Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Some favorite books...


Some Miscellaneous Favorite Books & Authors....
in no particular order....
for no particular reason....

Seeing Trees:  After reading this book, you will want to look closely at trees and all nature.
By Nancy Ross Hugo
Waiting for the Biblioburro: First saw a short film on PBS; inspiring story of delivering books in rural Columbia.  (Children’s book)   By Monica Brown
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Alexander McCall Smith --- I like all his series:  #1 Ladies Detective Agency; Isabel Dalhousie; 44 Scotland Street; Corduroy Mansions;  the stand alone title, La’s Orchestra Saves the World is a delight.

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson (reprint of 1938 title; also a film) -- Due to mistaken identity a dowdy, incompetent nanny gets a taste of the glamourous life as an assistant to a nightclub performer.

Two other earlier writers I enjoy are E. F. Benson, who wrote the very amusing Lucia series; and Dornford Yates who wrote both humorous tales (Berry & Co) as well as mild thrillers (Blind Corner).  These are periodically re-issued or may turn up among used books.

Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand by Helen Simonson  In an English village an unlikely friendship develops between a widowed retired Major and the Pakistani proprietor of a village shop.

Sound of a Wild Snail Eating  by Elisabeth Tova Baily -- nonfiction; the gift of a wild snail becomes an object of great interest to the bedridden author.

Anita Brookner -- I like all of hers but especially Hotel du Lac -- a young woman runs out on her wedding just before the ceremony.  Brookner’s books are character studies more than plot oriented books.

Mary Wesley -- British author’s debut novel published when she was 70; most well-known title is Camomile Lawn, set in the summer before WWII; made into a film.

Barbara Pym -- gentle, yet penetrating, character studies.

Joanne Harris -- favorites are Chocolat ; and Five Quarters of the Orange in which a woman recalls her childhood during the Nazi occupation when her mother was accused of collaboration.

Joanna Trollope -- her books revolve around changing family relationships, but she avoids the blatantly dysfunctional cliches;  she writes believably and sympathetically of children who are caught up in the changes.  Favorites:  The Rector’s Wife; Marrying the Mistress; A Spanish Lover

Penelope Lively -- Short books, that tell a memorable story.  Favorites: Consequences; Making it Up; How it all Began

Cory Doctorow  -- I’ve read a couple of his young adult novels -- Little Brother which is about teens fighting back against constant surveillance; For the Win about online gaming and gold-mining -- fast-paced, engrossing, and thought-provoking

Neal Stephenson -- science fiction, and not so-far-in-the-future fiction  Favorites: Diamond Age;  Cryptonomicon; Reamde

William Gibson -- science fiction, especially the related titles Pattern Recognition; Spook Country; and Zero History which show a society built around marketing

Mystery Writers / Series

Kerry Greenwood -- Phyrne Fisher - set in 1920’s Melbourne
                                Corinna Chapman - set in contemporary Melbourne

Elizabeth George -- getting back on track with the Lynley series  after Helen’s death   

Martha Grimes -- Richard Jury -- last couple with Johnson are a bit odd but Jury and his neighbors are still interesting

Good Thief’s guide to...  series by Chris Ewan -- reformed thief, now mystery writer, finds himself in situations as dire as those he creates for his main character.  

Mrs Pargeter mysteries by Simon Brett -- Mrs P. is a widow who, fortunately,  never  inquired too deeply into her husband’s business affairs; his former associates are only too happy to assist her when necessary.

Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter by Susan Albert Wittig -- the author of Peter Rabbit appears as a character in these gentle mysteries, but the other characters and the stories are fictional.  The animals can communicate with each other and are distinct characters.

Robert Barnard -- author of short mysteries that read quickly and effortlessly.

Henning Mankell -- Kurt Wallander series; but he also writes stand alone novels such as Man from Beijing which has a riveting beginning, and Italian Shoes, which is not a crime novel at all.

Three Bags Full; a Sheep Detective Story by Leonie Swann  -- unique mystery in which a flock of sheep try to unravel the mysterious death of their shepherd.

following Dreams of Joy -- the Cultural Revolution


Dreams of Joy by Lisa See -- read for October, 2012

The descriptions of the Great Leap Forward (the five year plan was originally 1958 - 1963) reminded me of some books I’d read that dealt more with the slightly later Cultural Revolution (approximately  1966 - 1976).

Brothers by Da Chen; Fiction; 2006
Fathered by a powerful general during the Cultural Revolution, half-brothers Tan and Shento live in entirely different worlds.  Tan’s is one of privilege and legitimacy, while Shento’s is one of depravation and hard work.  They are unaware of each other’s existence, but they fall in love with the same woman.

Life and Death in Shanghai by Nien Cheng; Non-fiction; 1986
A searing personal account of the author’s endurance of humiliation and solitary confinement during the Cultural Revolution.

The Revolution is Not a Dinner Party by Ying Chang Compestine; Children’s fiction; 2007
The Cultural Revolution from the perspective of 9 year old Ling, daughter of two physicians.   Life changes dramatically when one of Mao’s political officers moves into a room in their apartment.

Red Scarf Girl; a Memoir of the Cultural Revolution by Ji-li Jiang; Children’s non-fiction; 1997
At 12, Ji-li is a good student and a proud member of the Young Pioneers, but during the Cultural Revolution, her intelligence and her family’s wealth are liabilities.


Also by Lisa See:
Red Princess Mystery Series -- featuring Chinese police detective Liu Hulan
Flower Net  (#1, 1997)
Interior (#2, 1999)
Dragon Bones (#3. 2003)