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 I'll get back to a an interesting post I'm compiling on historical clothing soon.  Just down with a bad asthma attack...

 

My husband did a long over-due clear-out on our utility room - we've managed to get rid of about half the contents - but the amount of dust it kicked up triggered a really bad asthma attack.

 

Still, I'm certainly not going to complain - I can open the door fully, and I can use the sink in there again!

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I think this is one of my favourite Heyers of all. Both of the protagonists are sensible people, who don't actually want to spend all their lives at parties and routs, people drawn a little deeper and with more character. They're not quite your typical romance stereotypes. I love many Heyer books, but Jenny and Adam feel the most like real people. Adam, Viscount Lynton, was happy with his career as an army Captain and a big fan of the Duke of Wellington. Unlike many books set in the Napoleonic era, we get a lot more awareness of the progress of the war with Napoleon. Many of Adam's friends are still in the army, and his awareness of just how little interest the people he interacts with in London society have of the war, is galling to him. Jenny is the daughter of Jonathan Chawleigh, an extremely wealthy businessman. Her father wants a title for his daughter. Adam has come home on his father's unexpected death to discover that all he has is debts and mortgaged property. He had plans to marry his sweetheart, Julia, but all that is now impossible... The most interesting thing about the book is how Jenny copes with the knowledge that her husband is still in love with another woman - Julia. And she with him. Jenny is very sensible in her approach to the situation, and the contrast between Jenny's sense and Julia's sensibility is in many ways the heart of the novel. (Sensibility is a word far less in use these days, but 'sensibility' refers to an acute perception of or responsiveness toward something, such as the emotions of another. (or, in short, a propensity to get over-emotional about things...) If you want a novel in which people do all the usual romance cliches like denying their mad sexual attraction for each other, falling out because they misinterpreted something the other did, doing something really stupid to try and make the other, etc. then this won't be your book. If you want a novel where two people in a marriage that neither of them had anticipated, and where only one of them has feelings for the other, but who treat each other like adults and grow gradually in friendship and understanding as much as affection - then you may like this as much as I did.

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It's a funny thing, reading a book for review processes is a very different thing from reading it for fun.

Which is not to say that it can't be fun, but it's a different approach.

Since joining the English Civil War Society (Roundhead Association - down with Charles I), I noticed a request in the Roundhead Association newsletter for volunteers to review books.

I've reviewed stuff in the past - I used to write board game reviews, and I try to put decent descriptions on Good Reads when health allows - so I offered my services.

I got two books, one fiction one non-fiction.

The fiction book was a case where reviewing a book is a very different experience. It was a novel, set, naturally, during the English Civil War - a subject on which I have remarkably little knowledge...

I got half way down the first page before I was tempted to chuck it at the wall. The text was overblown and it was actually unclear what was going on.
It was a book I'd promised to review, so I persevered. Even with my knowledge of 17th century history, alarm bells were ringing. I can't remember why I felt it necessary to check the location of Bath's Guild hall in the 17th century, but half an hour on Google got it fixed beyond doubt. The writer had it in the wrong place. He also had a description of a tailors shop that felt totally wrong. The shop was all indoors, no apprentices, everything was ready made, no one was sitting sewing in the window. (Apparently I have picked up these things by osmosis over the years)

The urge to rip the book apart was increasing. I'd certainly never have paid money for it!

But, it was a review copy. I struggled onwards.

We got to actual warfare. And suddenly everything changed. This was history that the writer really knew well. He was crap on civilian history, but details of uniforms, weapons, siege warfare, dysentry, Clubmen (the other combatants apart from King and Parliament -essentially local groups who tried to keep both sides out of their local area) he was great.

And, the text suddenly came to life. Writing in his own field, he wrote far far better. The story became exciting and far more developed.

I checked facts here and there, learnt that ships were indeed steered by a whipstaff during this period. I didn't catch him out on a single military factor, even some details that I thought were well-conceived flavour text turned out to have a basis in history.

I ended up writing quite a positive review, which I would never have done if I hadn't felt that I HAD to read it.

But, he really, really needs a beta reader who knows the social history of the mid seventeenth century. eg. Shepherds did not wear smocks (came in a lot later). At this time, a smock was a women's undergarment.

(I appear have picked up quite a bit of stuff relating to clothing and laundry, just by talking to other re-enactors. And reading this that and the other.)

It's called 'Forlorn Hope', by Nicholas Carter. Published a small press that specialises in military history. It's the seventh in a series.

https://www.caliverbooks.com/bookview.php?pp96m2j96ms01sadvqt5q42dq1&id=30420

Here's the review that I eventually wrote - just in case anyone here is into English Civil War novels...



Forlorn Hope (Shadow on the Crown, book 7)
by Nicholas Carter
available from https://www.caliverbooks.com/

Review by Judith Proctor

Initial impressions of this book are mostly positive.
It’s a large size paperback with attractive cover art by Chris Collingwood showing Prince Rupert looking over his cavalry.
It’s printed on excellent quality paper – far better than a typical hardback. This book will not go yellow and brittle over the decades.
However, it has double-spaced paragraphs, which instantly gives me a frisson of concern. Large paperback books with double-spaced paragraphs are almost always self-published, print on demand books, which means the quality can vary enormously...

The first few pages seemed to justify this fear:

The opening location is stated as ‘by Bath Guildhall, August 21, 1645’. (I like the writer’s habit of dating each section, it makes it very easy to track the course of the civil war.)
The opening paragraphs establish that the soldiers are in a tailor’s shop. However, a few pages later, the shop is described as a ‘back street hovel’.
But by 1645, Bath Guildhall was definitely in the High street, not a back street. In 1625, a new building had replaced the old Guildhall (which was probably on Boatstall Lane near the East Gate.)

The tailor’s shop itself feels wrong for the period. He’s selling shirts, stockings and hats as well as other breeches and doublets. He has a surprising amount of goods ready-made (which requires a lot of money, and tailors were not well paid). Also, it’s a weekday, so why has he no apprentices at work? It’s possible the Royalist army conscripted them, but I would have expected at least one or two.

The first few pages carry on in this vein – not feeling really grounded in the seventeenth century. My favourite error was ‘Lord High Executioner’. Any Gilbert and Sullivan fans among you will instantly recognise that that title comes from ‘The Mikado’. It had no existence as a real title at any point in history – which makes it extremely unlikely that Sparrow would use it, even in jest.

One minor point that I find irritating is Carter’s reluctance to stick to a single name for a character. eg. The Royalist Colonel, Pothcurn, has to be called ‘The Cornishman’ roughly every third time he is mentioned.

I’ll be honest, and say that if I wasn’t reading this book for a review, I would have stopped by the end of the first few pages.

But I’m glad I didn’t. It gets better. A LOT better.

Once we get out of Bath and into military affairs, Carter is on his home ground. His writing really starts to flow. The descriptive text is colourful and detailed and really sets you in the period. It’s full of period details and introduced me to things I hadn’t come across before like clay grenades.

I’m enjoying the book now, taking in the action, the characters and the little details that are the result of a writer loving his subject. I was delighted to find that Sparrow – a Bristol man – remembered details like the aldermen having a duck shoot at Treen Mills before the war began. Even more delighted when I discovered this came from an actual historical record that referred to the duck shoot. I’d have been fine if Carter had invented that particular detail, but it shows how cleanly he can weave historical details into his narrative, when they relate to combat scenes.

Not just the army combat, ships as well. While Sparrow is at Treen Mills, he is to encounter the ‘Tenth Whelp’. This ship did exist, and it existed in the time and place he sets it (It was the tenth ship called ‘Lion’s Whelp’, hence ‘Tenth Whelp’). Just as Carter describes, it was equipped with sweeps as well as sails, and was steered by a whipstaff – I hadn’t come across the term ‘whipstaff’ before as my naval reading is normally Napoleonic, and they’d advanced to the well-known, spoked wheels by then – So I spent a happy ten minutes diving into the Internet discovering how a whipstaff works. Carter’s use is spot on.

I like books that tell me things that I didn’t know before, enjoy it when they give me the option of exploring more. I didn’t need to know how a whipstaff worked to understand the story – Carter makes it clear from context – but for me, it adds an extra element.
It also increases my trust in the writer.
With civilian stuff, he really needs a beta reader to double check for errata, as out of period words and phrases do slip in occasionally. (and small historical errors eg. washing clothes in fermented urine does not make them yellow – it’s a bleach)
Anything military… If I ever wrote anything military, I’d value his advice.

I love Carter’s ability to set a scene:
The nightfires illuminated the walls, gate, moats and approaches, casting a hellish glimmer over the pocked and battered stonework. Bristol was a fuming volcano, ringed in blinking, flickering fires.
And beyond the walls, Parliament’s army, defined by ten thousand smoking camp fires, half glimpsed in the drifting rain and sullen mists rising from the river like the dying breath of an undead host.

The combat scenes are all that any military enthusiast could ask for. Full of action, lots of period detail.
The Forlorn Hope formed up in grumbling silence, musketeers blowing on their match and swordsmen in the front ranks, several files of Telling’s pikemen wielding pikes at porte, the steel blades gleaming evilly.
Sparrow lifted his halberd and pointed the leaf-shaped blade at the walls, defenders and attackers locked together – the grand assault dangerously stalled behind the turf wall.
“Keep quiet - and follow me!”


This is the seventh book in a series – can it be read without reading the six previous books?
I think my answer would be yes. Provided you gloss over the first few pages with their confusing references to Germany, the Merode Bruders, etc. All you really need to know is that Major Sparrow (recently promoted) is currently with the dragoons; Parliament has just taken Bath and is preparing to besiege Bristol.

Do I recommend it – Absolutely.
And I didn’t expect to be saying that, when I started!



PS. Ignore the blurb on the back of the book. Whoever wrote it hadn’t actually read the book… Sparrow’s wife is NOT in Bristol. He knows where she is and she’s safe.
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Judith Proctor's Reviews > Sylvester or The Wicked Uncle

Sylvester or The Wicked Uncle by Georgette Heyer

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A young woman's romantic novel runs into problems, when she realizes that the villain of her book bears a much greater resemblance than she expected to a real person...
This is probably the funniest Heyer novel that I've read yet. Some of the characters are gloriously over the top: the mother who adors her baby boy all the time except when he's noisy, needs someone to play with, have a story read to him, etc. ( ie. she only really likes him, when someone else is looking after him but not the reality)
There is a cheerfully over the top fop with every single exaggerated item with clothing and jewelry that you could possibly wish for.
And a little boy who has picked up an awful lot of language he shouldn't have from the stable hands - and who then produces it at just the most in-opportune moment.

All in all, plenty of laughs, as well as a wonderfully mismatched couple who do manage to get together eventually, just in time for the required happy ending.
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 There are books you read and enjoy once, and there are books (not always the best ones) that you go back and read time and again.

These old friends are often ones that really got you when you were young, and they're a warm friend to return to. Some books make it onto the list later in life, but they have to have something special to add them to that list.  There has to be a comfort factor in there somewhere - the characters have to feel like people you know and want to spend time with.

Here's some of the ones on my list that have been re-read the most.

Heinlein gets three books on the list:

The Moon is a Harsh Mistress - there for the culture that Heinlein creates on the Moon, the complex marriage arrangements caused by the far greater number of men than women, MIKE who was the first self-aware computer I encountered and still one of my two favourites (Anne Leckie wrote the other).  Plus the whole against the odds rebellion against Earth and the way they go about it.

Double Star - An out of work actor agrees to act as a double for a politician who has been kidnapped just before a crucial visit to Mars.  Pure character - the actor is completely a-political, hates Martians, but very, very slowly, comes to understand the man he is impersonating.  My favourite scene in the entire book is when the King spots that he's a ringer. Why?  Becuase the guy he's replacing had detailed records on everyone he had to meet, but didn't need any aid to remember the King.  Our protagonist is polite about the monarch's model railway - which the original Bonforte thought was a silly hobby - and said so.

Citizen of the Galaxy - This wasn't a favourite when I was young. I always found the last section of the book to be a bit dull - the adventures cease and the bureaucracy begins.  As an adult, I understand what is being said. Slavery is an evil that cannot be eliminated by heroics.  To make any gains at all requires studying records, cash flow, ship movements, profits, etc.

Ursula le Guin - The first three Earthsea novels.  Pure magic.  But also with such understanding of human frailty.  Ged's journey from brash young man seeking the power he can gain from magic, is a long, long way from the man he will eventually come to be.  I lent this to a teenage friend recently, and was delighted when she said it was one of the best books she'd ever read.  (she reads a LOT of books)

Francis Hodgson Burnett - The Secret Garden. Something to do with Yorkshire, gardening, robins and really lonely/selfish children (who annoy each other so much that they eventually start to mature) makes this a book I keep coming back to.

 

Lois McMaster Bujold - the Vorkosigan series.  All of them. I have my favourites, but they'll all get re-read (yet again) eventually.  Strong women, love that depends on so much more than good looks, politics, characters growing up over time and learning/developing as they get older.  Space combat, laughter, friendship, the influence of one society on another. (One of the minor glories of this series, is that Barrayaran politicians (who tend to seriously underestimate women) fail to realise that letting the Regent's wife have a major input into the education of the young Emperor is bound to have him grow up with her political slant - which is far more broad-minded than that of anyone else on Barrayar.) Also, this series firmly plants its feet as LGBT positive.   The novel where a character changes gender in order to cope with the Barrarayan political system is both hilarious (for the reactions of all the old guard) and endearing.

Lois McMaster Bujold - the 'Penric and the Demon' series.  Hey, who wouldn't want to share their body with a two-hundred year old chaos demon  and end up worshipping a god 'The Bastard' with a very warped sense of humour? 
This is in many ways a very gentle series.  Events are often small in the eyes of the wider world, but vitally important for a few individuals. The Gods are real in this universe, but they cannot intervene directly.  to answer prayers, they need the aid of those who can hear/understand them. And those are very few in number.  Souls are greatly valued.  It is almost as important to save the soul of  a recently deceased person, as it is to save a life. Sometimes fear/unresolved business/even a desire to accuse a murderer can prevent a soul travelling directly to meet its god. But if the delay is too long, the soul fades and becomes sundered.

Tolkien - Lord of the Rings.  The only difference from enjoying it as a teenager, is that I get a lot more from the poetry now.

So, that's the ones that instantly come to mind - what are yours?  And why?

I can see that character growth and a well developed background feature highly in why I like these books so much.

 


 

 

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One  Of Heyer's very best books.

Frederica is used to being the head of her family. Since the death of her parents, she's had to organise her two younger Brothers, keep an eye on her older brother , and now she's trying to find a suitable husband for her beautiful sister.

The antics of her brothers lend real entertainment value to this story, and there is also genuine historical interest in things that Felix wants to visit. One of the joys of Georgette Heyer as a writer is that she always did her research in great detail. Frederica sees cows with milk for sale in Hyde Park, Felix goes to visit the inside of an iron foundry; and we watch a hot air balloon ascend. In the case of other writers, we might assume these to be made up , but when Georgette Heyer  is writing, you know that every historical detail will stand up to inspection.

This book is also delightfully amusing.
Alverstoke's interactions with Felix, as Felix attempts to drag him to see all kinds of mechanical things that Felix is convinced Alverstoke will find delightful, as pure joy, as are the conversations between Alverstoke and Frederica. 
At the decrepit age of 24, Frederica assumes she is out of the marriage market, so makes no attempt to attract Alverstoke for herself.  This leads to a friendly, relaxed dynamic that Alverstoke hasn't encountered before.
 
I was laughing audibly at many points in this book. I've read it before and will doubtless read it again :)
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 This book is an interesting read. Plaidy did a lot of research for her books (some details may be wrong as newer information has come to light since she wrote them, but overall they are pretty good on the accuracy front.)
 
It's an easy way of learning some history!
 
It's essentially about Sarah Churchill, the wife of the man who would become the Duke of Marlborough - a very successful general who won many battles.
 
And her poor relative Abigail Hill (eventually Abigail Masham).
 
Sarah discovers that some of her cousins have fallen into poverty and (probably to protect her own reputation) tries to find them positions/schooling.  She sees Abigail as being quiet and malleable and gets her a job as a chambermaid for Queen Anne (after several years of using Abigail pretty much as an unpaid servant for her own children).
 
Sarah and Anne spend much time together as children and Anne has always looked upto Sarah and admired her vivacity and outspokenness.  Anne has given Sarah important roles at court, but Sarah is very ambitious, and also has a very short temper.
 
Over time, Sarah's influence on Anne wanes, and Abigail's grows.
 
What I like about this book is that we see a lot of the politics of the period - and written at a level that summarises them nicely, but without drowning you in detail.  We get to know the leading politicians who all want influence with the Queen.
 
We also see the problem of selecting who will take the crown after Anne dies childless - her half brother James is Catholic, but the alternative option is George who is German. 
 
We see the effect of media - in the from of ballads and pamphlets - spreading misinformation, gossip and slander!  Nothing new there....
 
The downside of the book is that it's very evenly paced (admittedly the writer has to follow history as it happened, but I feel there is still more scope for drama) and the characters seeming very one-sided.
 
Sarah pretty much rants for the entire book (from her surviving letters, this may be true to character), but I'm sure she must have had SOME quieter moments.
 
However, some small elements really do bring out what it was like to live in this period, in ways that a more 'dramatic' novel might miss.  The number of children that women had, and how many of them died young....  Even the rich were not immune to smallpox and other infectious diseases.
 
I may read some more Plaidy novels, but mostly as a way of getting a historical over-view rather than for the characters.
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 This is a well-written book with some interesting world-building, but it ultimately failed to grab me.
 
After a global disaster referred to as the Big Water, vast swathes of the globe are covered in water.  One of the surviving regions is Dine Navaho Indian territory.  Here, the old legends have returned, the tales once told by Elders are now desperately researched in an effort to understand what is happening. 
Clan powers can re-emerge giving some people extraordinary abilities - but these are not supermen/women, use of these abilities is for a short duration and drains a lot of energy.
 
Characters like Coyote the Trickster are now real and interfering in the lives of ordinary people for their own amusement.
 
Maggie, the protagonist, had a harrowing experience as a teenager, which awakened her clan power - she's a natural killer.  Which makes her unpopular, but necessary, as there are monsters out there that eat people.
 
There's a lot of good stuff in this book, but I found I didn't really relate to either of the main characters, and there were a few points in the plot where I bounced right off it. 
 
 
eg. Why did Maggie believe that Neizghání was the witch they sought - because regardless of a few bits of planted evidence, it was so obviously ridiculous?)  Why did Longarm try to kill Kai?  Can you really get a car to run on whisky for fuel, and if you can, how can she drive so far on so little whisky?
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 I really wanted to like this book...
 
The characters are okay, I like the concept behind it.  I like the idea of a story about a Spanish Armada shipwreck survivor trying to survive in Ireland, but sadly, the historical research lets it down.
 
There are clearly bits that have been researched. eg. The description of how to use an astrolabe is correct, but it's also clear that the writer has relied on snippets of information from other people, rather than doing solid background reading herself.
 
Several times, I caught myself thinking 'Is that really correct?'  By and large, I let those go, as it's hard to be certain one way or the other. eg. Glass fishing floats were definitely not available in this period - but it's possible that they might have used some other kind of float.
 
Likewise map usage. The author went with latitude lines on a Mercator projection map. I think a portolan map, like this Spanish one - https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47da-ea02-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99 - from from a few decades before the Armada might have been more likely. 
But it's quite possible they existed side by side.
 
The first one that really knocked me out of the story was the crew of a Spanish merchant ship started eating ship's biscuit on their first day at sea!
Sure, people ate ship's biscuit at sea, but NOT until the fresh food ran out. 
(And merchant ships did not have crow's nest; and in any case you don't send a character with sea sickness up to the crow's nest even if there is one, because the ship rotates around it's centre of gravity and hence the motion high up the mast will be far worse than it is on deck.)
 
The point when I finally abandoned the book was when the evil English burned the fields of the  Irish peasants as a punishment, becuase they didn't have enough money to pay their taxes.
 
I have no objection to the English being evil - the treatment of the Irish historically was appalling. 
BUT - being evil does not make you stupid.
 
Every evil overlord knows that (unless the peasants are in active revolt and you're trying to starve them out) you wait for the peasants to harvest their grain, thresh it, and have all nicely stored in sacks for the winter - THEN you steal it.
 
Basically, if you want a story set in an interesting period in the past, and aren't too interested in the nitty gritty of historical detail, then the odds are that you will enjoy this.
 
But, if you're like me and read all sorts of odds and sods of historical bits and pieces, and wonder what those funny stars on old maps are actually for, then this book is best avoided before you throw your ebook across the room and damage it!
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 This is  well written book, and I really liked some of the characters.  It's set firmly in Shute's own field of expertise, with the main character, Mr Honey, doing a long term study on stress fractures in aircraft. He's very wrapped up in the technical aspect of his work, and tends to not notice much in the real world.
But when his boss realises that there may be aircraft flying that are within Mr Honey's predicted time of failure, then things start to get complicated.
 
The reason I can't give this book more than three out of five stars, is because I cannot accept a plot that relies on a planchette as a plot device.
 
(It's possible that Shute believed in such things himself, but I don't.)

 

You can get it free from Faded Page.

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 Like all of Shute's books, this is as much about people as events.

The title is taken from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayam.

“Tis all a Chequer-board of nights and days
Where Destiny with men for Pieces plays:
Hither and thither moves, and mates, and slays,
And one by one back in the closet lays.”

Four men meet in a military hospital during the WWII.  John Turner is unable to see the other three because of an injury to his eyes, but they all help him by reading to him, or holding conversations with him.

One, a black man, has been accused of raping a white woman; the second, a paratrooper, is facing a murder charge; and the third has been betrayed by his wife.  None of them has much too look forward to when they are well enough stand trial, or to go home.

Many years later, when Turner learns he has not long to live, he determines to find out what happened to the other three, and see if there is anything he can do to help them.

This a book about prejudice and preconceptions.  It uses the 'N' word, but it was written at a time when that word was still in common use.

Each of the three men has faced misunderstanding in one form or another.  Two of their stories (the strongest ones, I feel) relate to the way people have pre-conceptions or prejudices with regard other races.  The third is also telling in its own way - it looks at the way the army trains a man to kill, but how that training can work against him in a non-combat situation.

One of the things I like about Shute's writing is that he doesn't rush.  He tells the story as it happens to Turner.  It shows us - as does 'One the Beach' that there are choices when we have fore-knowledge of our own death.

Shute lived in a slower world than ours.  Even with aviation, it still took longer to get to places than it does now.

Turner is not a perfect man -he's done some wheeling and dealing in the black market, and his relationship with his wife is not all it could be. But his quest to help his fellow men draws him and his wife closer together for the time they have remaining.

All in all, this is a book that helps one remember that we're all just people.  And that there are unexpected kind people in many different places.
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 Got to the end of the book. Fantastic novel, will write review later.

This deserves a Hugo nomination?

It's still only 99p on Kobo.  https://www.kobo.com/gb/en/ebook/some-desperate-glory-7

(and Kobo is DRM free so you can buy it there and read it on your own e-book)

Grab it at that price while you can!

 

 

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 I don't normally recommend a book before I've finished reading it, but I'm a couple of chapters into 'Some Desperate Glory' and its a good read.

I picked it up on Kobo as a 99p special offer  - I often flick through these, they're a mixed bag. Some turkeys, but some really great books by authors whom I might not otherwise have tried.

So if you want to take  a punt while it's still on offer, go for it now (you can read novels from Kobo on any platform as they are DRM free).

Or, you can wait for the full review.

But I suspect it may be worth it even at full price.

Can't tell you that much about the story yet - Earth has been destroyed by the majo.  The majo appear to be a confederation of many alien races.

The surviving humans live on Gaiea, a fairly hostile planetoid and live by attacking majo shipping.  Their lives are focused on survival and revenge.  Kia, the protagonist is fixated on combat training. She has 'warbreed' genes, as does her brother, and is big, strong and desperate for revenge for an even that happened before she was born.  She tends to look down on those around her and is a total believer in the system.

But she's about to get a nasty surprise - her genes may be worth more to her society than her combat skills... 

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 This is a gentle, but very well-written historical romance.
 
Moyes has a really subtle writing trick that's hard to analyse.  When introducing the love interest, there are no major heart palpitations, no 'he was so gorgeous, he took my breath away', etc. but you still know that this is the person the protagonist will eventually fall in love with.
 
It's very skilful, and I prefer it to the school of "he's really hot, but I hate him".
 
There's also some really great historical stuff.  I thought at first that the author had invented the packhorse library, with women on horseback delivering books to remote, rural areas during America's great Depression, but it really did happen, and it fits brilliantly well into this novel. (See https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/horse-riding-librarians-were-great-depression-bookmobiles-180963786/ for both history and photos)
 
The only thing I didn't like was the use of the 'non-consummated marriage trope'.  I know it's the only clean way for writers to get a character out of a marriage, but annulments were incredibly rare in reality and very difficult to obtain.
 
Overall, it's a book I can happily recommend, both for the quality of the writing and the interesting historical setting.
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This book is free on Faded Page



Into each series a turkey must fall, and this one is a turkey for me.
 
Most of the books I've read in this series are gentle, character-based stories in which plot is pretty light and the moral aspects well handled.
 
This one feels more like an Enid Blyton adventure in which the quiet, gentle abbey is suddenly felt to be insufficient in its own right and acquires hidden tunnels, lost treasures, etc.
 
Dick, as another reviewer has said, is an annoying character with nothing to like at all.  His sister is nearly as bad.
 
The only positive aspect of the book is the introduction of Jen and Jack (I first met them in a later book, and liked them then).
 
The morality is also laid on rather heavily in this book.  Dick having to be persuaded of the benefits of being a 'decent' person.

If aspects of the story were not relevant to later books, I'd say skip this one. To be honest, you could probably work out most of it from context, though...

 

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 This novel is a love affair with English folk dance and a Cistercian abbey.
The abbey of the title is based on Cleeve Abbey in Somerset - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleeve_Abbey and the writer's love of the abbey and her knowledge of the architecture shines through.
Joan and her cousin Joy live in the abbey where Joan's mother has a job guiding tourists who come to visit.  They moved there after Joan's father died and they found themselves in much reduced circumstances.  It's worth noting that in the period the book is set, the leaving age for state education was 14 (and would have been 12 at the time of the first book in the series). Not being able to afford education after that age is a genuine problem for these characters.
 
Plenty of dancing in this book, my favourite is a lovely scene of Joan and Joy dancing together in the cloister garth. (the grass area that the cloisters surround).
There is a plot, but fortunately it's pretty light.  
I enjoyed this book for the details of the abbey, the dancing and the likeable characters.  It's a gentle read, and none the worse for that.
 
There's a difficult decision for Joan - and, in keeping with this series, it is shown as being difficult.  She knows the choice she has to make, and is determined to make it, but that doesn't stop it hurting.
 
This is definitely one of the better books in the 'Abbey' series.
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This should have been exactly the kind of book I enjoy. I love England's canal systems and narrowboats and would love to know more about the lives of the people who lived on these waterways.

Sadly, Dutton's book keeps on making me want to throw it across the room!

He has an obsession with a mystic bond between rivermen and rivers, with pagan beliefs about rivers influencing everything to do with them, gypsy origins, etc.

eg. I'm reading through an interesting page on the London docklands and then I hit "Rivers as places of festivals, pageants and days of leisure were obviously descended from ancient rituals of appeasing the gods of the waterways"

It's utter nonsense. There is no proof of any kind to suggest that leisure boaters are desiring to appease ancient gods, and I don't believe it for an instant.

He wants magic and romance and gypsy origins for watermen, and carefully selects his sources to find ones that support this.

eg. page 79 "The mutual love of step dancing and music points to an affinity quite probably based on blood and inheritance."

Any dance historian will know that step dance was widely popular in England, was performed in music halls, danced by men in pubs, etc. It was most certainly not confined to Gypsies.

Same with narrowboat painting. Dutton quotes Rolt, (who had similarly over-romanticised views) who was convinced that the progenitor of narrowboat art was gypsy caravans. But if one bothers to read Flowers Afloat: Folk Artists of the Canals Hardcover – by Tony Lewery - then it's clear that there were many influences on narrowboat painting, including popular Victorian mass produced pictures, pottery designs, painted tea trays, etc.

But Lewery isn't even listed in the bibliography.

Sadly, I find I can't read more than a max of three pages before hitting yet another unsupported belief. Which is a shame, because there is some good stuff in-between the the nonsense.

But the nonsense makes me so frustrated, that I'm giving this away without completing it, and will doubtless return to reading one of Charles Hadfield's canal history books. Far less accessible, but at least they stick to actual facts.
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Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie

by 
70716949
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it was amazing
 

I read this book, then I read it a second time. Then I bought the sequel and read that twice, and likewise the third volume of the trilogy.

It's very well written, and I missed quite a bit the first time around, as there's lots of depth to the culture and also to the plot.

One one level, the story in 'Ancilliary Justice' is almost simple. Breq rescues someone from freezing to death and goes with them on a quest to find a weapon to kill the person responsible for the death of someone she loved.

Except that Breq isn't human. She looks human, and her body was human at one time, but
Breq is a ship. The last surviving part of the troop carrier 'Justice of Toren'. She's an ancilliary - a human with implants that slave the body totally to an AI, in this case, 'Justice of Toren'. The conversion is total. Almost nothing remains of the mind/person that once inhabited her body. The ship itself is gone, destroyed by the leader of the Radch in an attempt to remove evidence of a political threat.
But as far as Breq is concerned, she IS the ship.
I say 'she', but one of the interesting things about the Radch language is that it is gender neutral, and clothing has no gender clues in Radch culture. Everyone is referred to as 'she'. You only every find the physcial gender of a character if Breq is speaking a different language. Breq often feels out of her depth in other languages, because she has to guess at gender in order to get pronouns right, but clues as to gender vary with different cultures...
Seivarden, the person she rescues, is eventually referred to as male, but we never do find out Breq's gender.
It's actually quite fascinating, because it makes you as a reader aware of how much gender stereotyping you do unconsciously.

One of the things I like about this series is that people do not change overnight. Not even when you save their life.
Seivarden comes from a noble family, and tends to look down on everyone else automatically. She expects privilege, and has severe mental health issues owing to accidentally ending up in cryosleep for a thousand years and waking in a time where her family no longer have influence.
The only being who remembers who she was is Justice of Toren. And Justice of Toren never actually liked Seivarden when she served as a lieutenant on the ship...
It's quite a while before Seivarden learns who Breq is, and she will try to change her thought patterns, but it's not easy to shake off the patterns of a lifetime.

This book won a Hugo, it's not hard to understand why. Highly recommended.
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 A light, entertaining book about the benefits of urine as  natural fertiliser.
 
This book, wisely in my view, tells you all kind of interesting historical facts about urine, shows urinals designed by artists, has photos of urinals in unusual places, etc. before getting into the hard data about actually using the stuff in a practical manner.
 
It gets you more comfortable about the subject before diving in.
 
I came across this book many years ago and was mildly sceptical, but I applied dilute urine, as directed, on my rather limp and yellowing French beans.
Two weeks later, the vigorous beans were green and growing fast. 
I was a convert.
 
I've used urine as a fertiliser ever since - not on salad crops such as lettuce, where there is a risk of contamination - but on pretty much everything that I grow.  Tomatoes thrive on it: so do squashes, runner beans, flowers, lawns (best applied before rain on lawns so you know it will wash in quickly and then you'll be more comfortable walking on the grass).  The list is endless.  
It's also great as a compost activator or for accelerating the rot of leaf-mould.
 
The simplest trick is to keep a plastic, screw-top milk bottle in your toilet, then you can fill up your supply without worrying about anything smelling. 
 
You can save a small fortune on commercial fertilisers.
 
I'd have rated the book higher if it wasn't getting a bit old now.  It was published in 2007 and the section on toilets is bound to be out of date, though the principles are pretty basic..
 
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 One of Heyer's better romances.  I'll probably read it more than once.
 
Kittie has been reared by her grumpy benefactor who was an admirer of her mother.  He decides that he will leave his fortune to her as long as she marries one of his great nephews (whom she regards as her cousins - having met them often as she was growing up).
 
The great nephews are not much impressed by this.  Either they are in love with someone else, already married and thus can't claim the cash, feel it's very very unfair on Kitty to be put in this situation, or feel insulted that their great uncle is trying to force their hand.
 
Kitty has always had a crush on Jack, but he does not turn up when Uncle Matthew demands - he hates being manipulated, even though he would be willing to marry Kitty (partly for the cash).
 
Freddie, who hasn't been told about the 'marriage' thing until he arrives is not interested in marrying Kitty - he is wealthy in his own right and isn't looking for a wife.
 
Kitty, who is desperate to go to London and try to find a husband who wants to marry her without any fortune (realistically a fairly forlorn hope...), twists Freddie's arm into proposing to her so that she can go to London with him.   (and also to try and make Jack jealous)  The rest you can probably guess...
 
I like Freddie.  He's not an obvious hero.  He doesn't sparkle in conversation, he's not the brightest member of his family, nor does he get into duels or flagrant gestures.  But he likes Kitty. He likes her developing sense of fashion, her willingness to listen to his advice about what to wear (and Freddie is on the spot when it comes to clothing).  He has a strong sense of propriety which leads him to disapprove of some of the contacts Kitty makes, but he's never nasty.
 
And when Kitty gets into scrapes, it will always be Freddie who quietly sorts things out without even being asked. 
 
It isn't very long at all before the reader senses that Jack's ways with the women, his manners (nowhere near as good as Freddie's), his flashes of temper, his tendency to try and manipulate people. etc. are causing Kitty to lose her infatuation for him - though Jack is so confident of his hold over her that he totally fails to realise this.
 
Freddie knows her feelings for Jack, but doesn't realise they have gone until she rejects Jack's confident proposal and chooses Freddie instead.
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I've been down with Covid - hence audiobooks are very much the order of the day... 

 

I listened to the audiobook of Lieutenant Hornblower and I cannot praise Christian Rodska too highly as a narrator. He brings the scene vividly to life, clear voices for each different character (including the women), an ease with naval terminology and a story-telling ability that never oversteps the boundary into melodrama.


This book is written from the viewpoint of Lieutenant Bush, which is a good authorial choice as there is a an event which takes place relatively early on in the book and Hornblower knows what happened and Bush does not. This means the reader does not know either and has to try and make his/her own deductions as to what happened.

The books starts in an area familiar from the TV series, with the increasing insanity of Captain Sawyer and the effect of his paranoia on the crew of the Resolution.

But the book goes further, because it shows the crippling effect of Sawyer's remaining presence as a lunatic invalid even after he has been removed from command.

The five lieutenants are often paralysed by indecision, trying to predict how their actions will be viewed by a future court of enquiry. Should the Sawyer's sealed orders be opened or not? They could be wrong in either direction depending on how events pan out.

in the case of the first lieutenant, it impacts on his command decisions as well. He's not thinking things through in detail, just going for simple safe options - in the Navy you can rarely be judged wrong if you attack.

Bush, the 4th lieutenant is a very good seaman, but he doesn't think outside the box. He undergoes a gradual shift throughout the book in his attitude to Hornblower, the 5th lieutenant, moving from initial mistrust to respect and a real friendship.

The story isn't just about naval battles. The writer includes a land battle - with fascinating historical details about the use of heated shot as a weapon; vicious tactical negotiation of a Spanish surrender (Hornblower manages to push them into terms that are far more painful for the Spanish than initially proposed); a glance at slave rebellions on Haiti; life on half pay when there is no war (and the Catch 22 of a promotion at the wrong time...), and the benefits of being a good whist player.

If you like naval/military history in the Napoleonic era, then definitely a recommended read/listen.

Spooky fic

Dec. 31st, 2021 11:31 am
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 I've been following some fiction recs from SelenaK and one I particularly liked also led me to this one - https://archiveofourown.org/works/35797606

 

A short, spooky crossover between 'Grand Designs' and the Cthulhu mythos.

 

'Grand Designs' is a TV programme about an architect visiting people who are doing interesting builds on new/restored buildings.  I'm familiar with it, but the story should still work even if you aren't. 

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(Sorry for posting so little of recent. I've had a lot of trouble with sciatica. )

 

Star Nomad is a reasonably good story.


The war between the Imperials and the Alliance is over, with many dead on both sides.

Alisa, who was a pilot for the Alliance (who won) is trying to get back some to her daughter.

The only way home is to use her mother's old freighter, Star Nomad, which is in poor condition sitting in an old scrapyard, and turns out to be occupied by an Imperial cyborg...

She needs to find enough passengers to cover the costs of getting home, but several of the passengers (including the cyborg) have their own agendas....

Has a flavour slightly reminiscent of Firefly - assorted crew, struggling to keep flying in the aftermath of war - but where it suffers is in the characterisation.

Some of the characters are reasonably well drawn, but some remain very cardboard. For instance, Beck, who is hired as security (and has his own combat armour) turns out to like grilling meat and to want to develop his own line of sauces. But given that promising start, he never talks about anything except the sauces (and even than in vague detail). No mention of side dishes, different grilling techniques, how he actually makes the sauces, etc.

They have no lives outside the plot.

I find myself comparing with "The Long Road to a Small Angry Planet" by Becky Chambers.

Chambers's characters have far more personality and life to them.

This isn't a bad book. I got the first three as a set and am already reading the second, but I think they'll probably be 'read once' books, whereas Chambers is definitely in the 're-read' category.

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 This book was recommended to me by a friend and I'm glad I read it.
 
It's set during WW2 and was written while the war was still ongoing and the outcome unknown.
 
War is not kind to old men.  Too old to fight and with little sense of purpose, John Howard goes to southern France to take a break fishing.
 
While there, he is asked by an acquaintance if he will take their two children back to England for safety, as the war is spreading further and they no longer feel safe.
 
Howard agrees, but what should have been a simple journey home gets more and more complicated as the Germans start advancing across France.  Trains get cancelled, food gets harder to find. Being English suddenly becomes very dangerous, and to make life even more difficult, there are other children that the war has left in dire straits.
 
One of the reasons this story works so well for me is that Howard is a very believable character.  He's not a man given to emotional outbursts or temper - he's calm and organised and takes things as they come. Which is not to say that he isn't worried or concerned or uncaring, but he's 70 and he knows his own physical limitations and he also knows exactly how hard you can push young children before everything becomes too much for them.  Therefore, when he has to take things slowly, he accepts that and doesn't waste energy over things he can't control.
 
He manages to shield the children, as far as he can, from a full understanding of what is going on around them, and oddly enough, this makes the reader even more aware of the impact of war.
 
In a quiet, understated way, this is war from the civilian angle, long streams of refugees, people dying in allied bombing raids, the ongoing struggle for food and shelter.
 
Do they make it safely to England?
 
Read the book and find out for yourself.
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 Three Men in a Boat is still one of the funniest novels ever written.  Written in 1889, it is a gentle account of three men (and a fox terrier) taking a boat trip along the Thames.  This a book that actually does make me laugh out loud.

As it's long out of copyright, you can read it legally here - https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/28837


Here's Hugh Laurie reading the opening section  - he is the perfect voice for it.


Swallodale

May. 26th, 2019 06:33 pm
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 There's  a reason Swallowdale by Arthur Ransome is a classic. It's a very well written book. (part of the Swallows and Amazon's series)

It's set in the Lake District and is set around children sailing boats and camping - and I wish I could be in that world...

It's one of those novels where nothing happens on a grand scale - afterwards, you wonder what the plot was - and then you realise the difference between having a plot and telling a good story.
 
Lots of things happen in Swallowdale, but they happen on a smaller scale. More like a series of episodes. The images that linger in the mind are Titty and Roger exploring, and inventing their own rules as to how to explore, how to avoid inconvenient things like roads, how to leave secret signals, etc.  Or Titty meeting the woodsmen and riding on the timber haulage
 
Sometimes, it's the setting, and the realisation of how far it now is in the past.  It's a world where cars are still few and far between: where milk comes in a jug, not a tetrapack; where timber is extracted from woods and hauled out be horses; where a shipyard has steam boxes for bending planks.  The Lake District is less crowded and there's a feeling of space which would be hard to imagine now.
 
1930, when the book was written, is less than a century ago, and yet is different in so many ways.
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I got this book because it was on the list of 100 best SF novels that was circulating recently, and it was only £1 on Kindle.  (It's now free!)

I don't know if I'll ever read it again, but it was certainly worth reading. 

It's a curious book. Beautifully written with text that draws on varied imagery, and uses both the nature of water and the tea ceremony to reflect the narrator's thoughts and her approach to life.
 
The author has a way of foreshadowing events that is almost spooky.  Reading one section, I knew that a character was about to die, yet upon re-reading it, I could not tell exactly had keyed me in. It was very subtle, but works, because the protagonist is a tea master - and she is able to sense when death is coming. Somehow, the writer conveys this ability to the reader.
 
In this post-climate change world, water is in very short supply, and the government use the water supply to control the population.  Finland, one of the last inhabitable areas has been ruled for a long time by people of Chinese origin and some of the names and customs reflect this.  Much technology has been lost and people scavenge the waste dumps of the past for useful items, or things that can be converted into useful objects.
 
It works well as a background and was pretty convincing overall.  the only item that really threw me out of the book was an almond tree (almonds need large amounts of water and I can't see them being grown in a region with severe water shortages).
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 I know some of you were interested in my review of Fathers Huc and Gabert's travels through Tibet in the early 1800s

Reapermum on LJ spotted that you can download the book (it's old and has been out of copyright for a long time), which is handy as it seems to be out of print at present.

'Lamas of the Western Havens' is only part of 'Travels in Tartary, Thibet and China'

Volumes 1 and 2 are both available on Project Gutenberg 
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/32747
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/33269
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 A book that is far more about character than plot.  Take eight people of various personalities, races, genders, etc., place them on board a space ship on a long journey and get to know them.
By the end of the book, the crew of the Wayfarer feel like old friends. You could sit down at a table with them  to eat a delicious meal cooked by Dr Chef (using ingredients from an alien marketplace), your surroundings cheerfully decorated by Kizzy from whatever she had to hand.  There would be laughs, grumbles from Corbin, an empty seat for Orhan  (who never eats communally, but still has a place in case they ever change their mind), and conversation that will cover everything from navigation issues to bad jokes.

There's a plot, though it's more a series of encounters that help us learn more about the crew, but also about what it means to be human, or indeed to be a sapient being of any kind.
 
Definitely looking forward to reading the next one!
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I bought this book because I'd met some Tibetan monks and was curious to know more about their history, and also, because I have a weakness for Folio Society books and  this one was on the shelf in a  National Trust second hand bookshop and caught my eye.

This book is the first hand account of two French Catholic monks who set off from China in 1844 on a long and arduous journey to Tibet.  Their journey was as missionaries, trying to reach a forbidden country, but the description of their journey and the detail provide a real sense of the hazards of the route.  
In these days when we can fly from A to B in no time at all, it's hard to grasp the sheer difficulty of travelling on foot and horseback over mountains, of the dangers of brigands, snow, starvation or of simply  losing one's footing on a high narrow path.  
Many travellers didn't make it.
Father Huc describes the journey and the people in great detail.  The 'inns' fascinated me, with their communal raised platforms for travellers to sleep on.  Under the platform was smouldering dung, to provide a little heat for the travellers during the night.
We learn of the small number of converts they made, but also of the Buddhists they met.  Of the squabbles between lamas, of the long and bloody conflicts between China and Tibet and the chancy politics between the two.
The engraved illustrations add the to text and give a good feel for the costumes of the era.
 
It's well worth reading, both as a travelling and also as a reminder that other cultures are far more complex than we assume.
 

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