concerts, not a book

Not a Book: Patti LuPone

Happy Sunday everyone, and I’m back in the theatre for this week’s post. And I’m writing this a few weeks after the actual concert, but as it was a sold out, one night only type thing, this is more a reflection on a night out than anything else.

Patti LuPone, for those of you who have never come across her, is somewhat of a legend of the theatre. If you’re not a theatre fan, but you are a Marvel fan, you will have recently seen her in Agatha All Along but trust me when I say that she’s Broadway icon. She has three Tony Awards, two Oliviers and a couple of Grammys. She was the original Eva Peron in Evita on Broadway, the original Fantine in Les Miserables when it started at the Barbican and the original Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard. She’s played Reno Sweeney in Anything Goes, Rose in Gypsy and Joanne in Company. She’s also in her mid-seventies now, so you don’t know how many more chances you’ll get to see her sing live. So of course I bought myself a ticket for this as soon as it went on sale.

Now I saw her do a concert in London more than a decade ago – with Seth Rudetsky playing the piano and in conversation with her and I was interested to see how this show differed from that one. In fact, I still have the set list from that Leicester Square Concert in my phone – where she did the big hits from her career – including for the first time in nearly 20 years some Sunset Boulevard in London (which was a whole thing given how badly that ended) and which I still can’t believe that I was witness to. A Life in Notes does still have songs from the musicals that she’s been in, but is mostly Patti singing songs that are important to her or make her think of a moment in her life. Now some of these were a little obscure for me – and could potentially have used a little more explanation – but I would have paid the whole ticket price just to for the songs from the musicals – which included Some People, On Broadway, Don’t Cry for Me Argentina, I Dreamed a Dream, Anything Goes and The Ladies Who Lunch.

She’s still in great voice – probably in better shape vocally than Bernadette Peters, although you could argue that Bernadette’s voice was quirkier to start with – and when she does talk she’s witty and fun. It was a totally sold out crowd at the Coliseum – more than two and a half thousand of us turned up for it, including a few celebs, although probably not as many as if it hadn’t been the same night as the Baftas. But I spotted her Company co-star Mel Giedroyc in the foyer along with Marianne Elliot. And once again it was a delight to be at a concert where there were no queues for the ladies – although there were for the mens! All in all I had a ball even if it did make me wish she’d do another show in the West End soon.

Happy Sunday – as a treat before I go, here’s a recording (not mine) of the Sunset Boulevard from that 2013 concert. Totes Emosh.

bookshops

Books in the Wild: The Reading Tree

Happy Saturday everyone, this weekend we’re celebrating the fact that I found a new bookshop near me!

The Reading Tree is a second hand bookshop in part of an old military depot that’s been converted into workspaces for local businesses – some are offices or workshops, others are shops. It’s not as big as Bookends/Bookcase in Carlisle (but honestly what is) but it’s probably the biggest second hand selection I’ve found near me.

As you can see it’s a really interesting building from the inside – the bookshop in in the upstairs (there are antiques and vintage shops downstairs in this building) and it’s got big windows and loads of light. It was a depot for ordnance, so if I was a betting person I would say that the roof looks so light and flimsy (relative to the rest of it) because of the risk of explosion – like buildings that store or manufacture fireworks: light roof so if there’s an explosion it goes up not out.

Anyway, what you can’t see here is that there’s a cafe too so that you can sit and read your new purchases. In terms of the stock it’s a real mix of relatively recent releases in lightly used condition and older books. It’s got a mix of fiction and non-fiction – it’s probably 40% of the space to the fiction, but given that fiction books are often smaller than non-fiction ones (especially cook books and military history ) it’s probably aout 50/50 split overall.

We wandered in here as part of a walk along the canal, so for once I didn’t buy any books because I had to walk another couple of miles back to the car carrying anything I bought and I only had a tiny bag (with no space for anything else), but I endorse this flow chart and I will be back…

romance, series

Romance series: Puffin Island Trilogy

It was the first day of spring this week and weather has really picked up to coincide with it, so this week for the series post, I’m writing about a romance series set on a windswept island in Maine*.

This is called the Puffin Island trilogy, although there is a 0.5 (which I haven’t read) which is a Harlequin Presents book in the UK and doesn’t seem to be obiviously set on the island or linked to the other three. But the trilogy itself is centered around three friends who each use the same cottage on the island when times in their life get tough.

Book one, First Time in Forever, features Emily who is hiding out on the island with her niece whose mum has just died in a plane crash, and her romance with Ryan, charismatic yacht club owner and former journalist. In Some Kind of Wonderful it’s Brittany, back on the island after a decade away only to discover the ex-husband who ditched her ten days after the wedding is back there too. And in Christmas Ever After, it’s Skylar and Alec who have been fighting in the background for the previous two books and who finally work things out between them.

Now obviously this is the wrong time of year for many people to be reading a Christmas novel, but I’m pretty sure if you read the first two you’ll end up reading the third anyway, even if it’s not Christmas reading season. Because individually these are great romances, but when you read them back to back they build as well and make you want to see what happens next. And of course as always Sarah Morgan’s great at creating places that feel like they’re real and people that you want to hang out and be friends with – see also the Snow Crystal/O’Neil Brothers books.

There are coming up on a decade old now, so I don’t know how easy they’re going to be to get hold of in paperback, but it’s on Kindle and Kobo too – and Christmas Ever After is in Kindle Unlimited at the moment

*why is Maine so popular as a setting for romance and mystery books? Is there something in the water?

Sarah Morgan three books, read them all

Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Books set in Ireland

It was St Patrick’s Day on Monday, and that’s given me an excellent excuse to think about books set in Ireland for today’s Recommendsday post.

I’m going to start with Molly Keane’s Good Behaviour. This is on of those books that I bought basically it was in a lovely Virago Hardback and the plot summary appealed to me. It was nominated for the Booker when it came out in 1981 so it’s also a rare example of an award-nominated book that I actually enjoyed! Anyway this is the story of Aroon St Charles, the daughter of an Anglo-Irish aristocratic family now falling (if not fallen) into decay. Although it starts when Aroon is nearly 60, most of the book is set years earlier in the 1910s and 1920s – and its mostly about the conflict between her and her mother. There’s a fair bit of decoding to do about what it actually going on and part of the beauty of the book is that you’re never quite sure if Aroon knows what’s going on and is being deliberately obtuse or if she really is that oblivious. Definitely worth looking for – if you want a longer and much more erudite review of it (with spoilers) then here’s on from the London Review of Books. I’m pretty sure I’ve got at least one of her other books sitting on the shelf waiting to be read – I really should get around to that!

A different sort of mid-century Ireland now, and Maeve Binchy. I read my way through a lot of these when I was a teenager when her books seemed to be everywhere, but in the decade and a bit since she died that seems to have changed. I think Tara Road is usually the one that gets talked about – but I think Light A Penny Candle was my favourite, but that may be because I read it at the same time that I was going through a huge phase of reading sagas (Barbara Taylor Bradford! Elizabeth Jane Howard! )and it gave me similar vibes to that – I haven’t read it in years and I do wonder if I would feel the same way now, or whether adult Verity would go for Scarlet Feather or something else entirely.

I was slightly older when I started reading Marian Keyes, but not *that* much older – I think my sister read her first and passed the books on to me – because our copy of Last Chance Saloon was definitely the original UK paperback one. Keyes is funny and smart but she’ll also break your heart – all her books deal with difficult issues, often including addiction and depression which she herself has experienced and spoken about very movingly. I’ve got a bit behind over the years, but Keye’s iconic Walsh Sisters series is being adapted for TV at the moment, so maybe this is the time for me to catch up.

Another Irish author who will break your heart is Anna McPartlin. I’m also behind with her books, but The Last Days of Rabbit Hayes and Somewhere Inside of Happy were both books of the week back in the early days of the blog – both of which reduced me to tears, in either trains or hostel rooms. I’ve definitely read a lot less books that I think are going to make me cry in the years since the start of the pandemic, because I’ve prioritised happy endings and closure in my reading amid the uncertainty of the world in general, but if you are more resilient than me, I do recommend her.

And that’s it for today – have a good one everyone!

books

Book of the Week: My Big Fat Fake Marriage

This was the preorder that arrived last week and is the follow up to When Grumpy Met Sunshine which was a BotW this time last year. And given the Elly Griffiths binge and my rules about repeating authors and later books in series, it was the obvious choice for today’s post.

Connie’s experience of men and relationships is… not good. They always turn out to have some horrible secret or nasty personality flaw. So she’s pretty sure her new neighbour must be hiding something really terrible behind his cheery façade and bow tie. Beck is an editor at a publishing company – and is just as sunny as he seems, except that he’s been single his whole life but told his co-workers he’s married and maintaining the lie is ruining his life. Before she knows what she’s doing, Connie’s stood up for him in front of a co-worker, and now she’s his wife. And they’ve got to keep the pretence going at a two week writers retreat…

Grumpy-Sunshine romances and cinnamon roll heroes have been a massive trend over the last few years, and I think Beck in this is possibly the biggest sweetest least unproblematic hero I have read in a long time. In fact he’s so nice and sweet that it was a bit much for me at times, especially when paired with Connie’s total cynicism about relationships and men, which is never properly explained in any detail. That said, I did really enjoy lots of this, although I wanted more comeuppance for Beck’s terrible coworker, and the fact that I read this in less than 24 hours (and on the first weekend of the new F1 season) says a lot about how readable this is, even if I didn’t like it as much as I liked When Grumpy Met Sunshine.

This came out last week – I had the paperback pre-ordered but it’s also in Kindle and Kobo.

Happy Reading

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: March 10 – March 16

Well I can confirm that I am in a full on binge of the Ruth Galloway series. I read three this week, but I also spent a couple of hours tramping around central London after work one day looking for the next in the series at a sensible price (new and secondhand shops, from Charing Cross Road to St Pancras. It was good exercise and in one shop another customer liked my bag (from Strand Books in New York) so much he asked if he could take a picture of it. So that was fun. Anyway, we’re halfway through March, I’m not halfway through my NetGalley books for the month, and I’m acquiring books at a rate of knots. But I’m having fun doing it and I did make some more progress on Cher’s memoir, so I’m not too cross at myself.

Read:

Singing in the Shrouds by Ngaio Marsh

A Dying Fall by Elly Griffiths

False Scent by Ngaio Marsh

The Outcast Dead by Elly Griffiths

The Ghost Fields by Elly Griffiths

My Big Fat Fake Marriage by Charlotte Stein

The Body in the Library by Agatha Christie

Started:

To Catch a Raven by Beverly Jenkins

The Rest of Our Lives by Benjamin Markovitz*

Still reading:

Murder Below Deck by Orlando Murrin*

Abdication by Juliet Nicolson

Cher: The Memoir Part One by Cher

Well as you could tell from Books Incoming, quite a few. That is to say four paperbacks bought and a pre-order arrived plus one ebook and another book preordered.

Bonus picture: the rather delightful wool display system in a haberdashers store in Soho.

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

not a book, streaming, theatre, tv

Not a Book: Dancing Back to the Light

Happy Sunday everyone, I’ve got a documentary recommendation for you this week, and I’ve bumped it to the top of the list because it was only on TV on Friday night – and so it’s on iPlayer now, and it’s important for arts documentaries to get viewing figures for us to get more of them. And this is a really good one.

Steven McRae is a Principal at the Royal Ballet – and in 2019 his Achilles tendon tore in the middle of a performance, leaving him lying on the stage in agony, thinking his career could be over. Dancing Back to the Light is the story of his rehabilitation and return to the stage in 2021. It’s a long and gruelling process, and as well as following him at work in the dance studio and the gym we also see him at home with his wife, herself a retired ballet dancer with the Royal Ballet, and their three young children.

I read a lot of books about ballet dancers when I was a child (and still re-read them now as an adult to be honest) and often wished that I had learned ballet. This will give you an unflinching portrait of the effort and sacrifice that goes into being at the top of your game in the modern ballet world, and how even the best dancers can have bad habits and be powering their way through in unhealthy ways. McRae is Australian and his childhood teacher always had the ambition for him to go to the Royal Ballet school – which seemed out of reach for a kid from a Sydney suburb on the other side of the world But 17 he flew to Switzerland to participate in the Prix de Lausanne and as he tells us in the documentary he won first prize – and a scholarship to the Royal Ballet. As that Instagram caption for the trailer says; he’s also a fabulous tap dancer – this is his tap solo from that competition:

McRae is very articulate and honest about what’s going on inside his head and how he’s had to rebuild the way that he dances and his every day routine as a result of the injury. He’s a dancer who has been incredibly acclaimed for his talent and dancing style – but it’s such hard work to be as good as he is. There are various jobs that I’ve seen described as being like a swan – serene on the surface but pedaling away madly underwater and ballet seems to be very like that – for the three hours of perfection you see on stage, there is untold dedication behind the scenes as well as whatever pain or injury the dancer might be carrying with them on stage at any given time. I think even if you’re not into ballet it’s worth a watch, because like so many documentaries about sports people it shows someone fighting to get back to the peak of their powers to try and make the most of their talent and passion while they can, but also about listening to your body and taking the time you need to do things properly.

If you’re in the UK, you can watch Steven McRae: Dancing Back to the Light on iPlayer here. It’s been broadcast as part of the Arena strand of documentaries. If you’re not in the UK, this has had a cinema release in France, and I’m sure it will be popping up on streaming platforms at some point.

The pile

Books Incoming: Mid-March 2025

This isn’t as bad as it could have been. I know it looks like a lot, but four of them are off the pile already because I’ve read three of the Elly Griffiths and the Curtis Sittenfeld are already read and on the normal shelves. One of those Griffiths plus the two Streatfields and the Georgette Heyer detective novel came from that Carlisle trip, the Anne De Courcy came from a trip to Gower Street Waterstones to pick up another Elly Griffiths, the Benevolent Society of Ill Mannered Ladies came from a trip to buy a book as a gift because I have poor will power and then the other two Elly Griffiths were secondhand purchases because I’m on a proper binge as you can tell from the Week in Books posts. And on that basis I expect there will be more of them next month…

Addendum: The willpower has been weak this week. More books have arrive since I took the top photo and as the original photo was already pretty full, I took another rather than restaging (and hauling everything back off the shelves) because if I didn’t it was only going to make next month’s photo even worse…

So here we have the preorder of the new book by Charlotte Stein that turned up on Thursday, another Edmund Crispin and three more Ruth Galloways, one of which is already read and off the to-read pile and onto the “needs to find a shelf for it” pile.

Series I love

Series I Love: Discworld

My brain can’t quite get it’s head around it, but Wednesday just gone marked ten years since Terry Pratchett died, and I couldn’t let that pass without writing something about the Discworld and my enduring love for it.

I’d like to start by pointing you at my Where to Start with Terry Pratchett post for my suggestions about not starting at the beginning of the series unless you’re a frequent fantasy reader, but actually starting with one of the mini-series within the Discworld. It’s six or so years since I wrote that, and since then I think I’ve re-read most of my favourite sub-series, but not the series as a whole. And I think I’ve re-read or re-listen the first two Moist von Lipwig books and The Truth every year – and helped by the fact that there have been fresh audiobooks released I’ve also added in the early watch books, which were a very hard listen on the digital transfer of the original Nigel Planer recordings – or at least they were so hard a listen on Guards! Guards! that I never bought any others and just stuck to the ones that were narrated by Stephen Baxter.

Discworld hardcovers

I love the way that Pratchett skewers the modern world and the things that he picks out to create an alternative version of. I do wish we had got the Moist takes on the Tax system that was hinted at in the final stages of Making Money, but Raising Steam was fun instead. Basically I wish we had more. I wish so the Embuggrance hadn’t happened and we had another ten PTerry books by now rather than only having the old ones to re-read.

I’m also really glad that I went to see him and Rob Wilkins at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 2011 to talk about Snuff. Because I’m an electronic hoarder I went back and checked my emails – and the event was to mark the fact that snuff was his 50th book – but I know that I went because I wasn’t sure how much longer he was going to be able to do events and I wanted to hear him speak. It was four or so years since he’d made the dementia diagnosis public at that point, Rob did the reading from the book and Terry had already stopped signing books – he was stamping instead. My only regret from that night is that I didn’t queue up to get the book stamped and meet him – but it was a work night, it was already after 10pm when it finished and I had come from one 12 hour shift and had another one the next morning. But I went, it was great and I was right – there weren’t many more chances, because I didn’t manage to do another one.

And I really respect the job that Rob and Terry’s daughter Rhianna have done looking after the Pratchett estate – they’ve been really thoughtful and careful about what they do with it and tried to follow his wishes – right down to steamrollering his hard-drives so that nothing else could come out that he hadn’t approved. And judging by Rhianna’s post this week, hopefully we may have a new adaptation of something coming at some point in the relatively near future.

Anyways, I’m off to think about whether I should but some more of the pretty hardbacks, which will lead to me looking at the Discworld Emporium website and then maybe do a Discworld jigsaw under my framed picture of Errol the Dragon. I’ll leave you with the links my original tribute post and my BotW post for Shepherd’s Crown – which I still haven’t been able to re-read.

GNU Sir Terry.