books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: March 28 – April 3

My lack of reading progress this week is entirely down to the combination of late shifts and the World Figure Skating Championships…

Read:

The Mueller Twins at the Chalet School by Katherine Bruce

Speaking from Among the Bones by Alan Bradley

A Frightfully English Execution by Shamini Flint

A Crimson Warning by Tasha Alexander

Champion of the Chalet School by Adrienne Fitzpatrick

Started:

Somewhere Inside of Happy by Anna McPartlin

Superfluous Women by Carola Dunn

Still reading:

Freya by Anthony Quinn

Along the Infinite Sea by Beatriz Williams

Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham

Jane Steel by Lyndsay Faye

Although I may not have made as much progress down the stack as I wanted, I haven’t added to it either – no books bought!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: March 21 – March 27

Some really good books this week – some of which I’ve already mentioned in my Easter Books post.  You may yet hear more about some of them too!  I went away for the bank holiday weekend – or you know the list of books read would have been higher if I’d been sitting on my sofa.  Get me with my life outside work and books!

Read:

The Sport of Baronets by Theresa Romain

The Night that Changed Everything by Laura Tait and Jimmy Rice

Deira Joins the Chalet School by Caroline German

Jolly Foul Play by Robin Stevens

Broken Homes by Ben Aaronovitch

As If! An Oral History of Clueless by Jen Chaney

The Skeleton Garden by Marty Wingate

Started:

Jane Steele by Lindsay Faye

Still reading:

Freya by Anthony Quinn

Along the Infinite Sea by Beatriz Williams

Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham

I didn’t buy any books!  Well I bought one book, but it wasn’t really for me (although it is on my kindle account, because I share it with Him Indoors).  So I’m calling it no books.  Who knew that was possible. I’ll try and not to buy any books at all this week…

Book of the Week, Fantasy, fiction

Book of the Week: The Night Circus

This week’s book of the week is Erin Morgenstern’s The Night Circus.  In another tale of the state of the pile, this was a Christmas book from my mother in 2014.  In my defence, it did get a bit misplaced for a while in a storage box and then got shuffled to the bottom of a pile it shouldn’t have been on – but thanks to my mum’s habit of writing dedications in the front of gift books I have the guilts.  Sorry mum.

Anyhow, everyone else read this 18 months ago at least, so I’m behind the curve, but in case you are too, The Night Circus tells the story of Le Cirque de Rêves and some of the people who live there.  The circus arrives without warning, is only open at night and is filled with enchantment and wonder.  The book focuses on several characters in particular, but to say much more is to say too much.  It covers decades in the lives of the key players – starting before the invention of the circus and switches backwards and forwards through time as you learn some of the secrets behind the Circus of Dreams.

I started it before those pesky nightshifts and it took my brain some time to recover so it took me longer to read than how good it is.  But once my brain was functioning normally again I gobbled this up.  It’s clever and it’s magical but not too far from reality in many ways.  It’s romantic and intriguing and I wanted more.  I suspect I’ll be going back to reread this again and that I’ll get even more from it second time.

Magic! Illusions! Kittens! Clocks! Scarves! The Night Circus has all this and more – and now it’s got me wanting some more books with magical realism.  I listen to Book Riot’s Get Booked podcast and there have been several people asking for books to fill a Night Circus-shaped void in their lives, so once I’ve got the pile sorted a little bit I may have to look into that.  In the meantime, I’m ransacking the existing backlog for stuff that might scratch that itch.  Luckily I still have some Peter Grant saved on the shelf.

Anyhow.  Get your copy from Amazon, Waterstones, Foyles and on Kindle or Kobo.

 

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: March 14 – March 20

A varied week of reading – with a touch of pretty much everything.  And I finally had the time to sit down and concentrate on The Night Circus, so the Still Reading list is down to one…

Read:

The Indecent proposal by Louise Marley

Bella and the Beast by Olivia Drake

Time Travelling with a Hamster by Ross Welford

Ships, Stings and Wedding Rings by Jodi Taylor

Death of a Diva by Derek Farrell

It Happened One Season by Stephanie Laurens, Mary Balogh, Jacquie D’Alessandro and Candice Hern

The Guides of the Chalet School by Jane Berry

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Started:

Along the Infinite Sea by Beatriz Williams

Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham

Still reading:

Freya by Anthony Quinn

The books from last week’s spending spree turned up and I realised that the book piles by the sofa are now getting tall enough (in some cases) to interfere with the curtains.  Thus I am seriously contemplating a buying ban on actual books.  So this week I only purchased 2 ebooks – and one of them was free.  I’ll keep you posted on the piles.

Authors I love, Book of the Week, Children's books

Book of the Week: Chiltern School

This week’s Book of the Week is Mabel Esther Allen’s Chiltern School.  Regular readers will already be aware of my love of the classic school story and this one last week was a real treat for my sleepy post-nightshift brain.

Chiltern School tells the story of Rose Lesslyn – who has lived with her grandparents since her mother died and her father moved to work abroad to get away from his pain (as people frequently seemed to do in books in this era).  Her father decides that she needs to go to school – much to her grandmother’s dismay – and she’s dispatched from her home on the Isle of Wight to a rather progressive (for the 1950s anyway) school in the middle of the Chiltern hills.  There she struggles to fit in but eventually finds her feet, makes friends and (re)discovers a hidden talent.

Chiltern School was written in the 1950s – and sold to a publisher, but never published until Allen published it privately in the 1990s.  And she was only able to do that because of the success of a reissue of another of her series – the Drina books in the 1990s.  The Drina series (the subject of one of my very early posts on the blog) were written under one of her pen names – Jean Estoril.  I had no idea about this until I read the forward of this book – I’d bought it because I’d really enjoyed another of her (many) other books The View Beyond My Father (about a young blind girl escaping from her domineering father in the 1910s) back in primary school days.  I was thrilled to discover that my love of the Drina series in the early 90s had meant that Allen had money to do this in her old age – and that someone who’s books I’d liked so much had written so much more than I thought!

And Rose does have similarities to my beloved Drina (that series started 7 years later). Both live with their grandparents – with a stern grandmother and a kindlier grandfather, although both of Drina’s parents are dead as opposed to just one of Rose’s (there are a lot of dead parents in children’s books of this era).  And trying not to give too much of the plot away here, Drina doesn’t know about her background at the start of the series but later choses to keep it secret – while Rose knows but doesn’t tell.

Both also feature the Chilterns – Drina’s ballet school has a boarding department there, where she stays in Drina Dances in Exile (the green book as it always is in my head because of it’s cover) and where she returns to several times in later books to visit friends.  Now since reading Drina, I have acquired a boyfriend who comes from that part of the world – so I got an extra level of enjoyment from Chiltern School’s mentions of places that his family live or have lived and where we have been.  And the area is a big feature in the book – it’s beautifully described – you can practically feel the wind rushing through your hair as Rose and her friends cycle around.

It’s not perfect – it is of it’s time and is not as diverse as you would (hope to) find a children’s book written now would be.  But Allen’s writing style is charming and every readable – this is a fun romp that will make you wish you could have gone to boarding school (in the 1950s) with Rose and all her friends.  That is if you couldn’t be a ballerina and be Drina…

My edition was published by Girls Gone By – who as I’m sure I’ve said before – specialise in republishing classic children’s stories that are now out of print.  They do the same for my beloved Chalet School and for authors like Lorna Hill, Malcolm Saville and many more.  Check out their website and see if they’ve done any of your childhood favourites.

I went straight on from this to Allen’s Ballet Family books (bought in the same spending spree back at the start of the year) which appear to have been published under Allen’s name and then reissued under the Estoril pseudonym in the 90s to capitalise on the success of Drina.  I don’t know how I missed them at the time – but they are a cross between Drina and Lorna Hill’s Jane goes to the Wells – with a ballet school that’s not The Royal Ballet and a family of 4 ballet students – who’s mother is still a ballerina.  And I really want to go back and reread the Drina series too.

Happy reading this week!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: March 7 – March 13

Hmmmm.  What to say about this week’s reading – distinctly children’s book heavy?  I had a spree with a dealer a few weeks back and they were just what I needed for my post-nightshift recovery.  And I finally finished The Shadow Hour at the weekend – once my brain had got back in gear!

Read:

Heartsong Cottage by Emily March

The Bronte Plot by Katherine Reay

Chiltern School by Mabel Esther Allen

The Ballet Family by Mabel Esther Allen (Jean Estoril)

The Ballet Family Again by Mabel Esther Allen (Jean Estoril)

The Shadow Hour by Kate Riordan

Started:

It Happened One Season by Stephanie Laurens, Mary Balogh, Jacquie D’Alessandro and Candice Hern

Still reading:

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Freya by Anthony Quinn

Time Travelling with a Hamster by Ross Welford

Oh dear.  I had a bit of a mega spending spree over the weekend.  I paid for it (mostly) with vouchers, but still added a lot more to the to-read pile than I’ve taken off it.  Whoops.

cozy crime, detective, fiction

Book of the Week: Death of a Cozy Writer

Back on the cozy crime for this week’s BotW with G M Malliet’s first St Just mystery. I’ve read a couple of Malliet’s Max Tudor series before – dishy vicar with a Past in rural village – which I’ve enjoyed so I was interested to read more from this author.

Sir Adrian Beauclerk-Fisk is a best-selling mystery writer, who delights in tormenting his adult children by constantly rewriting his will.  Then he announces his engagement and the whole family gathers to “celebrate”. But when his eldest son and heir turns up dead, suspicion, greed and malice run riot in the house.  Detective Chief Inspector St Just and Sergeant Fear must try to track down the killer before someone else ends up dead.

The whole Beauclerk-Fisk family are hugely dislikeable and this adds a certain something as you read about their machinations (some subtler and cleverer than others).  There’s also a lot of references to classic crime – so if you’ve read a lot of Christie you’ll enjoy that too.  Sir Adrian has distinct Luther Crackenthorpe tendencies and is stuck writing books about a detecting spinster who he has grown to hate and tried to kill.  His writing methods and plot accuracy (as described) also feel like a bit of a comment on someone too.

DCI St Just features less in this than I was expecting, so you don’t really get to know him massively, so I’d need to read another book in the series to make a proper judgement, but he comes across as quite well – fairly inoffensive, not overly flamboyant or extravagant – and obviously as a police officer he has a perfect right to be investigating the crime which was not the case in one of the other cozies I read recently which didn’t work anywhere near as well.

It’s not perfect, but it is a fun mystery with a good few twists before you find out who actually did it.  Get your copy from Amazon or on Kindle.  My copy was second hand – but I have seen some of Malliet’s books in store in The Works too.

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: February 29 – March 6

A relatively slow reading week.  My second run of nights happened over the weekend and I’m tired and cranky and can’t concentrate on complicated books – my aim for the coming week is to finish The Night Circus and The Shadow Hour – both of which I started and was enjoying before the nights but don’t have the brain power to concentrate on at the moment

Read:

The Record Set Right by Lauren Willig

The Winter Ground by Catriona McPherson

Snowflakes on Silver Cove by Holly Martin

The Jade Lioness by Christina Courtney

Death of a Cozy Writer by G M Malliet

A Death at the University by Richard King

Started:

Freya by Anthony Quinn

Time Travelling with a Hamster by Ross Welford

Still reading:

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

The Shadow Hour by Kate Riordan

I was so good and well behaved on the nights – no books bought and not much else either!  I did nearly buy a new Kindle (I want a Paperwhite so I can read in bed when I can’t sleep) but I couldn’t quite justify it.

 

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: February 22 – February 28

Now that is what four nightshifts can do for the to-read pile – I actually finished my 7th book of the week on the way home from the last night shift on Friday morning.  You’ll notice that the two books that are still on the go are ones where I need to use my brain a bit – and my brain is frazzled so it was light reading only!  But I did finish all my February new releases from NetGalley before the end of the month (with 3 days to spare!) – which is unusual for me.  Now I just need to work on the slight backlog from the autumn when everything got a way from me a bit…

Read:

Barbara the Slut and Other People by Lauren Holmes

Nancy Parker’s Diary of Detection by Julia Lee

The Mystery of the Jewelled Moth by Katherine Woodfine

Murder on a Silver Platter by Shawn Reilly Simmons

A Summer at Sea by Katie Fforde

The Duke’s Accidental Wife by Erica Ridley

The Stylist by Rosie Nixon

Ghostwriters Anonymous by Doreen Wald

The Unfortunate Decisions of Dahlia Moss by Max Wirestone

Started:

The Winter Ground by Catriona McPherson

Still reading:

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

The Shadow Hour by Kate Riordan

I was very, very virtuous and only impulse bought non books on the nightshift.  The pile is still massive though!

 

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week In Books: February 15 – February 21

Two longstanding books finished this week (with most of the reading of them done this week) and a few nights away from home and a bit of a social life means not as much read as I was hoping at the start of the week.  I also had a lot of stuff on the go and tried to prioritise getting some of them finished over starting new stuff that I could have read quicker.

Read:

Murder on the Half Shell by Shawn Reilly Simmonds

The Prince’s Boy by Paul Bailey

The Edge of the Fall by Kate Williams

The Feud in the Fifth Remove by Elinor M Brent Dyer

Villa America by Liza Klaussman

Started:

The Shadow Hour by Kate Riordan

The Unfortunate Decisions of Dahlia Moss by Max Wirestone

Nancy Parker’s Diary of Detection by Julia Lee

Still reading:

Barbara the Slut and Other People by Lauren Holmes

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

The Stylist by Rosie Nixon

A big old order of republished classic school stories arrived this week (hence the Feud in the Fifth Remove on the read list) and a couple of kindle books which were on a deal and recommended by the Smart Bitches crew.