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Thursday, January 30, 2020

January Books

I had a good reading month, though I still mean to read more of my print books. I've begun my reading from the 1920s.

January - 6

1. Mrs Caldicot's Cabbage War - book one in the Mrs Caldicot series
by Vernon Coleman
fiction 1993
Kindle
finished 1/2/20

As I read a line in this book, I had a flash of seeing a television production of it. I looked it up, and it starred Pauline Collins and John Alderton. I don't remember much about it, but from what I read, the film was changed some from the book. The story is about a very passive, very sheltered woman whose overbearing husband suddenly dies. Her son feels that she should go into a retirement home. She is my age (gulp!). The book is all about how the residents become empowered about their living conditions, and their lives. It is quite inspiring, with a happy ending, though there is sadness for the reader seeing how this place is run. And that there is such little regard for the inhabitants until Mrs C shows up.

2. The American Agent - book fifteen in the Maisie Dobbs series
by Jacqueline Winspear
mystery 2019
library book
Kindle
finished 1/8/20

Gosh, a lot of time has passed since we readers first met her in 2003. I so enjoy these books and the characters. One of the very great pleasures of my reading life.

3. The Nine of Us
 Growing Up Kennedy
by Jean Kennedy Smith
nonfiction 2016
print
finished 1/8/20

Jean Kennedy Smith is the last surviving child of Joseph and Rose Kennedy. She has written a really lovely telling of her life. Even if you've read everything about the Kennedys, she offers a new perspective. I loved this book, and am so happy she wrote it.

4. Mavis of Green Hill
by Faith Baldwin
fiction 1921
Kindle
finished 1/13/20

My first book of the 1920s, and such a joy it was. This wasn't about flappers and gin, but about a young woman who was bedridden from a train accident a dozen years before. She begins a correspondence with a young poet, and rather falls in love with him through his poems. She is a romantic soul who doesn't have a lot to amuse her in the life she leads. A new doctor comes into her life who suggests new treatments, and suddenly her whole life changes. One of the treats of the book is seeing Cuba in those days.

5. Brooklyn Legacies - book five in the Erica Donato series
by Triss Stein
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 1/16/20

I do so enjoy this series. The reader learns something new about Brooklyn in each book. This one focused on the tensions of development between the Jehovah's Witness church and an historical home. The only negative for me is that I got annoyed at the main character's little criticisms of older times, while she is an historian!

6. The Cask
by Freeman Wills Crofts
mystery 1920
Kindle
finished 1/30/20

I've never read anything quite like this 100-year-old book. It is the ultimate police procedural, with the emphasis on procedure. It was almost like reading a police report, and then later a lawyer's report.

These policemen are mostly all men, except for a short time when three women do some work. They don't have families or girlfriends. They have friends, and they eat out, and they go to the movies, but there is no romance. They are totally devoted to their work. This work is slow and methodical.

I actually had to look up the word cask.  It is a large, barrel-like container used for storing liquids. In this book casks also held statues, and a dead woman's body.

The people investigating went back and forth from England to France to Belgium, trying to find out who killed her. The phrase about not leaving a stone unturned absolutely applies to these men. A fascinating book with a thrilling ending.

I have mentioned before, I think, that I subscribe to a publication called Give Me That  Old-Time Detection put together three times a year by a man named Arthur Vidro. The autumn edition featured Mr. Crofts. The 1996 review ofThe Cask was written by Charles Shibuk in the British publication CADS. I am going to quote some of the review.
Crofts suffered a major breakdown of his health in 1919 and, while seeking something to distract him from a slow and tedious period of convalescence, decided to try his hand at writing a detective novel.
The Cask (1920) secured rave reviews, and was translated into many languages, and had sold the not inconsiderable total of 200,000 copied by 1940. 
With the exception of E.C. Bentley's Trent's Last Case (1913), The Cask is probably the best first detective novel in the history of the form, and with Agatha Christie's The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920), it heralded the advent of the detective story's great Golden Age. Critic Anthony Boucher, reviewing a 1967 reissue of The Cask, remarked: "Probably the most completely competent first novel in the history of crime, it is the definitive novel of alibis, timetables - and all the absorbing hairsplitting of detection..."
Ellery Queen, who considered it one of the ten most important detective novels, described it as the first great modern police novel.
The Cask is available on the Kindle, in paperback, and in hardcover. Not bad for a century-old book! Well worth all the praise. I was completely immersed and fascinated.

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Today's picture/napping house



Did you ever read The Napping House by Audrey and Don Wood? Wonderful children's book.

Monday, January 20, 2020

Today's video - Nina Simone / Why? (The King of Love is Dead)

Written by her bassist, Gene Taylor, this is Nina Simone singing.

These words were written by the person who posted the video, Baye Kambul:

Recorded on April 7, 1968, live three days after the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. and performed at the Westbury Music Fair. Nina Simone dedicated her performance to King's memory. The song was written by her bass player, Gene Taylor. An edited version of this performance appears on Simone's album, Nuff Said (1968). I felt the unedited version captures the true emotional energy of the period surrounding Simone's performance.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

It's (almost) midnight and the kitties are sleeping

Do you remember Letterman singing this song?



Well, we got our kitties today, and it was 11:30 when I took these pictures. That's Gemma on the couch, and Maisy on the floor. They have been wild as sin! Play, play, play and then fall down asleep. I had forgotten the utter joy of kittens. More, and better, pictures to come.



Sunday, January 12, 2020

Quotes du jour / Rudyard Kipling and T.S. Eliot

These two quotes are from this year's Susan Branch calendar - A Year in the English Countryside. The Kipling is on the cover, and the Eliot on the January page.


Friday, January 10, 2020

British Isles Friday - The Queen and the future Kings

I am finally putting up a post for British Isles Friday, a weekly event which may be found here. It is rather the perfect thing for me who reads mostly British books, and watches pretty much only British television, and follows many of the Royals on Instagram! In fact my first entry for this weekly event is a photograph I saw on Instagram. You may read more about it in The Guardian here.


I found it such a touching photo. That dear little boy. He has such presence already. It seems like a minute ago his father was his age. The generations match my own family. Tom's mother is almost the Queen's age. Charles and I were both born in 1948. William was born a month before Margaret, and George was born five months before Hazel.

If you are interested, you may read about the succession to the British throne here.



Thursday, January 9, 2020

Beginning my posts about the 1920s with some photos of real 20s people

These were in my mother's photo album. Happily she dated them, so I know they are from the 1920s. She grew up on a farm, and went to school in the next town. This was a small place in northern New Hampshire, far away from the cities, but these girls look quite as fashionable as others I've seen in pictures from those years.

Marcel. Is that what it was called when their hair had those folds in it? Yes, I just looked it up!


This is the only one from the 20s that had my mother in it - a brother beside her.


And another brother (there were ten kids)


One of her sisters


 Girl friends







And the teachers! They don't look much older than teenagers themselves.


And life on the farm (my mother boarded with someone in town during her high school years)

Her father


Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Today's video - Love Me/ Elvis

I know I've mentioned my mother here on the blog, and put up pictures, but I'm quite sure I've not told you this story. When I was 25, Tom and I sat in the waiting room while my mother was having her gall bladder out. The doctor came in and told us that they found pancreatic cancer, and she had 2-6 months to live. This was March 18, 1973, and she died exactly a month later. I really can't remember that month at all, only that it was awful. But there was one bright light, one hour or so when I was able to completely immerse myself in something else, and that was the televised version of Aloha From Hawaii. I took the phone off the hook, and Tom and I just watched. We are both huge Elvis fans, and watching him now I still feel there will never be anyone to top him.

On what would have been his 85th birthday, here is one of my favorites from the show.

Friday, January 3, 2020

Will our 20s be roaring?

This is 13-year-old me on March 17, 1961 dressed for a roaring 20s dance. I remember there was a woman in town who had an attic full of old clothes, and I went to her house and chose the outfit.

In that year, 1920 was only 41 years ago. 41 years ago now was 1979. To most of my readers, I would guess, that doesn't seem that long back.

I found myself thinking about this, and thinking about the fact that the twenties were still a part of living history when I was a girl.

I decided that I wanted to learn more about that decade. I've gathered the books I own that were written then, or are about people who lived during that time. I want to buy a nonfiction book about the 1920s. And I've bought Clouds of Witness by Dorothy L. Sayers. I'm not planning to read exclusively about this time period, but I want to read a fair amount to bring myself back to those years.

Here are the books I have on my shelves. I have read some of them. The Great Gatsby and The Sun Also Rises are two of my all-time favorite books, as well as A Moveable Feast.




Hadley has come out in a new edition and with a new name - Paris Without End. It was published around the same time as the fictional, The Paris Wife. I've had my Hadley for years and I so look forward to reading it. The cover has Hemingway's famous, heartbreaking words.


Hadley is buried in New Hampshire, only about 60 miles from me, and I hope to visit her grave, and post pictures when I write about the book!

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Quote du jour/Fanny Fern

The cream of enjoyment in this life is always impromptu. The chance walk; the unexpected visit; the unpremeditated journey; the unsought conversation or acquaintance.

Fanny Fern - more about her here
1811-1872

I have this quote in my email quotes folder. I read it first in a Yahoo group I used to be part of.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Books Read in 2020

January - 6

1. Mrs Caldicot's Cabbage War - book one in the Mrs Caldicot series
by Vernon Coleman
fiction 1993
Kindle
finished 1/2/20

2. The American Agent - book fifteen in the Maisie Dobbs series
by Jacqueline Winspear
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 1/8/20

3. The Nine of Us
 Growing Up Kennedy
by Jean Kennedy Smith
nonfiction 2016
print
finished 1/8/20

4. Mavis of Green Hill
by Faith Baldwin
fiction 1921
Kindle
finished 1/13/20

5. Brooklyn Legacies - book five in the Erica Donato series
by Triss Stein
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 1/16/20

6. The Cask
by Freeman Wills Crofts
mystery 1920
Kindle
finished 1/30/20

February - 4

7. Overdue - book two in the Village Library series
by Elizabeth Spann Craig
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 2/6/20

8. The Man of Property - book one in The Forsyte Saga
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1906
Kindle
finished 2/20/20

9. Bread and Jam for Frances
by Russell Hoban
Illustrated by Lillian Hoban
children's fiction 1986
print
finished 2/21/20

Indian Summer of a Forsyte - an interlude between The Man of Property and In Chancery
Now might be called 1.5 in a series
55 pages long
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1918
Kindle
finished 2/23/20

10. Lassie Shows the Way
by Monica Hill
pictures by Lee Ames
children's fiction 1956
print
my childhood Golden Book
finished 2/25/20

March - 4

11. In Chancery - book two in the Forsyte Saga
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1920
Kindle
finished 3/1/20

12. To Let - book three in the Forsyte Saga
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1921
Kindle
finished 3/11/20

13. The White Monkey - book one in the Forsyte Saga: A Modern Comedy
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1924
Kindle
finished mid-March (didn't jot it down)

A Silent Wooing - an interlude between The White Monkey and The Silver Spoon
Very short, but important to the story. Jon's life in America.
Also on the Kindle, and probably published the same year as The White
Monkey

14. The Silver Spoon - book two in the Forsyte Saga: A Modern Comedy
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1926
Kindle
finished 3/31/20

Passers By - an interlude between The Silver Spoon and Swan Song

April - 7

15. Hadley - the hardcover version published 1992
Paris Without End - The True Story of Hemingway's First Wife - the paperback edition published 2011
I read both books. I began with Hadley but there was so much underlining (a used book) that I was distracted, so I bought the paperback version, and read most of the book that way.
by Gioia Diliberto
nonfiction 1992
print
finished 4/4/20

16. Swan Song - book three in the Forsyte Saga: A Modern Comedy
by John Galsworthy
fiction 1928
Kindle
finished 4/10/20

17. I Really Like Slop, I Am Invited To A Party, and We Are In A Book
by Mo Willems
children's fiction  various publication dates
print - read to us by Hazel
and I Am Invited To A Party read to us by Campbell via Facetime on an earlier date
finished 4/14/20

18. Anchored Inn - book ten in the Gray Whale Inn mysteries
by Karen MacInerney
mystery 2020
Kindle
finished 4/16/20

19. Silent Bud Deadly - book two in the English Cottage Garden mysteries
by H.Y. Hanna
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 4/20/20

20. Through the Kitchen Window
by Susan Hill
nonfiction 1984
print
finished 4/14/20

21. Doom and Bloom - book three in the English Cottage Garden mysteries
by H.Y. Hanna
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 4/25/20

May - 4

22. A Secret Garden
by Katie Fforde
fiction 2017
Kindle
finished 5/3/20

23. Through the Garden Gate
by Susan Hill
nonfiction 1986
print
finished 5/6/20

24. The Garden of Lamentations - book 17 in the Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James
series
by Deborah Crombie
mystery 2017
Kindle
finished 5/9/20

25. A Bitter Feast - book 18 in the Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James series
by Deborah Crombie
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 5/15/20

June - 4

26. All Creatures Great and Small
by James Herriot
nonfiction 1972
Kindle
finished 6/4/20

27. All Things Bright and Beautiful
by James Herriot
nonfiction 1974
Kindle
finished 6/18/20

28. The Word Is Murder - book 1 in the Hawthorne series
by Anthony Horowitz
mystery 2017
print
finished 6/27/20

29. All Things Wise and Wonderful
by James Herriot
nonfiction 1977
Kindle
finished 6/29/20

July - 9

30. Redhead By The Side Of The Road
by Anne Tyler
fiction 2020
Kindle
finished 7/2/20

31. The Sentence is Death - book 2 in the Hawthorne series
by Anthony Horowitz
mystery 2018
print
finished 7/5/20
I stopped part way through and reread The Word Is Murder, and then
came back to this. Even after just a couple years, I couldn't quite remember
events that Horowitz referred to in this book.

32. Happily Ever After & Everything In Between
by Debbie Tung
graphic nonfiction 2020
print
finished 7/5/20

33. A Killer Ending - book 1 in the Snug Harbor mysteries
by Karen MacInerney
mystery 2020
Kindle
finished 7/8/20

34. The Lord God Made Them All
by James Herriot
nonfiction 1981
Kindle
finished 7/17/20

35. My Life from Scratch
A Sweet Journey Of Starting Over, One Cake At A Tim
by Gesine Bullock-Prado
nonfiction 2009
print
finished 7/19/20

36. The Widow's Cruise - book 13 in the Nigel Strangeways series
by Nicholas Blake (pen name for Cecil Day Lewis)
mystery 1959
Kindle
finished 7/23/20

37. Every Living Thing
by James Herriot
nonfiction 1992
Kindle
finished 7/26/20

38. Buried in a Bog - book 1 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connoly
mystery 2013
Kindle
finished 7/29/20

August - 8

39. Scandal in Skibbereen - book 2 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connoly
mystery 2014
Kindle
finished 8/2/20

40. An Early Wake - book 3 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connolly
mystery 2015
Kindle
finished 8/5/20

41. A Turn for the Bad - book 4 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connolly
mystery 2016
Kindle
finished 8/9/20

42. The Other Side of the Dales
by Gervase Phinn
nonfiction 1998
print
finished 8/10/20

43. Cruel Winter - book 5 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connolly
mystery 2017
Kindle
finished 8/12/20

44. Many A Twist - book 6 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connolly
mystery 2018
Kindle 
finished 8/15/20

45. The Lost Traveller - book 7 in the County Cork mystery series
by Sheila Connolly
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 8/21/20

46. Fatal Roots - book 8 (and the last because the author died) in the County Cork series
by Sheila Connolly
mystery 2020
Kindle
finished 8/28/20

September - 5

47. Rough Time in Nuala - book 7 in the Inspector de Silva mysteries
by Harriet Steel
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 9/7/20

48. Taken in Nuala - book 8 in the Inspector de Silva mysteries
by Harriet Steel
mystery 2020
Kindle
finished 9/10/20

49. Borrowed Time - book 3 in the Village Library Mysteries
by Elizabeth Spann Craig
mystery 2020
Kindle
finished 9/14/20

50. Haunting in the Hallway - book 5 in The Inn at Holiday Bay series
by Kathi Daley
mystery 2019
Kindle
finished 9/17/20

51. The Murder of Cecily Thane - book 1 in the Spike Tracy series 
by Harriette Ashbrook
mystery 1930
Kindle
finished 9/24/20

October - 5

52. Fell Murder - book 25 in the Robert Macdonald series
by E.C.R. Lorac
mystery 1944
Kindle
finished 10/1/20

53. Bats in the Belfry - book 12 in the Robert Macdonald series
by E.C.R Lorac
mystery 1937
Kindle 
finished 10/8/20
After the wonder that is Fell Murder, this was a great disappointment. I was totally confused with the characters, and what is worse, I found the book dull.

54. Death Came Softly - book 23 in the Robert Macdonald series
by E.C.R Lorac
mystery 1943
Kindle
finished 10/18/20

55. Electric Eden
Unearthing Britain's Visionary Music
by Rob Young
nonfiction 2010
print
finished 10/22/20 about 3 1/2 hours before sun went into Scorpio
took 2 months and 12 days to read!

56. Murder in the Mill-Race (aka Speak Justly of the Dead)- book 37 in the Robert Macdonald series
by E.C.R Lorac
mystery 1952
Kindle
finished 10/29/20

November - 5

57. Grandmothers
by Salley Vickers
fiction 2019
print
finished 11/8/20

58. Rope's End Rogue's End - book 22 in the Robert Macdonald series
by E.C.R Lorac
mystery 1942
Kindle
finished 11/9/20

by Susan Branch
graphic nonfiction 2020
print
finished 11/11/20

60. The Murder of Steven Kester - book 2 in the Spike Tracy series
by Harriette Ashbrook
mystery 1931
Kindle
finished 11/23/20

61. An English Murder (aka The Christmas Murder)
by Cyril Hare
mystery 1951
Kindle
finished 11/26/20

December - 9

62. The Murder of Sigurd Sharon - book 3 in the Spike Tracy series
by Harriette Ashbrook
mystery 1933
Kindle
finished 12/1/20

63. All Aboard for Christmas
by Christopher Jennison
nonfiction 2004
print
finished 12/4/20

64. A Most Immoral Murder - book 4 in the Spike Tracy series
by Harriette Ashbrook
mystery 1935
Kindle
finished 12/5/20

65. Murder Makes Murder - book 5 in the Spike Tracy series
by Harriette Ashbrook
mystery 1937
Kindle
finished 12/11/20

66. Murder Comes Back - book 6 in the Spike Tracy series
by Harriette Ashbrook
mystery 1940
Kindle 
finished 12/17/20

67. Under an English Heaven - book 1 in the Ellie Kent series
by Alice K. Boatwright
mystery 2014
Kindle
finished 12/22/20

68. What Child is This? - book 2 in the Ellie Kent series
by Alice K. Boatwright
mystery 2017
Kindle
finished 12/24//20

69. Christmas is Murder - book 1 in the Rex Graves mysteries
by C.S. Challinor
mystery 2008
Kindle
reread
finished 12/29/20

70. Another Little Christmas Murder
by Lorna Nicholl Morgan
mystery 1947
print
finished 12/30/20

Tom's 2020 Reads

7 in all

February - 1


1. Slow Horses - book one in the Slough House series
by Mick Herron
mystery 2010
print
finished 2/9/20

March - 1

2. Magpie Murders
by Anthony Horowitz
mystery 2016
print
finished 3/9/20

May - 1

3. Seeds of Change
Six Plants That Transformed Mankind
by Henry Hobhouse
nonfiction 1985 - revised in 1986, 1992, 1999, 2005
print
finished 5/16/20

June - 1

4. The Boy From The Woods
by Harlan Coben
fiction 2020
print (Christmas present from Margaret)
finished 6/1/20

August - 1

5. The Word is Murder - book one in the Detective Daniel Hawthorne series
by Anthony Horowitz
mystery 2017
print
finished 8/12/20

September - 1

6. The Sentence is Death - book two in the Detective Daniel Hawthorne series
by Anthony Horowitz
mystery 2018
print
finished 9/20/20

October - 1

7. The Innocent
by Harlan Coben
mystery 2005
print (Margaret's book)
finished 10/4/20