RANDOM JOTTINGS


A blog about music, sports, theatre and rants





Well the Jubilee weekend is now over and it was all huge fun and also rather wonderful. Highlight for me was the video of the Queen having tea with Paddington Bear which ranks alongside her James Bond skit at the Olympics in 2012.

So back to normal and I managed to get some reading done. 

I was in a charity shop a week or so ago and picked up a book Murder at the Brightwell by Ashley Weaver.  It had a delightful and stylish cover and I read the first page and thought oh this sounds fun.

"It is an impossibly great trial to be married to a man one loves and hates in equal proportions. It was late June and I was dining alone in the breakfast room when Milo blew in from the south.

'Hello darling' he said brushing a light kiss across my cheek. He dropped into the seat beside me and begain buttering a piece of toast as though it had been two hours since I had last seen him last rather than two months.

I took a sip of coffee. 'Hello Milo. How good of you to drop in'"

The setting is Kent, England and it is 1932.  I really enjoyed this book. Witty and amusing and though there are rather too many descriptions of clothes and jewellery, it is all great fun. AmeryAmery is married to Milo who seems to do what he likes and spends a great deal of time on the Riviera.  When Amory's ex fiance turns up asking for her help regarding his sister who is contemplating marriage to a rather unsatisfactory character, she decides to go to the Brightwell Hotel where they are all staying and help him out.   Naturally, the rather unpleasant fiance turns up dead at the bottom of a cliff and Amory finds herself at the heart of the mystery.   She manages to solve the mystery and it is all light and silly and written in great style.

This book had cost me the princely sum of £1 and I then went on line and discovered there were six others in the series.  Needless to say, I downloaded them all and read them one after the other and derived great pleasure from them.

I then received an alert that a pre-order had been sent to my Kindle, the latest in the Bruno series by Martin Walker. I read these all last year when I initially discovered them and enjoyed them, but I have now rather changed my mind as they are becoming increasingly tedious.

To Kill a Troubadour deals with a terrorist threat to a free concert featuring a local group Les Troubadours who will be performing their latest hit 'A Song for Catalonia'. The song goes viral when the Spanish government ban its performance on the grounds that it is encouraging the Catalonian bid for independence.

Now this is all very exciting and the scene is set but then we go off piste to an alarming extent. It becomes clear that there is a sniper in the area following a car crash and the discovery of a bullet.   We are treated to at least four pages of a lecture on the history of military rifles from Bruno (who is an expert).  Later on we have pages on Catalonia and the Arabic influence on medieval culture.  While the security services are involved and the big cheeses arrive from Paris, Bruno manages to play tennis, cook meals for everyone with copious descriptions of his recipes and methods including the preparation of a wild boar and then at the end of course he saves the day.

And, as I assume the author is an ex-pat, we get the predictable dig at Brexit.

I found myself skipping great chunks of this book. I reckon 30% of the book was germane to the plot, the rest was padding. I doubt I will waste my money on purchasing any more in this series.

I will wait and see if they turn up in a charity shop instead.

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7 responses to “Recent Reading”

  1. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    I think you’ll thoroughly enjoy it. You may remember that during lockdown Camilla issued a list of 9 novels she’d enjoyed and would recommend, then in the second lockdown (or thereabouts) she issued another list and then it all morphed into her Reading Room. At first it was only available on Instagram which was tricky to access on my phone but now it has a proper website full of all sorts of interesting interviews and articles as well as all six seasons of her reading choices.
    Gosh, yes, I agree about the making of mistakes. Looking back, it was all such a mess and although Charles at 32 should have known better than to marry a woman with whom he had nothing in common I do feel that Prince Philip and indeed the Queen do bear a smidgen of responsibility.
    Let’s hope that, doting (guilty?) father though he may be, Charles doesn’t make the mistake of encouraging the Duke & Duchess of Markle back into the Royal fold or indeed of handing out titles to their children. After all, as Edward’s children don’t use royal titles and they are the Queen’s own grandchildren, the precedent has been set.

  2. Elaine Avatar

    No I have not come across it. I will have to seek it out; I am very fond of Charles always have done. Yes he has behaved badly and mistakenly but blimey don’t we all!!

  3. Elaine Avatar

    Gasquet has a one handed backhand and also Wawrinka but cannot think of any more.
    I have posted about Queens
    and now the Wimbledon hysteria begins and already Radacanu is all over the place. Bigging her up to win which is just plain daft. She may surprise us all, who knows, but this media attention is dreadful and Sue Barker and Tracy Austin’s hysteria meter will be off the scale
    I won’t be watching Serena

  4. Elaine Avatar

    I have yet to try the new Weaver series as they are a bit pricey for the Kindle. I love the covers they are so evocative.
    the Bruno books are now just plain boring. I skipped great chunks of it. Why is it authors feel they shuold have to lecture us? Peter Robinson wrote the DCI Banks books which I used to enjoy but the last one or perhaps it was the one before had three pages of anti brexit stuff at the beginning so I binned it. Val McDermid whose books I really like keeps going on bout scottish independence. You know what authors? I DON’T CARE what your politics are. I want to read a good book not listen to you wittering on
    I hae posted re Queens since you left this comment. I fear with Sue going we are going to be lumbered with La Balding. She ticks all the right diversity boxes.

  5. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    By the bye, Elaine, given that you’re a monarchist AND a reader(!) have you come across the Duchess of Cornwall’s Reading Room? I spent over an hour exploring it yesterday. Must say, whatever doubts I sometimes have about Charles & Camilla it will be fun to have a monarch who is interested in something other than HORSES!

  6. Jacquie in RI Avatar
    Jacquie in RI

    Our tennis channel here in the US is carrying some of the Queens tournament as well as matches from the other pre-Wimbledon. Queens grass seems the greenest. I like that. I turn it on when I have a little time and usually get hooked into a good match. We get the live stuff at 5 am and then later in the day when you are all sleeping we get taped matches. I see Serena has a wild card invite. How will they seed her? I really think it’s time for her to hang it up, even if she is one of ours. I’m going to miss Ash Barty. I loved watching her play.
    I’ve decided that I am only going to root for those who use a one-handed backhand.I think there’s only one or two. Stephanos Tsitsipas is one. Looking forward to the fortnight.

  7. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    I’m so glad you enjoyed these books as I adore them; they definitely come into the settle-down-with-a-gin-and-tonic category. Mind you, everything does for me these days! Have sadly just finished the last to date and haven’t taken AT ALL to Weaver’s new series:(
    I especially like the covers but that’s because I am officially a Very Shallow Person.
    Oh God yes, the latest Bruno. They’ve been cookery books-meet-James Bond for quite a while and I’ve always been bored by the Lamest Love Affair in literary history i.e. Bruno/Isabelle; however, it was all the history and the constant Brexit digs that got me this time. I skipped so many pages. Don’t worry, you’re sure to find them in charity shops! I always smile at just what you do find in charity shops, actually, usually the latest literary prizewinner one week after it’s published!
    And now it’s lovely Queen’s, my favourite tennis event of the year. Sorry to hear Sue’s giving up Wimbledon as she does such a good job but couldn’t resist my usual smile at her appearance. The hair is not bad at all at the moment but the acid yellow top was an error in my opinion and who do you think did the raccoon eye-make-up?! The men, well, badly fitting boring grey jackets as usual.

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