Bookish Thoughts

You might know that I recently borrowed The Lake Shore Limited by Sue Miller from my local library, I had been under the impression that it was the book which Peggy Ann at Peggy Ann’s Post had enjoyed, but that was a different one by the same author. So I didn’t even look at the blurb before borrowing it and when Judith (Reader in the Wilderness) commented that she had tried the book and had given up on it, I thought that I was unlikely to have the same reaction – just because I rarely give up on books – but I gave up on The Lake Shore Limited on page 56 to be precise – nine lines from the bottom of the page.

It was the words Lou Gehrig’s disease which stopped me, and I only realised a few weeks ago that that is what people in the US call Motor Neurone disease. For me that was the last straw in what was a bit of a doomfest of a book with one character mourning the loss of a brother at a young age in one of the September, 11th planes.

It reminded me of the Kate Atkinson book When Will There Be Good News – which I ploughed my way through as I really usually enjoy her books but at the end of it I could only think – what a miserable book. Why write such depressing stuff, I feel like prescribing the writers a course of anti-depressants just so that they won’t infect the rest of us with negativity.

This could well be an age thing. I imagine that as a young thing there’s a fair chance that you haven’t had the misfortune to have experienced at first hand things like the early death of siblings – or in my case three cousins who died before the age of 10. You might not have had to nurse your parents and in-laws who had diseases such as cancer, heart disease, peritonitis and MS. You probably haven’t experienced at close quarters someone with MN disease, but I have. And that was why I couldn’t read on any more. I read for entertainment and that doesn’t include horror. I feel the same way about television programmes, it has always been a mystery to me that things set in hospitals are so popular. I suppose those who watch them are not the people who have had to visit hospitals or even had the misfortune to be the person in the hospital bed. When you are the one having to give permission for a life-support machine to be switched off in reality, then you don’t wish to revisit the experience again, not even at second hand.

So I prescribed myself more from P.G. Wodehouse, and I’m feeling quite like my old self again. What ho!

Library Book Haul

I hadn’t intended going into the library but after going for a walk along the esplanade where we ended up having our skin blasted by very sharp snowflakes, the library in the high street was calling to us as a place to get warm and dry – for a wee while anyway.

I ended up borrowing Agatha Raisin and the Wizard of Evesham by M.C. Beaton. I had wanted to read all of these books in order but that would mean requesting them all one by one so I’m just going to get them as I can, so long as they aren’t too recent. This one was published in 1999. Doesn’t that number look weird and so old-fashioned, I’m obviously getting used to the 20 numbers!

I also picked up The Lake Shore Limited by Sue Miller. This has a sticker on it saying that it’s by the author of The Senator’s Wife which apparently was a Richard and Judy bestseller! That’s the sort of thing which usually puts me right off a book but I think that Peggy Ann read this one recently and enjoyed it so I’ll give it a go as I’m trying to read some more up to date fiction now and again.

I stopped looking then as I had thawed out a bit and was ready to brave the weather in the street, and at least I’ve done a bit towards keeping the library numbers up.

As if that wasn’t enough, when we got back home I started having a wander around Project Gutenberg and came across the name Isabel Anderson in their lists. Such a Scottish sounding name – I thought, so I had to have a look and see what I could find out about her and her writing. It turns out that Anderson was her married name, she was previously Isabel Weld Perkins from Boston and at one point she was apparently the wealthiest woman in the world. The upshot is that I downloaded her book The Spell of Japan as I thought it might be interesting and the original cover looked lovely, she also wrote one called The Spell of the Hawaii Islands and the Philippines and one about Belgium as well as one fiction book.
You can see her books here if you’re interested.

That should keep me busy for a while!