Book Review: Peril at End House by Agatha Christie

I seem to have fallen into a habit of listening to British audiobooks (it’s the accent, I admit it!) and my most recent was no exception: Peril at End House by Agatha Christie, which besides giving me a nice accent to listen to, played into my general goal to “read” more of Dame Agatha.

This is a Hercule Poirot mystery, narrated by his friend Captain Hastings. The two encounter Miss Nick Barkley, owner of End House and recent survivor of several strange accidents. Poirot puts the pieces together, convinces Nick that someone is trying to kill her, and sets to work to prevent the murder, investigating all the people around Nick.

This is, I think, Christie in the classical style, with a big cast of suspects, frequent misdirection and re-direction, a final confrontation scene bringing all the suspects together and, of course, a final twist that I must admit I didn’t see coming. I’m going to have to try this one again one day, and watch how the clues fit together now that I know the ending! Continue reading “Book Review: Peril at End House by Agatha Christie”

Book Review: My Name Is Memory

I didn’t actually plan to read more of Ann Brashares’ books after reading The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, but in the course of linking to her site for my reviews, I happened to read the plot summary of My Name Is Memory—and was far too intrigued to resist!

Daniel has lived many lives, and remembers them all. Starting around 500 AD, he has been reincarnated through many times and places. In his first life, he was part of an army that burned down a village—and killed a beautiful girl in the fire. In later lives, he meets her again and again. He remembers, but she doesn’t. They fall in love more than once, and lose each other again and again, but in all his lives Daniel searches for her, waiting for the lifetime when they can finally be together.

The book is structured with alternating chapters. In one thread, Daniel tells his history through the centuries. The other thread is set in the present day, focusing on Daniel and Lucy, both teenagers, both deeply attracted to each other, but parted when their first conversation goes very badly. Lucy struggles to understand why she’s so drawn to Daniel, and the meaning behind her dreams that hint at past lives. Continue reading “Book Review: My Name Is Memory”

Movie Review: San Francisco

San FranciscoI recently rewatched Gone with the Wind, which got me thinking on other Clark Gable movies…and eventually led me to a rewatch of San Francisco, a 1936 movie about the 1906 earthquake, starring Gable, Jeannette MacDonald and Spencer Tracy–and which I probably hadn’t seen in 15 years!

Gable plays Blackie Norton, saloon owner and prominent citizen on the rough and disreputable Barbary Coast of San Francisco. Mary Blake (MacDonald) is a preacher’s daughter and new arrival to San Francisco, hoping to sing at the Tivoli Opera House but only able to find work singing in Blackie’s night club. For the first hour and a half of the movie, Mary is torn between her high principles and her attraction to Blackie, while Father Mullin (Tracy) watches in alarm—until finally the earthquake hits, and tears the city apart.

I found this movie a bit slow in spots…but I was fascinated by Blackie’s character, and it’s all worth it for the last half-hour depicting the earthquake. Continue reading “Movie Review: San Francisco”

Alchemy and Meggy Swann

I rarely pick a paper book up randomly anymore, but I do browse for audiobooks sometimes.  That’s how I landed on Alchemy and Meggy Swann, because it’s by Karen Cushman and I thought that was a good indicator.  And then after I had checked it out, I discovered it was being read by Katherine Kellgren–which would have sold me on it anyway!  This also is a nice pick for my largely-ignored goal this year to read more historical fiction.

Meggy comes to London in the mid-1500s, summoned by a father she’s never known.  Master Ambrose is an alchemist, consumed by his “great work,” who had hoped for an able son to help him.  Besides being female, Meggy is crippled from birth, only able to walk with the aid of two sticks.  Ignored by her father, Meggy has to find her own place in the loud, sprawling city of London.

Meggy goes through an excellent evolution throughout the book.  As it begins, she’s sympathetic but not very likable.  No one (except her grandmother) has ever been kind to her, and she meets the world now “with her fists up,” ready to give as good as she gets.  She gradually softens, as small acts of kindness back and forth build up tentative friendships with a few people around her.  She loses her fierce anger, while gaining self-confidence and appreciation for her own worth.

One of Meggy’s first friends is Roger, her father’s former apprentice who has now joined a theatre company.  Meggy is not eager to be friends and he’s perfectly willing to spar back.  The range and creativity of the insults they exchange would make Shakespeare proud!

Meggy’s character arc was the part that really seized me, but there’s also a bit of a conspiracy plotline, and a lot of good historical information too.  This isn’t built around any major historical events, but the atmosphere of 1500s London is very strong, with the crooked streets, the crowds, and of course–the stenches!  Like Cushman’s best-known book, Catherine Called Birdy, this one never skimps on the dirtier side of life in the past.  There’s a lot on alchemy too, and the quest for the Philosopher’s Stone.  I don’t have a lot of scientific knowledge, but I knew enough to know where the alchemist was going wrong in his interpretation of what his experiments told him.  It was interesting to see what learned men of the day thought they knew–and to wonder what people 500 years from now will think of our science!

This was a very engaging book and, almost needless to say, Katherine Kellgren’s reading was as excellent as ever.  I now want to read more Cushman books!  A reread of The Midwife’s Apprentice, I think, and I’ve been meaning to read Will Sparrow’s Road…which should be good for that historical fiction reading goal…

Author’s Site:

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Other reviews:
Finding Wonderland
Ana Mardoll’s Ramblings
Book Aunt
Anyone else?

Buy it here: Alchemy and Meggy Swann

Visit Venice with the Gondola Maker

I have rarely read a book that was driven so much by atmosphere as The Gondola Maker by Laura Morelli.  Set in Venice in 1581, this is historical fiction with the emphasis on the historical, taking us inside the world of the craftsmen and gondoliers of Venice.

Luca’s path in life seems mapped-out and unavoidable, to follow in his father’s footsteps as one of Venice’s finest gondola builders.  But in a moment of rage, Luca makes a terrible mistake.  He flees his old life and his old identity, becoming a boatman on the docks.  He soon becomes private gondolier to Trevisan, a master painter, and there Luca finds two new obsessions: Giuliana, a beautiful girl in a painting; and an old gondola he vows to restore to beauty.

This is a slow book, but not in a bad way.  It’s clearly minutely researched, and Morelli pays great attention to description, especially of craftsmanship.  Many characters are artists, not only the painter but also all the men involved with the different pieces necessary to create a beautiful gondola, Luca included.

I find that I have great respect for Trevisan, mostly because of one observation Luca makes.  Trevisan is a highly successful painter, who takes pains to dress like the nobility (possible through an agreement with a costume-maker’s shop!)  Because of this, he has become accepted among the patricians, even though “he engages in what is, after all, manual labor, little different from how any Venetian glassblower, ironsmith, carver or other artisan spends his day.”

There’s a fascinating double-play here.  Luca lowers Trevisan’s status to the same as all of these professions (including his own), beneath the wealthy in status.  No doubt this was true in the historical social hierarchy!  And yet, the depiction of these other crafts throughout the book raises them, to the level I think a modern reader is likely to place a master painter in, as a genius and great artist.

But mostly I respect Trevisan for finding a way to rise above his ascribed status.  He is a painter, he doesn’t enter a different profession or somehow earn a title, but he’s able to earn respect and privilege above what should be expected for his class.  I love that.  Trevisan is a supporting character, but he may be my favorite anyway.

That may say something about the main character…  I have no dislike of Luca!  Mostly, though, I feel like he was the eyes we used to explore a fascinating world.  His story takes second-place to the world he’s moving through.

And that definitely says something about the romance.  It’s a big plot thread, and it does add some good intrigue and plot twists to the story.  But as a romance it just didn’t grab me.  I mean, Luca fell in love with the painting of the woman.  Even when he begins to interact with Giuliana herself, I never felt sure he appreciated anything about her beyond her beauty.  And that’s a real shame, because there are glimmers that Giuliana is a very intelligent young woman who is determined to chart her own course, beyond the control (none at all) that girls of the nobility typically had.

I would have loved to read this story from Giuliana’s point of view, or perhaps in a split viewpoint.  Giuliana is objectified by every man in the story, some more blatantly than others (normal for the era, I’m sure).  Unfortunately, I was never convinced that Luca wasn’t ultimately doing the same thing.  He acknowledges near the end of the book that he doesn’t really know her at all and that’s true!  There are hints that there’s so much more to her, and I wish we’d had the opportunity to really see that come through.

I actually liked Luca’s “love affair” with the restored gondola much better.  While he takes the living, thinking Giuliana and reduces her largely to a painting, he takes the inert piece of wood and raises it to something that feels almost alive.

So at the end of the day…this is a good book if you like a certain kind of story.  If that story is rich in history and art, and especially if you have an interest in Venice specifically, then I can recommend The Gondola Maker!

Author’s Site: http://lauramorelli.com/

Other reviews:
The YA Lit Chick
Chronicles
Rosie Writes
Anyone else?

Buy it here: The Gondola Maker

Disclosure: I received a copy of this novel from iRead Book Tours in exchange for an honest review.