Nine Coaches Waiting is probably Mary Stewart's most well-known (and well-loved) book. And I can see why. This was the second time I've read this book and it was just as enjoyable as the first time I read it.
In this book, young Linda Martin goes to Chateau Valmy in the French Alps as a governess. There is a sad past involving brutal orphanages that is mentioned briefly, but other than that, we know absolutely nothing about her. When Linda arrives at the chateau, she is struck by its beauty and grace and is determined to do well. But after several days, she begins to realize that the chateau is full of dark secrets. There is the pale, shy little boy named Philipe and host of characters that surround him: the creepy, yet brilliant uncle and the aunt who is nervous and takes pills, the friendly American who is working as a forester, and the wild young cousin who comes for visits. After one harrowing night where Philipe narrowly misses being shot in the woods, Linda begins to suspect the uncle and his son.
This book is quite gripping. In some of Mary Stewart's books, she overdoes the atmospheric suspense a bit, but in this book, that hefty does of suspense works wonders. As Linda and Philipe creep through the foggy forest and hide in a little wooden cabin to escape the evil uncle (whoops, spoiler...but you knew that was coming), you can just feel the tension build. The characters who were evil were just evil enough to be convincing and the good characters were nice, but not nicity-nice.
The one thing that mildly annoyed me was the French. The French characters would speak English to Linda and then just say one or two random words in French. As Linda is speaking only English (even though she knows French quite fluently-it's her one power over her employers, they don't know she can tell what they're saying), I have no idea why they're assuming that she just knows the occasional French word. But that's such a nit-picky thing and it wasn't a huge part of the plot, so I really shouldn't complain. At least it wasn't as bad as the 50s movies where all of the characters speak English throughout the whole movie with a stilted, awkward French accent. Gah.
Of course, I read this book in the new edition I got with the pretty vintage illustrated cover. I am having so much fun reading these books all over again in a nice edition. This book is a must-read. If you never read another Mary Stewart book again, this is the one to read. But I say that with every Mary Stewart book I review, so just read any of the Mary Stewarts and you'll be glad you did.
I can't do the Amazon link for these Mary Stewart books because they're only sold through Amazon UK. So for my American readers, if you want to get this specific edition, google Amazon UK and then type in any of the Mary Stewart titles and you'll find them.
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Monday, June 2, 2014
Words I Love (And Wish Were Used More)
I was taking the laundry off the top of the line and over and over in my head I was happily repeating the word, "befuddle". This might sound ridiculously strange, but sometimes I'll come across a word (doesn't have to be a new word) in a book and the word just strikes me. I savor it as I go about my business and, usually, the word sticks with me for a long time. Anyway, I thought I would share some of my favorite words. Most of them aren't particularly extraordinary, they're just words that strike me as fun to say (or think).
So here are my words that I think are really fun to say (and just fun words in general). Thanks to Dictionary.com for the definitions. The examples are my own.
1. Flack- Eg. "He didn't get a lot of flack about his latest business decisions." It means "to publicize or promote something or somebody". However, when I've heard it it always has negative connotations.
2. Defunct- Eg. "The computer that once worked quite well is now completely defunct." It means, "no longer living; dead or extinct; no longer operative or valid". I don't know why, but saying this word just amuses me.
3. Jabberwocky- Eg. "When Joe talks, it is merely jabberwocky." It means, "Invented or meaningless language; nonsense". I have loved the Jabberwocky poem by Lewis Carroll for a long time, so this word is one of my favorites.
4. Mellifluous- Eg. "Everything she said was mellifluous in tone." It means, "sweet or musical; pleasant to hear". This word is just so fun to say! I also love that it sounds like what it means. It's not quite onomatopoeia, but it's awfully close.
5. Perspicacious- Eg. "Lucy is quite perspicacious when it comes to people's characters". It means, "having a ready insight into and understanding of things." I still remember the first time I ever heard this word in about 5th grade. I was completely struck by how fascinating the word sounded and scurried off to ask somebody what it meant.
6. Tintinnabulation (yes, I spelled that without looking it up!)- Eg. "The tintinnabulation of bells filled the air." It means, "a ringing or tinkling sound." This word just sounds joyful, doesn't it? I don't think I've ever used the word in sentence in real life, but it's a nice word to know.
7. Vicissitudes- Eg. "Ah, the vicissitudes of life." It means, "a change of circumstance or fortune, typically one that is unwelcome of unpleasant." It's just a handy word to have on hand when you're gripping and it's fun to say as an added bonus.
8. Avuncular-Eg. "Mr. Smith had an avuncular manner." It means, "of or relating to an uncle." Again, don't think I've ever actually used this.
9. Placebo- Eg. "Aunt Beatrice begged for her placebo pills every morning and night, little knowing that they did nothing". It means, "a harmless pill, medicine, or procedure prescribed more for the psychological benefit to the patient than for any physiological effect." Just a funny word. I first read it in a science magazine in middle school.
10. Gormless- Eg. "Freddie is a gormless lackard." It means, "lacking sense or initiative; foolish." This word makes me grin every time I read it or say it (yes, I have used this word several times). It's normally used with another archaic insult word because it's an adjective. So you couldn't say, "Freddie is a gormless." I think this might be my favorite word on the list. It's quite handy as an insult when you're just enraged. I first heard this word in a children's book, The Penderwicks. I am eternally grateful to Jane Penderwick for this great word.
So here are my words that I think are really fun to say (and just fun words in general). Thanks to Dictionary.com for the definitions. The examples are my own.
1. Flack- Eg. "He didn't get a lot of flack about his latest business decisions." It means "to publicize or promote something or somebody". However, when I've heard it it always has negative connotations.
2. Defunct- Eg. "The computer that once worked quite well is now completely defunct." It means, "no longer living; dead or extinct; no longer operative or valid". I don't know why, but saying this word just amuses me.
3. Jabberwocky- Eg. "When Joe talks, it is merely jabberwocky." It means, "Invented or meaningless language; nonsense". I have loved the Jabberwocky poem by Lewis Carroll for a long time, so this word is one of my favorites.
4. Mellifluous- Eg. "Everything she said was mellifluous in tone." It means, "sweet or musical; pleasant to hear". This word is just so fun to say! I also love that it sounds like what it means. It's not quite onomatopoeia, but it's awfully close.
5. Perspicacious- Eg. "Lucy is quite perspicacious when it comes to people's characters". It means, "having a ready insight into and understanding of things." I still remember the first time I ever heard this word in about 5th grade. I was completely struck by how fascinating the word sounded and scurried off to ask somebody what it meant.
6. Tintinnabulation (yes, I spelled that without looking it up!)- Eg. "The tintinnabulation of bells filled the air." It means, "a ringing or tinkling sound." This word just sounds joyful, doesn't it? I don't think I've ever used the word in sentence in real life, but it's a nice word to know.
7. Vicissitudes- Eg. "Ah, the vicissitudes of life." It means, "a change of circumstance or fortune, typically one that is unwelcome of unpleasant." It's just a handy word to have on hand when you're gripping and it's fun to say as an added bonus.
8. Avuncular-Eg. "Mr. Smith had an avuncular manner." It means, "of or relating to an uncle." Again, don't think I've ever actually used this.
9. Placebo- Eg. "Aunt Beatrice begged for her placebo pills every morning and night, little knowing that they did nothing". It means, "a harmless pill, medicine, or procedure prescribed more for the psychological benefit to the patient than for any physiological effect." Just a funny word. I first read it in a science magazine in middle school.
10. Gormless- Eg. "Freddie is a gormless lackard." It means, "lacking sense or initiative; foolish." This word makes me grin every time I read it or say it (yes, I have used this word several times). It's normally used with another archaic insult word because it's an adjective. So you couldn't say, "Freddie is a gormless." I think this might be my favorite word on the list. It's quite handy as an insult when you're just enraged. I first heard this word in a children's book, The Penderwicks. I am eternally grateful to Jane Penderwick for this great word.
Sunday, June 1, 2014
Tasha Tudor
Just this week, I check an old favorite out of the library. It was one of the beautiful books that are about Tasha Tudor. For those of you who don't know, Tasha Tudor was an eccentric old New Englander who wrote and illustrated beautiful children's books. She was sort of the American Beatrix Potter. But books were just the tip of her skills. She was known for her gorgeous gardens, delicious food, old-fashioned dress, and generally picturesque lifestyle. She lived all alone in a farmhouse with her many animals (she was best known for her collection of corgis).
Throughout the years, people came to interview her and photograph her life. This book, The Private World of Tasha Tudor, is organized by season. There are gorgeous pictures of Tudor's fascinating life and the words in the book are her own. The author took multiple recordings of her talking about things in her life and then he organized them into this book.
The pictures are really the main point. Sure, having Tudor's charming voice on paper is nice, but the beautiful pictures are what I love so much about the Tasha Tudor books. The sweeping dresses in Civil War prints, the bank of lilies, the charmingly clutter-y kitchen are captured so beautifully.
This book is wonderful and not just in a coffee-table book way. I find Tasha Tudor's books to be kind of like looking at Pinterest-interesting and inspiring for me. There are quite a few books about Tudor from a garden book to crafting book. But I think that The Private World is probably the best of them because it's written in Tudor's own words and the photography is by far the best. I really enjoyed this book.
Throughout the years, people came to interview her and photograph her life. This book, The Private World of Tasha Tudor, is organized by season. There are gorgeous pictures of Tudor's fascinating life and the words in the book are her own. The author took multiple recordings of her talking about things in her life and then he organized them into this book.
The pictures are really the main point. Sure, having Tudor's charming voice on paper is nice, but the beautiful pictures are what I love so much about the Tasha Tudor books. The sweeping dresses in Civil War prints, the bank of lilies, the charmingly clutter-y kitchen are captured so beautifully.
This book is wonderful and not just in a coffee-table book way. I find Tasha Tudor's books to be kind of like looking at Pinterest-interesting and inspiring for me. There are quite a few books about Tudor from a garden book to crafting book. But I think that The Private World is probably the best of them because it's written in Tudor's own words and the photography is by far the best. I really enjoyed this book.
Saturday, May 31, 2014
Unpunished
After endlessly procrastinating (I have no idea why), I finally got around to reading Unpunished. And I am so glad that I did! Unpunished is written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a fairly famous feminist writer from the 20s. She is better known for writing such things as The Yellow Wallpaper and Herland. However, before she became a famous writer, she wrote a little mystery gently poking fun at mysteries of the time and providing radical (for the time) social commentary. This mystery is Unpunished.
Unpunished is the story of a surprisingly (again, for the time) equal couple. This husband and wife are joint detectives. Every evening, they come home, cook supper, and then clean up together. This might not sound jaw-dropping for today, but for that time period, this was pretty ridiculously unexpected. The husband finds out about a new case in which a very unlikeable man has been shot, stabbed, bludgeoned, hanged (not hung, people), and poisoned. As the couple digs into the mystery, they realize what a truly awful person this man was. This man (sorry, I can't remember his name) ruled all of the women in his home with an iron fist and oppressed so many people that were "lower" than he was to such an awful extent that any number of people are suspected for murdering him. In fact, the reader is actually expected to sympathize with the suspected members, rather than the murdered person. The family is miserable and oppressed and would like nothing better than to get back at this tyrant. Gilman writes so bitterly about this man that I was quite sure that she had had some experience with somebody rather like him. I went back and read the preface and, sure enough, her brother-in-law was, apparently, a hateful and bossy old somebody who ruled her after her father died.
Aside from being a good mystery that left me saying, "What?!" at the end of it, this story was well written and made some pretty important commentary, even for today. Sure, bossy old fathers forcing their young daughters into unwanted arranged marriages isn't happening very frequently, but the way people interact with each other and the world is still a relevant topic today. This book is slow going at first, but the story starts to seep in to you after a few chapters. I highly recommend it
And I have the amazon link. Our library was discarding it and I just happened to catch it, so I don't know how many libraries are keeping the book. (I'm not saying that your library doesn't have it- our's has the unfortunate tendency to throw out the old books and keep buying new, more "relevant" books.) Happy Reading!
Unpunished is the story of a surprisingly (again, for the time) equal couple. This husband and wife are joint detectives. Every evening, they come home, cook supper, and then clean up together. This might not sound jaw-dropping for today, but for that time period, this was pretty ridiculously unexpected. The husband finds out about a new case in which a very unlikeable man has been shot, stabbed, bludgeoned, hanged (not hung, people), and poisoned. As the couple digs into the mystery, they realize what a truly awful person this man was. This man (sorry, I can't remember his name) ruled all of the women in his home with an iron fist and oppressed so many people that were "lower" than he was to such an awful extent that any number of people are suspected for murdering him. In fact, the reader is actually expected to sympathize with the suspected members, rather than the murdered person. The family is miserable and oppressed and would like nothing better than to get back at this tyrant. Gilman writes so bitterly about this man that I was quite sure that she had had some experience with somebody rather like him. I went back and read the preface and, sure enough, her brother-in-law was, apparently, a hateful and bossy old somebody who ruled her after her father died.
Aside from being a good mystery that left me saying, "What?!" at the end of it, this story was well written and made some pretty important commentary, even for today. Sure, bossy old fathers forcing their young daughters into unwanted arranged marriages isn't happening very frequently, but the way people interact with each other and the world is still a relevant topic today. This book is slow going at first, but the story starts to seep in to you after a few chapters. I highly recommend it
And I have the amazon link. Our library was discarding it and I just happened to catch it, so I don't know how many libraries are keeping the book. (I'm not saying that your library doesn't have it- our's has the unfortunate tendency to throw out the old books and keep buying new, more "relevant" books.) Happy Reading!
Friday, May 30, 2014
A Walk
After a busy morning, I took a walk down the lane to put a letter in the mailbox. A kitty-friend (Shadow) followed me down and we had a lovely walk enjoying the view and taking pictures (in my case) and shrinking in fear from the cussing mockingbird (in her case). I'm sharing the pictures with you that I took today.
She leaped down off of the bench where she was sleeping and agreed to join me for a walk… |
But first, she had to gaze a little apprehensively up at the tree that held the enraged mockingbird, |
Who warned her that her days were numbered and if she even thought about getting his babies, she had him to answer to. |
We saw gorgeous iris and poppies…I love that little window of time where both are in flower… |
And the clothesline full of wash… |
And a blue, blue sky. |
Thursday, May 29, 2014
A Toast Rack
I'll be back tomorrow with a review of Unpunished. Yes! I finally got around to reading the dang thing and it was a wonderful read.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Henry Reed
I'm back again today with yet another wonderful children's book, this time for slightly older readers. This book is in my personal library and the other day I just randomly picked it up and started reading it. The book is called Henry Reed's Babysitting Service. Henry Reed is the son of an ambassador who travels all over the world. Every summer, he comes to his aunt and uncle's cozy little 1950s New Jersey neighborhood. There are several books, but my favorite is definitely Henry Reed's Babysitting. After the previous summer which is covered in the first book, Henry returns to Grover's Corner and proceeds to plan another moneymaking scheme with his friend Midge.
After conducting lengthy surveys of all the neighbors, they see that there is a real need for babysitting. And there starts the fun. There is the busy housewife for whom they cook hamburgers, little knowing that the "hamburger meat" is really ground horse meat for the poodle; and there's the extremely naughty little girl who is surprisingly good at hiding from her caretakers. But no matter what Henry and Midge do, they always have surprising adventures. And of course, as in all good 50s children's books, adults are blissfully absent, meaning that the children can have uproarious times without any supervision whatsoever.
The book is written in a diary form (something I don't normally enjoy reading), but the stories are so funny and interesting that it works quite well. I think that the diary form actually works very well for the reader because Henry's voice comes through so clearly without interruptions from the author.
I first heard of these books in middle school, when my dad read one of them aloud. I remember loving them at once, so it was fun to read through this book again. This story is really great for any age. Along with Henry's very funny voice are the great illustrations. All 5 of the Henry Reed books were illustrated by the famous Robert McCloskey (who illustrated and wrote Blueberries for Sal). Anybody as young as 6 would get the humor and the adventures and there is something timeless about the stories, even with the 50s American references.
After conducting lengthy surveys of all the neighbors, they see that there is a real need for babysitting. And there starts the fun. There is the busy housewife for whom they cook hamburgers, little knowing that the "hamburger meat" is really ground horse meat for the poodle; and there's the extremely naughty little girl who is surprisingly good at hiding from her caretakers. But no matter what Henry and Midge do, they always have surprising adventures. And of course, as in all good 50s children's books, adults are blissfully absent, meaning that the children can have uproarious times without any supervision whatsoever.
Henry and Midge |
The book is written in a diary form (something I don't normally enjoy reading), but the stories are so funny and interesting that it works quite well. I think that the diary form actually works very well for the reader because Henry's voice comes through so clearly without interruptions from the author.
I first heard of these books in middle school, when my dad read one of them aloud. I remember loving them at once, so it was fun to read through this book again. This story is really great for any age. Along with Henry's very funny voice are the great illustrations. All 5 of the Henry Reed books were illustrated by the famous Robert McCloskey (who illustrated and wrote Blueberries for Sal). Anybody as young as 6 would get the humor and the adventures and there is something timeless about the stories, even with the 50s American references.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)