Some Ebooks from the Trip
Mar. 27th, 2022 08:25 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I intended to use this trip to zoom through a lot of old books that have hung around my Kindle for AGES… which might have happened if I had not also downloaded the trilogy Some Experiences of an Irish R.M., Further Experiences of an Irish R.M., and In Mr. Knox’s Country, by Martin Ross (the pseudonym of writing duo Edith Somerville and Violet Florence Martin, who might have been a couple although apparently debate rages).
I knew the books were comedies and went into them expecting legal shenanigans, but in fact they are almost entirely hunting stories. I don’t believe I’ve ever read a hunting story before (at least not about sport hunting; I have read things like Hatchet where the hero hunts for food), and it was an interesting glimpse into an alien world, although a delicately minded modern reader may wish to know that lots of animals suffer in these books. Not just the hunted foxes etc.; there are an awful lot of kicked dogs and whipped horses.
My other three ebooks were more successful. Lucy Larcom’s A New England Girlhood is a childhood memoir (one of my favorite genres) about Larcom’s childhood in a seaside Massachusetts town and girlhood working at the mills in Lowell, where Larcom wrote for the famous Lowell Offering and began to develop into the famous poet she would become. Wonderful detail about life in Massachusetts from the 1820s-40s, and rich evocative descriptions of nature.
I’ve long meant to read more Kate Douglas Wiggin (best known for Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm), and I started with Timothy’s Quest. When their harsh, uncaring foster mother dies and the neighbors decide to send the children to an orphan home, eleven-year-old Timothy picks up his adoptive baby sister Gay and heads out on a quest to find her a family.
I am a sucker for children-on-their-own stories so I quite enjoyed this, although in this case the children spend much less time on their own than in, say, The Boxcar Children. Timothy finds a beautiful white house at the edge of a pretty country village (the chapter subtitle is “Timothy Finds a House in Which He Thinks a Baby Is Needed, but the Inmates Do Not Entirely Agree with Him”), and then Timothy and Gay slowly and surely knock over every adult heart like a set of ninepins.
I also read Josephine Scribner Gates’s The Story of Live Dolls, in which all the dolls in a town come to life for a month and have wonderful adventures with their girls. They have a picnic! They go to the seaside! They visit the grounds of the Doll Hospital, where doll clothes grow on trees, and every girl gets to pick out a complete new outfit for her dolly! Delightful. I love it. I really think that “wonderful magical good times with no setbacks or secret catch” is a genre that we should bring back.
I knew the books were comedies and went into them expecting legal shenanigans, but in fact they are almost entirely hunting stories. I don’t believe I’ve ever read a hunting story before (at least not about sport hunting; I have read things like Hatchet where the hero hunts for food), and it was an interesting glimpse into an alien world, although a delicately minded modern reader may wish to know that lots of animals suffer in these books. Not just the hunted foxes etc.; there are an awful lot of kicked dogs and whipped horses.
My other three ebooks were more successful. Lucy Larcom’s A New England Girlhood is a childhood memoir (one of my favorite genres) about Larcom’s childhood in a seaside Massachusetts town and girlhood working at the mills in Lowell, where Larcom wrote for the famous Lowell Offering and began to develop into the famous poet she would become. Wonderful detail about life in Massachusetts from the 1820s-40s, and rich evocative descriptions of nature.
I’ve long meant to read more Kate Douglas Wiggin (best known for Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm), and I started with Timothy’s Quest. When their harsh, uncaring foster mother dies and the neighbors decide to send the children to an orphan home, eleven-year-old Timothy picks up his adoptive baby sister Gay and heads out on a quest to find her a family.
I am a sucker for children-on-their-own stories so I quite enjoyed this, although in this case the children spend much less time on their own than in, say, The Boxcar Children. Timothy finds a beautiful white house at the edge of a pretty country village (the chapter subtitle is “Timothy Finds a House in Which He Thinks a Baby Is Needed, but the Inmates Do Not Entirely Agree with Him”), and then Timothy and Gay slowly and surely knock over every adult heart like a set of ninepins.
I also read Josephine Scribner Gates’s The Story of Live Dolls, in which all the dolls in a town come to life for a month and have wonderful adventures with their girls. They have a picnic! They go to the seaside! They visit the grounds of the Doll Hospital, where doll clothes grow on trees, and every girl gets to pick out a complete new outfit for her dolly! Delightful. I love it. I really think that “wonderful magical good times with no setbacks or secret catch” is a genre that we should bring back.
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