Shiny New Books

At last, dear blog readers, I can announce what I’ve been surreptitiously up to for the past couple of months (and why there have been relatively few blog reviews here during that time) – Shiny New Books!

Let me explain – next Monday a new online quarterly magazine Shiny New Books will launch at www.shinynewbooks.co.uk. It’s a recommendations site, looking at the best books published in each quarter – fiction, non-fiction, and (my section) reprints, as well including author interviews, behind-the-scenes pieces by publishers, and other bonus material.  We’re hoping that you’ll dip in and out of the site throughout each quarter, to see (as our tagline suggests) ‘what to read next and why’.

And who is this ‘we’?  You may have noticed coy mentions of something exciting coming on other blogs – and I can now tell you that Annabel, Victoria, and Harriet are my co-editors. I’m sure you know all their blogs – you can click on their names to take you to them – and I feel very honoured to be working on this alongside them, given their talents and brilliant blogs.  Not to mention how fun it’s all been!

The reviews haven’t only been written by the four of us, of course, although we have been beavering away at them – some of our favourite bloggers have been quietly writing reviews for us (and keeping nice and quiet about it, thanks everyone!) and we’re hoping to have many more on board for next time.  Opportunities to write will come when we launch, of course.

Monday 7 April is when we go live – at the moment there is very little visible on the site, but feel free to go and check it out, or bookmark it ready for launch.  And for now, you can follow us on Twitter, like our Facebook page, and (most importantly) sign up for the newsletter in the box below.  This will have bonus material, and come out more frequently than the quarterly magazine issues.

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We’re all very excited about this venture – I hope you don’t mind us whetting your appetite with a week still to go before launch, but I will (of course) give another announcement when Shiny New Books is really and truly launched.

Song for a Sunday

A lot of people turn their nose up at singers on reality shows, but you might quite like Sally Barker… she toured with Bob Dylan and the like, but had to quit when her husband died and she had to raise her children.  Well, thank The Voice that she’s back; I’ve rarely heard a singer who can put this much emotion in a song.  She reminds me a bit of Joni Mitchell – appropriately, since she was in a band called the Joni Mitchell Project.

Stuck-in-a-Book’s Weekend Miscellany

Another busy weekend coming up for me – I really must arrange one where I just lie around reading books – so I’ll leave you with a quick trio!

1.) The blog post – it’s been ages since I read a Richmal Crompton book, and Leadon Hill isn’t one of the 26 I have read (not including the William series), but Claire’s review has whetted my appetite for more.

2.) The link – I watched Twenty-Twelve long after everyone else (the BBC sitcom about a committee preparing for the Olympics), but I’m on board with W1A.  It’s a sort-of sequel, with Hugh Bonneville and Jessica Stevenson reprising their roles, set at the BBC – Bonneville’s character has become ‘Head of Values’. It’s just as brilliantly believable as before, with lots of verbal ticks (tics?) offering the most comedy. Watch here on iPlayer, if you can.

3.) The poll results – a slight change from the usual miscellany! Thank you for so many results; I found it really interesting to see how the different Penelopes fared (and loved the comment from Jill, on the poll, that her favourite was Penelope!)  The results are above – so far, anyway; the poll is still open – and I will report back on The Pumpkin Eater when I’ve finished it.

Some Penelopes…

Thank you for your comments on yesterday’s post, to those of you who did – I always get anxious posting fiction, in a way I don’t at all with reviews, so feedback and encouragement means a lot!

Now, onto something entirely different.  I quite often get my Penelopes in a muddle – Lively, Fitzgerald, and Mortimer – and I don’t think I can be the only one who does.  I’ve read three or four novels by Penelope Fitzgerald, whom I very much like, and I’m currently reading one by Penelope Mortimer (The Pumpkin Eater), so I’m hoping to disentangle them soon.

I thought I’d use this opportunity to experiment with a poll.  Possibly there are better uses of them, but this was a quick and easy way to see how pollcode.com works!

I’m just intrigued to discover how popular the Penelopes are respectively.  Do pop any particular recommendations (or anti-recommendations) in the comments.

Which Penelopes have you read?
Fitzgerald
Lively
Mortimer
None of the above
  
pollcode.com free polls 

The Museum (short fiction)

Sometimes the mood takes me to write some fiction… This one, again, is a bit different from the others – I’m enjoying experimenting.  I shan’t say any more about it, although part of me is itching to say more.  Instead… here is ‘The Museum’.
Sylvia Hawthorn often answered the door with something in
her hand and today it was a blue and gold teapot, which had once been a gift
from a friend of her father’s who might have become Prime Minister, if he had
ever successfully stood for election.  Luckily
the teapot was empty, albeit slightly soapy.
“Miss Hawthorn?” said the lady in uniform on the
doorstep.  The uniform was navy and neat,
with a stripe of gold on the pocket, but Sylvia did not recognise it.  A man in the same uniform (a little less
neat) stood behind.  Both of them looked
young, but a lot of people looked young to Sylvia – who was, herself, 78, but
(as people often put it) ‘still living alone’. 
It was that ‘still’ that Sylvia hated to hear.  The word implied that things might, perhaps
should, soon change – that, frankly, some person or persons unknown had slipped
up by letting the situation continue for so long.  The lady in uniform smiled patiently, and
waited for an answer.
“Yes, I’m Miss Hawthorn. 
Can I help you?”
“We’re here for the museum.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“The museum.  We’re
here regarding the museum.  Would you
mind if we stepped in for a moment?”
Sylvia was not used to saying no to people.  Indeed, she was not used to be consulted on
any matter.  Having been brought up to
respect uniforms, whatever they might signify, she stepped back to allow the
lady and the man to walk past her down the hall.
“I think it will do nicely,” said the lady.
“Perhaps the corridor could be widened?” murmured the man.
“Oh, well, of course – the corridor could hardly stay as it
is.  Think of wheelchair access, for one
thing.”
“I’m sorry?” Sylvia said, but they were in the living room
now.  She wished that she had vacuumed,
or at least tidied in there, but she always started her weekly clean in the
kitchen.  It certainly wasn’t tidy in the
living room, she knew; a pile of books were on the sofa, a jigsaw puzzle was
half completed on the coffee table, and there might well be – she blushed to
remember – the remnants of a cup of cocoa on the sideboard.  Still, she couldn’t stand in the hallway all
evening.  She put down the teapot on the
stairs, and followed.
In the living room, the man and the lady were walking slowly
around the coffee table, looking closely at the mess of objects.  Sylvia trotted quickly to the sofa and
started picking up books.
“Excuse me, Miss Hawthorn,” said the lady sharply, “I’m
going to have to ask you not to touch the exhibits.”
The man hurried across the room, and firmly took the books
from Sylvia’s hands. 
Anne of Green Gables,”
he read, “and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.”  The lady produced a tiny notebook from
somewhere within the uniform, and scribbled some notes.
“They’re from a sale at the library,” Sylvia said, the blush
returning to her cheeks – it was never far from them. “I promise I didn’t steal
them.  I paid £1 for each.  The suggested donation was only fifty pence,
but I like to support charity when I can.” 
She paused, wondering what other relevant information she could possibly
provide.  “I don’t recall the exact
charity.  I have a feeling it might have
been something to do with parrots.”
“Just put them back where they ought to be, thank you.  I’m sorry, Miss Hawthorn, the exhibits really must be left as they are.”
“I’m afraid I don’t really understand – ”
“Proper signage will be in place in due course,
obviously.  Now, if you could take us
through to the kitchen…?”
The lady spoke considerably more than her companion, but he
made up for his silence with the level of attention he paid to all of Sylvia’s
possessions, frequently writing things in his own tiny notebook.  It was a little officious, Sylvia thought,
not to say nosey.  If the man who might
have become Prime Minister were there, he’d have known what to do.  He’d been so clever about the situation with
the village hall plumbing, and had once given her a pair of warm suede gloves,
sensible man.  Not many gentlemen would
have thought of that.  Sylvia took the
only course of action she could think of.
“Would either of you like a cup of tea?”
“Oh, certainly.” The lady in uniform nodded to her partner,
whose own uniform, it transpired, held takeaway cups filled with tea.  “Of course, we can’t use the cups and mugs
you have here.”
Sylvia tried not to look offended, which was the certain
method of making her look her most offended. “The crockery was a gift from my
parents.  I believe the mayor has a
similar set.”
“Write that down,” said the lady to her companion. “The
current mayor? Yes? But you understand that we can’t use the exhibits in such a
manner.”
“Goodness, no!” said the man.
“I’m terribly sorry,” said Sylvia, feeling reluctantly that
the time had come to be direct, “I really don’t understand.  Are you from the council?  Is this – ” (an advert she had seen on
television came dimly to her mind) “– is this at all connected with my TV
licence?”
“I thought I’d explained. 
We’re from the museum.  We are
members of the Museum Committee.”
The man in uniform, who was examining the shelf of teacups,
looked over his shoulder and added: “The subcommittee for pre-launch evaluation
and itemisation.”
“But – I really am most terribly sorry – what is this museum?  And what has it to do with my home?”
The lady laughed – quite kindly, it seemed to Sylvia.  She smiled uncertainly in response.  There remained a faint hope that a few words
would make everything clear again.
“Why, the museum of you, of course!  The Sylvia Hawthorn Museum.”
Before Sylvia could respond, the man had beckoned to his
partner.
“A teapot.  A teapot
is missing.”
The lady strode across the room, friendliness lost in a
moment of businesslike concern.  She
flipped through her notebook, frowning.  Sylvia
stared across the room, hoping that standing still and not speaking would
somehow provide a solution to her confusion. 
They muttered to each other for a minute or two, until Sylvia wondered
if they had forgotten about her entirely. 
Eventually the lady addressed her.
“Miss Hawthorn, my colleague cannot find the teapot.  A blue and gold teapot.”
“I’m afraid I – no – no, it’s usually on that shelf.  I don’t know where it is.”
“Miss Hawthorn, this is quite a serious matter.  Any theft will be prosecuted.  That is our policy, however large or small
the item or items taken.”
“But – but it’s mine.  The teapot is mine.  Everything in this house is mine!”  Even in a moment of confrontation, though,
Sylvia was scrupulously honest, and felt compelled to acknowledge an exception:
“There is a library book by my bed.  I
don’t own that.  It isn’t especially
good.  I would describe the
characterisation as lacklustre.”
The man wrote this down quickly, but the lady’s eyes did not
drop from Sylvia’s face.  “I don’t wish
to upset you, Miss Hawthorn, but the museum simply can’t permit exhibits to be
tampered with.”
“I wish you’d explain to me what this museum is.”
“I believe you’re being deliberately difficult, Miss
Hawthorn, and the committee had so hoped that pre-launch evaluation and
itemisation would run smoothly.  We only
have a week until opening, as you know.”
“But I don’t know.
 I really and truly don’t know what
you’re talking about!”
“The Sylvia Hawthorn Museum, of course. I have already made
that quite clear.”
Sylvia stood with her mouth a little open.  They had reached, she realised, what her
father would have called an impasse.
The man shook his head with obvious disappointment. “We can
come back to assess the kitchen later,” he said. “It’s almost three; we’d better make a start
upstairs soon.” He turned back to the shelf.
The stairs!  Sylvia
suddenly remembered where she’d left the teapot.  In amidst the confusion, that seemed to be a
bright light of elucidation.  Perhaps,
somehow, if she clung onto that information, the rest would fall into place.
The lady and the man had now both turned away from her,
apparently giving her up as a lost cause. 
They were counting mugs and cups, ticking them off a list in their
notebooks.  Sylvia watched them for a
moment, and quickly made up her mind.  Suddenly,
hoping they wouldn’t follow, she hurried out of the kitchen.  Her pace increased as she got to the hallway.
They hadn’t
noticed her leave.  She knew what she had to do.  Without pausing to
put on a coat or a hat, without even putting on the gloves that had been a gift
from the friend of her father’s who might have become Prime Minister, she
pulled open the front door, grabbed the teapot from the stairs, and ran, ran as
quickly as she could, away from the door, away from the museum, and away, away into
the fog.

A couple of meet-ups

I’ve had a very busy week, and a very lovely one.  Not only did I get to go to the Bookbarn and buy oodles of books (thanks for all your comments and thoughts, much appreciated, I will reply soooon) but I went to a couple of meet-ups.  Well, one was more official than the other – this Wednesday saw the annual Penguin Bloggers’ Night at Foyle’s, which is now a much-loved fixture in the blogging calendar.  Hats off to Lija and her team for organising another wonderful event.

It was lovely to see old friends, some of whom I’d not seen since the previous year’s event, and especially nice to meet Claire for the first time. And of course, we got to hear from some authors. It was great to have a quick chat with Rebecca Hunt after meeting her at a previous event – her new novel Everland is out soon.  The extract that appealed most was a very funny reading by Nina Stibbe.  Annoyingly I can’t remember the name of the novel, or find info online.  But, er, look out for that.

Nina Stibbe

Rebecca Hunt

Oh, and there was Will Self, reading from Shark.  Not a novel that appeals to me, but it was intriguing to see the stance and approach of a man who must – surely – feel he has to live up to his reputation.  He said nothing at all directly to the audience, stood some distance from the microphone, and walked off as soon as he’d finished.  Hmm.  Maybe he’s shy…

Will Self

On Saturday I was off to London again – off to Foyle’s again, indeed – for a meet-up of the Virago Modern Classics group on LibraryThing.  This lovely group of ladies and gentlemen (mostly ladies) are great fun, and we had a lark descending on various Charing Cross Road bookshops, as well as an Oxfam, the London Review of Books shop, and Persephone.

It was fab to see various old friends again, and to meet some folk in person for the first time.  It was particularly wonderful to meet Karen/Kaggsy, as I love her blog and we’ve chatted a lot online, but never met.  It was such fun to chat away about books in person.  But the guest of honour, and the reason for us grouping together, was Laura – who used to blog at Laura’s Musings – who was over from the US of A.  What a fun and funny lady!  We all laughed a lot on Saturday, and I have to put in another word for Julie, who isn’t a blogger but is extremely funny.  And there I shall stop naming people, because everyone there was a joy!  As were the Dutch pancakes we ate for lunch.

I was relatively restrained (memories of the Bookbarn not being far behind me) and bought three books.  Two more – The Amateur Marriage and The Hare With Amber Eyes – were a kind gift from Luci, who brought bagfuls to share.

I bought Colin II by E.F. Benson, because I always like adding to my Benson shelf, and because ‘Colin 2’ is basically a nickname I could have had growing up.  But I must read Colin before I get onto the sequel.  Also Abbie, which I recently borrowed from a friend and very much enjoyed.  And finally The Basilisk of St. James by Elizabeth Myers, whose letters I so loved reading in 2005 or 2006.

But I made up for my restraint by forcing encouraging others to buy whenever possible – including some gems, like Nothing Is Safe by E.M. Delafield, and a couple of scarce Barbara Comyns.  Never let it be said that I discourage book buying…

So I need a weekend to get over my weekend, but what fun it was!

A Trip to the Bookbarn…

While I was in Somerset, having a lovely time with Our Vicar, Our Vicar’s Wife, and little Sherpa, we managed to fit in a trip to the Bookbarn.  If you’ve not heard about it, it’s an enormous secondhand bookshop in north Somerset, claiming to have a million books.  Many of these are online, and you have to search for those in the shop on the world’s slowest computer, but thousands of others are available for browsing – at £1 each!  I never come away empty-handed, and on Tuesday I came away with twenty books.  That includes four which I bought in a charity shop in Wells, which we went to afterwards.  Never let it be said that I keep my purchases silent – here they are!  Please do let me know if you’ve read any, got any, would like any, or have any thoughts at all!

I’ll go through them from the bottom of the left pile upwards…

Remembering Leacock: an oral history
A book about Stephen Leacock that I didn’t know about?  Yes please!  This one seems to be interviews with people that knew the great Canadian humorist.

42nd Street
I’m off to see the musical on the 30th, and I stumbled across the screenplay.

Two by Two by David Garnett
I’ve read surprisingly little by David Garnett, considering Lady Into Fox was a fundamental book for my doctoral thesis, but now I can add another title to the pile – I couldn’t resist Noah’s Ark for a theme.

Our Stage and Its Critics by E.F.S.
I can never resist an early twentieth-century book about the theatre… This one was published in 1910, so is unlikely to include anything about authors I know and love, but I’m still excited.

The Oliviers by Felix Barker
See above… but this time about Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh!

A Cornish Childhood by A.L. Rowse
Slightly Foxed Editions have made me fall in love with childhood memoirs, particularly those which take place in beautiful locations.  Enough said.

Tobit Transplanted by Stella Benson
I ummed and ahhed over an expensive copy of this a while ago, so a £1 copy was a lovely find!  After loving I Pose earlier in the year, it’s nice to have another Benson ready and waiting.

What Next? by Denis Mackail
Every bookshopping trip should have one best find, shouldn’t it?  The one you grab and feel like the whole thing was worthwhile.  And this was mine – like everyone else, I love Greenery Street, and I’m eager to read some more Mackail and see what else he has up his sleeve.

Mysterious book…
This one is a gift, which I have cunningly doctored to hide the title…

(from the bottom of the right-hand pile)

Awakenings by Oliver Sacks
I lost my copy of this at some point – either lent to someone and forgotten, or under some floorboards somewhere.  So, hurrah for finding a copy in a charity shop!

Notes from a Small Island by Bill Bryson
It’s almost odd that I haven’t bought this before, since I enjoy Bryson’s writing. Couldn’t say no to a 30p copy.

Pilgrimage I by Dorothy Richardson
To be honest, I can’t say I’m super excited about embarking on those notoriously difficult stream-of-consciousness novel (there are 12 or so more volumes after this one), but… well, it feels like the right sort of thing to have on the shelf.

Bindle by Herbert Jenkins
Some nice serendipity – it’s no secret that I adored Patricia Brent, Spinster, and a few of you said Bindle was just as great.  Now it’s mine, all mine!

The Story of My Life by Helen Keller
I thought The World I Live In was brilliant and revelatory, and have been meaning to read her earlier, more famous, book about living without sight or sound.

Every Good Dead by Dorothy Whipple
How could I resist a copy of a Whipple novel with a cover as gloriously awful as this?

Strange Gardens by Michael Quint
One day I will read a French book that I like.  Will it be this one?  Maybe…

The Setons by O. Douglas
I thought Pink Sugar was great, so… well, you’re probably sensing a theme in this post!

From A College Window by A.C. Benson
One of the Benson dynasty (E.F. and all that, though no relation to Stella, so far as I’m aware) wrote a book of essays about life, while looking out of a window at Magdalen College.  Another no-brainer, so far as I’m concerned.

So, there you have it!  And would you believe it… I’m off book buying tomorrow too.  A long fast has been broken.  Over to you – thoughts?

Mr. Norris Changes Trains by Christopher Isherwood

This is another one where I’m sending you off to Vulpes Libris!  We’ve inaugurated Shelf of Shame week, where five of us pick an author or book we’ve been meaning to read for ages, and see how we find them.  (I’ll pre-empt anybody saying that there’s no need to be ashamed of having left something unread by saying… it’s a fun idea for a themed week, enjoy!)

I picked Christopher Isherwood, as I felt I ought to know more about such an important interwar writer. And I own this copy because it’s got a beautiful cover!  It’s a Folio edition, but had lost its slipcover before it found its way to my hands.

Follow the link to find out what I thought…

The last Sherpa/book combo, I’m afraid…

Mr. Fox by Barbara Comyns

One of the many lovely things about being at home in Somerset is that most of my books are down here. Although I have several hundred unread books in Oxford, I have many more in Somerset that I don’t get to run my eyes over everyday – and so there are some fun surprises on the shelves here.  Not so much books I’d forgotten about, but certainly books I hadn’t expected to be able to read soon.  Saturday was so sunny and lovely that I wanted to pick up something that perfectly matched my mood.  And what better than to treat myself with a long-awaited Barbara Comyns?

Oh, how did you get into the picture, Sherpa?

I’ve read nearly all of Comyns’ novels now (saving just A Touch of Mistletoe) and I’d thought that the styles divided neatly into two – the seven novels of the 1940s-’60s, and the three which she published in the 1980s after being rediscovered by those bastions of rediscovery, Virago Modern Classics.  Well, if I’d read Mr. Fox blindfolded (…as it were) then I would have placed it in the first group.  Which is a very good thing, in my book – Mr. Fox (1987) is up there with Comyns’ best books, in terms of tone, character, and sheer calm madness.

The setting is World War Two, and the heroine (of sorts) is typically Comyns territory – Caroline Seymore has a young daughter (Jenny) but is quite like a child herself.  As she narrates her life – running from flat to house to flat, avoiding bombs, selling pianos, cleaning for a neurotic vegetarian – she is that wonderfully Comynsian combination of naive and fatalistic and optimistic:

I still had a feeling something wonderful was going to happen, although it was taking a long time.  Perhaps it was just as well to get all the sad part of my life over at one go and have all the good things to look forward to.
I don’t think any sentence could encapsulate the outlook of a Comyns heroine better than that.  As always, we have the surreal told in a matter-of-fact way, and the novel reminded me most of The Skin Chairs.  It is like someone telling their life story in one long breath, slightly muddled, with emphasis falling equally on the significant and insignificant.  It makes reading the novel a bit disorientating, but in a lovely way – you just go along for the ride, and wait to see what will happen.  And it makes it all feel so believable, because surely no novelist could craft something so detailed and yet so arbitrary?

And the Mr. Fox of the title?  He is that wartime speciality, the spiv.  There never seems to be any romance between Caroline and Mr. Fox, but they live together to save money and conduct their curious operations together – whether on the black market or, as mentioned, selling grand pianos.  He is a charming man, and Caroline seems curiously drawn to his ginger beard, but he also has a ferocious temper – and Caroline is often happier when he’s not around.  The pairing is bizarre – a marriage of convenience that isn’t actually a marriage.  It adds to the surreality of the novel, and I can’t really work out why he gets the title to himself, since Mr. Fox seems to be so much more about Caroline.  Or even, indeed, about the Second World War.  With air raids and rationing and evacuees, Comyns uses the recognisable elements of every wartime novel or memoir, but distorts them with her unusual style and choice of focus.  How many times have we seen films or read novels with a scene of anxious villagers gathered in church to hear war declared?  Compare that with the way in which Comyns shows it:

On Sunday I could stay at home because the men from the Council took a holiday; so the Sunday following my visit to Straws I was washing and ironing all the curtains so that they would be fresh for the new house.  I listened to the wireless as I ironed, but I was thinking of other things and was not listening very carefully; then suddenly I heard Mr Chamberlain telling everyone the war had come, it was really here although outside the sun was shining.  It didn’t seem suitable to iron now the war had really come, so I disconnected the iron and stood by the window biting my nails and wondering what to do next.

Mr. Fox, like all her novels, is also very funny.  Mostly that is because of the naive but unshockable voice which is cumulatively built up, but I also loved lines like this:

I hoped they liked warmth, because I had an idea vegetarians thought it unhealthy to be warm or comfortable and usually lived in a howling draught

The novel has such an authenticity that I wonder if Comyns kept it in a drawer for decades.  I wish somebody would hurry up and write a biography of her, because I’d dearly love to know more about her life – if it is a tenth as bizarre and captivating as her novels, then it’d make for a splendid biography.

If you’ve never read any of Barbara Comyns’ work before, I’d still recommend starting with Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead or The Vet’s Daughter (and probably not Our Spoons Came From Woolworths, which is her most well-known and my least favourite), but you wouldn’t be doing badly if Mr. Fox was your first encounter with her.  And if you already know and love Comyns, make sure you find yourself a copy of this one – you’re in for a treat.

Hangsaman – Shirley Jackson

I’ve been on a mini Shirley Jackson binge (can two books be a binge?) which I’ll be giving more details about in good time, but I had to share this.  I read Hangsaman and The Sundial, and whilst browsing reviews came across this cover on The Rumpus.

In the fine tradition of schlocky covers, it’s got almost nothing to do with the plot – and nothing at all to do with the tone – of the novel.  But it caught my eye, because surely… that’s Magdalen College on the front! Whoever crafted the cover to this American novel about an American college decided that the best thing for the cover was an English university college… wonderful.

This picture was nabbed from here.