books, Children's books, Series I love

Children’s Bookshelf: The Drina books

Paperback books in the Drina series
It took 20 years – but I finally have a matching set

I know exactly when I got my first Drina book – because when my mum gives people books, she always writes a message in them.  She gave me Ballet for Drina in June 1991 – when I was seven – to read while she was in hospital for an operation.  In the front she wrote that it was one of her favourite books when she was little – and I loved it as well from the moment I first read it and wanted the rest of the books in the series.  Several of the others in the series have inscriptions in them marking them as being holiday books from various trips around the south coast.  I’ve had the whole set since I was about 14 – but a couple of them didn’t match (smaller size! Different cover style!) and thanks to the wonders of eBay I got the “missing” matching books last year and was finally able to put them in order without the fretting over the fact that they didn’t look right!  As you can see they’re all very well-loved  – except Drina, Ballerina, one of the new additions, but I can assure you that my old copy is practically falling apart further down the shelf.

The Drina books are responsible for my childhood dream of being a ballerina – a dream which lead eight-year-old me to try to sew my own pointe shoes from an old cotton shirt from the ragbag, some loo roll and some hair ribbons!  Drina is also responsible for some notable mispronunciations in my vocabulary – from the say-it-how-you-see-it school of reading – to this day I still struggle to pronounce Igor as Eegor rather than Eye-gor. Particularly because my stepgran had a beautiful Persian Blue called eegor that I used to feed when I went to visit and I always associate names with the first person/animal I knew with that name…

For those of you who haven’t read the series, it’s the story of Andrina Adamo – known as Drina – an orphan who is being brought up by her grandparents and who finds out when she starts ballet lessons in the first book that her mother was actually famous ballerina, who was killed in a plane crash along with her husband on a flight to New York where she was due to dance.  Drina is desperate to be a ballet dancer – but wants to succeed on her own without any help (or hindrance) from her famous mother’s name.  At the start of the second book the family move to London for her grandfather’s job and Drina starts at ballet school.  The rest of the series follows Drina’s trials and tribulations in her quest to succeed – including overcoming her grandmother’s reluctance to let her follow in her mother’s footsteps,  twisted ankles, school rivalries, her grandfather’s health problems which lead to her having to spend time away from her training and falling in love (at 14) with a glamourous New Yorker a couple of years older than her called Grant.

It’s hard to pick favourites – but I think mine are Drina Dances Again – where she plays Little Clara in The Nutcracker and Mr Dominick and Madame Volonaise find out Drina’s closely guarded secret about her mother’s identity; Drina Dances in Paris – where Drina goes to dance in The Nutcracker in Paris and Grant (the New Yorker) comes to visit her, Drina Dances on Tour – where her big secret finally comes out, she joins the company, experiences what it’s like to be in the corps de ballet and where Grant arrives in London and comes to find her and Drina, Ballerina which sees the series end with her dancing her mother’s most famous role and marrying Grant.

Looking back at what I’ve written, it sounds like a very far-fetched tale, but then how many children’s stories aren’t! I read them over and over when I was younger, and even as a teenager when I was poorly I’d get out my Drina books and start reading them all over again.  Even today, just flicking through them so that I could write this post I’ve come over with the urge to sit down with them and have another read.

Looking at Amazon, I don’t think they’re in print anymore – which is a real shame – because there are still as many ballet mad little girls out there as there always were.

But that does lead me to another thought that has crossed my mind more than once – I am part of the last generation who will read these sort of stories and be able to see my own life in them?  For all that Ballet for Drina was written in 1957, it was very similar to my own life – a world with no mobile phones or home computers and where most houses only had one TV – although flying wasn’t the big deal that it was in Drina and liners had stopped being a method of getting to New York by the early 90s.  The same applies to a lot of the school stories I used to read (many of which I’m sure I’ll post about in due course) – the only difference between my life and theirs was that their trains ran on coal and that they called maths arithmetic.  Will today’s children – who’ve grown up with smart phones, iPads, laptops, the internet and Playstations be able to buy into these stories the same way?  I hope so, because I know how much enjoyment and knowledge I got from them when I was little.

books, The pile

The status quo

I’ve girded my loins.  I’ve taken a deep breath. I’ve done some dusting.  Here is a photo of the to-read pile and the library book bag.

To-read pile

It looks bad doesn’t it? I know.  It’s out of control.  And the eagle eyed amongst you may notice that there’s two Jasper Fforde books from the same series on there too (breaking a rule of the to-read pile) and that’s because I spotted The Fourth Bear in a charity shop this morning for a pound and it seemed like too good an opportunity to miss.  I haven’t worked out an excuse for the Mrs Bradley mystery and the Frances Osborne which I bought in a different charity shop five minutes later.  I’ll get back to you on that.

 

 

 

books, stats, week in books

The Week In Books: April 28 – May 4

Not the busiest week reading wise – six things finished, a couple more started and still on the go.

Read:

Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris

I Am Shakespeare (a play) by Mark Rylance

Vivian’s Heavenly Ice Cream Shop by Abby Clements

Significant Others by Armistead Maupin

The Three of Us (short story) by Cathy Woodman

Manna from Hades by Carola Dunn

Started:

The Viceroy’s Daughters by Anne de Courcey

Sure of You by Armistead Maupin

Lavender Lady by Carola Dunn

Still reading:

Tales of the Jazz Age by F Scott Fitzgerald

Love, Nina by Nina Stibbe

Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake

What have I learnt making this list? I have too many books on the go at the moment.  And I’m feeling guilty about the fact that I’m still no further on with Titus Groan, which I started in January… The fact that it’s still lingering is another illustration of the problem with the massive to-read pile actually – if I don’t get into something quickly, there’s always something else I want to read, but because the book has been sitting on my shelf for so long, I think that I can’t give up and say it’s not for me.  Although with Titus I’m only 75 pages in and I usually read at least 100 pages or a quarter of the book before I’m prepared to admit defeat. On the bright side, Vivian’s… and I Am Shakespeare were long standing residents of The Shelf, and Dead Reckoning was from the pile too.

As you’ll see I’m working my way through Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City series (expect a post on that at some point) and am nearing the end of the True Blood series – in fact Dead Reckoning was the last I could get for a penny plus postage from Amazon, so I was expecting to have to wait to finish the series and then I found the last two in the library on Thursday!

As for the others, Cathy Woodman is one of the authors on the list of people I automatically buy new stuff from so I picked up her short story soon after it came out, Manna from Hades has been on the Kindle a while but I’d forgotten about it (oops) until I picked up the next two in the series in The Works this week so I bumped it to the top of the pile.

My aim for this week?  To reduce the number of things on the go…

books

To-read pile Malingerers…

I think everyone has at least one of these – the book you bought because it looked interesting, but you’ve never got around to reading, because there’s always something else more interesting.  I’m not going to name the books on my shelf, but as you’d probably expect on a to-read pile the size of mine there’s probably a dozen really long term residents lingering around – and they were the reason for my re-organisation of the pile the other day.

For me, they tend to fall into a couple of categories – books about history, classics that I ought to have read, and really thick books.  Several of the long-standing books fall into two of those classes.  There are also a couple of books on there that I’ve borrowed from my mum and haven’t got around to reading, and now it’s been so long that I can’t give them back to her without having read them…

The re-organisation of the pile has seen me group the books into genres and put them together – I’ve half developed an idea that I ought to have one book from each section of the pile (two shelves, two piles – so four) on the go at a time to try and make the (hoped for) reduction in the pile more even, and help me resist the urge to stock up on one genre if I go through a phase of reading one type of book avidly. I know it’ll never happen though!

So what can I do about them?

Well that Lent book-buying ban was my first attempt to try and reduce the stockpile, although as it was running at the same time as an attempt to read the library book backlog, it wasn’t as successful as I’d hoped – although the April numbers still show a (slight) net decrease.  I read 22 books in March – but at the start of the month the library book campaign was already going – and 10 of the March books were from the library bag (that’s quite impressive) and another five were from the kindle backlog (so kind of reducing the to-read pile) but on the bright side, only one was a book that I had just bought. But that doesn’t mean I didn’t buy others and add to the pile – although my Goodreads to-read list only shows 1 new addition that I know I actually own in March, I may have bought books that were already on the list, or that I’ve not added yet.

So this next attempt is going to be a concerted effort to restrict my buying, but also to go down the shelf rather than the library book bag.  But as I refilled the library book bag on Thursday, this may not work…

Wish me luck – and if you have any suggestions let me know in the comments or on twitter @WildeV

books

The Rules of the To-Read Pile

I know, I know.  Considering that the pile is so outlandishly large, the idea that it has rules seems ludicrous.  But it does – although they are few and somewhat flexible.

The principle rule is No more than one book per author on the pile: I’ll admit this does get broken frequently (although I’m getting better at keeping to it) and for two main reasons – firstly when The Works have lots of books by the same author in one of their offers and secondly when an author writes more than one series – for example Charlaine Harris currently has three books on the pile – two Aurora Teagardens (from The Works) and one Harper Connelly (the last two Sookie Stackhouses are in the library book bag – different rules apply to library books).

The second is Don’t buy hardbacks.  I’ll admit that this rule does mean I end up behind the curve on some authors. But its born from experience – I just don’t get around to reading hardbacks – they’re big, they’re heavy and they won’t fit in my handbag. They end up sitting on the shelf for months and months even when they’re something I’m really keen to read.  I am sometimes given hardbacks, but I don’t usually put books that are only out in hardback on my gift lists. Most books come out in paperback in the end – and the few that don’t are usually books that I can buy for borrow from my mum.

The third is Don’t buy series out of sequence. This is because they end up sitting on the pile for ages waiting for me to buy/borrow the books leading up to it because I hate reading series in the wrong order in case I spoil a major plot point (it’s happened before I don’t want it to happen again).

Most of the sins of my to-read pile can be put under one of those headings.  As I’ve said before, I’m terrible for discovering a series and then reading it through from start to finish (as I’m doing at the moment with the Tales of the City series) but the rules mean I usually only buy one book in the series at a time – although there are exceptions – like when I’m trying to get over a free delivery threshold – or those Works multi-buys again.

books, stats

April Stats

On Good Reads to-reads shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 387

New books* read in April: 20

Books from the Library Book pile: 3

Books from the to-read pile: 9

E-books: 3

Books read as soon as they arrived: 6

Most read author in April: Armistead Maupin (Three books in the Tales of the City series)

Books* read this year: 72

Books bought: 14

Net progress: 1 less book on the to-read pile…

April saw the end of the Lent Book Buying ban, so I can’t take too much credit for the progress down the pending pile, but I’ll try not to buy more than I read in May as well!

 

* Total includes some short stories (1 in fact in April – Trisha Ashley’s Finding Mr Rochester)

books

State of Play

Yesterday I tidied the to-read shelves and piles.  Yes, you read that right, shelves and piles. And then there’s the Kindle to read list.  And the library book bag.  I’m starting to think I should open with “Hi, I’m Verity, and I have a book buying problem”…

I’ll admit that things have got a little out of hand.

The background: I’ve always been a voracious reader. When I was at primary school, I used to go to the library on a Saturday morning with my mum and sister, fill my card (10 books) and then fill whatever space was left on theirs.  Buy the end of Sunday, I’d usually have read three-quarters of what I’d borrowed – a diet of Sweet Valley Twins/High/University, Babysitters Club, boarding school stories, young adult angst and whatever else I could lay my hands on.

At secondary school I spent my lunchtimes in the library “helping” partly to avoid people I didn’t like (and who didn’t like me) and partly so I could spend more time reading.  I read for pleasure less at university – because studying History and French meant I was spending a lot of time reading and I needed to see some sunlight. Plus I’d discovered student radio and that was sucking my life away in a new and interesting way.  When I went out into the big wide world I went back to books.  After a day spent staring at computer screens, what could be better than a good book?

When I moved to Essex for my first job I took 10 “favourite” books with me.  When I moved in with The Boy two and a half years later, I bought 75 home with me.  And that was after I’d got rid of some I wasn’t going to read again.  I’d also been making good use of Essex’s excellent library service – and their free request service to augment my reading diet with the stuff I couldn’t justify on my (tight) budget.

The Boy had one bookcase when I moved in, half full of books, half full of magazines and paperwork.  Now we have three full-size bookcases, two of which are completely full of my stuff – and I’m starting to have to double shelve stuff.  When my parents’ church had a fête 18 months ago, the book stall was basically the result of a clear out I had. They still haven’t sold them all.

My to-read shelves are a little half-sized bookcase (£4.99 in the sale from B&Q in the days of the first Essex Flat) which sits under the sitting room window, next to my end of the sofa.  It’s full (of course) so there are now two piles of books behind my arm of the sofa.  And the library book bag sits next to that. And then there’s my Kindle.  I deliberately didn’t count how many books I hefted around yesterday in my reorganisation, but it must be close to 60. I know that the unread folder on my kindle has 144 items in it because it tells me it does every time I open the kindle.  I had got the Kindle under 100 – but I’ve been making real efforts to make inroads into the physical pile – as The Boy was mocking me about it (he doesn’t know about the figures for the Kindle) and the digital bits have been stacking up.

What’s causing the problem? Well, I have a series of authors who I will buy anything and everything they write, so whenever something new from one of them appears it jumps straight to the top of the list.  Then I have a terrible habit of starting a series, really liking it and then proceeding to buy the rest of the series one after the other, ignoring the rest of the books I should be reading first (examples include the Daisy Dalrymple, Phryne Fisher, Mitchell and Markby and Lord Edward Corinth series) and if I find a new author I like then I’ve been known to do the same to their back catalogue.  And then I get suckered by multibuys in places like the Works and on occasion Tesco.

I’m also very bad at forcing myself to read stuff if I’m not in the mood.  So there are some really interesting looking non fiction books sitting on my shelf that I do want to read – except that I’m tired and don’t want something taxing, or there’s a new book by X on the pile, or I really want to read the next book in Y series next.

And the real killer is the very thing that means I read so many books – my commute.  My job is in London, I live in Northampton.  The train takes between 50 minutes and nearly 90 minutes depending on what time of day it is, and I prefer to fill this time with reading. And some times I stay down in London when I have a lot of shifts in a row or the transport situation is difficult (like this weekend for example).  Now I read fast (about 100 pages an hour if it’s something I’m enjoying and don’t have to think to hard about) so I can often read nearly a book a day on the commute. The kindle was total godsend, but then the physical books – the ones I might want to keep, lend or that I buy really cheap and give away afterwards – started to pile up.  So I’ve been making an effort to take actual books instead – but they’re heavy so I don’t take epic sagas and I take a new book each day (sometimes leading to a pile up of 2/3 finished books) so I don’t end up carrying something that I’ve finished around all day.

So, what am I going to do about it? Keep reading, try to stop buying as much – and write about it here to keep track of how I get on.