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I have given up trying to keep pace with this author's output. At one stage in my reading career I was chasing up the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency,  the 44 Scotland Street Series and  ditto the Corduroy Mansion books. It all got a bit much and so I retired from the field.   I have to be honest and say that I was beginning to find the books a bit 'samey' and rather meandering.

But I have stuck with the Isabel Dalhousie books and I have hardback copies of all of them on my shelves and I so enjoy them and buy each one as soon as it is published. I don't want the Kindle editions, I want the hardback. 

Isabel Dalhousie lives in Edinburgh with her husband Jamie, fourteen years younger than her which gives her pause now and then, with their son Charlie and, in this latest novel, she has had a second son Magnus. Charlie is not too enamoured of his new little brother and insists he should be 'put down the drain'. They live in a splendid house with a general factotum or housekeeper, Grace, who Isabel inherited from her father when he Distantleft her the house and here they all live in domestic harmony and it is all rather life affirming and balm to the soul to read.

Isabel is a philosopher and part of the joy, for me at any rate, of these stories is the wandering off into various tangents and discussions arising from the subject in hand. Now here I have no problem with the meandering which I found slightly tedious in McCall Smith's other books and the leisurely pace of the narrative is most pleasing.   The story line is almost incidental in this series though obviously there is a plot, as such. Isabel has a reputation for 'helping' people, problems are brought to her to solve and in a quiet way and taking a long slow path to the solution, she manages to resolve them, though not always in the way she expects.

In A Distant View of Everything, an old school friend, Bea Shandon contacts her.She is worried. Bea loves matchmaking and pairing people off and she feels that a recent successful meeting between a woman friend and a well known plastic surgeon may have been a mistake. She has heard that the man in question has a bad reputation with women and tends to attach himself to those with wealth and then, having extracted money from them, leaves them. One has even tried to commit suicide.

So Isabel sets out to investigate and finds all is not as it seems…..

If you are a lover of the Dalhousie novels than I need say no more. If you are new to them, be warned they are not full of blood and guts and exciting crime, they are gentler and kinder than that but always to the point and real. For me the pleasure in reading them is the prose, the elegant fluid writing, not a superfluous dot or comma or exclamation mark anywhere. beautifully clean writing. On my first introduction to Isabel I skipped paragraphs as I got a bit impatient with the sliding off topic, but no longer. Now I find a quiet sit down with the latest in this series is good for me. It makes me sit quietly and relax and when I close the book up I feel calm and rested.

This week on my return from Australia when I am feeling unsettled and a bit emotional at missing my Oz based daughter, it was just what I needed.

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6 responses to “A Distant View of Everythig – Alexander McCall Smith”

  1. Elaine Avatar

    I began to get a bit bogged down with all the different series so now just concentrate on the Isabel stories. I so enjoy them. Just could not keep up with all the others!

  2. Lizzie Avatar
    Lizzie

    I too am a great fan of Isabel. Quite a role model in fact, with her pleasant Edinburgh life and the constant ‘philosophising’. I also read the Scotland St series which is amusing and serious at the same time.

  3. Elaine Avatar

    I have a feeling that the author is probably a gentle kind man as well as these characteristics seem to run theough all his books

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Gentle pleasure is the right description. I make no effort to keep up with the others now but make sure I never miss the Dalhhousie series. Oddly enough, after finishing this book yesterday, I found I had a really good night’s sleep cor the first time in a week. Must be coincidence!
    Thank you for your kind wishes

  5. Ann Avatar
    Ann

    I also agree about his books though I never did really take to the Botswana ones and only read the first one. Always have loved the Dalhousie ones best and went immediately to my local library’s website to order this one.

  6. David Nolan Avatar

    I agree that, whilst there can be a “samey” quality to his books, they are a tremendous gentle pleasure. I gave up following the Botswana books a while back, but still love the two Edinburgh based series of which Dalhousie is one. With both these series I tend to re-read the last book before taking up the new one. I hope you soon settle back into normality.

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