Life After Life by Kate Atkinson
In February, 1910, in the middle of a snowstorm, Ursula Todd is born. The umbilical cord is wrapped around her neck and she is stillborn. In February, 1910, in the middle of a snowstorm, Ursula Todd is born. The umbilical cord is wrapped around her neck, but the doctor has just arrived so is able to save her and she lives--until she dies. In February, 1910, in the middle of a snowstorm, Ursula Todd is born. She lives a little longer before she dies. In February, 1910, in the middle of a snowstorm...
With this beginning, I embarked on the journey that is Life After Life, written by the woman who is probably my favorite contemporary author, Kate Atkinson. I've never read a book of hers that I didn't love and his one is no exception. I often feel my mind expanding and experiencing small explosions when I read her books--sometimes I even get goosebumps. This was the case with this book as well. I knew the basic premise of the book--that Ursula Todd lives many different lives. As I commented to Bill halfway through the book, I was expecting a different structure--one that's more straightforward--with succeeding sections describing the next life of Ursula Todd. This was silly of me because it's Kate Atkinson! Of course it's not going to be straightforward and linear! No, we jump around forwards and backwards in time as various scenarios play out. Things happen in one lifetime that are avoided in another by a chance decision or unexplained feeling. Then she takes us back to the beginning and we see Ursula going down a different path. I guess you can tell that I loved this book. I'll be thinking about it for a long time. I'm thrilled that I have more of her books to discover and that she has a new one coming out in September, which is shaping up to be a very good publishing month indeed!
Eight Detectives by Alex Pavesi (personal copy)
In 1937, mathematician Grant McAllister wrote an academic paper on the mathematical possibilities of mystery story structures. He was interested in what features were required to make a story a mystery story, what the permutations were, and how many possibilities there were. He then constructed a book of 7 stories that illustrated his theory. Then he disappeared from public life. Decades later, Julia, an editor, has tracked him down to talk to him about the book which is going to be republished. The chapters in this book alternate between the stories and the conversations between Grant and Julia. I recently picked this book up at a charity shop. It will be re-donated. It was OK in parts. It was an interesting structure and an original idea. The author has a PhD in mathematics. It started off pretty well for me. I though there was something a bit off about the short stories although I couldn't quite put my finger on what it was. They became darker and more gruesome as the book went on though. Every chapter involving the conversations between author and editor began with the editor repeating the last lines of the previous story. I guess in the end I didn't think the book was particularly well written and by the time the big reveals came at the end, I no longer cared. I can't really recommend this one.
Murder at Mount Fuji by Shizuko Natsuki, translated by Robert Rohmer (borrowed from the library)
Jane is travelling to a wealthy neighborhood on the slopes of Mt Fuji to stay with her friend's family for the New Year festivities. There's a lot of snow, but she arrives safely. Things go downhill from there. Jane is doing a study abroad year and needs some extra income, so she is tutor to Chiyo, who is studying English literature and needs help with her final paper, which must be written in English. The visit will be a working one. Chiyo's family has several members and much tension. It's a wealthy family and there's some tension about the family business as well as interpersonally. It's not much a a surprise when the patriarch is killed on the night Jane arrives, but it is surprising that Chiyo says she did it. The cover-up begins and Jane participates. The police begin their investigation and plot ensues. This author has been described as the Japanese Agatha Christie, which is why I requested the book. I've tried a couple of other classic Japanese mysteries and didn't get very far before deciding they weren't for me. This one wasn't really for me either, but I did finish it. I found it very repetitive and the dialogue felt stilted. The latter may have worked well in Japanese or it could be a translation issue. But there were several times in the book where someone basically gave a synopsis of where the case stood at that point, covering the same ground numerous times. The solution was credible. The ending was rather abrupt. If you like Japanese mysteries, by all means, give this one a try, otherwise I'd give it a miss. Not terrible, but there are other books to spend time with.
Second Fiddle by Mary Wesley (personal copy)
This was another charity shop purchase and it was another book that I thought was OK. Claud has come home to his mother's house in the country having broken up with his girlfriend and failed his accountancy exam. He's decided he's going to write a novel. At a charity concert with his mother, he meets Laura and becomes slightly obsessed. Laura decides she'll help him cope with life so he can write his novel. She's 20 years older than him and has a mysterious background. Her mother lives in the area in an old rectory. An uncle lives there too. There's another family that Laura grew up with and there are rumors about who her father is/was. Laura spends a great deal of her time in London, where her business is located and she has a flat. And so the story follows Claud and Laura as they go about their lives. There are other people as well. There were funny bits in this story, but as it progressed, it got darker and eventually we learn why Laura behaves as she does. There's not a lot of plot in the story and there were some things I found off-putting. The book was published in the late 1980s, which I am old enough to remember and it did feel of its time. I've read a couple of other Mary Wesley novels and I have to say this was the one I liked the least. Had it been longer, I might not have finished it. I have her most well-known novel and a biography of her, both picked up at charity shops, so we'll see how they are at some point.
The New House by Lettice Cooper (borrowed from the library)
Originally published in 1936, this is a book about change--societal, cultural, personal change. It's about how people deal with change, both those who embrace it and those who resist it. It's about how some things are passed down in families, sometimes in surprising ways. It's about the often difficult task of determining how much you owe to others and how much to yourself. It's about fining the courage to be yourself even when familial and cultural expectations try to keep you in a box. It's about expectations met and unmet. It's a book that surprised me as there were parts of it that could have been describing my own life, both as a child and an adult, even though the book was published a few decades before I was born and is set in England and I was in the US.
This gem of a book is set in one day--moving day for the Powell's. Mother Natalie and daughter Rhoda are moving out of the home Rhoda has lived in her entire life. At 33, she's not keen on this move at all. Neither is Natalie--and Natalie has been spoiled her entire life, so she's used to getting what she wants. Not this time, though, no matter how much she whines, cajoles and feels put upon and victimized. There's no choice really, since Tom, the husband and father, has recently died and the money to keep up a large house and grounds simply isn't there. Tom was the head of a steel company. That position now belongs to son Maurice. The business wasn't doing very well even when Tom was alive due to changes in the culture, which made it harder for small businesses to compete. Maurice is married to Evelyn, but they've drifted apart. Their daughter, Tatty, who is only three, is caught in the middle. Delia, the youngest, moved away from home a while ago and works for a lab. She's going to marry Jim, a scientist, and they're going to start their own lab. She wants to help her sister escape from a life of servitude with their mother. Delia comes from London to help with the move. Maurice and Evelyn are involved. Natalie's sister, Ellen, who is the model for what Rhoda does not want to become, also helps. The story takes place on one day, but we get background history as we go from one character to another, reading their thoughts and memories as the day progresses. I found this aspect of the book fascinating, although the main tension in the book is the question of what Rhoda will decide when Delia suggests that she move to London and take her place at the lab when she leaves to marry and work with Jim. Rhoda goes back and forth in her mind about whether she can, whether she wants to, or whether she'll be 'allowed' to. At one point, she thinks about a time from her childhood when the three siblings were at a frozen pond learning to ice skate. Maurice and Rhoda were ever so careful. Delia raced out onto the ice. Rhoda remembers that while she and Maurice were very slow and afraid to fall, Delia fell several times, but she learned to skate before either of them. I won't divulge what Rhoda decided here. I will say that I loved this book and will be looking for more by this author in future. The edition I read is a republication by Persephone Books (I LOVE Persephone Books!) and contains a preface by Jilly Cooper, herself an author. Lettice Cooper was Jilly Cooper's husband's aunt and it was quite interesting to read about Lettice Cooper's work and what the influences on it were. It's an excellent book all around.
Tyler's Row by Miss Read (BorrowBox e-audiobook)
Back when we first got to Ireland, I blogged about a book I'd been given by the librarian, who thought I might like it. It was by Alice Taylor, who writes mostly about Irish village life. The librarian said Taylor reminded her of her own childhood in a different part of Ireland. I loved the book, read it in an evening, and went back the next day to check out everything they had by Taylor. The librarian was thrilled. A retired English professor I knew back in the US suggested that if I liked Alice Taylor, I might like Miss Read--she did. Turns out I did too. I read what was available at the time. In the last several years, BorrowBox has added several Miss Read titles and I listened to them as they appeared, including a very enjoyable memoir. They've recently added more that I haven't read or listened to, this being one of them. As always, it was a great read/listen. These are very charming sorts of books, narrated by the village schoolteacher, Miss Read, who describes all of the village activities both in the school and beyond. This book does involve the school, but that's not the primary focus. Instead, most of the action (such as it is) takes place in Tyler's Row, a small compound of four cottages. When the middle two go up for sale, a couple from a nearby town consider buying all four. But there's a problem--the two tenants at either end. They dislike one another intensely and they cannot be removed from the cottages. Plot ensues from there. I thoroughly enjoyed this listen, sitting in bed, drinking tea, and stitching while I did so. There are some serious issues addressed within the book, but mostly it's a light-hearted and very pleasant book, narrated by Gwen Watford who played Dolly Bantry in the Joan Hickson Miss Marple series years ago. I kept picturing Dolly Bantry as I listened. She does an excellent job as a reader of these books and I enjoy her and the books very much.
So the first half of March is a wrap. I've got a growing pile of books here and another one to pick up at the library this week. I'll have no trouble finding reading material to see me through the rest of March. Hope it's the same for you!















