Sunday, January 30, 2022

January Roundup

Despite the snowy, cold weather we've been having in Colorado, I don't feel like I have been doing much reading. I just realized that the puzzle I just finished consumed a lot of my reading time, so I guess that explains it.

Apart from finishing a very short classic, Elizabeth and Her German Garden, I only managed to read three books this month but they were all quite enjoyable.

Rosamunde Pilcher binge - I read Winter Solstice in December as part of my holiday reading and loved it so much that I decided to indulge in rereading both The Shell Seekers and September. Both were a real treat. 


I gave The Shell Seekers five stars and vowed not to wait another 30 years to reread it! Absolutely love the setting--Cornwall mostly and the flashbacks to the years between the wars. Penelope Keeling is definitely a character I admire and reading the book made me long to get back in my garden and get my hands dirty with planting, weeding, pruning, transplanting, and admiring my handiwork. She has such a zest for life that I found invigorating, and I loved the story of her youth, and the art world, and Cornwall...did I mention Cornwall? It is rapidly moving up the list of places I must visit and soon. Two of her three children were maddening to the point of distraction, but that was part of the story.


I gave September four stars. It was great and I loved the Scottish setting and the diverse cast of characters, but the story was just quite not up to the same level as that of The Shell Seekers. I'm a huge fan of small town settings and this was a good story, but it didn't have a character that I could love quite as much as Penelope from The Shell Seekers

I was thinking I might watch one of the two versions of The Shell Seekers, but am not sure. I read that the original version, with Angela Lansbury, varies quite a bit from the book, which would drive me to distraction. The version with Vanessa Redgrave was a German production and I haven't been able to determine whether it is in German or not. If anyone has seen either one and can provide some insight, I would appreciate it.


Apart from basking in Pilcher-land, I also read Peter Ackroyd's biography of Edgar Allan Poe, Poe: A Life Cut Short. I enjoy Acroyd's writing and he is a first-rate biographer, but this was such a somber book to read. I learned an immense amount about Poe--I had thought I had a handle on him--but I was sorely ignorant. First of all, he lived much earlier in the 19th century than I had thought, and while he lived in poverty for virtually all of his life, his genius and talents were recognized by his peers and the reading public. 

I am in no way qualified to diagnose his mental challenges, but he clearly suffered from various mental disorders that made his sad life so much harder and sadder. I found myself comparing Poe to Dickens, who was just three years younger than Poe. Both had troubled childhoods, with parents and surrogate parents who didn't provide them with the care that children need. Both worked as journalists, for newspapers as well as magazines. Dickens was driven to succeed and was energetic almost to a fault. Poe was sporadic, sometimes bursting with energy but then diving into despair and self-destructing via alcohol. I think in terms of raw talent, they were comparable, but Dickens was able to channel his talents better. While Poe's stories and poems have stood the test of time, I do feel that his output is far more limited than was that from Dickens and he didn't mature as a writer in the same way that Dickens did. 

13 comments:

  1. Nice observations all around!

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  2. I own a few Rosamunde Pilchers but haven't read them yet. Your recommendation makes me inclined to bump them up! The comparison between contemporaries Poe and Dickens is so interesting. I remember reading how Poe was inspired by Dickens' real life pet raven, Grip, to write 'The Raven.' I wonder what he could have produced if he'd been as productive as Dickens.

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    1. Yes, I forgot about that tangible connection, Grip, between Dickens and Poe. Thanks for the reminder!

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  3. Hi Jane, I must give Rosamunde Pilcher a try. She sounds like just the sort of writer I would like. Poe is on my classics list this year and I am looking forward to it. Good comparison between Dickens and Poe and why some are able to overcome difficult childhoods and others are not. Alcohol got to Poe which I guess was his way of self medicating. But he was a genius and I look forward to revisiting his short stories this year.

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  4. I waited way too long to reread The Shell Seekers, too, but it was one of the brightest spots of 2020 for me. I'd planned to reread Winter Solstice last month, but didn't get around to it. I'm ready for "some basking in Pilcher-land", too!!

    Interesting to read your Poe/Dickens comparison. I've read a little about Dickens, but know nothing at all about Poe.

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  5. I love ALL of those Rosamunde Pilcher books! They're perfect winter reading. :)

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    1. Yes, the British settings are great, but the jaunts to Ibiza and Majorca were a wonderful antidote to the gloom of January.

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  6. Okay I need to read Rosamunde Pilcher! Then I will see the movies based on her books, which I haven't seen. Somehow I got thru life without reading the blockbuster The Shell Seekers which seems awful that I missed it .... but I can still remedy the situation. And I didn't realize Poe and Dickens were close in age and so similar in circumstances, hmm!

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  7. Hi, not seen that cover for The Shell Seekers before, I like it! Have you ready Mary Wesley's The Camomile Lawn? Lovely Cornish setting.

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    1. No, but thanks for the tip. I will look for it.

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  8. Hi Jane - I waiting 20 years to read Winter Solstice - which I finally read in January and loved it! I immediately purchased Shell Seekers but, I'm saving it for perhaps June when the weather is warm--can't wait. Glad you have had a wonderful experience with these authors.

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  9. It is still interesting to me how The Shell Seekers became such a huge bestseller when new. Her earlier books (which I read later) were pleasing but slight. I suppose one of her editors or her agent persuaded her to think of writing more of a saga. I think the packaging helped and the messaging that this was a book that had a great story *and* could also safely be given to mothers and mothers-in-law. I haven't reread any of them recently but am hoping to visit Cornwall in June so it is time for a reread!

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    1. I think your analysis is spot on. Cornwell is on my must-visit list as well. I have been dreaming about it since I read Rebecca as a young teen.

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