Books Read in June 2011
Remember how our mothers and grandmothers used to “spring-clean”? It’s not much mentioned these days, it seems. But I learned when I moved to the country and started to heat with a wood furnace, just why Grandma did it – to wash away the wood soot that ends up on everything.
Between cleaning and getting into the garden on the few non-rainy days we had this past month, I ended up spending less time reading. Here’s the eight books I managed to get through.
1. Agnes Warner and the Nursing Sisters of the Great War by Shawna M. Quinn
Agnes Warner of Saint John, New Brunswick served as a nurse in WWI in France & Belgium. She sent letters home, which her friends there bound into a small book to sell to raise funds for Warner to carry out further relief work. That booklet forms the core of this well-researched book about Agnes Warner, her work, and the role of nurses, particularly Canadian ones, in the War (that was supposed) to End All Wars.
2. Radio Shangri-La: What I Learned in Bhutan, the Happiest Kingdom on Earth by Lisa Napoli
Napoli, who works in American radio in Los Angeles, spent several months helping Bhutan’s youths to launch and refine their own radio station. You can read my review of her account here.
3. In the Shadow of the Glacier by Vicki Delaney
First in the Constable Molly Smith mystery series, set in fictional Trafalgar, British Columbia (near non-fictional Nelson). The mystery was decent and I enjoyed the Canadian setting, but the surprise ending that came out of nowhere yet was there all along, elevated this book to above average.
4. The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford
Published in 1942, this fictional account of gentry-class girls growing up in 1920s and 1930s England is wickedly funny.
5. Love in a Cold Climate by Nancy Mitford
The second in the ‘Fanny’ trilogy, this one is still funny, but a little more outrageous as the “lumping Colonial” (from Nova Scotia!) who is to inherit Hampton Court turns out to be Cedric, a swishy “Little Lord Fauntleroy” who becomes the life of 1930 London society.
6. The Go-Between by L.P. Hartley
Published in 1952 and set in the summer of 1900. The jacket says: “While visiting the country estate of a classmate, Leo becomes the charmed and innocent carrier of messages between the beautiful daughter of the house and her lover, a handsome tenant farmer. It is a secret known only by the three, the deeper meaning of which is not perceived by the youngster. Then one terrible night, a sudden and agonizing glimpse into adulthood seals forever Leo’s blighted fate.”
7. The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives by Lola Shoneyin
Set in modern-day Nigeria, in Baba Segi’s polygamous family. An interesting study of personalities, and a culture and a social situation unknown to me. The family dynamic was both foreign and familiar. The secret of the title is easy to discern, though, and seems anti-climatic when it is finally revealed to Baba Segi. The presentation of the subject matter can be a tad raunchy, which detracted from my enjoyment of the book.
8. Tabloid City: A Novel by Pete Hamill
Highly billed, this low-key thriller started out promisingly but built to several anti-climaxes. Set in NYC, a city I love to visit but don’t know as well as I’d like, it may have been more interesting to me if I could have pictured the exact locations cited as each character’s situation was documented. Some foul language, which seemed mostly unnecessary.
Links for my Canadian readers:
Agnes Warner and the Nursing Sisters of the Great War
Radio Shangri-La: What I Learned in Bhutan, the Happiest Kingdom on Earth
Love the warmth that radiates from the woodstove that heats our home, hate the soot that soils everything! Hope summer has fewer reading road blocks set up for you.
I don’t read alot of non-fiction but ‘Nursing Sisters’ sounds like one I would enjoy.
I think you would enjoy ‘Nursing Sisters” – and it’s a slim volume that reads quickly, too.
I loved Pursuit of Love when I read it, years ago, but somehow (even though it came in a 3-in-1 book) I haven’t read other Nancy Mitfords yet.
Simon, I think since Mitford’s books aren’t widely available, especially in North America, they don’t get much coverage by reviewers, either newspaper or blog. (The copy I read had to be specifically requested & was a 1952 edition that came out of the Archives at the Central branch of our County library.) There are SO many authors I that intended to read more of, but never think of!
So many books, so little time!
I really enjoyed Lisa Napoli’s book too. I love reading books that allow me to travel vicariously to places I will probably never get to see…
Me too! And Bhutan is one place I will SURELY not get to see…
Your blog is one of the most intelligent I’ve seen.
Keep up the good work.
mike
Thank you , Mike – that is high praise coming, as it does, from a guy who writes about great books. You keep up the good work, too!