RANDOM JOTTINGS


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I know the above does not necessarily have to go together but somehow in the summer I find it very difficult to settle down to What I Call Serious Reading (such fun!) – sorry for the lapse into Miranda speak, and tend to settle down to lighter novels, books that will make me feel good, that have a happy ending and, sometimes, are forgotten as soon as the last page is read.   This has been the case with me recently and in the last month or so when I have been sunning in Madeira and trying to sun in England  HAH, I have turned to light lit.

With Janet Evanovitch you know what you are going to get.  Gorgeous hunky men, slightly off the wall feisty heroines, a food fight of sorts, disasters all round, exploding cars/microwaves/kettles – take your Wkchoice and, best of all, a hilariously barmy read that will have you weak with laughter.  I have just finished Wicked Business, the second in a series about Lizzy Tucker, a pastry chef in Salem, Massachusetts, who would rather concentrate on making cupcakes for a living but seems to have supernatural powers, hitherto unrecognised.   She has a sexy partner, Diesel, who is off limits as he too has weird powers and if the two of them get together and have, you know, s*x, disaster will ensue.   There is an evil cousin Gerwulf Grimoire, who sounds like a refugee from Harry Potter, a search for some magic stones, a weird broomstick, a one eyed cat called Cat (gosh) and a monkey called Carl.   Throw all ingredients into a bowl, stir madly and see what happens – a hoot of a book that's what.

I discovered her books a couple of summers ago and loved them, here is what I said at the time.

In the last week I have read three of the Daisy Dalrymple books by Carola Dunn, a couple of Michael Connelly, and three by Marcia WIllets.  I am sure the authors will not take this amiss if I say none of them are likely to appear on the Booker List, but in my opinion are much more enjoyable and accessible than most of the titles that crop up in this competition each year (Mem: do NOT RANT about the Booker, Elaine) and have been happily ensconced in my armchair post-omelette lunch with cup of tea, choc biccy and The Birdcage by the aforementioned Marcia W.   Her books are dBcelightful, usually with two narratives hopping backwards and forwards in time, most of them are set in Cornwall and her protagonists live in lovely houses by the sea or delightful cottages down a narrow high hedged lane with gardens full of wildflowers and pansies and it is all lovely and so satisfying.   There will be ups and downs along the way but we know all will end happily and be sorted out and there is a great satisfaction in that.

One book I read every summer is The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilcher about which nothing need be said as I seriously wonder if there is anybody out there who has not read this simply marvellous book, great read and will make you laugh and/or cry.   I do wish this author would write some more but she stopped some time ago as she grew older and can hardly blame her but oh I wish….

In the winter I always re-read her Winter Solstice which I think I like even better.

Books have been pouring into Schloss Random in the last few weeks (could not open my door on return from hols as the hallway was blocked with parcels) and I just have to much reading to do it panics me a bit.  I am glad I am a fast reader and to all those publishers out there who have sent me books, I love and appreciate you all and will be getting through my To Be Read pile as soon as poss.

And if it keeps on bloody raining as it is now, then I may be able to shift quite a few…..

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27 responses to “Summer/Feel Good Reading”

  1. Kate Avatar
    Kate

    I’m delighted to meet someone else who loves Winter Solstice as much as I do! And you’ve convinced me about Marcia Willett — just bagged Summer in the Country and The Birdcage off BookMooch. It’s high summer over here, so difficult to find time to sit & read. But it’s on my “to do” list for today, and since I’ve gotten the peach frozen yogurt made and freezing, I’ve only got to organize the entertainment center and then I can have at it!

  2. Elaine Avatar

    Do visit the Tate Gallery while you are in that area. Not sure I care much for anything inside it, but the setting is simply beautiful. There is not on angle or square line in the gallery, all curves and lovely round bits. Not putting it very well but you will know what I mean when you see it!

  3. susan.ehrenkranz@gmail.com Avatar
    susan.ehrenkranz@gmail.com

    We will be staying in a hotel in Carbis Bay- it sounds just lovely- and then traveling to Fowey for several days. Then onto Winchester, where I am dragging my husband to Jane Austen’s house and London, where my husband has meetings. Can’t wait!

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Which part are you visiting Susan? My in laws used to live not far from St Michael’s Mount which was a favourite with my girls when small – they thought it looked like a fairy castle. We also had wonderful holidays at Carbis Bay – beaches there quite beautiful. I am planning a trip there next year as I have not been for so long

  5. susan.ehrenkranz@gmail.com Avatar
    susan.ehrenkranz@gmail.com

    Thank you for the Marcia Willet suggestion! My husband and I are going to Cornwall in September.

  6. Elaine Avatar

    Yes I read Shell Seekers when I was younger and now realise I am the same age as Penelope – bit lowering really. Currently reading more Marcia Willett and I do enjoy them

  7. Carol Artemiw Avatar
    Carol Artemiw

    I, too, reread The Shell Seekers every summer. When I read it the first time I was the age of Penelope’s daughters, but last summer, I was shocked to realize that I was now 64 and had become Penelope!
    A movie was made starring Angela Lansbury, so when I read the book I see her as Penelope. I think she was perfect in the role.
    Have you read Standing in the Rainbow by Fannie Flagg? I think it’s better than Fried Green Tomatoes and it’s on my summer reading list every year.
    Carol

  8. Elaine Avatar

    Ah Hemingway, well what can one say? I say nothing as I have never been able to come to grips with his writing. Always felt he was such a phony

  9. Elaine Avatar

    There are times when just fun and laughter and lighthearted reading is the order of the day and I find in the summer that is all I can deal with. I have a wonderful new biog of Bismarch to read but may have to put it back to the dark nights, or perhaps read a chapter a day might be a good idea

  10. Claire 'Word by Word' Avatar

    They sound like great summer recommendations, think I’m in the mood for some light reading after accidentally leaving my Hemingway ‘A Moveable Feast’ on a parkbench yesterday evening while watching my son on his trottinette (scooter).

  11. Susan Avatar

    I love the Stephanie Plum mysteries, but haven’t tried the new ones yet. It sounds fun! I will now :-)
    I think fluffy reading is perfect for summer. I tend to sneak in more fun ones in the summer. Like Bridget Jones’s Diary, that is my usual summer fare reread. :-)

  12. Elaine Avatar

    I have not tried her Regencies, will have to check them out. Went to the library yesterday and came home with five of the DD books so perfect reading for a dreary wet weekend.
    Yes I agree about Rosamune Pilcher but Marcia Willett is in the same mould and am enjoying them very much

  13. Julie B. Avatar

    I adore Carola Dunn’s Daisy books. I’ve just got Rattle His Bones through the mail today and I can’t wait to find some time to read it as it looks wonderful! I also discovered that she wrote Regency romances which are as delightful as her mysteries. I’ve been downloading them onto my Kindle and they are an absolute joy to read!
    I tried reading a Janet Evanovich book once, but I couldn’t get very far. I do love Marcia Willett. Wonderful warm-hearted stories, although nobody tops the fantastic Rosamunde Pilcher, in my opinion.

  14. Elaine Avatar

    If you have a long enough hosepipe I will be more than happy…..

  15. Elaine Avatar

    I have had shop assistants hand a receipt over while they chat to somebody else and I usually just stand in silence until they realise I have not taken it and turn round to look at me. Then eye contact is made I hold out my hand and say with a beam Thank you SO much…works every time

  16. Joanna V Avatar
    Joanna V

    Could you please send some of that rain across the pond to the US, we’re in the midst of a drought and it’s been so hot (breaking all kinds of records) here that all I have the brain cells for is light reading. I haven’t read an Evanovich for a while, am glad to hear her new series is fun – will have to give it a try. Too bad the movie they made from her first Stephanie Plum book sounded so awful – I laughed all through that book, making a funny movie from it should have been easy!

  17. Margaret Powling Avatar
    Margaret Powling

    Oh, I love the books you have mentioned, Elaine, Ros Pilcher’s books and Marcia Willett’s books. I’ve read all Marcia’s since her first one, Those Who Serve, and they do have that feel-good factor. Of course, they are about a certain milieu, people do have problems but they’re softened by having lovely homes, receive sweet scented pink hyacinths as presents, and often still have ‘staff’ to help with the housework. And, like you re-reading those two particular Ros Pilcher novels each year, I re-read each summer Mrs Pilcher’s second book which is never mentioned anywhere: April It is not the same book as Snow in April (from the 1970s) but a book published in 1957 (when I was a young teenager) and I just loved it, as it was about a young girl of 17 going to stay with her parents in Cornwall for the summer. It’s about first love and is a delight from beginning to end, very much of the period, when a 17 year old still did what her nanny told her to do!
    And in response to Pam Travellin Penguin, I love the books of Alice Steinbach, too! I have her three books, none of them novels, but as easy to read as novels.
    But don’t start me on a Rant … I have been so depressed today with the bad behaviour of counter staff in Boots … and not young women, either, but women of a certain age who should know that it’s polite to say “Thank you” when you hand them money for something, and that they shouldn’t simply disappear before you’ve even been handed a receipt which is still chugging out of the till while they are nattering to the pharmacist ‘out the back’. I had to ask another assistant who had ‘taken over’ for my receipt. The first one obviously couldn’t be bothered to complete the transation. Is it just me? Do such bad manners grate with others?

  18. Elaine Avatar

    They are just sheer FUN

  19. Elaine Avatar

    I have found the new Fitzgerald hard going and so did a friend of mine so we are not alone. The Gianrico Carofiglio books are terrific – came across them by accident and they are beautifully written. Am very much enjoying the Willett books – she plugs the gap left by Pilcher

  20. Elaine Avatar

    Pam the answer is no but will check them out. So glad that you are learning to Rant!

  21. Victoria Corby Avatar

    I hadn’t realised that Janet Evanovich had started a new series, what a treat it wounds.

  22. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    Good to know that there is a new Lizzy Tucker book out – I am struggling rather with the new Conor Fitzgerald and could do with some light relief! One of the characters in The Namesake mentions Gianrico Carofiglio as a magistrate who boosts his earnings with writing and I found myself wishing that it was half as readable as one of his books. I’m all for quirky detectives and witty repartee but not when it gets in the way of the story – so far it is not anywhere as good as the last one.
    Love Rosamund Pilcher’s books although I haven’t read any for ages, but I seem to have missed Marcia Willett completely so far so I will have to peruse the library shelves and see what they have. Thanks for the recommendation.

  23. Pam Travellin Penguin Avatar

    Thank you for reminding me of Rosamunde Pilcher. It has been years since I read her books and the Shell Seekers was great fun. Have you ever read Alice Steinbach? She wrote three books, all of which I loved, more serious than Pilcher but for some reason just thought of her too. She died this year but her books will live in my heart forever. Travel and adventure once she ends up single in her later years, a love affair, learning to cook in Paris, loved her too.( an aside..help, I’m learning to rant reading your blogs.)

  24. Elaine Avatar

    I read some Marcia W quite a while back and remember being rather underwhelmed by them but now I find them enjoyable and, as I said, comforting. Perhaps as we get older we like to think that life will work out OK!

  25. Elaine Avatar

    I like them – comforting and they make you feel happy and all is right with the world. Sometimes that is all we need from a book

  26. Jo Avatar

    I read some Marcia W when I was a lot younger, and discovered her books again recently. Will read more no doubt.
    Light summer reading is just the order of the day especially when the current order seems to be rain of biblical proportions. Cannot wait for my holidays to indulge all day!

  27. Mary Ronan Drew Avatar

    OK, Birdcage requested from the library. Thanks for the referral – Marcia Willett is a new author to me.

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