The Portable Dorothy Parker – The 1944 Club

I’ve just got back from a weekend in Aberdeenshire where I had expected to be able to finish The Portable Dorothy Parker, well – I didn’t quite manage it but I’m not far off the end. Often her short stories feature married couples who are quite mismatched and spend a lot of time bickering and misunderstanding each other. One is about the stresses of dating with a young woman willing the phone to ring, praying that ‘he’ will ring her. They’re about human nature and she had a neat turn of phrase such as – His voice was intimate as the rustle of sheets

I had expected her stories to have more humour in them but I’m still finding them entertaining. I had no idea that Dorothy Parker wrote poetry, there are a lot in this book and they are often quite funny.

General Review of the Sex Situation

Woman wants monogamy;
Man delights in novelty,
Love is woman’s moon and sun:
Man has other forms of fun.
Woman lives but in her lord;
Count to ten and man is bored.
With this the gist and some of it,
What earthly good can come of it?

What do you think? A wee bit dated maybe? My copy of this book is in the first half of The Penguin Dorothy Parker.

And what did I get up to in Aberdeenshire? Well, three castles were visited as was one bookshop, and I now have nine more books to find space for, but more about those in another post.

The 1944 Club

1944 club

It’s time for the 1944 Club, which is being hosted by Kaggsy at Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings and by Simon at Stuck in a Book, the week has come around far too quickly for me. At the moment I’m reading Portable by Dorothy Parker, hoping to get it finished by the end of the week.

However, I have read a few books published in 1944 in the past so here are some from my archives.

Till Death Us Do Part by John Dickson Carr

Berlin Hotel by Vicki Baum

The Case of the Gilded Fly by Edmund Crispin

The Headmistress by Angela Thirkell

The Man Next Door by Mignon G. Eberhart

Pastoral by Nevil Shute