Sunday, June 29, 2025

Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay #ClassicsClub

 Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay was my spin pick for The Classics Club. I read the lenghty forward and it seems there was a question about the author's first hand knowledge, or is it entirely a work of fiction.  It is labeled as historical fiction with a setting in 1900 at a girl's college in Victoria Australia. The locations Hanging Rock and Macedon ranges are real.



Mrs. Appleyard established a girls college and boarding school insisting on a very English "uniform" and forms of etiquette. When the story begins it's Valentine's day, the girls exchanging cards and planning a picnic at Hanging Rock. Mrs. Appleyard is a strict head mistress and very unyielding, trying to keep with "proper" English customs in an unsuitable environment regarding clothing.

 It is mentioned how the governess, teacher and young ladies are required to wear gloves, voluminous dresses and hats in spite of the scorching Australian heat.  Appleyard did not believe in adapting for the heat. The description of the landscape, flora and heat are well written, placing you in the scene.

" Insulated from natural contacts with earth, air and sunlight, by corsets pressing on the solar plexus, by volumious petticoats, cotton stockings and kid boots, the drowsy well-fed girls lounging in the shade were no more a part of their environment than figures in a  photograph album, arbitrarily posed against a backcloth of cork rocks and cardboard trees."

A few of the girls napped while several of the senior girls decided they would like to walk and get closer to the Rock. Miss McGraw, the mathmatics teacher, wanted to take measurements and so it was agreed they could walk but be gone no more than one hour. It should be noted everyone's time pieces stopped at noon.

Over an hour later one girl came screaming down the path and couldn't recall what had actually happened but the senior girls and Miss Mcgraw were missing.  After searching as long as possible the coachman returned to the college. From there on, the scandal of it blackened the college until it's ruin.

There are many more characters who played a large part; Albert the stableman and Michael, a young artistocrat living with his aunt and uncle, forming an unlikely friendship with Albert. The two of them went lookng for the missing girls independent of the police investigation. One of the girls was found, close to death, but she could not remember a single thing about the walk after the picnic or anything about the missing girls and teacher.

There is an otherworldly and eerie atmosphere about the disappearances and the subsequent events which seemed to touch on the lives of anyone involved with this picnic.

As Joan Lindsay attended a girl's boarding school in the same vicinity it has been suggested this is very loosely based on a true story.  That is never revealed to be true and I think this novel was a brilliant fiction Lindsay created.  As the author stated when asked, "Whether Picnic at Hanging Rock is fact or fiction, the reader must decide for themselves...it hardly matters."

It should be noted there was a final chapter which the editor asked Lindsay to delete, leaving things ambiguous rather than explaining.  I'll be looking for that version called The Secret of Hanging Rock, it would include chapter 18, to see how our author wanted to end this.

4 stars

Sharing with The Classics Club for the spin.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Monday Mailbox

 Monday Mailbox is hosted by Vicki at I'd Rather Be at the Beach.  This is a weekly event to share books we added to our collections. 



Last week I bought Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay for the Classic Club Spin and started it a few days ago.



From the library I received Time of The Child by Niall Williams for Kindle checkout and hope to get to it before it's due back.


Did you get any books this week?  Check out Monday Mailbox to see who linked up this week.

Friday, June 20, 2025

Home is where the rabbits roam

First off, apologies for not answering emails or visiting blogs for a bit.  I will be catching up soon!

πŸ‡What a week. We have finally moved and unpacked most of the 75 boxes and set up furniture. Last night we were listening to music and realized how relaxed we felt ...it feels like home.  We wondered if there would be an adjustment after spending 33 years in our previous home but we are very happy.




One thing I did not expect was seeing so many rabbits in this closed in neighborhood.  The previous owner said she'd get rabbits and squirrels in the yard and I wondered about that.  We see several loping about across lawns, sitting under trees in the front yards - it's so cool!  We opened the front door to get Loki out for a walk and one was apparently sitting in the flower bed just off the entrance.  Amazing that Loki never saw it run into the bushes.



Books

This past week I posted about the Classic Club Spin and the number that came up is 11 so I will be reading Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay. This is an Australian author with a setting in Australia.



Among the many books I've unpacked I came across these two gems. The Mike Biles book is a fabulous easy to read history about England. 

Bored Of the Rings is a parody of J.R.R. Tolkien's book. It's probably out of print. Doug has had it since he was in high school so it's amazing it's not been lost in any of our moves. 
Just wanted to share those for British Isles Friday.





Friday, June 13, 2025

Classic Club Spin time!

 It's the Classic Club Spin Time!  Here's my book list for spin #41

  1. A Room with a View by E.M. Forester
  2. A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
  3. Agnes Grey by Ann Bronte
  4. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
  5. Daisy Miller by Henry James
  6. Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
  7. Goodnight, Mr. Tom by Michelle Magorian
  8. Hotel Du Lac by Anita Brookner
  9. It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
  10. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
  11. Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay
  12. Scapegoat by Daphne Du Maurier
  13. Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
  14. Tess of the D'urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
  15. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
  16. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
  17. The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
  18. The Quiet American by Graham Greene
  19. The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell
  20. To Sir with Love by E.R. Braithwaite
When the spin number is announced on Sunday June 15 I will (hopefully) read that book before August 25, 2025.  




Sharing With

The Classics Club


Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Italian drama and Typhoid Mary

 Happy Tuesday!  I thought I would take some time to catch up on the blog for tv and book chat. Here a few I finished.

Finished a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card - The Story of a New Name by Elena  Ferrante. This is book two in the series. I rounded up to 4 stars.  The characters are complicated and you want to read more about the interactions between Lila and Elena but wow, what a vile bunch of characters surrounding them.  

Elena and Lila have been friends since they were very young and always had a tempetuous relationship.  At times they are fiercely loyal to one another and other times, barely controlling their jealousy with sharp comments or snubs.  Definitely a different friendship than any I have ever experienced.  They are young women now, Lila married at 16 to the overbearing Stefano.  He beats her, he buys her the best of everything but he will never break her spirit.  Sadly, Lila realizes too late she should have not married him.

Elena continues with her studies and excels with her educational pursuits. While she has a bit of envy about Lila's financial stabilty and standing in their community, Lila in turn has some envy about Elena being able to continue school and escaping the life in the neighborhood.

Jealousy, barbed comments, love and more in this novel.

πŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“š


I also finished Fever by Mary Beth Keane.


This is a historical fiction relying heavy on facts about Mary Mallon,  an Irish woman, also known as Typhoid Mary.  She was arrested in 1907 because she was suspected of spreading disease.  The story details historical facts about her incarceration, testing ad nauseum, her employers and more. After her arrest she was held at a hospital for medical testing then moved to North Brother Island where she remained in quarantine for decades.
It's quite an interesting story and the author keeps you engaged with the personal details about Mary's life. 

Other books I have read by Keane are Ask Again, Yes and The Half Moon.  Looking forward to The Walking People.


As for watching, we have finished season one of Landman and Billy Bob Thorton is fantastic in the lead role.


It's spin time at the Classics Club so I will get my spin post up or scheduled before the weekend. I'm hoping for one of the British authors such as Graham Greene, Ann Bronte, Forester or Hardy.  We will see.

As I write we have two more nights in our home and then off to a hotel with Loki, then closing on the new place. Catch up with you later :-)

Sharing with:

Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Joy for British Isles Friday


Saturday, June 7, 2025

If it's rainy I'll be reading.....

It's been raining  off and on for days and my flowers are thriving. I suppose I will plant more at the new house next week as I love the vibrant colors.

Library Loot

I was not expecting Frozen River to be available to me for weeks as I was number 22 on the hold list so I didn't think to suspend it.  The library does rent books when one is popular so I suppose that's what happened here.  Either way, I will tuck into this fat novel and hope to finish in my timeframe allotted.



Landman starring Billy Bob Thornton, Jon Hamm and Demi Moore was also available so we started watching it as we are done with season one of Jack Irish.  It's great so far but if you are offended by the F bomb, be warned.


A new addition of Book Page is available and I found several books for my TBR.  A highlight is Daughters of the Bamboo Grove,  a nonfiction by Barbara Demick.  There is an interview with the author and I found it interesting.

"Daughters of the Bamboo Grove tells the gripping story of separated twins, their respective fates in China and the USA, and Barbara Demick's role in reuniting them against huge odds. Painting a rich portrait of China's history and culture, it asks questions about the roots, impact and consequences of China's one-child policy, the ethics of international adoption, and, ultimately, the assumptions and narratives we hold about the quality of lives lived in the East and the West."

I don't usually drop the money for a new publication but I am mighty tempted for this one.


That's my week's Mailbox Monday and Sunday Salon.  Hope you received some goodies this week.

Sharing with Vicki for Mailbox Monday and Deb at Readerbuzz




Monday, June 2, 2025

Mailbox Monday

 Mailbox Monday is hosted by Vicki and gives us a chance to share what we have gotten in this week.




Katherine at I Wish I Lived in a Library had posted about this book But Have You Read the Book?  See her post here.  Fortunately my library had a copy.



It was fun going through the titles and seeing which ones I'd read, which I had watched but not read and which ones I'd read and watched.




As for DVDs in Mailbox Monday I grabbed sets one and two of Jack Irish and season one of Jack Irish.  If you are ever going to watch this series it starts with Set 1 and 2 then follows with Seasons 1, 2 and 3.


That's my week's Mailbox Monday.  Hope you received some goodies this week.

Sharing with Vicki for Mailbox Monday


Friday, May 30, 2025

Some good reading this month

The end of May already....wow. Nothing new here except catching up on some emails and errands. We finished watching the series Firefly and I sure wish they had continued it. Next week is my birthday so we will get a pizza and watch The Martian that evening. Loki has been looking a bit unhappy about the lack of furniture in the house these days but that will all change soon.

On to book chat.  I have been very behind in writing anything or linking up.

I read Rick Steves On the Hippie Trail but never linked up. Review in the link.

I also finished Where the Forest Meets the River.   This picks up five years after the first book with all the same characters and I loved it.  Can't wait for her to publish the last one in this series because I need to know what happens with Greg, Rose, Nate, Richard and ...well, all of the characters in this small town.  There have been some revelations, some closure and lots of hope but she sure left us with a few cliff hangers!


Most recently there was The Distance Between Us by Maggie O'Farrell, a recommendation by Les at Coastal Horizons.   As with any O'Farrell book I've read this one grabbed me straight away.  There isn't a lot of dialogue, especially in the beginning chapters, but the descriptive writing drops you right into the middle of Jake's Hong Kong new year celebration and resulting tragedy.  The other storyline, which will eventually merge, takes us into Stella and Nina's world in London, Wales and Scotland. All three of our main characters have big secrets.


Next up will be a roundup for Elena Ferrante and Rosamunde Pilcher books.

I hope you have gotten some good reading in this May.  Thinking of Shelleyrae at Book'd Out where she is dealing with severe flooding.  Thoughts are with you!

Armchair travel for May has taken me to Maine, Scotland, England, Hong Kong, Italy and Ireland.

Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday and Deb at Readerbuzz  for Sunday Salon.

 

Monday, May 19, 2025

Rick Steves on the hippie trail
(2025 Nonfiction Reading Challenge}

Rick Steves' travel books and shows are always informative and entertaining.  This publication isn't a typical guide book.  Actually, it's not a guide book at all. It's a memoir and diary of an amazing trip he and his friend endured when they were in their twenties.


I did say endured as it was described as an primitive adventure with total lack of refinement. Filthy conditions for sleeping, dangerous border guards and at times meals with questionable concern regarding preparation. That said, it's exactly what he and his friend wanted to check off the bucket list.  The Hippie Trail. You know straight off you'd have rough conditions but it's the adventure of a lifetime.

This is actually the diary of two 23 year old friends who make this trip work on a showstring budget.  They controlled themselves by limiting photos to 11 per day.  These were the days of film and no cell phone snaps. 

The appeal to me was reading about the youthful carefree attitude regarding travel.  Something I have done, but wouldn't repeat now.

I was in Europe the same year Steves arrived to start this journey but my loose itinerary was all about seeing western Europe (and as much of it as possible) before money ran out. A one way ticket from Miami to Luxembourg and savings lasted me (and the now ex-husband) for a year and a half before returning home.  I interject this because I get the youthful sense of adventurous traveling, sleeping in a van, discovering new foods and cultures with zero responsibilities. 

Much thanks to Deb at Readerbuzz for the opportunity to read this book.

This book is shared with Shelleyrae at Book'd Out for the 2025 Nonfiction Reader Challenge. Category: Published in 2025

Friday, May 16, 2025

Boxing and Reading

Hello fellow book bloggers. The whirlwind of putting the house on the market, selling in two days and getting in contract for another put my head in a spin. While I had finished two books prior I've yet to get it together for reviews.  Those two are coming up next week as I have to have a goal.  And I need some fun time that doesn't involve boxes, bubble wrap and labels  😊

Currently reading Elena Ferrante's book The Story of a New Name, the second in the trilogy, with Susan as a buddy read. I like it better than the first book and the story picks up where book one left off.



I had finished The Book Club by Roisin Meaney and couldn't remember if I posted it so...here it is.


The Book Club by Roisin Meaney grabbed me by the name of the book as well as the setting. A book club and it's in Ireland - yes, please. Just about all of it takes place in Ireland with some London memories thrown in. I enjoyed the mentions of Doolin, Cliffs of Moher and Nenagh, all places we have visited years past.


The main characters are listed in the front so I bookmarked that page for reference as I read. A makeshift library was created by Beth Sullivan as the town didn't have a library for the residents and the book club met in this cozy book filled cabin. The location was near the Sullivan home off a cliff with ocean views. That might be a deal breaker for me - moving to a town without a library. Good for Beth creating an impressive collection for the readers in town.

Beth is a 72 year old retired widow who has had her share of tragedy. Her only daughter, son-in-law and a granddaughter were killed in a car accident. Immediately after the accident her other granddaughter named Lil dropped out of college, stopped speaking then then moved in with her grandmother. This is important to the entire story line.

The story weaves in and out with several characters overlapping each other's lives. Not one single unlikable character in the book. Next door to Beth we have Tom, the newest addition to the community who has moved from Dublin to the Kerry coast. He is renting a house from Beth located next to hers. The empty house was her deceased daugher's so you know there will be emotional moments over that. Tom also has a secret and he doesn't reveal that to his new community.

The characters are well developed so I had a good mental picture of them and the dialogue was smooth. A coastal Kerry setting, a book club, a pub, a gift shop and nice people made this a feel-good book. While I wasn't tempted to abandon the book there were things that I wish had panned out differently near the end.

For instance, we eventually learn what Tom was hiding but it doesn't come up until near the end of the book. It's something people may not be comfortable with had they known about it without understanding the circumstances. Also Lil's constant writing in a notebook to communicate, as it's evident she has no medical reason to remain silent, got a little contrived. Things wrap up quite neatly but so quickly at the very end...meaning a few pages from the end. All the secrets and turmoil could have been introduced earlier, in my opinion, instead of a rushed ending. It leaves the reader to come up with their own conclusions to what happens to certain characters.

That said, I would read another of Irish author Roisin Meany's books as I was kept interested and love the setting. 3.5 stars

Loki

Last but not least - have a look at unbridled joy.  Loki rolling in the sunshine.






Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon and Joy for British Isles Friday.

Friday, May 9, 2025

Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh
#BriFri # ClassicsClub

 Brideshead Revisited was on my spin list for the Classics Club but I wasn't able to finish it in time.  It was interesting n some parts but other parts I found it a slog.  This would cause me distraction and I'd read something else. Hence my lengthy reading time with a 400+ page book.


The book starts in the WW II time period with Captain Charles Ryder moving his troops along the English countryside. When his company comes upon an estate to set up their camp it's revealed to be Brideshead, a vast property and mansion owned by the wealthy Flyte family. Charles is very much familiar with the home and property as he spent a good deal of time there, in what seems to him, a lifetime ago when he was a student at Oxford.

Immediately after arriving at Brideshead Captain Ryder, as the narrator, recollects how he met fellow student Lord Sebastian Flyte at Oxford roughly twenty years earlier. It's a very rude introduction as Charles is hosting a party in his rooms and Sebastian walks by, drunk, leans into the window to speak and vomits all over the floor. To make amends he invites Charles to his home for a lunch and apologizes.  This ignited a deep friendship between Charles and Sebastian. As they spent more time together Charles was embraced by the Flyte family and became close to Sebastian's sisters - Lady Julia and Lady Cordelia.

As Evelyn Waugh embraced Catholicism in the 1930s it influenced his writing, making religion a prominent theme with this particular book.  As you read about Charles' relationships with Lady Marchmain, Julia and Sebastian you'll see how Catholicism becomes rather it's own character, a cape of guilt for Julia when her father suggests she is living in sin.  The sin was her leaving the church to marry Rex and then her affair with Charles. There are many other instances where faith, guilt and life styles  are explored.

I've always been bad. Probably I shall be bad again, punished again. But the worse I am, the more I need God. I can't shut myself out from His mercy. ... Or it may be a private bargain between me and God, that if I give up this one thing I want so much, however bad I am, He won't quite despair of me in the end.”

There are many sections to this book.  The Oxford years, Sebastian leaving England for Venice, his alcoholism, Charles and the Flyte family and of course the war.

Overall, I wasn't crazy about the book but I am most likely in the minority. 3.5 stars

Linking up with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday and The Classics Club.



Hello December....❄

Hello world. I've been absent for a bit but probably haven't missed anything crucial.  I guess.  Life got mad at us in November.   E...