Category Archives: Fiction – Light

The Discovery of Witches – Deborah Harkness


I find it quite hard to categorize this book. On the one hand it is full of interesting historical detail and on the other it descends into a ‘mills and boon’ style romance. Having said that I found it a compelling read and I read it very quickly and I’m sure I will read the next installment.

Here is the blurb …

When historian Diana Bishop opens a bewitched alchemical manuscript in Oxford’s Bodleian Library it represents an unwelcome intrusion of magic into her carefully ordinary life. Though descended from a long line of witches, she is determined to remain untouched by her family’s legacy. She banishes the manuscript to the stacks, but Diana finds it impossible to hold the world of magic at bay any longer.
For witches are not the only otherworldly creatures living alongside humans. There are also creative, destructive daemons and long-lived vampires who become interested in the witch’s discovery. They believe that the manuscript contains important clues about the past and the future, and want to know how Diana Bishop has been able to get her hands on the elusive volume.
Chief among the creatures who gather around Diana is vampire Matthew Clairmont, a geneticist with a passion for Darwin. Together, Diana and Matthew embark on a journey to understand the manuscript’s secrets. But the relationship that develops between the ages-old vampire and the spellbound witch threatens to unravel the fragile peace that has long existed between creatures and humans—and will certainly transform Diana’s world as well.

This book is a sophisticated version of ‘Twilight‘ – Twilight for grownups perhaps?

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The Piano Tuner – Daniel Mason


This novel has been languishing in my pile for quite some time – at least 12 months. I am not sure why I didn’t read it earlier. I think it might be the browness of the cover.

Here is the blurb …

On a misty London afternoon in 1886, piano tuner Edgar Drake receives a strange request from the War Office: he must leave his wife, and his quiet life in London, to travel to the jungles of Burma to tune a rare Erard grand piano. The piano belongs to Surgeon-Major Anthony Carroll, an enigmatic British officer, whose success at making peace in the war-torn Shan States is legendary, but whose unorthodox methods have begun to attract suspicion. So begins the journey of the soft-spoken Edgar across Europe, the Red Sea, India, Burma, nd at last into the remote highlands of the Shan States. En route he is entranced by the Doctor’s letters and by the shifting cast of tale-spinners, soldiers and thieves who cross his path. As his captivation grows, however, so do his questions: about the Doctor’s true motives, about an enchanting and elusive woman who travels with him into the jungle, about why he came. And, ultimately, whether he will ever be able to return home unchanged to the woman who awaits him there… Sensuous and lyrical, rich with passion and adventure, The Piano Tuner is a hypnotic tale of myth, romance and self-discovery. It is an unforgettable and haunting novel.

This is a slow moving novel – a bit like the journey to Burma itself. It is full of wonderfully evocative descriptions of scenery, food and smells. It feels hot, sticky and totally foreign.

This novel is also a bit of a mystery. Why a piano in the jungle? What exactly is Anthony Carroll up to?

Edgar, our piano tuner, is quite an innocent or at least single-minded and completely ignorant of the shifting political sands around him. Burma is a country at war – torn form within by rival tribes and fought over by the English, French and Russians who are all attempting to increase their empires.

This is a beautifully written novel (although I found the final third a bit slow going). All of the characters are convincing, but the best part is the world created by Mason – it feels very tangible.

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Below the Styx – Michael Meehan

This month we planned to read Ulysses but halfway through the month we revolted and chose to read Below the Styx instead. Here is the description from the  publisher…

Martin Frobisher has been beating close family members about the head with an epergne. Frobisher, successful publisher and community leader, is in the City Remand Centre, awaiting trial for murder. What shadow has fallen across the comfortable lives of Frobisher, his ambitious wife Coralie and her flaky sister Madeleine? What has led a cultivated and reflective man, known to shoo spiders and earwigs out of the harm’s way, to such reckless acts of violence?
With the prospect of imprisonment for the Term of his Natural Life, can Frobisher and his research assistant Petra find guidance in the life and fortunes of a brilliant young Englishman, marooned in Australia, ‘the land of vulgarity and mob rule’ more than a century earlier, and obsessed with the darker moments in the nation’s history? Why does Frobisher appear to care more, in the end, about the life of Marcus Clarke than he does about his own

This novel is written from Martin’s point of view and the lengths he takes to justify his actions are hilarious – ultimately he was driven to it for various different reasons, but mostly because of a fundamental incompatibility of philosophy. Interspersed in his reminisces about life with Coralie are his thoughts on Marcus Clark – a 19th century Australian writer – in fact he seems to identify with Marcus Clark I even wonder if he thinks he is Marcus Clark in a later life.

This novel is an easy read, full of interesting historical details. I think I will definitely chase down his other novels.

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Housebound- Winifred Peck

This novel is set during World War Two and it follows the adventures of a ‘lady’ trying to do the house work herself. She tries to maintain the same standard (to please her husband) as when she had two maids – there is many a comic mishap. Like when she is trying to set the breakfast table (which requires so many things) and the coffee boils over the bacon and toast.

Here is the Persephone (well a bit of it)  information …

Penelope Fitzgerald wrote: ‘If I could have back one of the many Winifred Peck titles I once possessed I would choose House-Bound. The story never moves out of middle-class Edinburgh; the satire on genteel living, though, is always kept in relation to the vast severance and waste of the war beyond. The book opens with a grand comic sweep as the ladies come empty-handed away from the registry office where they have learned that they can no longer be “suited” and in future will have to manage their own unmanageable homes. There are coal fires, kitchen ranges and intractable husbands; Rose is not quite sure whether you need soap to wash potatoes. Her struggle continues on several fronts, but not always in terms of comedy. To be house-bound is to be “tethered to a collection of all the extinct memories… with which they had grown up… how are we all to get out?” I remember it as a novel by a romantic who was as sharp as a needle, too sharp to deceive herself.’

While learning how to maintain a house, Rose thinks about what being house-bound means in a literal and figurative sense. She feels that her husband and her difficult daughter are both house-bound emotionally. The daughter, Flora, is quite a challenge. A melodrama queen whose version of her childhood has her parents (mother and step-father) plotting to harm her at every opportunity. There is a lovely American doctor who first steps in to help Rose with her house keeping dilemma’s and then coincidently Flora is his patient. This novel is set during the war and inevitably there is tragedy, but it ends with hope.

This novel is very much of it’s time and place and probably won’t appeal to a general audience, but I’m glad I’ve read it. I enjoyed Rose’s inner-monologue as she grappled with various house-hold duties.

Here are some other reviews …

http://bookssnob.wordpress.com/2010/05/07/house-bound-by-winifred-peck/

http://dovegreyreader.typepad.com/dovegreyreader_scribbles/2007/04/occasionally_i_.html

http://booksandcooks.blogspot.com/2008/06/house-bound.html

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The Priory – Dorothy Whipple

Above is an image of the end paper in the Persephone edition

This is a novel very much of it’s time – 1930s England. It’s about women and education and the role of women of a particular class at a particular time. None of the women have been educated for anything but marriage and if they doesn’t happen or the marriage fails then they are left floundering without any way of earning their keep. Without marriage their lives are doomed to girlish silliness and boredom.

Here is the description from Persephone

The setting for this the third novel  is Saunby Priory, a large house somewhere in England which has seen better times. We are shown the two Marwood girls, who are nearly grown-up, their father, the widower Major Marwood, and their aunt; then, as soon as their lives have been described, the Major proposes marriage to a woman much younger than himself – and many changes begin. ‘The Priory is the kind of book I really enjoy,’ wrote Salley Vickers in the Spectator, ‘funny, acutely observed, written in clear, melodious but unostentatious prose, it deserves renewed recognition as a minor classic. Whipple is not quite Jane Austen class but she understands as well as Austen the enormous effects of apparently minor social adjustments…Christine is a true heroine: vulnerable, valiant, appealing, and the portrait of her selfless maternal preoccupation, done without sentiment and utterly credible, is one of the best I have ever come across. The final triumph of love over adversity is described with a benevolent panache which left me feeling heartened about human nature… A delightful, well-written and clever book.’

The lives of several women are portrayed in this novel. The two sisters; Christine and Penelope, Anthea, the unmarried women (called sheep by the sisters), Aunt Victoria (the sisters’ aunt) and the servants (Bertha and Bessie).

Upper class women are trained at home (unlike the sons who attend school and then university). They are expected to marry and if they don’t then they remain at home – no chance of a career or independence.

Victoria has never married and she is expected to keep house for her brother after his first wife dies. In his opinion she does this poorly and he is compelled to marry Anthea in an effort to have his house run smoothly. Victoria is not interested in the house she simply wants to paint (badly it would seem). Anthea is in love with the Major but is quickly disillusioned and transfers all of her attention to her pregnancy and then her children (children are the great advantage of marriage it gives the women something on which to focus not mention things to do).

Christine falls in love and marries a dashing young man – he turns out to be too dashing and they separate. At this stage they have a child. Christine returns home, but there isn’t the money to maintain her. She must find a job, but she is qualified for nothing. In the end she finds a job in a beauty salon (because she is a ‘lady’).

Penelope marries simply to escape the family home. She is determined that she will not have children and makes this a condition of her marriage. Consequently she is bored and restless.

None of the women have much control of their lives – the best they can hope for is to be pampered.

From a social history point of view this novel is fascinating. The domestic routine, the servants and the day to day activities of people without the need of employment.

I found it a bit long winded particularly the section where Christine was working in London, but it’s an easy read and I encourage anyone interested in domestic fiction to read it.

Here are some other reviews …

http://karensbooksandchocolate.blogspot.com/2010/12/priory-by-dorothy-whipple.html

http://agirlwalksintoabookstore.blogspot.com/2009/04/review-priory-by-dorothy-whipple.html

http://abookaweek.blogspot.com/2008/05/priory-by-dorothy-whipple.html

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The Tapestry of Love – Rosy Thornton

I bought this based on a recommendation by Cornflower and I bought it from here (I love the free-shipping). I did struggle a bit to get it finished  and I wasn’t that taken with the romance thread of this story. I did like the idea of moving to France and starting a needlework business.

Here’s the blurb …

A rural idyll: that’s what Catherine is seeking when she sells her house in England and movies to a tiny hamlet in the Cevennes mountains. With her divorce in the past and her children grown, she is free ti make a new start, and to set up business as a seamstress. But this is a harsh and lonely place when you’re no longer here on holiday. There is French bureaucracy to contend with, not to mention the mountain weather, and the reserve of her neighbours, including the intriguing Patrick Castagnol. And that’s before the arrival of Catherine’s sister Bryony …

Despite finding this novel hard-going, the characters were well-written – very realistic. I loved the description of life in a small french community. It was quite unglamourous; it rained a lot in Autumn, it was hot, the French bureaucracy was complicated and circular. I guess my main issue is that I didn’t like Patrick. I didn’t find him attractive or mysterious. I didn’t care if he and Catherine managed to get together by the end of the novel or not – in fact I rather hoped not.

Having said that I think many people would enjoy reading this novel – the parent child dynamic is particularly well done (Catherine and her feelings for her mother and Catherine and her own children).

Here are some other reviews …

http://www.cornflowerbooks.co.uk/2010/07/the-boars-and-the-bees.html

http://www.birdsontheblog.co.uk/tapestry-of-love-by-rosy-thornton-a-birds-book-review/

http://bookgazing.blogspot.com/2010/10/tapestry-of-love-rosy-thornton.html

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One Day – David Nicholls

I seem to be hearing quite a bit about this book and when it was described as ‘chick lit’ for boys I thought I had to read it.

Here’s the blurb …

You can live your whole life not realising that what you’re looking for is right in front of you.

15th July 1988 Emma and Dexter meet on the night of their graduation. Tomorrow they must go their separate ways.

So where will they be on this one day next year? And the year after that?

And every year that follows?

As I graduated in 91, the era that this story was very familiar to me – mixed tape anyone? On the surface the story was very simple; girl meets boy, girl likes boy, boy doesn’t seem as enthralled with the girl.  It opens in 1988 (St Swithins day) Dexter and Emma have hooked up and spent the night in Emma’s bed. It seems this could turn into something special, but university is over and Emma is going to change the world and Dexter is going travelling.

Every year we get an update on their lives and their relationship. Emma is lost, she has a string of dead end jobs (working as a waitress in a Mexican restaurant). Dexter, on the other hand, lands on his feet and becomes a famous television personality. We read about their relationships with co-workers (usually doomed) and their on going friendship. This novel is about how a person life changes over time and how relationships evolve.

Nicholls is a witty writer and I enjoyed reading this novel immensely. I think calling it ‘chic lit’ for boys is misleading because it is at times very sad (unexpectedly so).

More reviews …

http://savidgereads.wordpress.com/2010/07/18/one-day-david-nicholls/

http://bookbath.blogspot.com/2010/07/one-day-david-nicholls.html

http://www.abc.net.au/tv/firsttuesday/s2898517.htm

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Gallery Girl – Wendy Holden

This was just a light, easy read.

Here is the blurb …

Zeb Spaw is the contemporary artist of the year, even more so after his latest work Prostheseus Bound recently sold for £20 million, but will he be able to keep the masterpieces coming, or is it all downhill from there? Alice loves working in Palladio, a traditional art gallery, and loves boyfriend David more, but with him working longer hours their relationship is reaching breaking point.
Maeve’s husband Ciaran has decided to re-launch his boy-band Boyfriend after the recent successful re-launches of Take That and Boyzone, but what about Maeve and her desire to begin painting again? Dan, a less than successful portrait painter, has moved to the country in the hope of finally getting his big break but ends up holding life classes. When Alice is catapulted into the world of contemporary art, she doesn’t know what to do with herself. And when Maeve walks into one of Dan’s art classes, there’s no telling where it will end.

Read it when you want something that requires no effort and is fun.

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Cheerful Weather for the Wedding – Julia Strachey

The above image is from the end papers from the Persephone edition.

It was a very quick read, but I don’t think my mind was in the right place. Although I admire the writing, I didn’t enjoy this novel.

Here is the blurb …

This is a very small book but a very perfect one, revealing a rich sense of humour and very great literary and dramatic skill. The situation of a girl on her wedding morning trying to stifle her doubts and dull her knowledge that she is making a frightful mistake is painful; the collection of ill-assorted guests who have gathered together on the bright and bitter March morning is as agonising  and as inappropriate as such a crisis in life itself … The most striking thing in the book is its funniness. We are not dealing here with the circus jokes of a PG Wodehouse, for the characters here are living people. The humour is profounder, for it arises out of the characters and illuminates and exhibits them to us, It is a book full of the funniness of painful situations, of the sort of humour which enables us to look back with laughter at the things which have hurt us most in life.

Here are some other reviews …

http://nonsuchbook.typepad.com/nonsuch_book/2010/05/persephone-week-cheerful-weather-for-the-wedding-by-julia-strachey.html

http://stuck-in-a-book.blogspot.com/2009/05/cheerful-weather-for-wedding.html

http://brideofthebookgod.wordpress.com/2008/05/22/cheerful-weather-for-the-wedding/

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Perfect Proposal – Katie Fforde

I’ve written before about being a Katie Fforde fan – I was disappointed with the last two novels. They just seemed a bit formulaic and I didn’t like the heroines. However, this one is a return to the Katie Fforde of old.

Here’s the blurb …

Sophie Apperly’s family has never taken her seriously. Fiercely academic, they see her more practical skills as frivolous – whilst constantly taking advantage of her. So when her best friend Milly invites her over to New York, she jumps at the chance. It’ll do her ungrateful family good to do without her for a while. What’s more, she’s on a quest – America holds the key to solving her family’s financial woes, even if they don’t deserve her help.

From the moment Sophie hits the bright lights of Manhattan she’s determined to enjoy every minute of her big adventure. So when an evening at an art gallery throws her into the path of Matilda, a spirited older lady who invites her to Connecticut for Thanksgiving, Sophie willingly accepts much to the dismay of Matilda’s grandson Luke. Undeniably attractive, but infuriatingly arrogant, he seems to doubt Sophie’s motives for befriending his grandmother. No match for the formidable Matilda, he eventually admits defeat, but first he has a proposal to make. He’ll help Sophie in her quest to save her family from financial ruin if she repays the favour. But just what does he have to do in return …?

This is a quick easy read – sometimes a bit contrived, but Katie Fforde is a guilty pleasure not improving literature. It is a romantic comedy with the focus completely on the relationship between the heroine and the hero; you know the type ‘girl meets boy, they overcome some obstacles and live happily ever after’. Having said that I enjoyed reading this novel –  it is a perfect escapist read.

Here are some other reviews …

http://preferreading.blogspot.com/2010/08/perfect-proposal-katie-fforde.html

http://chicklitreviews.com/2010/06/11/book-review-a-perfect-proposal-by-katie-fforde/

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