osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

“Seems weird that we have this one random heterosexual in this book,” I said, eyeing Billy Prior doubtfully as I read Pat Barker’s Regeneration. Well, now I’ve read the sequel, The Eye in the Door, and it turns out Billy Prior is also as queer a nine-bob note, so balance has been restored to the universe.

Overall I feel that Billy Prior is not as compelling as Rivers or Sassoon or Wilfred Owen (who do have the incomparable advantage of being real people), and this book is therefore not quite as strong as the first - but maybe that’s an unfair thing to ask, anyway. My favorite character is Rivers: his cool, detached, analytical voice, even when he’s looking at his own emotions, not so much experiencing them as peering at them under a magnifying glass.

I loved the atmosphere of Elizabeth Brooks’ The Orphan of Salt Winds, which is set at the delicious gothic decaying house of Salt Winds, beside a treacherous marsh alongside the sea. But both of the dual timelines deflated at the end, which was a disappointment. Spoilers )

What I’m Reading Now

D. K. Broster clearly just decided to throw ALL her favorite hurt/comfort tropes in The Wounded Name and I am HERE for it. Since I last posted, Laurent has been taken captive, only to discover that Aymar has also been taken captive, and Aymar is TERRIBLY WOUNDED! SoLaurent volunteers to share Aymar’s cell, because only constant nursing can save Aymar from death, and no one else will take it on because Aymar stands accused of betraying his own men!!!

Yes, you heard that right. The wounds to Aymar’s body are as nothing to the wounds in his HEART. Of course Laurent is convinced to the bottom of his soul that Aymar couldn’t possibly be guilty… but Doubts are beginning to creep in.

In Dracula, the men have FINALLY realized that leaving Mina out of the loop is a TERRIBLE idea, but TOO LATE, Dracula has already begun to feed on Mina! It’s fine, though, because that means that now Mina has a psychic connection to Dracula, which will surely help them track him down and stake him?

What I Plan to Read Next

At the beginning of November I’m going on a trip to Massachusetts, and I’m contemplating what to bring along for a little You Are Here reading! A reread of The Witch of Blackbird Pond perhaps? Maybe I should take another crack at Walden?

The trip encompasses a visit to Orchard House, where Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women, which is now a museum; I plan to at long last buy myself a copy. I KNOW, it’s shocking I don’t have one. Maybe I should also read a biography of LMA, or a critical analysis of her work, or something like that? Let me know if you have any recs.
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Dorothy Gilman’s Mrs. Pollifax Unveiled. I really meant to save this final Mrs. Pollifax book for a rainy day… but I felt an overwhelming urge to read it now, and who am I to resist an overwhelming urge? Gilman brought back John Sebastian Farrell to team up with Mrs. Pollifax for the denouement, thus bringing the series full circle from Mrs. Pollifax’s first adventure with Farrell. A satisfying end.

As this is the last Mrs. Pollifax book, I figured it was now or never on Mrs. Pollifax - Spy, the Mrs. Pollifax movie starring Rosalind Russell as Mrs. Pollifax. Russell is a goddamn delight, but I was sorry Spoilers )

Last January I bombed out of Mary Stewart’s The Crystal Cave, but I gave it another try with [personal profile] littlerhymes and we powered through! It helped perhaps that I went into it knowing that this is going to be the book where Everyone Is Mean to Merlin, and not in a tragic woobie way either: that’s just how the bannock crumbles in the harsh world of Dark Ages Britain.

What I’m Reading Now

Elizabeth Brooks’ The Orphan of Salt Winds, a delicious novel which has performed the difficult feat of making both its historical and its modern-day plotlines equally gothic. On the eve of World War II, orphan Virginia is adopted by the young couple who own the seaside house Salt Winds, in what the reader quickly senses is a doomed attempt to save their rickety marriage. In the modern day, Virginia in her old age finds a curlew skull on the doorstep of Salt Winds, which she believes is a sign that tomorrow night she must walk into the marsh to drown… No idea where this is headed, but loving every minute of it.

In Dracula, Lucy has DIED. Could this all have been avoided if Van Helsing had been a literal more liberal in sharing information so that everyone was on the same page about the necessity of the garlic flowers and keeping a constant watch over her at night? MAYBE. [personal profile] littlerhymes and I also agreed that PERHAPS if Mina had been summoned, her blood might have saved Lucy: the love of a good woman etc. Lucy Westenra, killed by heteronormativity…

What I Plan to Read Next

Onward in the Merlin Chronicles!
osprey_archer: (books)
Last week I described Elizabeth Brooks’ The Whispering House as Mary-Stewartish, and I think there’s definitely some Mary Stewart in its DNA, but the book is also very much its own thing, darker and more harrowing than most Mary Stewart books are. Our heroine, Freya, is deeply in mourning for her sister Stella, who five years ago jumped to her death off the cliffs near beautiful, crumbling Byrne Hall. Now, Freya comes to Byrne Hall in hope of finding some answers, and instead finds Corey, the beautifully sad scion of the house.

Spoilers, cw for suicide )
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Finished Reading

At long last I have finished Richard Rubin’s Back Over There: One American Time-Traveler, 100 Years Since the Great War, 500 Miles of Battle-Scarred French Countryside, and Too Many Trenches, Shells, Legends, and Ghosts to Count! I started reading this… over a year ago… it’s one of those books that is interesting while you’re reading it, but eminently easy not to pick back up once you’ve put it down.

It was particularly interesting for its depiction of the physical toll the war took on the French countryside: the farm fields that still turn out ordinance every time they’re plowed, the blockhouses that litter the countryside and are sometimes used as garages or garden sheds, the trenches still visible in the earth…

I also learned that the Germans made their trenches out of concrete. With drainage. I feel the British and the French could have emulated this technological advance with great profit, instead of making their troops wade through mucky dirt trenches for weeks on end till their feet started to rot.

What I’m Reading Now

Onward in Thomas Hughes’ Tom Brown’s School Days! Tom and his chums are being forced to do chores (fagged) by the fifth-formers, when only the sixth-formers are allowed to fag the lower forms, but the current sixth-formers have abdicated their duties and allowed the fifth form to run rampant… so Tom and his friend East have barricaded themselves in their study in revolt, and the biggest bullies of the fifth form are currently breaking the door down. Ah, schoolboy larks!

I’m also reading Elizabeth Brooks’ The Whispering House, which feels sort of like something Mary Stewart might write if she were still writing books today. You’ve got the gothic English country house with the mysterious family, the plucky first person girl narrator who is going to explore mysteries! fall in love! and maybe narrowly escape murder! (I’m not far enough in the book to be sure of that one, but I’m getting some vibes.)

It’s a little more “literary” than Stewart - alternating POVs, and the heroine is perhaps a little more mired in grief than a Stewart heroine ever gets about her dead family members. But still, as I said: there are vibes.

What I Plan to Read Next

Last week I vowed to make progress on my books in progress, and have I? Well, I guess finishing Back Over There counts, but for the most part, no. No I have not!

Profile

osprey_archer: (Default)
osprey_archer

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
4 5 6 7 8910
111213 14151617
18 19 20 21 22 2324
25262728293031

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 25th, 2025 08:47 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios