If Authors Ordered at Starbucks

imagesCreated by an English literature and a history student (presumably with exams to avoid), this post will probably do nothing for you unless you enjoy the smell of a fresh hardback or skip evenings out for a book in bed.

Mrs. Queen Takes the Train by William Kuhn

qu2xWhat is it about the “new arrival” shelves at the library? My enormous hoard    small collection of books to be read is mocking waiting for me at home and still I bring home yet another book.  It’s a disease.

Turned out Mrs. Queen Takes the Train was just the cozy ticket (pun intended!) for a rainy afternoon (yes finally a little rain here in the Bay Area).

From the back cover:

After decades of service and years of watching her family’s troubles splashed across the tabloids, Britain’s Queen is beginning to feel her age. She needs some proper cheering up. An unexpected opportunity offers her relief: an impromptu visit to a place that holds happy memories—the former royal yacht, Britannia, now moored near Edinburgh. Hidden beneath a skull-emblazoned hoodie, the limber Elizabeth (thank goodness for yoga) walks out of Buckingham Palace into the freedom of a rainy London day and heads for King’s Cross to catch a train to Scotland.

But a characterful cast of royal attendants has discovered her missing. In uneasy alliance a lady-in-waiting, a butler, an equerry, a girl from the stables, a dresser, and a clerk from the shop that supplies Her Majesty’s cheese set out to find her and bring her back before her absence becomes a national scandal.

See, now how could I resist this?  Brewed myself a cup of tea, put on my favorite comfy sweater and set to it.

This is a modern view of the Queen and her past travails including the Diana years and the ebbing of her subject’s support.   We get a view into the inside workings of the palace, the many roles required to handle the Queen, palace protocols and the many obligations of royal duty.  As an Anglophile, I found this aspect of the story fascinating.

Despite escaping the palace, the Queen has difficulty shaking her royal attitudes and boundaries.  Her lack of understanding how the world works without attendants is amusing as she waits for others on the train attend to her needs and address her correctly – but she prevails and finds herself relaxing with the commoners.   I found myself empathizing with the Queen as she heads to the Britannia and memories of happier times.  After all, who would want that job thrust upon them while still just a young girl?

The motley crew of attendants that follow the Queen to Scotland have their own compelling stories to tell – enemies become friends, lovers come out of the closet, and the grieving find some solace.

The novel has been compared to another fictional tale of the Queen,  The Uncommon Reader, by Alan Bennett.

Mr. Kuhn slyly refers to this other book in this novel:

“‘Did you read the one about The Queen becoming a reader?’ said the woman in spectacles to the young man at her side.`I did enjoy that one. So funny. And of course, being a reader myself, I liked that side of it.'”

The film The Queen is also referred to in this up-to-date take on British royalty.

Mrs. Queen Takes the Train abounds with dry, British humor and social commentary.  Mr. Kuhn tackles the homeless, terrorism, race relations,  and mental illness.   What I found fascinating was how the author gave the Queen a human side (she does yoga and attempts a computer) but still maintains the respectful dignity due a British monarch.

In the end the Queen must once again return to the palace and assume the duties of her crown- but with a fresh perspective and the reader is left to imagine she will find them less burdensome.

Note:  Read Mr. Bennett’s book, wherein the Queen discovers a bookmobile outside the palace gates and revels in the delights of reading for pleasure

For the want of a comma…

Wedding-rings I often question my overzealous use of the comma, but when I read Ann Patchett’s response to a review of her most recent book, I sighed with self satisfaction…

 Puppy Love

To the Editor:

I was grateful to see my book “This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage” mentioned in Paperback Row (Oct. 19). When highlighting a few of the essays in the collection, the review mentions topics ranging from “her stabilizing second marriage to her beloved dog” without benefit of comma, thus giving the impression that Sparky and I are hitched. While my love for my dog is deep, he married a dog named Maggie at Parnassus Books last summer as part of a successful fund-raiser for the Nashville Humane Association. I am married to Karl VanDevender. We are all very happy in our respective unions.

ANN PATCHETT

NASHVILLE

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese

cuttingThrowback Thursday or Past Reads

Before I started this blog, I kept notebooks of the books I’d read.  I began years ago in order record my thoughts as a book group member and then later just so I wouldn’t purchase or (yikes) re-read the same books.  Don’t smirk, you’ve done it too!  I thought I would share some of my top good reads on random Thursdays.

Today it’s Cutting for Stone, by Abraham Verghese.

From the publicity blurb:

Marion and Shiva Stone are twin brothers born of a secret union between a beautiful Indian nun and a brash British surgeon. Orphaned by their mother’s death and their father’s disappearance, bound together by a preternatural connection and a shared fascination with medicine, the twins come of age as Ethiopia hovers on the brink of revolution.
 
Moving from Addis Ababa to New York City and back again, Cutting for Stone is an unforgettable story of love and betrayal, medicine and ordinary miracles–and two brothers whose fates are forever intertwined.

Most of my reader friends disliked this novel, could not get into it, or found it dull and overwritten.  As a member of the minority I was swept away into this brilliant and powerful saga.

Yes, it’s a Saga with a capital S – an epic tale that follows twisty, messy lives   The tale takes the orphan twins from their birth in a medical clinic–through the frightening coups in Ethiopia — to New York City where they become successful surgeons in their own rights.

The twins come of age at the Ethiopian medical clinic where they were abandoned at birth and they suffer the consequences of their youthful carelessness and their unreliable makeshift family. The twins’ (twin’s?) lives are complicated yet enriched by these fascinating and crooked characters — a misguided, often drunk, but good-hearted doctor, a female OB who is overly sentimental, yet cruel and unforgiving not to mention the various thugs and manipulators who draw the boys in and out of trouble

The author is a surgeon and his professional insight is throughout the book.  The medical scenes are extremely graphic and eyeopening – there are plenty of mishaps, botched surgeries and the genital mutilation scenes are not for the queasy.  But Mr. Verghese also did some fine research.  The history and culture of Ethiopia is one of the highlights of the story — both fascinating and horrifying.   The author writes with both beauty and harshness and I guarantee you will stop in the middle of reading to marvel at his remarkable prose.

Yes, this book is sometimes slow going and there are many side tracks. Other readers found the detail overwritten – whereas, I found that the many-layered descriptions enriched the remarkable story.

You’re on notice – Cutting for Stone is messy, appalling and sometimes confusing.  This is not a light novel and, at 670 pages, this is a demanding read.  Nonetheless, I found it, like life itself, full of love and cruelty — joy and sadness.   A Saga with a capital S.

 

The Moment of Everything by Shelly King

moment I really must expand my repertoire, but, like the Halloween candy lurking in my cupboard (Reese’s PB cups if you must know), I just can’t resist yet another book about books and bookstores. Better yet, The Moment of Everything is set in Silicon Valley (check), takes place in the present (check) and, yes — centers around a used bookstore (check check).

From the publicity blurb:

Maggie Duprès, recently “involuntarily separated from payroll” at a Silicon Valley start-up, is whiling away her days in The Dragonfly’s Used Books, a Mountain View institution, waiting for the Next Big Thing to come along.

When the opportunity arises for her to network at a Bay Area book club, she jumps at the chance — even if it means having to read Lady Chatterley’s Lover, a book she hasn’t encountered since college, in an evening. But the edition she finds at the bookstore is no Penguin Classics Chatterley — it’s an ancient hardcover with notes in the margins between two besotted lovers of long ago. What Maggie finds in her search for the lovers and their fate, and what she learns about herself in the process, will surprise and move readers.

I found much to enjoy in this novel. The Dragonfly bookstore is wonderfully formed — its haphazard used book selection, an OPEN sign where the letters slide to read NOPE when closed, a mean tempered cat, and its fair share of quirky customers.

Ms. King beautifully captures Silicon Valley and, having been in high-tech for many years, I kneel to her bulls eye observational skills – she perfectly captures high tech geeks seeking obscure science fiction paperbacks, gaming parties and especially the snooty meeting of the “Silicon Valley Women’s Executive Book Club” in a pristine home with its state-of-the-art kitchen.

The mystery of the love notes written in the margins of a battered old copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover is enchanting.

The plot is multi-layered and fast paced — there’s lots going on.  Maggie only half-attempts to find another job and spends her days reading romance novels.  She tries to fend off her narcissistic mother and is having a torrid love affair (or is it?).  To try and stay sane, she starts to volunteer at the Dragonfly – attempting to bring it into the 21st century and the red in order to compete with big book store across the street.   On top of all this, she is obsessed with mystery of the love notes in the book.  Sometimes Ms. King loses control of these story lines and they become disjointed — but keep reading by the next chapter you’ll be back on course…and I’ll caution you, the ending is a tad predictable.

But in the end, I found the best part of The Moment of Everything was Ms. King’s engaging and witty voice.  I found myself both grinning, and at times giggling throughout this book.  Given the realm of grim novels out there (Dystopia anyone?) a novel that makes you smile is perhaps the best recommendation.

My favorite quote

“The kind of people who come to the Dragonfly don’t just own books, they need them, crave them, find it impossible to breathe without them. They come because they are in love with the store itself, with its handled wares and their untold takes. They come because they are wondering about about the people who owned all these books before. The come because the people whose paths they cross are like the books they find, a bit worn around the edges, waiting for the right person to open them up and take them home.”

Review copy provided by Grand Central Publishing via NetGalley.

How to Tell if You Are in a Gothic Horror Novel

On this Hallowed Eve – a scary warning here.

 

Dark-Gothic-Wallpapers-9

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Something is wrong – something is terribly wrong   …    It’s probably nothing.”

 

 

The Long Way Home by Louise Penny

louise penny Here I am again, recommending another intelligent and well-written mystery series.  This time by a Canadian writer.   These (as with Deborah Crombie) shall and should be read in sequence (Still Life is the first).

Louise Penny is a former CBC journalist and her well-honed story telling craft makes each of her novels a gem.  The series largely focuses in and around the picturesque Canadian village of Three Pines, filled with idiosyncratic inhabitants — but these are no typical “cozy” mysteries.  The characters have  depth, humor and pathos and the plots are often intricately complex and psychological.  I eagerly await each and every one of her novels.  So I blissfully delved into The Long Way Home, the 10th in her series.

The Long Way Home finds Chief Inspector Gamache now retired in Three Pines hoping to relax and recover from the horrors he experienced (yes you must read the earlier novels to truly understand the context).  He and his wife, Reine-Marie, are enjoying village life – breakfasts at the bistro, browsing at the bookstore, dinners with friends – when one of their friends, Clara, asks Gamache to help locate her estranged and now missing husband.  Clara and Gamache are joined by Reine-Marie, Myrna, the bookstore owner, his ex-Sargent De Beauvior, and the ever-cranky poet Ruth.

This unlikely crew of investigators find themselves in the Canadian region of  Charlevoix, a place of harsh beauty along the St. Lawrence river, which has attracted artists for centuries.  The mystery orbits around paintings of the beautiful landscape and Canadian artists.  You can see some of the artwork here.   This novel is fairly steeped in art – even the cover of the book feels and looks like a canvas. Part of the mystery also refers to a place in Scotland dubiously named “The Garden of Cosmic Speculation”, it really does exist and looks fascinating – check it out here.  As always, with Ms. Penny’s novels, I find myself making a list of things to Google.

Back to the story —  this is a markedly more philosophical and somber novel which deliberately mirrors Gamache’s introspection since his retirement from the force. Much of the book is psychologically driven and I grew tired of Clara’s tormented artist self pity. The artistic process and angst is discussed ad nauseum and is used as motive where it really doesn’t make sense.  There is some repetition and reiteration  — OK-OK we get the Balm of Gilead reference already! Basically, I longed for the plot to step more lively, if you please.

There were moments of the old charm and humor (nearly not enough for this reader):

“Ergo, he painted them on his return to Canada,” said Clara.

“Ergo?” asked Myrna.

“Don’t tell me you’ve never wanted to use it,” said Clara.

“Not now that I hear how it really sounds.”

Don’t get me wrong, I enjoyed this book and it retains Ms. Penny’s gorgeous writing.  I was happy to revisit the Three Pines, its characters (including one foul-mouthed duck), glimpse into Gamache’s new life (he reads each morning on a bench overlooking the village) and share in the non-stop cozy tea breaks and good meals – does that Bistro ever close?

The Long Way Home is still an excellent read, just not on par with Ms. Penny’s previous novels. I remain a steadfast  fan and will eagerly await Ms. Penny’s next installment in this smart, original series.

One big rant: Come on Ms. Penny you’re better than this book’s melodramatic ending!

(I am hoping Ms. Penny doesn’t fall into a series black hole ala Elizabeth George —  whose mysteries, in my opinion, lost their way after she killed off Helen.)