columbus has plans to discover “paradise” in the west, Louis de Santángel helps him at a time when love, faith, politics and torture of the Jews, Christians and Muslims is at its height in 15th century Spain.

Kaplan left me feeling that his research on the Spanish Inquisition  was sound and extensive. It took him six years to research and write. I really enjoyed this book!

 

Thank you to Mummy Whisperer for her first review here. Number two is coming up shortly.

 

 

 

Curl up with…….The Tudors June 23, 2010

Filed under: Alison Weir,Authors,Historical,Jean Plaidy,Margaret George,Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 10:08 am
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The Tudors

Bizarrely enough when I was younger I wasn’t anywhere near as interested by history as I am now and I hear that quite a lot from adults I know (probably growing up and staritng to get a sense of your own mortality has a lot to do with it!); but the one thing I do remember absolutely loving learning about in school was the Tudors. Henry VIII and his six wives fascinated me: all that greedy guzzling at banquets, heads being chopped off left, right and centre and stuck on London bridges for the publics viewing pleasure, the fashion, the scandals…..I loved it all.

A couple of weekends ago, Mr Whisperer and I went for a day out at Chatsworth House in Derbyshire as I love the huge grounds there and there are gorgoues gardens, cute gift shops and yummy tea and cakes!

 
 
 
 
 

Chatsworth House

We didn’t realise when before we got there was that there was a Tudor Village set up in the grounds with a tent to get a spit-roast pork sandwich and a cider and wander round the various craft stalls manned by people dressed up in the Tudor garb.  

 
 

Not a good time to loose ones head!

Man doing something Tudorish

All hail Queen Boof!

Of course all these meanderings through village and stall, eating freshly roasted meat got me thinking about the books I have read about the Tudors. Here are a selection of my favourites:

 

I’m Henry VIII I am, I am!

Love him or hate him, you have to admit that old Henry is one of the most fascinating characters ever to grace Blighty, or anywhere else in the world, for that matter. The man is a legend! King of England for 38 years back in the early-mid 1500′s, Henry not only had six wives but he found a way to get rid of his first wife (Catherine of Aragon) after 20 or so years becuase he wanted to marry Anne Boleyn instead. Back in the days before being able to divorce, Henry decided that the only way he could get rid of Catherine was to change religion from Catholic to Protestant and bring the whole of England along with him for the ride. Don’t like that idea?: then prepare to loose your head!

After ditching Catherine he finally married Anne Boleyn but soon realised his mistake when he found that she wasn’t the sweet little lapdog he thought she was. How to get rid of Anne? Chop her head off by accusing her of sleeping with her own brother! (Oh, and chop the head of said brother off too, and why not her music teachers too for good measure?). After Anne came Jane Seymour, the love of his life, but the poor (or is that lucky?) girl died in child birth after giving birth to his only son. Then came Anne of Cleves who he divorced for being too ugly (maybe he had never looked in a mirror), Katherine Howard who was too slutty and lost her head for her pains (fancy being in love with someone her own age, and then being forced to marry the King of England and then said King finding out that she had the nerve to be in love with someone else before she met him! Tsk!) and finally Katherine Parr, who it is claimed (I hope this is true for her sake) never had to sleep with the King as he was infirm with a gangrenous leg at the time and only had to mop his brow and show up to events as his Queen.

As well as his numerous wives and extra-curricular bedroom activities (he had at least 2 illegitimate children) King Henry also had a little thing for destroying monestaries up and down the UK to name but one of his hobbies. 

 
 

by Margaret George

 This is one of my favourite books about Henry. At almost 1000 pages (and pretty small print) it’s not a quick read but having said that, I was so engrossed in the story that it did take me only about 10 days to read. The story is told by his “fool” Will Sommers and charts Henry’s life from before birth to after his death. So much research and period detail has gone into this book and I have read that it took Margaret George over 10 years to write. It really is such a great book and if, like me, you haven’t read anything about the Tudors since you were at school this is a great refresher. It assumes no knowledge of those times but isn’t patronising. I never once felt lost or out of my depth; just engrossed in a page-turning book.

Another great book about Henry and his wives (but non-fiction) is Alison Weir’s The Six Wives of Henry VIII. Even if you’re not a fan of non-fiction, this is really readable and almost reads like fiction: really interesting too.

The Six Wives of Henry VIII by Alison Weir

 

Catherine of Aragon

Catherine of Aragon, Henry’s first wife, is probably my favourite of all six wives. Possibly because she was around for the longest, or that she was dgnified to the end, but also because her own background is fascinating too. Catherine (or Catalina) was the daughter of Queen Isabella of Spain and grew up in the time when the Moors were drivin the Jews out of Spain to towards Portugal and town after town was being sacked.

Jean Plaidy has written a great book called Daugthers of Spain which is about Queen Isabella’s 4 daughters (and one son). It is actually third in a trilogy of books about Isabella but they all work as stand alones. This book tells the story of Catalina growing up and who was married off to whom and for what reason (it’s all about the power!). One of Catalina’s sisters, Joanna (Juana) was known as Juana La Loca as she was a little (or a lot) crazy. There is a book called The Last Queen which I really want to read that is all about her life but I haven’t got round to it yet. 

Daughers of Spain - Jean Plaidy

 

Lady Jane Gray 

Perhaps one of the more overlooked Tudors: probably because not only did she only rule England for nine days, there is not as much known about her earlier life as the more prominent royals.

Innocent Traitor (again by Alison Weir) is a work of fiction based upon real facts and is one of my favourite Tudor reads. There is snobbery, coruption, abuse, child neglect and ruthlessness galore inside these 400 pages. Honestly, it’s like watching an episode of Shamless but with posh people. It really is an eye-opener into the goings on of the Tudor court (and peoples attempt to get into it). 

 
 

Innocent Traitor by Alison Weir

 

I have so many more books on my bookshelf from the Tudor period that I really want to get to soon.

Do you like books about the Tudors? Which ones do you recommend?

 

 

 

 

Book Review: The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill June 22, 2010

Filed under: Authors,Globe Trotting,Historical,Lawrence Hill — The Book Whisperer @ 8:31 am

The Blurb:

“Abducted from Africa as a child and enslaved in South Carolina, Aminata Diallo thinks only of freedom—and of the knowledge she needs to get home. Sold to an indigo trader who recognizes her intelligence, Aminata is torn from her husband and child and thrown into the chaos of the Revolutionary War. In Manhattan, Aminata helps pen the Book of Negroes, a list of blacks rewarded for service to the king with safe passage to Nova Scotia. There Aminata finds a life of hardship and stinging prejudice. When the British abolitionists come looking for “adventurers” to create a new colony in Sierra Leone, Aminata assists in moving 1,200 Nova Scotians to Africa and aiding the abolitionist cause by revealing the realities of slavery to the British public. This captivating story of one woman’s remarkable experience spans six decades and three continents and brings to life a crucial chapter in world history.”

 

What I thought:

The Book of Negroes (or Someone Knows My Name as it’s called in the US) is fiction based on fact. The people are made up; the places and events are not. What I thought I knew about the slave trade, it turns out I could have written on a postage stamp. I knew that Africans were kidnapped and taken abroad to work as slaves for wealthy white people several hundred years ago and I thought I knew the hardships and poverty they suffered. Not so.

This book is narrated by Aminata Diallo, an African woman in her late 50′s. Aminata tells the story of her life starting with how she was kinapped from her village in 1757, aged eleven. After watching her parents killed in front of her, she is yoked around the neck, stripped and made to march across jungle, forest and mountain for 3 months. Frightened, humiliated and separated from her loved ones, she also watched people she was tied to die along the way. Once the group had reached the shore they were bundled onto a ship that was to be their home for the next few months. People from all different parts of Africa were stuffed in like sardines in a can, naked, hungry, not understanding one anothers languages.  Once in America, Aminata and her fellow ship-mates were sold at public auctions to slave owners.

 

Slave ship from Africa

Aminata continues her story through that life-changing journey through America and Canada. Hardship and humiliation are at the forefront of this book, but what I loved was that Hill allowed his characters to find love and friendship too; he gave characters real strength of human spirit and showed that even during the most heinus events and times, people are capable of the most selfless acts of kindness.

What I found most shocking in the whole book was that this girl realizes she’s amongst people who have no idea who she is, who have no idea that she has feelings and need for dignity, and they have no understanding of the land she was forced to leave. Most people can’t pronounce her name and the slave owners don’t even care to try, calling African women Mary to keep things simple.

There were many surprising aspects to this book for me and as well as learning huge amounts about things I thought I already knew about the African slave trade but didn’t, but also it shines a spotlight on almost every nation. The people who captured Aminata in the first place and killed her parents were fellow Africans, the Americans in New York (where Aminata is taken to later in the book) claim to be the slaves of the British (without a hint of irony). Books like this are so important to us and to future generations, lest we should forget.

The Book of Negroes is written in a simple and gentle way that, despite its almost matter-of-fact style, packs a real punch. Aminata is a great narrator and, even though she is fictional (which I admit to sometimes forgetting) she has such an important role to play in brining this story to life.

Highly recommended.

  What do other book bloggers say?

…..a very human story, sympathetic, honest, fair to the greys of history, thought-provoking, poignant – Giraffe Days.

….. the book was incredible because it was captivating and interesting – Nose in a Book

…..Lawrence Hill has done something wonderful here - Bookishgal

Have I missed yours?

 

 

Book Review: Day After Night by Anita Diamant June 4, 2010

Filed under: Anita Diamant,Authors,Globe Trotting,Historical,Middle East — The Book Whisperer @ 4:47 pm

 The Blurb:

“Atlit is a holding camp for “illegal” immigrants in Israel in 1945. There, about 270 men and women await their future and try to recover from their past. Diamant, with infinite compassion and understanding, tells the stories of the women gathered in this place. Shayndel is a Polish Zionist who fought the Germans with a band of partisans. Leonie is a Parisian beauty. Tedi is Dutch, a strapping blond who wants only to forget. Zorah survived Auschwitz. Haunted by unspeakable memories and too many losses to bear, these young women, along with a stunning cast of supporting characters who work in or pass through Atlit, begin to find salvation in the bonds of friendship and shared experience, as they confront the challenge of re-creating themselves and discovering a way to live again.”

 

What I thought:

“The nightmares made their rounds ages ago. The tossing and whimpering are over. Even the insomniacs have settled down. The twenty restless bodies rest, and faces aged by hunger, grief, and doubt relax to reveal the beauty and the pity of their youth. Not one of the women in Barrack C is twenty-one, but all of them are orphans.”

This is the opening paragraph to this book and as soon as I read it I knew I was going to become a part of these womens lives for the next 300 pages: I had already lost my heart to them.

I picked this book up for two reasons: 1) I had previously read and loved Anita Diamant’s The Red Tent and 2) having lived in Israel for two years back in the early-mid ’90′s I am fascinated and passionate about reading books set here.

The book is set in a place called Atlit, a camp just outside the town of Haifa for detaining new arrivals after WW2 and before the state of Israel is declared. The people inside Atlit are mainly European Jews who have fled the places that killed their families and friends and tried to kill them, and turned to Palestine for a new life. There are four main characters in Day After Night: Tedi is a Dutch survivor who hid for much of the war and was raped repeatedly by the son of the family who hid her, Leonie is Parisian and survived by becoming a German soldiers prostitute after her family was killed, Zorah only just survived several years in a concentration camp and Shayndel from Poland hid in the forests for years as part of the resistence, killing soldiers where they could and marching people towards Palestine.

 

The camp at Atlit

One of the things I liked about this book was that there was no really unecessary detail about what happened to the four girls in the holocaust. We see glimpses of their past, but more with a view to helping us see them as they are now, without gratuitous or sensational detail. It is important that we, as the reader, understand that these girls had an unspeakably horrific past but the book is not about the holocaust per se, but about what happened to them once they got to “The Promised Land”; how they were again detained behind barbed wire fences, with armed sentires in watch towers, knowing nobody and with uncerain futures. The girls themselves didn’t want to share their past with their fellow detainees:

“She knew they were reluctanat to tell their own stories because all of them began and ended with the same horrible question: why was I spared? Everyone’s mother had been gentle and devout, every sister a beauty, every brother a prodigy. There was no point in comparing one family’s massacre to another’s. Every atrocity was as appalling as the next:  Miriam’s rape, Clara’s murdered husband, Bette’s baby, who was suffocated so the rest of the family would not be discovered.

It was unspeakable, so they spoke of nothing.”

One night, the girls are woken from their beds and partake in an escape from the barracks. They are freed by the Palmach (Isreali elite stike force) and rehomed in a kibbutz. That night all the girls finally sleep deelply and dream – it is like they have finally allowed themselves to dare to dream; to dare to believe that there may be a better life out there waiting for them. I always love Epilogue’s in a book: I have a need to know what happened to the characters I have grown to love, or at least travelled with for several hundred pages so I sighed with satisfaction at the end, of not only having just read a great book but also because I could put those girls to rest.

 Although the characters in the book are made up, the actual story itself isn’t. Atlit still exists (although it is now a museum and education centre) and they really did break out, with the help of the Palmach on 9th October 1945. After walking through forrests and up steep hills all night they finally reached Beit Oren, a kibbutz, where they were homed for the night. When the British turned up the next day, some 4,000 residents from Haifa formed a human sheild around the kibbitz and the soldiers finally left. From there, the several hunderd espcapees were rehomed in various kibbutzim around Palestine.

I’m not Jewish, and my family have never suffered anything so appalling and barbaric as what happened to Jewish families (among others) in WW2, but you don’t have to be Jewish to empathise with something so horrific as this. Nearly everyone I met in Israel had some member of their family who was or knew someone who was one of the first immigrants back in WW2.  One memory will stay with me forever: in 1993 Steven Spielberg released his film, Schindlers List, staring Liam Neeson. I went to see the movie at a cinema in Ra’anana, Israel where I lived and worked, with an English friend. The rest of the audience were locals. At the end of the film,   the black and white turns to colour and some of the very characters that were played on screen and survived the holocaust, place stones on Schindlers grave. I have never experienced anthing like what happened next: soft weeping became breathless sobs; people hugged one another and once the credits had rolled and the lights had come on, the entire aurdience was still in their seets – now in complete silence.

This book was sent to me for review by Simon and Schuster. Thank you!

 

Book Review: The Japanese Lover by Rani Manicka May 26, 2010

Filed under: Globe Trotting,Historical,Rani Manicka — The Book Whisperer @ 1:08 pm

The Blurb:

“Parvathi leaves her native Ceylon for Malaya and an arranged marriage to a wealthy businessman. But her father has cheated, supplying a different girl’s photograph, and Kasu Marimuthu, furious, threatens to send her home in disgrace. Gradually husband and wife reach an accommodation, and the naïve young girl learns to assume the air of sophisticated mistress of a luxurious estate. She even adopts his love child and treats Rubini as her own daughter – a generous act which is rewarded by a long-wished-for son.

But it is a life without passion, and Parvathi dreams of loving – and being loved – with complete abandon.

When the Japanese invade Malaya, in WW2, they requisition the estate. Marimuthu dies and Parvathi is forced to accept the protection of the Japanese general who has robbed her of her home. For the first time, she experiences sexual ecstasy. And gradually, her sworn enemy becomes the lover she has always yearned for . . .”

 

What I thought:

I am actually struggling with finding a way to review this book as, even after turning the last page, I’m still not entirely sure what it’s about. It felt, to me, like the book wanted to be a sprawling, epic book about a woman who was married off for money in Malaysia and set over nearly 100 years, but here it really falls short: there wasn’t enough depth there and I still feel, in a way, that I don’t know the characters well enough. I can’t quite decide whether it was mean to be a family saga, a book about finding true love, a book about spiritualism, a book about WW2, I just don’t know. I sort of feel that the story never really found its true identity.

The story starts in Ceylon in 1916, with the birth of Parvathi to a very poor and lazy father and a doting mother. Her father is told by an astrologer on the day of her birth that she will marry into great wealth and when a marriage broker appears 16 years later trying to find a wife for a hugely wealthy Malaysian businessman, Parvathi’s father gives him a picture of a beautiful girl who is not his daughter and her fate is sealed.

Crossing the sea by herself she is thrust straight into the marriage with this man who is more than 2 decades her senior and who is angry and humilitated at being decieved. He decides to send Parvathi straight back but for reasons that are never especially clear, he doesn’t. She remains in the house where she is happy but unloved. Several years into the marriage, her husbands love-child is brought to live with them after her mother (and her husbands lover) dies and then Parvathi herself gets pregnant and gives birth to a child; a son. These two children are the most rude, selfish, brattish, vile kids and both of them deserved a damn good slap in my opinion! GRRRR!!!

When WW2 breaks out and the Japanese descends on Malaysia, Parvathi is taken to be a lover for a Japanese General and there she finds true love.

It sounds simple enough, right? So it shouldn’t have confused me, but it did. I did enjoy The Japanese Lover but I just didn’t fall in love with it. I didn’t find enough forward momentum with it: I enjoyed it for the most part while reading it but had no real compulsion to pick it up again when I wasn’t reading it. I never really felt like there was anything to cling on to in terms of wanting to know what happened – I felt as though the book couldn’t decided wether to be plot driven (which I don’t think it really was) or character driven (again, there were none whom I felt I knew well enough for this).

I have yet to find another review on the internet for this book but I am looking forward to reading some as I am curious to see if this was just my take on it or wether others feel the same way.

Thank you to Waterstones for my review copy of this book.

 

 

Author Interview: Susan Fletcher March 8, 2010

Filed under: Historical,Susan Fletcher,Uncategorized — The Book Whisperer @ 10:51 am

 Susan Fletcher – author of Corrag, Eve Green and Oystercatchers

I have been so excited about doing this interview since I read Susan’s latest book, Corrag. I was lucky enough to get an advanced copy back in January and I honestly haven’t been able to stop raving about it ever since. It is truly one of the most beautiful books that I have ever read. My review for the book Corrag is here.

So what’s Corrag about?

Here is what Amazon says about it: “The Massacre of Glencoe happened at 5am on 13th February 1692 when thirty-eight members of the Macdonald clan were killed by soldiers who had enjoyed the clan’s hospitality for the previous ten days. Many more died from exposure in the mountains. Fifty miles to the south Corrag is condemned for her involvement in the Massacre. She is imprisoned, accused of witchcraft and murder, and awaits her death. The era of witch-hunts is coming to an end – but Charles Leslie, an Irish propagandist and Jacobite, hears of the Massacre and, keen to publicise it, comes to the tollbooth to question her on the events of that night, and the weeks preceding it. Leslie seeks any information that will condemn the Protestant King William, rumoured to be involved in the massacre, and reinstate the Catholic James. Corrag agrees to talk to him so that the truth may be known about her involvement, and so that she may be less alone, in her final days. As she tells her story, Leslie questions his own beliefs and purpose – and a friendship develops between them that alters both their lives. In Corrag, Susan Fletcher tells us the story of an epic historic event, of the difference a single heart can make – and how deep and lasting relationships that can come from the most unlikely places.”

 

On to the interview with Susan 

How did you come up with the idea for the book? 

  I had always had a strong pull towards the Scottish Highlands, and to Glencoe in particular. Towards the end of my second novel, ‘Oystercatchers’, I finally made my way up to the glen for a few days. The mountains were more dramatic and beautiful than I could have imagined, so much so that I felt emotional to be amongst them. Then, on my second afternoon there, I visited a local museum. I saw Corrag’s name on the wall, read her story, and I instinctively knew that she was to be the narrator of my third book. It was a surge, an absolute conviction – I’ve never had that feeling before. And that night, in my hotel room, I began to write the book.

Describe Corrag in 3 words

 Spiritual, loving, brave. 

The way Corrag notices every little detail of nature, embraces it and describes it is so breathtaking that from reading the book I can only assume that you are a nature lover. Is this correct and if so, where are your favourite places?

 Thank you for saying that! And yes, I adore nature. I’ve always felt calmer and happier outside. In general, I love woods and mountains. More specifically, nowhere comes close to Glencoe. There is a rock high up in the glen which I would take my notebook and a flask of coffee up to, and I’d sit there and just look. I’ve seen deer from there, and eagles, and there is so much sky! Several scenes in the book were written up there, and far more of it was conceived in that spot, or near it. Of all the beautiful places, I think that’s the best of all.

 

Did your opinion of what happened in Glencoe in 1692 change at all while researching and writing the book? 

I knew very little about the Massacre before researching it. I only knew - wrongly – that it was Campbells murdering MacDonalds, and not much more. But the reality is far more complicated than that. Many people were involved or implicated, and whilst the murders were dreadful, the truth is that day-to-day clan warfare brought about far more deaths than those that happened in Glencoe that night. We know about the Massacre because of its deceit (it was ‘Murder Under Trust’) and its political ramifications, more than anything else. It fuelled Jacobitism, and changed allegiances.

 What were the easiest and the hardest thing about writing Corrag?

  All the research was tricky! I wanted to portray the Massacre as accurately and fairly as I could – for there are many misconceptions about what happened, even to this day. I also felt nervous writing about real people, as there’s an element of responsibility there: I didn’t want to paint a person in a dubious light unless there was evidence to support it. The easiest part about writing the book was writing about nature – about my character’s love of it. It meant I had no choice but to sit in beautiful places, to watch the minutiae of the natural world for hours in the name of ‘research.’ I had half-an-hour of watching a bumble bee visit foxgloves, writing down how it looked and sounded, and knowing that Corrag would have loved such a thing. I remember thinking how blessed I was, to have such a job!!

 Where is your favourite place to write? 

That rock above the glen is my favourite, by far – but not in the rain! If I’m using a notepad, then I love being in coffee shops, making notes. If I’m typing, then it’s at home - sometimes even in bed! (The Massacre scene was mostly written in bed – it was a sad and challenging scene to write, and I somehow felt safer there.)

 Are you working on anything else now and can you give us any little tidbits?

 It’s very early days and I am always reluctant to give too much away – as things change so quickly, at this stage. But I’ve always had a novel in me that starts off in Africa. I’m researching around that, just now.

 You’re about to be stranded on a dessert island and can only take 3 books with you. What do you take? 

It would have to be books of hope and reassurance – nothing gloomy! Mary Oliver’s poetry is full of both these things - so I would take her Selected Poems. Then, perhaps, Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible. I’ve read it many times over, but it’s still humorous, beautiful and profound. And I’d finish with Women Who Run With The Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estes – neither a novel nor poetry, but rather a book that celebrates womanhood, nature, instinct, and which I always turn to when I’m feeling in need of guidance. It would keep me happy and strong until the boat arrived!

 Have you ever read a book and thought “Damn! I wish I’d written that”? 

All the time! Most recently I wished I’d written Philip Hoare’s Leviathan – an incredible study of man’s relationship with the whale. It’s both mournful and beautiful, and my head was full of whales for weeks afterwards…!

If you could travel back in time for one year anywhere in the world, what year would you choose and where would it be? 

It would have to be the Scottish Highlands in 1691 - I’d want to meet all these people I’ve spent the past two years imagining. 

Finally the quick fire round: 

         Favourite colour: All of them – honestly. Couldn’t pick one.
         Favourite animal: Too many! Ducks, owls, hedgehogs…
         Favourite holiday destination: Scotland (I’m in love with it), and I hear Bali’s pretty nice.
         Favourite aurthor: Don’t have one. Sorry…
         Favourite song: There’s a lovely combination of Somewhere Over The Rainbow/What A Wonderful World, sung by a man with a banjo (I can’t remember his name!). It’s joyous and bouncy and sweet. It’s what I’d like to have played at my funeral so that people could walk out with a smile.
         Favourite movie: Amelie and The Thin Red Line.
         Favourite childhood memory: Crab-fishing with my brother near Christchurch, Dorset, and tipping up the bucket onto the pier when the boat came in. All those people squealing as the crabs ran over their feet! Naughty but brilliant.

 

Want to know more?

 Here is a link to a podcast that Susan did over at Fifth Estate - it’s a short interview but really interesting and definitely worth listening to.

I also came across this on Love Reading yesterday – Susan is the Guest Editor for March and disucsses her favourite authors and books.

You can check out more reviews etc on Amazon too.

 

And finally… 

Thank you so much to Susan Fletcher for joining me for this interveiw, and to Fifth Estate for organising it. I truly adored this book and highly recommend it as one you pick up soon. If you enjoy historical fiction, lyrical fiction, feel-good books then you will love this. For anyone who appreciates beauty in the written word then this is for you.

 

 

Book Review: Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks February 7, 2010

Filed under: Geraldine Brooks,Historical — The Book Whisperer @ 5:15 pm

What Amazon says: “Geraldine Brooks’s Year of Wonders describes the 17th-century plague that is carried from London to a small Derbyshire village by an itinerant tailor. As villagers begin, one by one, to die, the rest face a choice. Do they flee their village in the hope of outrunning the plague or do they stay? The lord of the manor and his family pack and leave. The rector, Michael Mompellion, argues forcefully that the villagers should stay put, isolate themselves from neighbouring towns and villages and prevent the contagion from spreading. His oratory wins the day and the village turns in on itself. Cocooned from the outside world and ravaged by the disease, its inhabitants struggle to retain their humanity in the face of the disaster. The narrator, a young widow called Anna Frith, is one of the few who succeeds. Together with Mompellion and his wife Elinor, she tends the dying and battles to prevent her fellow villagers from descending into drink, violence and superstition. All is complicated by the intense, unacknowledgeable feelings she develops for both the rector and his wife. Year of Wonderssometimes seems anachronistic as historical fiction. Anna and Mompellion can occasionally appear to be modern sensibilities unaccountably transferred to 17th-century Derbyshire. However there is no mistaking the power of Brooks’s imagination or the skill with which she constructs her story of ordinary people struggling to cope with extraordinary circumstances.”

 

What I thought: I picked this straight up after having read People of the Book also by Brooks and having loved it. I then read Year of Wonders in a day as I couldn’t put it down, and was all set to give it 5 stars until the epilogue (more on that later).

Eyam village

This book is based on the true story of the village of Eyam in Derbyshire in 1665 when the Plague arrived in a trunk of fabric sent from London. The Village of 300 or so people took an oath with their Parish Priest not to leave the village, therefore containing the disease and potentially saving thousands of lives. Of the 300 or so villagers in Eyam, within one year over 200 of them were dead. For more than a year, nobody came in and nobody went out. They were left food and supplies in a hole in the wall of the boundary stone up on the hills by kind people from the surrounding villages.

The plague cottages
 The story is told by Anna Frith, an 18 year old widow, who loses her 2 tiny boys to the plague and then goes on to comfort and help other villlgers through this horrible year as their loved ones too succumb to Plague.
Although some of the characters were real people (George Viccars was the tailor who recived the box of fabric and was the first person in the village to die), and Anna’s neighbour Mary Hadfield who lost her husband and 3 children also existed. Other characters have been based on real people, for example Brooks’ Priest Michael Monpellion was based on the real Vicar William Mompesson but she changed his name as she also changed his character.
 

 

Having been to Eyam several times (you can still visit the Plague cottages there) I thoroughly enjoyed this book as it brought to life a time that seems so beyond our comprehension. However, much as I loved it the ending almost sopilt it for me. I don’t want to ruin it so I won’t say what happens but I found it slightly silly in that it just didn’t seem to fit the story at all.
All in all though, a great story of endurance, love and hope in a truly terrible time in history which is made all the more frightening because it actually happened. I would highly recommed this book.

 

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Book Review: People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks February 7, 2010

Filed under: Geraldine Brooks,Globe Trotting,Historical — The Book Whisperer @ 4:38 pm

What Goodread says: “From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of March, the journey of a rare illuminated prayer book through centuries of war, destruction, theft, loss, and love.”

 

What I thought: After having read the blurb on the back and not being particularly keen to pick this book up for a few weeks, when I finally did I couldn’t put it down.

I found this book a really gripping and actually left me pining to pick it up and carry on reading when I had other stuff to do (work mainly – how inconvenient!). This is the story of Hanna, an Australian rare book expert who gets the fantastic opportunity to work on the Sarajevo Haggadah (which has been missing for decades). From here (between the story of Hanna and her discoveries) we are treated to a feast of life in cities such as Vienna, Venice, Barcelona and Seville ranging over more than 5 centuries. I absolutely loved these stories and meeting the people in them and ultimately making the connection between them and how the book ended up in its next home.

I really did enjoy this book;  I found it not only incerdibly interesting but also a great story that kept making me want to read on (I love books that make me not want to put them down). I recommend this book highly.

 

Book Review: Five Quarters of the Orange by Joanne Harris January 30, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Globe Trotting,Historical,Joanne Harris — The Book Whisperer @ 10:38 pm

What Amazon says: “Joanne Harris’ sensational novel Five Quarters of the Orange revolves around a recipe book, continuing the theme of culinary intrigue begun in Chocolat and Blackberry Wine. Framboise, the middle-aged narrator, begins her story in Les Laveuses, on the banks of the Loire:

When my mother died she left the farm to my brother, Cassis, the fortune in the wine cellar to my sister, Reine-Claude, and to me, the youngest, her album and a two-litre jar containing a single black Perigord truffle.

Framboise returns to the village where she grew up during wartime, and with the help of the recipes scribbled in her mother’s album, opens up a small restaurant. However, she is desperate to keep her identity a secret even amongst the aged villagers with whom she played on the banks of the Loire in the years of German occupation during the Second World War. Framboise immerses herself once again in the peaceful rhythms of village life, pungently evoked by Harris’s evocative prose. But slowly, reluctantly, Framboise begins to unravel the terrible wartime secret that drove her family away from the village. As she cuts between idyllic descriptions of the village and the increasingly dark memories of the war, Framboise admits:

I know, I know. You want me to get to the point. But this is at least as important as the rest, the method of telling, and the time taken to tell. It has taken me fifty-five to begin, at least let me do it in my own way.”

 

 

What I thought: I am head over heels in love with this book. Only a terrific author can write about something as appalling as war and occupation and uneccesary death but yet make you feel so alive and carefree whilste reading it. The prose was as mouthwatering, succulent and juicy as the food in the book and I wanted to be there! Yes, I wanted to run down to the Loire and swim and splash and yell and hang upsidedown from trees overhanging the river and race through sun-soaked fields and pick fruit in the orchards. I wanted to sneak off on the back of bike to the nearest village to watch a film in the cinema unbeknown to my mother, I wanted to set traps in the Loire and catch fish and I wanted to go to market on a Thursday morning and sell home-made pastries. And all this under German occupation. Only a talented author can make you feel like that while telling the story of something far more sinister.

This is a book about an old woman who comes back to the village of her childhood, but can’t allow the villagers to find out who she really is. Aged nine Framboise and her family has to make a hasty exit from Les Laveuses and now she can’t allow them to know the truth of who she really is and also what really happnened back in 1942. The book is as sumptuous as it is teasing with bits of information that allows the reader to peice all the fragments together over the course of the story and lead us to the final catastrophic moments.

I adored this book; it was ripe, tangy and a feast for the senses. I want to read it all over again. But if not, it has made me hungry and now I need to go and raid the fridge………

This book is in my Top 10 ever!

 

If you enjoy Five Quarters of the Orange then you should also enjoy Blackberry Wine by Joanne Harris.

Unfortunately I never got round to reviwing this one as I read it on holiday last year and now I’m not sure I could do it justice by trying to remember the details. However, if you liked Chocolat or Five Quarters of the Orand then there is a huge chance that you will love this one. It’s one of her three “foodie” themed books and is totally magical. The book is actually narrated by a bottle of wine (sounds strange, but honestly it really works!). Again, it is set in rural France and has the same effervescence of the other two. Enjoy!

 

 

 

Book Review: Corrag by Susan Fletcher January 27, 2010

Filed under: Historical,Susan Fletcher — The Book Whisperer @ 8:34 pm

The Blurb

 ”The Massacre of Glencoe happened at 5am on 13th February 1692 when thirty-eight members of the Macdonald clan were killed by soldiers who had enjoyed the clan’s hospitality for the previous ten days. Many more died from exposure in the mountains. Fifty miles to the south Corrag is condemned for her involvement in the Massacre. She is imprisoned, accused of witchcraft and murder, and awaits her death. The era of witch-hunts is coming to an end – but Charles Leslie, an Irish propagandist and Jacobite, hears of the Massacre and, keen to publicise it, comes to the tollbooth to question her on the events of that night, and the weeks preceding it. Leslie seeks any information that will condemn the Protestant King William, rumoured to be involved in the massacre, and reinstate the Catholic James. Corrag agrees to talk to him so that the truth may be known about her involvement, and so that she may be less alone, in her final days. As she tells her story, Leslie questions his own beliefs and purpose – and a friendship develops between them that alters both their lives. In Corrag, Susan Fletcher tells us the story of an epic historic event, of the difference a single heart can make – and how deep and lasting relationships that can come from the most unlikely places.”

(source: Amazon.com)

 

 What I thought

Rarely does a book bewitch (pardon the pun) and mesmorise me quite so much as this one. It is truly one of the most beautiful and lyrical books I have ever read.

The story is narrated by Corrag, a 16 year old girl who is awaiting being burned at the stake for being a witch in 17th century Scotland. Corrag is visited in jail by Charles Leslie, an Irish Jacobite who wants to prove that the recent massacre in Glencoe was the work of the soldiers under William of Orange. Corrag is English and has run away “north and west” at the command of her mother who is about to be hung for also being a witch. Corrag takes the old and beaten horse of a cruel neighbour, a grey mare who becomes her best and only friend, and spends the next year living off the land and making her way north-west where she arrives in Glencoe. At first the clan is wary of her, but over time they welcome her into the fold although she still lives in her self-made little hut on the moor.

What is magical about this book is Corrage’s voice. She lives, breathes and dreams nature and the land around her. Every tiny thing is spoken of with such love and passion and she notices everything – a dew drop on a leaf, the changing colours of the rocks through the day, the silver sand as the grey mare gallops over beaches in the moonlight. The way she narrates is lyrical and equistite and the world she inhabits makes you feel like you can breathe again. Despite her life so far and her hardships, she has such a capacity for love and kindness for eveyone she meets.

Through her visits from Charles Leslie, Corrag tells her life story from her birth through to the night her friends were slain in a Scottish valley during a blizzard. Each person is wary of the other at the beginning – Leslie returns daily as he is waiting for details on who was behind the massacre (believing it to be the new King) and Corrag is determined that her life will not be forgotten. After several weeks they find a strange comfort in each other and a friendship is born. Corrag has found companionship in her final days and Leslie learns to see whe world through fresh eyes.

I honestly just loved this book. It has now become a firm favourite and I am sorry it has ended. I have never read any of Susan Fletchers other two books but I will now be seeking them out.

Highly, highly recommended!

You can also read my interview with the author, Susan Fletcher, here.

 

Other books by Susan Fletcher are: Eve Green  and Oystercatchers.

 

 

Waiting on Wednesday January 27, 2010

Filed under: Alison Weir,Historical — The Book Whisperer @ 11:10 am

This week I am waiting on Alison Weir’s new fiction book The Captive Queen. I love her non-ficiton books also, but after reading Innocent Traitor (see my review here) I can’t wait for this book to come out.

Sysnopsys from Amazon:

“It is the year 1152 and a beautiful woman of thirty, attended by only a small armed escort, is riding like the wind southwards through what is now France, leaving behind her crown, her two young daughters and a shattered marriage to Louis of France, who had been more like a monk than a king, and certainly not much of a lover. This woman is Eleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine, and her sole purpose now is to return to her vast duchy and marry the man she loves, Henry Plantagenet, a man destined for greatness as King of England. Theirs is a union founded on lust which will create a great empire stretching from the wilds of Scotland to the Pyrenees. It will also create the devil’s brood of Plantagenets – including Richard C ur de Lion and King John – and the most notoriously vicious marriage in history. “The Eagle and the Lion” is a novel on the grand scale, an epic subject for Alison Weir. It tells of the making of nations, and of passionate conflicts: between Henry II and Thomas Becket, his closest friend who is murdered in Canterbury Cathedral on his orders; between Eleanor and Henry’s formidable mother Matilda; between father and sons, as Henry’s children take up arms against him; and finally between Henry and Eleanor herself.”

The book is released by Hutchinson (Random House) on 1st April 2010 in the UK and in July in the USA.

“Waiting On” Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine. This event spotlights upcoming releases that we’re eagerly anticipating. Please visit Jill’s blog to find out what other book bloggers are waiting for

 

Book Review: Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin January 24, 2010

Filed under: Historical,Melanie Benjamin,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 4:01 pm

What Goodreads says: “Alice Liddell Hargreaves’s life has been a richly woven tapestry: As a young woman, wife, mother, and widow, she’s experienced intense passion, great privilege, and greater tragedy. But as she nears her eighty-first birthday, she knows that, to the world around her, she is and will always be only “Alice.” Her life was permanently dog-eared at one fateful moment in her tenth year–the golden summer day she urged a grown-up friend to write down one of his fanciful stories.

That story, a wild tale of rabbits, queens, and a precocious young child, becomes a sensation the world over. Its author, a shy, stuttering Oxford professor, does more than immortalize Alice–he changes her life forever. But even he cannot stop time, as much as he might like to. And as Alice’s childhood slips away, a peacetime of glittering balls and royal romances gives way to the urgent tide of war.

For Alice, the stakes could not be higher, for she is the mother of three grown sons, soldiers all. Yet even as she stands to lose everything she treasures, one part of her will always be the determined, undaunted Alice of the story, who discovered that life beyond the rabbit hole was an astonishing journey.

A love story and a literary mystery, Alice I Have Been brilliantly blends fact and fiction to capture the passionate spirit of a woman who was truly worthy of her fictional alter ego, in a world as captivating as the Wonderland only she could inspire.”

 

 

What I thought: Have you ever wondered what happened to the little girl who inspired Alice in Wonderland? I must be honest – I’m not sure I even knew that the real Alice had existed until I read the blurb for this book. But, yes, real she was. The real Alice lived until the age of 81, had married and had three sons. But where did it all begin?

Alice I Have Been is fiction based on fact. The story is narrated by Alice herself and where no evidence remains, Melanie Benjamin takes artistic licence to fill in the gaps. Alice was the daughter of the Dean of Oxford University where she was one of 10 siblings who lived a very priviledged upbrining within the grounds of the University. It was there that the family met and befriended Mr Charles Dodgson (or better known to the world as Lewis Carrol). It was on one particularly hot summers day, while out rowing with Alice and two of her sisters that Dodgson made up the tale of Alice in Wonderland to amuse the three girls and for years afterwards Alice begged him to write it down. Little did she know that her childhood was to be immortalised forever.

The relationship between Dodgson and the three girls made me hugely uncomfortable, however. There were echoes of Lolita which I found a really unsettling experience while reading a book set in Victorian times and with such a quaint backdrop. There’s something really unnerving about such little girls in their white muslin dresses with parasols being quite so obsessed with a man in his twenties. Charles Dodgson (a Mathematics professor at the Universtiy) was also a photographer in his spare time as well as writing stories. His rooms in the college were littered with toys and dressing up boxes for young girls to play with and his photograph collection contained hundreds of images if children in various, sometimes provocotave, positions. When she was eleven years old, Alice’s parents had a falling out with Dodgson and he was never allowed near the family again. Nobody knows what happened, nobody ever spoke of it and after his death, Dodgsons family tore out parts of his diary that related to that particular time. One can only wonder what really happened but in the absense of any facts, Benjamin weaves her own theory around what happened one summers day to end that relationship.

The rest of the book follows Alice as she grows up, watches her as she falls in love with Queen Victoria’s son Prince Leopold (there is evidence that this may have happened) and ultimately marries and has three children, only claiming fame and noteriey at the end of her life as the girl who fell down the rabbit hole and will be forever seven years old.

I really enjoyed this book. It made me feel uncomfortable at times (but then I suspect it was meant to) but ultimately the ride along with Alice was an enjoyable one. It has certainly made me want to read Lewis Carrol’s famous book again too. Recommended!

 

Thank you very much to Delacorte Press (part of Random House) for the review copy of this book.

 

If you liked that review and want to know more, why not enter the Giveaway I am hosting. There is still a week left to enter and there are 3 copies to giveaway (internationally). Please see here for more details.

 

 

 

Book Review: Soulless by Gail Carriger January 15, 2010

Filed under: Gail Carriger,Historical,Laugh Out Loud,SciFi / Fantasy,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 3:29 pm

Synopsis from Amazon:

“Alexia Tarabotti is laboring under a great many social tribulations. First, she has no soul. Second, she’s a spinster whose father is both Italian and dead. Third, she was rudely attacked by a vampire, breaking all standards of social etiquette. Where to go from there? From bad to worse apparently, for Alexia accidentally kills the vampire – and then the appalling Lord Maccon (loud, messy, gorgeous, and werewolf) is sent by Queen Victoria to investigate. With unexpected vampires appearing and expected vampires disappearing, everyone seems to believe Alexia responsible. Can she figure out what is actually happening to London’s high society? Or will her soulless ability to negate supernatural powers prove useful or just plain embarrassing? Finally, who is the real enemy, and do they have treacle tart? SOULLESS is a comedy of manners set in Victorian London: full of werewolves, vampires, dirigibles, and tea-drinking.”

What I thought:

What an absolute treat this book was to read! I absolutely loved it. I was recommended this book a few months ago so I picked up a copy when in NYC in December as it wasn’t out in the UK then. Then in January I was lucky enought to interview Gail for this blog and was even more fascinated and intriguied when I read her answers. Who knew a book about vampires, werewolves and ghosts wandering around Victorian London and attending tea-parties would be so much fun? From the minute I cracked open the spine I knew I was in for a great ride. Our heroine is Miss Alexia Tarabotti and she has fast become one of my favourite characters in any book: she’s feitsy, speaks her own mind, sarcastic, soulless, large chested and so funny!

In the opening pages, Miss Tarabotti accidentally kills a rogue vampire who tries to attack her, and although she is put out that said vampire doesn’t appear to know that she was born without a soul and therefore immune to any supernatural attack, she is more annoyed that the vampire landed in the middle of the food table and on top of the treacle tart, which she had particularly been looking forward to. Within minutes, The Earl of Wolsey, Lord Maccon, arrives in the middle of the mess – he has been sent by Queen Victoria to investigate the mystery of disappearing registered vampires and appearing rogue vampires. Lord Maccon also happens to be a werewolf, the Alpha at that, and Miss Tarabotti appears to exasperate him at every turn. The characters are what really made this book, for me. Alexia aside, I also fell in love with Lord Akeldama, a flambouyant vampire who practically minces through the pages, and Lyall, Lord Maccon’s beta werewolf and sidekick are fantastic, as are the vile Mrs Loontwill (Alexia’s mother) and her two sisters.

Miss Tarabotti’s adventure with trying to track down what has happened to the disappearing vampires and werewolves and getting herself kidnapped by a man with a wax face are nothing compared to the other big distraction that keeps following her around in the shape of an increasingly randy Lord Maccon.  There are fangs, fur, ghosties, tea, treacle tart, peacock hats, silver-tipped parasols, adventure,  science, satire  blended with steampunk and some fantasy – the whole shebang.

I really did enjoy this book and I can’t wait for the next in the series, Changeless, to come out in April. I can highly recommend this book and urge you to read it!

For more information:

Amazon

Gail’s Website

Interview with Gail

 

TBR Thursday – The Little Stranger January 14, 2010

Filed under: Crime/Mystery/Thriller,Historical,Sarah Waters,Spooky — The Book Whisperer @ 3:25 pm

TBR Thursday is a meme hosted by Drea, if you want to join in this meme visit her blog and leave your TBR Thursday link there for others to see. TBR Thursday highlights all those books that you physically own but haven’t had the chance to read yet. Or maybe they’ve already been released and you’re dying to grab a copy from the library to read but already have too many books on your table. There can be some old books, some new books, and some that are in between, but they have to be books that you want to read and review!

I have chosen The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters. I was lucky enough to be sent a lovely hardback copy by Virago Press and it is sitting patiently waiting for me to pick it up and read (which I will do soon).

“In a dusty post-war summer in rural Warwickshire, a doctor is called to a patient at lonely Hundreds Hall. Home to the Ayres family for over two centuries, the Georgian house, once grand and handsome, is now in decline, its masonry crumbling, its gardens choked with weeds, the clock in its stable yard permanently fixed at twenty to nine. Its owners – mother, son and daughter – are struggling to keep pace with a changing society, as well as with conflicts of their own.
 
But are the Ayreses haunted by something more sinister than a dying way of life? Little does Dr Faraday know how closely, and how terrifyingly, their story is about to become entwined with his.
 
Prepare yourself. From this wonderful writer who continues to astonish us, now comes a chilling ghost story.”

For more information you can visit:

Amazon

Sarah Water’s Website

Looking forward to reading this one.

 

 

 

 

Author Interview: Leanna Renee Hieber January 9, 2010

Filed under: Historical,Leanna Renee Hieber,Paranormal,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 6:14 pm

Firstly, thank you to Leanna for taking the time to answer some questions about her book The Strangely Beautiful Tale of Miss Percy Parker.

Here is a bit of info about Leanna before we start: “Award winning and bestselling author, actress and playwright Leanna Renee Hieber grew up in rural Ohio inventing ghost stories.  Graduating with a BFA in Theatre from Miami University, a focus in the Victorian Era and a scholarship to study in London helped set the course for her Strangely Beautiful series. The dramatic, historic, spiritual and paranormal are the primary forces in her lyrical, eerie, atmospheric fiction. 

When not writing or on set, she loves a good Goth club, singing soprano in choir and adventuring about her adopted hometown of New York City, where she resides with her real-life hero and her beloved rescued lab rabbit Persebunny, Queen of the Undereverything. ” (Info taken from Leanna’s website).

So now for the questions:

 
Have you made any new years resolutions and if so can you share any with us? 
Write more.  That’s vague, I know, but an important resolution nonetheless.
 
Which book have you read in the last year that made you think “Damn, I wish I’d written that?”

I’ve recently gone back to Elizabeth Peters’ Amelia Peabody series and every time Amelia says something so period, British, utterly outrageous and I laugh out loud, I think that thought.
 
You’re about to be stranded on a desert island and you are only allowed to take 3 books with you: which do you take and why? 
(And this is where Leanna cheats with collected works volumes! Ha!)  The collected Jane Austen, the collected Harry Potter and Fellowship of the Rings.  (With the Collected works of Bram Stoker and Charles Dickens in the wings!)  I would take these books because they represent the most transporting, beautiful reading experiences in my life that each in their own way has been formative to my personality and writing style.

 
Now onto the first book in the Strangely Beautiful series. Where did you come up with the idea for the book and do you believe in ghosts? 
Odd, colourless, dear Percy couldn’t have appeared in my mind at a worse time.  I was working 14 hour days as a performance intern for the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company.  I had no time to start a new novel set in 1888 (writing books set in this year had been somewhat of a lifetime habit of mine, but I’d never finished one). Yet Miss Parker, timid as she was, would not be dissuaded by my busy schedule.
            Deathly-pale, Percy appeared in my consciousness against my default and beloved 19th century backdrop; gliding quietly into Professor Alexi Rychman’s grand office. She spoke nervously about spirits and visions.  She stared longingly at that brooding, intense, enigmatic professor across the room from her. I was hooked like a drug on the two of them. I had to know what made them tick, why Miss Percy looked like a ghost but wasn’t one (the answer, I found with delight, came in Mythology that I take great liberty with).  Toying with a palpably aching power dynamic between two lonely, secretive people who are magical, flawed and gifted in very different ways became my instant obsession.  I knew when Percy and Alexi entered my heart, that my life would never be the same for having met them, and it wasn’t.  In creating The Guard, I gained a family of characters I adore. The story fell into place piece by piece through a sequence of years, set against the eerily beautiful, haunted, moonlit Victorian London I’d always yearned to visit.  And nine years later it’s my dream come true to share it. 
 
And yes, I do believe in ghosts with all my heart.  I have seen things I cannot explain, though I do not see them as Percy or the Guard sees them.  But as the Bard said, and I oft defer to him; “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” The Victorians were huge spiritualists, it’s fitting.
 
What research did you do on London under the rule of Queen Victoria? 
Since childhood I’ve been reading 19th Century literature; the best research of all.  In college I pursued a focus study in the Victorian Era, went on scholarship to London for research (took the Jack the Ripper tour and knew I had to include those murders, supernaturally, in my book) and began adapting works of 19th Century literature for the stage. I surrounded myself with books on the time period, of particular use is “What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew.” My favourite part of the process was researching the ghosts.  Save for the Athens Academy ghosts, every ghost I mention in the series is a real, documented London haunt, all of them taken from ghost stories I learned from the renowned Richard Jones, a foremost expert on such matters.  If you’re interested in these ghost stories, they’re archived posts via the “Haunted London Blog Tour” page of my website
  I’ll have a new Haunted London Blog tour mentioning the new ghosts of Darkly Luminous come April (along with giveaways). 

 
Which are your favourite books and authors from that era and did any of them influence or inspire you while writing your book?

All. In particular, Gothic fiction (from the seminal Castle of Otronto onwards).  Favourites from/near the era, all of them inspirations / influences:  The Picture of Dorian Gray, Les Miserables, Wuthering Heights, The Age of Innocence, the Phantom of the Opera, Dracula, Frankenstein, Jekyll and Hyde, all of Dickens, Austen, Collins, Edgar Allan Poe and all the 19th Century Romantic poets.
 
What is it about the Victorians that fascinates you so much? 
I feel I know them, and was one of them once.  I am compelled by the grit versus the grandeur.  The churning collective consciousness of a self-conscious society undergoing hyperbolic spiritual, industrial, psychic, Empiric, scientific, artistic changes.  A preened exterior and a seething underbelly.  The revered and loathed creature that was Woman.  The kiss of a hand as erotic.  Burgeoning civil liberties and social causes amidst raging poverty, intolerance and inhuman working conditions. Sensationalism; the birthpangs of popular culture, the friction between evangelism and hedonism. The drama, the art, the architecture, the music, the literature and their love of spiritualism and classical themes. And the clothes. Really love the clothes.
 
Your books are cross-genre; how has this affected how they have been viewed by publishers and the public? And do you have a favourite genre of books when it comes to reading yourself?

Cross-genre has its beautiful perks and it has its drawbacks.  What was most difficult was selling the book in the first place, because publishers weren’t sure where to shelve it. It’s a Gothic Victorian Fantasy Paranormal Romance with Suspense, light Horror and YA elements. (But if I could use only one word to describe this book? Gothic). On my 9 year publishing journey it was finally Dorchester (no stranger to cross-genre initiatives) who bit and it was worth the wait, it’s a great home for the series and I’ve got an awesome editor in Chris Keeslar. 
            As for the readership: The most beautiful perk has been reviewers and readers finding the Strangely Beautiful blend of genres refreshing and original. Yet the blend may not be everyone’s cup of tea.  While a cross-genre book has wider appeal and can connect with many readers on different levels, more genre-specific fans may not like the choices made outside of their favourite genre’s conventions- Fantasy fans might not be used to the dramatic lyricism of a Historical Gothic, Historical fans might not embrace the paranormal/mythic foundations. But my hope remains that a lot of readers are like me; blend all my favourite genres together and I’ll love the book all the more for it.
            As for my personal reading, I love the confluence of genre forces and so I find myself drawn to cross-genre books myself, especially historical paranormal.  But while I’m in the thick of writing, I try and avoid my exact sub-genres, hence my reading a lot of Victorian-set mysteries like the Amelia Peabody series and Anne Perry’s novels.
 
There is a second book coming out in April this year (The Darkly Luminous Fight for Persephone Parker). Is that it for the Strangely Beautiful series or is there more to come?

The Darkly Luminous Fight for Persephone Parker is indeed Strangely Beautiful #2, picking up exactly where the first book leaves off – and I’m so excited about it.  The series continues in October of this year with a novella (Strangely Beautiful #2.5) – which again picks up exactly where the sequel leaves off.  And then I envision two more books in the series, the next a prequel and a fourth book that would follow the Rychman familial legacy up to World War I.

 
And finally, the quick fire round:

Favourite colour:  Black
Favourite item of clothing: My myriad corsets
Favourite animal: Birds
Favourite flavour crisps (chips):  Anything cheese flavoured
Favourite holiday destination:  London (it’s my #1 destination, holiday or otherwise)
Favourite childhood memory:  Terrifying my girl scout troupe by telling ghost stories I made up as I went along.  Once I even got so worked up I electrocuted myself upon a lamp.  Not my favourite part of the memory, but my levitating hair made for advantageous effect.
Favourite song:  A tie between “The Lark Ascending” by Ralph Vaughan Williams (Classical) and “Beloved” by VNV Nation (Goth)

Thank you Leanna, and good luck with your forthcoming books.

Here are the first two books in the series and some info about them and don’t forget to check out the website for those giveaways!

The Strangely Beautiful Tale of Percy Parker (out now)

“What fortune awaited sweet, timid Percy Parker at Athens Academy? Hidden in the dark heart of Victorian London, the Romanesque school was dreadfully imposing, a veritable fortress, and little could Percy guess what lay inside. She had never met its powerful and mysterious Professor Alexi Rychman, knew nothing of the growing shadows, of the Ripper and other supernatural terrors against which his coterie stood guard. She saw simply that she was different, haunted, with her snow white hair, pearlescent skin and uncanny gift. This arched stone doorway was a portal to a new life, to an education far from what could be had at a convent-and it was an invitation to an intimate yet dangerous dance at the threshold of life and death…”

The Darkly Luminous Fight for Persephone Parker (out in May 2010)

“With radiant, snow white skin and hair, Percy Parker was a beacon for Fate. True love had found her, in the tempestuous form of Professor Alexi Rychman. But her mythic destiny was not complete. Accompanying the ghosts with which she alone could converse, new and terrifying omens loomed. A war was coming, a desperate ploy of a spectral host. Victorian London would be overrun. Yet, Percy kept faith. Within the mighty bastion of Athens Academy, alongside The Guard whose magic shielded mortals from the agents of the Underworld, she counted herself among friends. Wreathed in hallowed fire, they would stand together, no matter what dreams or nightmares—may come.” (Both synopsys courtesy of Goodreads).

I will be posting a review of the first book in the next few weeks (when the snow clears up and Amazon can actually deliver my order!) so watch this space.

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Book Review: Innocent Traitor by Alison Weir January 8, 2010

Filed under: Alison Weir,Historical — The Book Whisperer @ 9:43 pm

Wow! I loved this! It was like watching a series of Shameless but with posh people. Greed, bad mothers, bad fathers, plotting, bitching, murdering, affairs, rape……phew! Really, you couldn’t make this stuff up!

Seriously though, this is such a well written account of Lady Jane Grey, the young 16 year old Queen of England who only ruled for 9 days. It starts at her birth (to a mother who would have been carted off by social services today) and follows her throughout her 16 years by her own account and by accounts of those closest to her. Poor girl! She really was just a pawn in her parents greedy plans and ultimately met her death because of it. Lady Jane Grey was a complete surprise to me too: she was wilfull, feisty, somewhat precocious and very pious. For a girl to speak her mind so much in those days must have been incredibly difficult but speak it she does. The other big surprise for me was Queen Mary who was kind and compassionate in a way that I never knew. I thoroughly enjoyed this book – my first Weir. Never a dull moment, it rips along making you unwilling to put it down. An amazing period in history has been brought vibrantly to life. Stunningly good read!

 

Author Interview: Gail Carriger January 7, 2010

Filed under: Gail Carriger,Historical,Paranormal,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 11:39 am

Firstly, thank you to Gail for taking part in this interview.  Here is the “obligatory bio” from Gail’s website for a quick overview of the lady herself:

“Ms. Carriger began writing in order to cope with being raised in obscurity by an expatriate Brit and an incurable curmudgeon. She escaped small town life and inadvertently acquired several degrees in Higher Learning. Ms. Carriger then traveled the historic cities of Europe, subsisting entirely on biscuits secreted in her handbag. She now resides in the Colonies, surrounded by a harem of Armenian lovers, where she insists on tea imported directly from London and cats that pee into toilets. She is fond of teeny tiny hats and tropical fruit. Soulless is her first book, Changeless is her second.”

Now on to the questions:

Have you made any new years resolutions and if so can you share any with us?
I have decided to do more yoga and drink less tea. So far this year, tea = 12 and yoga = 3. Not so good really.
 
Which book have you read in the last year that made you think “Damn, I wish I’d written that?”
That isn’t normally my first thought upon finishing a really good book, unless it’s a New York Times best seller. However, I really, really loved Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow by Jessica Day George. It obviously stemmed from a place of love and academic familiarity with Nordic fairy stories. The prose was beautifully lyrical and it was a genuine pleasure to read.
 
You’re about to be stranded on a desert island and you are only allowed to take 3 books with you: which do you take and why?
The Forgotten Beast of Eld by Patricia McKillip, By the Sword by Mercedes Lackey, and Taming the Forest King by Claudia J. Edwards. All for exactly the same reason: I can read them over and over again and never get tired of them.
 
Now onto the first book in the Parasol Protectorate series – Soulless. Where did you come up with the idea of vampires and werewolves prowling the streets of Victorian London?   It’s a ruthless vehicle to explain history’s greatest mystery: How did one tiny island manage to conquer an empire upon which the sun never set? I decided that the only possible answer was that England openly accepted supernatural creatures, and put them to good use, while other countries continued persecution. This gave Great Britain a leg up dealing with messy little situations like winning major foreign battles or establishing an efficient bureaucracy or convincing the world cricket is a good idea. It so very Victorian to take a stance the equivalent of, “Ah yes, vampires, jolly good chaps, excellent fashion sense, always polite, terribly charming at cards, we just won’t mention that little neck biting habit.”
 
What research did you do on London under the rule of Queen Victoria?
I had a fair bit of expertise in certain aspects of the era (fashion, food, manners, literature, theatre, upper class courting rituals, antiquities collecting) when I started but great gaps in other areas that I quickly realized needed to be filled. I spent a lot of time researching the gadgetry and technology of the day, travel and communications techniques, medical and hard science advances, not to mention other things like major wars and military strategies, configuration of army regiments, geographical lay out of London in the 1870s (shops and streets names), newspapers, and government policies. That’s the thing, you never know what information you are going to need until you need it, and inevitably the internet doesn’t have it. Since I’m writing alt history I can always disregard the facts, but I like to get it right first, before I mess with it. Most people won’t care to look up the details (or get it wrong by confusing my setting with Austen or mid-Victorian, I’m specifically 1773) but it will bother me if I don’t know the truth of the matter.
 
Which are your favourite books and authors from that era and did any of them inspire you while writing Soulless? 
I love Elisabeth Gaskell, so anything by her. I like Jane Eyre but can do without the other Bronte sisters. Of course, I lived and breathed Dickens for a very long time, still do once a year, so I have to mention him. I’m an aberrant in this, but David Copperfield is my favorite. Amelia B. Edwards’ A Thousand Miles Up the Nile was certainly an influence on Alexia’s character. As to inspirations, I’d say P.G. Wodehouse had more of an influence on my writing style than anyone from the actual Victorian era. 
 
Can you explain steampunk to us and what is it about it that fascinates you so much? 
There are two main kinds of steampunk. The first, and most common, envisions a future as the Victorians imagined it. Steampower dominates (usually at the expense of electricity) and Victorian science, morals, and manners reign supreme. The writings of H.G. Wells and Jules Verne are good examples. The alternative option, depicts a far future world that harkens back to Victorian culture, for example a bustle dress made of kevlar. There are also other temporal “punks” like clockpunk (c. 1500s) and dieselpunk (WWII). I’m fascinated by steampunk because it allows me to play with all the intriguing and appealing bits of Victorian era, while ignoring the rotten underbelly (bigotry, slavery, destitution).
 
There are second and third books coming out this year (Changeless and Blameless). Is that it for the Parasol Protectorate or is there more to come? 
The usual rules of publishing apply. All I can say is, I’m open to more from Alexia and Lord Maccon. I’m currently under contract for only the three books. I don’t leave you hanging at the end of Blameless, so please don’t worry.
 
Do you plan on writing any more series after this one? Can you give us any juicy tidbits about your plans? 
I have a Sci-fi YA I’m playing about with. Who knows if that will ever see the ink of publication? I’m enjoying Alexia’s world so much I’ve become interested in exploring both the past (specifically Alexia’s father) and the future, perhaps overseas in the Americas. I’d like to do a Turn of the Century Old West steampunk setting, polluted with my general irreverence, of course. The first is probably a stand-alone book, the second could be a series. Who knows? All are mere twinkles in the eye at the moment.
 
And finally, the quick fire round: 
Favourite colour: red
Favourite item of clothing: A vintage 1950s black Dior suit (dress with jacket) that fits like a dream (thank goodness you didn’t ask about shoes, that’d take me hours to figure out)
Favourite animal: octopus (naturally)
Favourite flavour crisps (chips): Walkers roast chicken (I liked the pork & pickle too)
Favourite holiday destination: Italy, specifically Lake Como
Favourite childhood memory: sand ball wars on the beach (kind of like the California version snow ball wars, only harder and during the summer)
Always treacle tart or do other puddings get a look in? Oh, other puddings, by all means. Particularly custard. I am a sucker of custard in all its many forms.

These are the first two books in the Parasol Protectorate series. Here is a synopsys for both:

Souless: “Alexia Tarabotti is laboring under a great many social tribulations. First, she has no soul. Second, she’s a spinster whose father is both Italian and dead. Third, she was rudely attacked by a vampire, breaking all standards of social etiquette. Where to go from there? From bad to worse apparently, for Alexia accidentally kills the vampire – and then the appalling Lord Maccon (loud, messy, gorgeous, and werewolf) is sent by Queen Victoria to investigate. With unexpected vampires appearing and expected vampires disappearing, everyone seems to believe Alexia responsible. Can she figure out what is actually happening to London’s high society? Or will her soulless ability to negate supernatural powers prove useful or just plain embarrassing? Finally, who is the real enemy, and do they have treacle tart? SOULLESS is a comedy of manners set in Victorian London: full of werewolves, vampires, dirigibles, and tea-drinking.

Changeless: “Alexia Tarabotti, now Lady Maccon, awakens in the wee hours of the mid-afternoon to find her husband, who should be decently asleep like any normal werewolf, yelling at the top of his lungs. Then he disappears – leaving her to deal with a regiment of supernatural soldiers encamped on her doorstep, a plethora of exorcised ghosts, and an angry Queen Victoria. But Alexia is armed with her trusty parasol, the latest fashions and an arsenal of biting civility. Even when her investigations take her into the backwaters of ugly waistcoats, Scotland, she is prepared: upending werewolf pack dynamics as only A soulless can. She might even find time to track down her wayward husband, if she feels like it.”

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Book Review: The Diaries of Adam and Eve by Mark Twain January 7, 2010

Filed under: Comfort Reading,Globe Trotting,Historical,Mark Twain,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 10:44 am

What a lovely little book. Twain explores what it could have been like for two very different people to discover the odd world around them and he does it with much humour. Watching both Adam and Eve play their sterotypical roles to perfection is redemed by Twain’s humour; Adam wanting to do nothing but build things and Eve wanting to do nothing but talk (much to Adam’s dismay) is both funny and lovable. Eve wants to discover everything; she names all the animal and mothers them all, she delights in every new thing she discovers.

Entry from Adam’s diary: “Perhaps I ought to remember that she is very young, a mere girl, and make allowances. She is all interest, eagerness, vivacity. The world to her is a charm, a wonder, a mystery, a joy. She can’t speak for delight when she finds a new flower; she must pet it and caress it and smell it and talk to it and pour out endearing names upon it.  And she is colour mad: brown rocks, yellow sand, gray moss, green foliage, blue sky – the pearl of the dawn, the purple shadows on the mountains, the golden islands floating in crimson seas at sunset, the palid moon moon sailing through the shredded cloud-rack, the star-jewels glittering in the wastes of space.”

How wonderful to be able to look at the world through those fresh eyes and see so much beauty in it. That part was as beautiful as it was amusing to see Adam’s confusion to why she is so in awe of everything.

When Adam comes home from a few days trip away he finds Eve with something can he is convinced is a fish until he put it in the water to see and it sank. He then decides that it must be both kangaroo and bear before finally settling on the fact that it may be one of them. As well as Cain and Abel, the couple go on to  have 7 more children (two of them named Gladys and Edwina!). Their long life togehter inc ludes their first experience of death and not understanding it, and their unconditional partnership until Eve finally goes to her grave.

Definitely recommended.

 

Book Review: The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O’Farrell January 5, 2010

Filed under: Historical,Maggie O'Farrell — The Book Whisperer @ 4:34 pm

I completely fell in love with this book in the one sitting it took me to read it (because I just couldn’t put it down).

This is the story 2 young girls, Kitty and Esme, growing up in the 20′s and 30′s in first colonial India and then in Edinbugh when their parents move back home. They are sisters who share everything and love each other very much yet one is the dutiful, polite, home-maker type and the the other is the slightly rebellious younger sister who wants to stay on at shcool rather than marry a nice boy. After a series of events (which include trying on her Mothers clothes of all things!) and a shocking incident that happens to her, Esme (the younger sister) is sent to a lunatic assylum and dissowned by her own family and where she remains for the next 61 years.

Inbetween this story told by Esme and also Kitty (whom now has altzheimers) we also flit between the past and the present with Kitty’s Grandaugter, Iris, who also narrates her story. The way O’Farrell has woven the 3 women’s voices so intricately together to reveal only parts of the story at a time is just amazing and also serves to keep you turning those pages well into the night. The story is so beautiflly told and the twists and surprises mean that you can’t possibly put it down even for a minute.

I don’t really know what I expected of this book, but I certainly wasn’t prepared to be so blown away by it.  I really do highly recommend this book and hope you enjoy as much as I did. I have read one other of O’Farrell’s (After You’d Gone) which I also enjoyed but not as much as this one.

 

 
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