osprey_archer: (books)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2019-02-06 08:30 am

Wednesday Reading Meme

What I’ve Just Finished Reading

I read Mary Boewe’s Beyond the Cabbage Patch: The Literary World of Alice Hegan Rice as research for the blog post I’m writing about Annie Fellows Johnston and her writing group (the Authors Club), and it was perfect, exactly the kind of information that I wanted about the interconnections within the group.

And also - although this is beyond the scope of the post - Rice’s connections with the wider writing world: she corresponded with Ida Tarbell the muckraking journalist and Kate Douglas Wiggin (the two writers were often confused, as Rice’s most famous book was Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch) and even Mary Mapes Dodge, the editor of St. Nicholas Magazine, a grand doyenne of the American literary world. I love this kind of tracing of social & professional connections - like a literary family tree.

Alice’s husband Cale Young Rice was also a writer, a poet, of the insufferable not-very-talented “my poetry isn’t popular because the masses only want dreck!” kind. He sent a lengthy letter to Harriet Monroe of Poetry magazine to demand to know why she didn’t publish more of his work or review his books and Harriet Monroe - presumably driven beyond endurance by his endless stream of poems - she responded that she found his work derivative and dull and didn’t publish it because she didn’t want to, and I feel a little bad for him because that would be crushing, but at the same time - I can’t feel too bad when he literally asked for it. WHY, CALE.

I also read Jaclyn Moriarty’s The Extremely Inconvenient Adventures of Bronte Mettlestone, which I think suffers somewhat from a surfeit of characters - I was having some trouble keeping track of who’s who - but the world-building is as charmingly whimsical as in the A Corner of White trilogy, and I’m looking forward to the sequel. Which probably will not be published in the US for ages.

What I’m Reading Now

Winifred Holtby’s South Riding has arrived at last! It’s still early days (which in a book of this size means I’m over a hundred pages in) but so far I’m impressed by Holtby’s ability to introduce a vast cast of characters so vividly that I haven’t had any trouble keeping track of them. (Of course it helps that a few years ago I saw a miniseries based on the book - so far as I can tell, pretty faithfully.)

I am a little put out that we haven’t gotten to spend more time with my favorites, though. But I’m sure Midge and Sarah Burton will show up again soon.

I’ve begun Henry Williamson’s Tarka the Otter, His Joyful Water-life and Death in the Country of the Two Rivers, which is approximately 75% landscape description, and unfortunately landscape description is one of those things where I’ll suddenly realize that I’ve reached the bottom of the page and have no idea what I just read. But I’m persevering: a chapter a night.

What I Plan to Read Next

I wanted to continue with the Lord Peter books, only to discover that the library only has The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club on audiobook, but I listened to Whose Body on audiobook and hated the narrator so much that it almost put me off Sayers for life - he just made Peter sound so insufferable! So I’ll have to find another way to get this book.

In the meantime I’ve got The Nine Tailors on hold; I don’t suppose (outside of the Harriet books) that it matters too much which order I read the books in.
evelyn_b: (Default)

[personal profile] evelyn_b 2019-02-06 06:06 pm (UTC)(link)
He sent a lengthy letter to Harriet Monroe of Poetry magazine to demand to know why she didn’t publish more of his work or review his books and Harriet Monroe - presumably driven beyond endurance by his endless stream of poems - she responded that she found his work derivative and dull and didn’t publish it because she didn’t want to, and I feel a little bad for him because that would be crushing, but at the same time - I can’t feel too bad when he literally asked for it.

ahahaha poor guy. DON'T WRITE A LETTER DEMANDING TO KNOW WHY HARRIET MONROE WON'T PUBLISH YOUR POEMS, though. I always feel a little sorry for people who can't internalize that simple life lesson, but not that sorry. It's not that hard! Just don't do it!

I was hoping you'd like Tarka, but it is very much Not For Everyone and yeah, it's a heck of a lot of landscapes. Well, we'll see what happens!
Edited 2019-02-06 18:06 (UTC)
amaebi: black fox (Default)

[personal profile] amaebi 2019-02-06 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Lord Peter also becomes more sufferable as the novels progress*, which may be a temptation yet also a warning that reading order has some significance.


* The stories are a different matter, and kind of in a different and extremely histrionic universe.
amaebi: black fox (Default)

[personal profile] amaebi 2019-02-07 10:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah, in the stories it's mostly that Lord Peter appears so often as a sort of protean Uber-Mensch.
littlerhymes: (Default)

[personal profile] littlerhymes 2019-02-07 11:22 am (UTC)(link)
she found his work derivative and dull and didn’t publish it because she didn’t want to

He asked, she answered!

The ebook of Bellona Club is available on the same website from which we Billabong! I think quite a few Sayers are out of copyright in various jurisdictions. I don't think I've read this one, but the ones I have read I mostly got from similar sites.
amaebi: black fox (Default)

[personal profile] amaebi 2019-02-07 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Bellona contains a delicious conservative read of a Socialist arty club of the period.
ladyherenya: (Default)

[personal profile] ladyherenya 2019-02-08 08:37 am (UTC)(link)
I don't remember having an issue with the number of characters in Bronte Mettlestone, but I think some of them turn up in The Whispering Wars and I couldn't connect them with their appearance in the first book.

What is it with libraries not having Sayers in the format one wants? When I was reading the Harriet ones, my library only had them in either large print or audiobook. Then last year, I wanted specifically wanted the audiobook of The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club and the library had a dramatisation but not an unabridged audiobook.