Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Death of a Cozy Writer
This is a great murder mystery send-up of the British "cozy" mystery -- Colonel Mustard in the drawing room with a knife -- smart and tight. Sir Adrian Beauclerk-Fisk creates a family fraught with hate, indifference, jealousy and addiction. But in the end, he meets his own demise, leaving greedy heirs, a new (murderess?) wife, and skulking servants. Detective Chief Inspector Arthur St. Just is left to sniff out the clues. Fun!
Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography
I have read and loved the comic strip Peanuts since the late 60's. Charles Schulz, its creator, was universally accepted as a cheerful, God-fearing, all-American guy. This book reveals the truly sad, tortured man he was behind the scenes. Although this book was rather depressing at times, it opens us to the genius of Schulz crafting his personally reflective work. Another fascinating story is the building of the marketing juggernaut of Peanuts, encompassing everything from greeting cards to books to toys. Fans ask, was Schulz Charlie Brown? This book unmasks Schulz as Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Schroeder, Linus, and Lucy at different times in his life.
Friday, December 17, 2010
Churchill Defiant
This biography of Winston Churchill's postwar years was fascinating. Churchill Defiant outlines the triumph and tragedy of the postwar/early Cold War years as Churchill confronts medical setbacks, political defeats and unfinished plans. Thrown out of office as Prime Minister in the middle of the Potsdam talks of 1945 on a tidal Labour party victory over the Conservatives, Churchill must leave important negotiations to lower-level ministers, setting the stage for historical events that continue to impact us today. His continued efforts for high-level peace talks with the Russians were met with opposition from his own Cabinet as well as from a fearful, fumbling Eisenhower. Read this (and perhaps someday, Churchill's own multi-volume memoir of WWII) for a perspective on today's world situation and political intricacies. I wish the author had included photos from key events in the book rather than simply describing them; they would have greatly amplified the text.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Teacher Man
It's been a good while since I read Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes and 'Tis, but it wasn't long into Teacher Man that I fell back into his style: lilting Irish, but all at once "in your face". The man who must write the longest sentences in modern prose describes his days as a high school English teacher, and a brief stint at the community college level, as well as a failed attempt at a doctorate degree at Trinity College, Dublin. The failures are many for McCourt, but he gives a glimpse of the triumphs as well in teaching teens to think and create. As a parent of a teen, I wish all teachers would spend more time teaching children at all levels of study to think and create, rather than to spew information on a standardized test.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Mistress of the Art of Death
A medieval mystery? Yes, and Mistress of the Art of Death delivers a great story, historically accurate details and gripping characters, all set in the 12th century town of Cambridge during the reign of Henry II the Plantagenet. Not being one to read murder mysteries, I started this one with caution, but was rewarded with a heroic leading lady rushing to solve grisly tortures and murders of children before another is snatched for a certain death. And a love story too? Oh yes. Twists and turns? Oh yes. Looking for Franklin's next book, The Serpent's Tale starring the same leading lady? A third, emphatic yes.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Narrow Dog to Carcassonne
A retired Englishman and his wife take their canal boat on the trip of a lifetime. Canal boats apparently are NOT robust enough for a sea journey, but Terry and Monica's dream is to chug along the English canals, out the Thames, across the Channel, pop into Calais, down the French canals, through Paris, down to Carcassonne. (Why Carcassonne? It sounds nice.) Accompanied by their narrow dog, Jim the whippet, they accomplish just what they set out to do, sharing the peculiarities of modern canal travel as they go. We meet unsavory characters, hard-working but sparse lock captains, town fair patrons, bartenders, mayors, other narrow and wide dogs, and everyday people rather surprised to see an English canal boat out of its usual environs. The eighteen French phrases at the back of the book to keep on hand when traveling are not to be missed. This book is a charming keeper, especially if you have experience traveling to any of the locales it describes, or have a dream to do so.
Friday, November 5, 2010
The Pirate Queen
Made it through nine chapters of this book on Queen Elizabeth I and her pirate adventurers in the early years of her reign. It's historical non-fiction; I knew that going into it. But very HEAVY on facts, very LIGHT on story. More like a history final than a "Pirate Queen". I'm going back to Alison Weir for my English history fix.
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