ExUrbanis

Web Name: ExUrbanis

WebSite: http://www.exurbanis.com

ID:213277

Keywords:

ExUrbanis,

Description:

keywords:
description:
Get the feed in a reader!Get updates by email!Get updates by email! Home About Archives ExUrbanis Urban Leaving to Country Living View from my Window 11May21 May11

What a difference in a month! It beginning to look like spring although it sure hasnt been feeling like it. Temperatures have been mostly single digits C (seldom above 50 F).

A closer view this month

The trees are still pretty bare, but the grass is green and growing and the daffodils that we actually sodded over last year have returned. This brings me much joy.

In contrast, a friend helped me plant close to 200 daffodil bulbs in this new garden last fall. They were meant to fill the garden with a swath of yellow, and spill out onto the lawn (which they have done.) What a disappointment they have proved to be.

A work in progress

Whats in your garden right now? Are the spring flowers in your part of the world all finished?

P.S. Some of the book and product links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Friday Afternoon Views from My Office, Outdoor Living, Things of Beauty | 6 Comments 20 Books of Summer May10

This is the first time that I’m participating in the 20 Books of Summer challenge hosted by Cathy at 746books.

I’ve chosen my summer reading to include books from the Four Books in a Row challenge, suggested by Rebecca at Bookish Beck, the Bookbloggers Challenge run by Lynne at Fictionophile, and to complete the What’s in a Name Challenge hosted by Andrea at the Carolina Book Nook, but I’ve divided it into months for my ease of reference.

You’ll see that my July reading has a definite theme that, in fact, spills over a bit into August. And bonus: I was able to get all of these books off my own shelves, or in my Kindle library, except for four titles. Two of those I’ve put inter-library loan requests in for, but whether the libraries will be open remains to be seen. The remaining two, I’ll just have to bite the bullet for, and buy ecopies. (Total about $15 Canadian). Not bad for a whole summer of reading!

JUNE

One Hundred Secret Senses by Amy TanSummer House with Swimming Pool by Herman KochOn Tour by Noel StreatfeildThe Inconvenient Indian by Thomas KingSweet William by Beryl BainbridgeSomething for Everyone by Lisa Moore

JULY

We are All Birds of Uganda by Hafsa ZayyanBirdie by Tracey LindbergThe Good Lord Bird by James McBrideThe Spectator Bird by Wallace StegnorOne for the Blackbird, One for the Crow by Olivia HawkerBirds of a Kind by Wajdi MouawadThe Birds by Tarjei VesaasThe Birds by Aristophanes

AUGUST

Birdcage Walk by Kate RiordanBirdcage Walk by Helen DunmoreSilver Sparrow by Tayari JonesHour Glass by Michelle RenéMiss Pym Disposes by Josephine TeyRunaway by Alice Munro

I have one title held back that I reserve to swap in if one of these titles doesn’t work: Hoot by Carl Hiaasen. My dad recommended Hiaasen to me. Don’t you just love that cover? Have you ever read anything by Hiaasen?

P.S. The book links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

#4BooksinaRow #20BooksofSummer21 #BB2021FRC #WhatsinaName

P.P.S. Im still trying to master this block editor thing, so my spacing is a little-not-so-much-what-Id-like. Please bear with me. Thanks!

posted under Book stuff | 20 Comments Vintage Movie Time: Outdoor Havens April24
I did this balcony, although I wasnt really on the cover of Time.

Twenty years ago, I had a small business decorating what I called “outdoor spaces”: porches, balconies, decks, patios, gazebos and so on. As part of my advertising as the haven maven, I wrote content for several online and print publications.

Yesterday, I found a piece I was particularly pleased with at the time, but which never found life in a publication. It’s especially appropriate around Oscars time, but there’s only one movie in this list that was made in this century, so I’m classifying it as ‘vintage’ rather than Oscars. Enjoy!

TOP TEN VINTAGE MOVIE OUTDOOR HAVENS

1. The absolutely most wonderful outdoor space in all of movie-making history must be the quintessential Adirondack-style screened porch in On Golden Pond. Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn’s portrayals of Norman and Ethel Thayer earned them Academy Awards in 1982.

2. My childhood dreams came to life in the musical number that Liesl and Rolfe danced around that fabulous gazebo in The Sound of Music. Nominated for ten 1966 Oscars, this musical saga of the von Trapp family took away five statuettes including Best Picture.

3. The widow’s walk that Colonel Behrani added to The House of Sand and Fog played an integral part in the plot of this 2003 drama. Who can forget Ben Kingsley and Shohreh Aghdashloo’s last afternoon together, watching the sun set from their precious balcony?

4. Last moments together play a recurring theme in movies and outdoor spaces. In the 1999 version of Anna and the King, Jodie Foster and Chow Yun-Fat danced together in the royal gazebo the last time he held her in his arms.

5. Porch swings have often been associated with old-time courting, and so the scene in Witness in which Rachel and Daniel sat silently rocking spoke volumes and no dialogue was needed. Witness won two 1986 Academy Awards.

6. Hark – what light through yonder window breaks? The most famous balcony scene in history is over 400 years old. Willy Shakespeare would no doubt have loved Franco Zeffirelli’s adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, which copped two Oscars at the 1969 ceremonies.

7. Although the plantation setting might suggest lots of activity played out in outdoor living spaces, Gone with the Wind’s most memorable porch scene was when Melanie caught sight of Ashley’s return and fairly flew off the steps to run into his arms. GWTW was nominated for a phenomenal 15 Academy Awards in 1940 and won nine – including, of course, Best Picture.

8. Much of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner is set on Matt and Christina Drayton’s elegant terrace overlooking San Francisco. At the 1968 Academy ceremonies, Katherine Hepburn won her second of four Oscars for this picture.

9. Forrest Gump and his mother lived in a rambling southern country home with one of movies’ most beautiful white painted verandas. It was from here that Jenny stepped down on her wedding day. Among the six 1995 golden statuettes that this movie won, was an award to Tom Hanks as Best Actor, and Best Picture.

10. Titanic swept the box office and the 1998 ceremonies, winning an astonishing 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture. But wait—this movie was set on a boat- where was the outdoor haven? Of course—Jack declared himself King of the World – all the while standing on the deck.

Two decades on I find my tastes have changed slightly. My favourite in the list now? Depends on whether Im in city or country mode.

City: Hands down, the Draytons SF terrace in Guess Whos Coming to Dinner? Country: that absolutely wonderful wrap-around porch in Greenbow, Alabama.

How about you?

P.S. Some of the book and product links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Outdoor Living | No Comments View from my Window 12Apr21 April13

I havent posted for six months. Mostly, its because Ive been busy with many things including back surgery. But I had to compare this spring here in Nova Scotia with last spring and any of the other 17 springs weve lived here. Yesterday morning was sunny! And warm! (well, relatively: nearly 10 degrees C / 50 F) It was a lovely day to spot clean a wool carpet and let it dry on the back deck.

Theres not much green showing in the photo, but trust me, theres a whole lot of budding going on w-a-y earlier than usual.

The other (bigger) reason that I havent posted is that every time I thought I could set up a quick post, I ran smack up against the Word Press Block Editor. It frustrated me, angered me even. I tried all the tips from various bloggers who have found a way around it but my screens didnt match theirs and I couldnt click on the buttons they said to.

Now Ive determined that if Block Editor had been what there was when I started posting, I would have learned it. So Ill learn it now. Please bear with me and forgive my mistakes over the next few weeks.

P.S. Some of the links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Friday Afternoon Views from My Office | 8 Comments Reading Challenge Completed: BOOK CHALLENGE by ERIN Summer 2020 October14

Erin and Vinay host a Facebook group that sets up two 4-month reading challenges with competitions each year. Participants are required to read ten books in the four months of each challenge. The most recent BCBE has run from July 1st and ends October 31st. I believe the next one will run January to April 2021. I always complete this far too late to win any prizes, so Id dont even bother to tally my score. This is really great fun! #bookchallengebyerin

FREEBIE (min 200 pages): The High Rise in Fort Fierce by Paul Carlucci

Paul Carlucci is a Canadian author (who seems to go to great pains to disguise that fact) of mostly, if not completely, short stories.

High Rise is a collection of linked short stories that reveal a novels plot by the end of the book. Somewhere, I heard that Fort Fierce is modeled on Fort McMurry in northern Alberta, and home of a lot of Atlantic Canadians so, of course, I had to read it.

Its one of those books that you want to read again from the beginning but I had to return it to the library. Its rather brilliant, really. 4 stars


STARTS WITH S: So Big by Edna Ferber

So Big is a modern classic and the winner of the 1924 Pulitzer Prize. Its billed as the story of Selina Peake DeJong, but was really about her son Dirk, a nobody from a little truck farm in south Chicago who made it big. Wikipedia says it was modeled on a real-life woman.

I agree with Ferber who said of it: It had no plot at all, as book plots go, and further remarked that it was a story of the triumph of failure. 4 stars


Title has a PREPOSITION: The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell
4½ stars


ODD NUMBER in a series: Shadow Dancing by Julie Mulhern #7 Country Club Murders

This delightful murder mystery series is set in 1971 Kansas City. Despite the fact that I really dont like romance in my murder mysteries and that Ellison Russel would probably snub me if we ever met, I cant help but like her and root for her relationship with the handsome homicide detective (whom the author has styled on Steve McQueen).

All of the book titles in the Country Club Murders series are based on songs from the era, and the covers are all of the same design. Especially if you are of a certain age, you just have to try it. 4½ stars


SET IN A DIFFERENT COUNTRY: Such a Long Journey by Rohinton Mistry
4 stars

FEMALE POLICE Protagonist: The Birdwatcher by William Shaw #1 DS Alexandra Cupidi

It would take a lot for me to continue in a police procedural series and, even though I thought Cupidi was well-drawn and absolutely believable, this didnt have it. The plot had just a few too many coincidences. 3½ stars

IMMIGRANT Main Character: Barnacle Love by Anthony de Sa

Five years ago, I found de Sas first book Kicking the Sky to be heartbreaking and very human, and I really wanted to like Barnacle Love as much. I just didnt.

Like Carluccis Fort Fierce, this is a book of linked short stories, telling in chronological order the story of a Portuguese fisherman washed up in a storm on the shores of rural Newfoundland in the 1950s. Eventually, the family gets to Toronto, where the kids ride their bikes in the alley, as they did in Kicking the Sky.

De Sa, who is second generation Portuguese seems to draw heavily on his own family and their experience. 3½ stars


Title contains THING: Anything for Billy by Larry McMurtry

3½ stars


Book has an OCTOBER CONNECTION: Daisy Jones the Six by Taylor Jenkins-Reid

(October 13th is National No Bra Day. Really.)
Enough said?
3½ stars


CITY, TOWN, VILLAGE etc. in title: The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson

Oh I’ve been wanting to read this for years, and now I can add it to Nonfiction November.

You all probably know that its about the 1893 Chicagos Worlds Fair AND about the completely mad serial killer H.H. Holmes and his World’s Fair hotel. It was riveting.

And I was so surprised to learn that the first Ferris wheel was steam-powered (duh) AND had whole rail cars where today we have one seat.

Also: I thought the White City was Chicago but it actually was a term applied to the main portion of the Worlds Fair. 4½ stars

I may have made a mistake in how I entered this and might not even qualify but it was fun anyway. Does anything look interesting to you?

P.S. Some of the links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff, Reading Challenges | 6 Comments #4BooksinaRow Challenge: Letter M Books October11

As I mentioned in my last post, Bookish Beck’s variation on Phyllis Roses The Shelf: From LEQ to LES: Adventures in Extreme Reading is for any set of four books in a row on my own shelf. I decided to choose from the books on my fiction shelves, filed by author surname. The letter M was my first dip.

The first book I tackled was Such a Long Journey which was Rohinton Mistry’s first book, published in 1991 and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, which was won that year by The Famished Road by Ben Okri. Mistry had published two short story collections prior to this first novel, but it was the magnificent A Fine Balance that catapulted him to fame in 1995.

Such a Long Journey is classic Mistry: straightforward in plot development, but taking the time to build the settings, as well as the characters. Mistry is a genius in drawing us pictures of everyday 20th-century India. We can feel Gustad’s frustrations, his fears – and his loyalties to old friends that embroil him unwittingly in dangerous activities. It was important for us to realize the corner that Gustad was in and that, despite the questionable nature of the deliveries he has to make, we are fully on his side.

I have also read Mistry’s third novel Family Matters, and recommend any of Mistrys fiction to anyone interested in late twentieth century India. A Fine Balance appears on my list of all-time favourites. His marvelous writing talent is on in display in all of his books, although the circumstances of A Fine Balance (during the Troubles and Indira Gandhi) make it the most powerful of the three.
4 stars


Anything for Billy is the first of author Larry McMurtry’s books that I’ve read. I seldom hear much about it so I assume it wasn’t his best or, at least, his most popular. The book is fiction, based loosely (very loosely) on the last few days of the life of Henry McCarty aka William Bonney aka Billy the Kid. Billy was killed in a shoot-out at the age of 21, and that much remains the same in this book. But everything else is changed and/or imagined. Since we know how the whole mess ends, it’s almost painful to watch Billy swagger toward this death.

The narrator of Anything for Billy is spinning a yarn for us. It’s a yarn that is likely pretty accurate about the Wild West, but it’s just a yarn. 3½ stars

I have more books by McMurtry on my shelves and will definitely read them.


I had a choice of three books that W.O. Mitchell wrote and chose Jake and the Kid.

According to Wikipedia:

“An author of novels, short stories, and plays, Mitchell is best known for his 1947 novel, Who Has Seen The Wind, which has sold close to a million copies in North America . . and later a collection of short stories in 1961, Jake and the Kid which subsequently won the Stephen Leacock Award.”

Also, according to Wikipedia, I was really wrong in a previous post when I said ´My bet is that in the prairie provinces, the stories [in the Star Weekly] were by W.O. Mitchell.’ These stories were actually radio broadcasts of a series of the same name, which aired on CBC Radio between 1950 and 1956.

Mitchell grew up in Saskatchewan and most of his stories reflect a boy’s experiences growing up on the prairies. As I said in that earlier post, I’m keeping this book ‘forever’. 5 stars

And finally, there was The Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet by David Mitchell. This novel won the 2011 Commonwealth Writers Prize regional prize (South Asia and Europe); was long listed for the 2010 Man Booker Prize for Fiction, was one of Time Magazines Best Books of the Year (#4 Fiction), was a Globe Mail best book, and a New York Times Notable Book of the Year. It was shortlisted for the 2011 Walter Scott Prize. It’s also my brilliant cousin’s (well, one of my brilliant cousins) favourite book so I approached it with some degree of trepidation, fearing that in my ignorance of the finer points of literature, I wouldn’t properly appreciate it.

The amount of research that had to have gone into The Thousand Autumns is phenomenal. Not only did Mitchell have to authentically create the Dutch East Indies trading post of 1799, and also Japan (not limited to the port of Nagasaki) of that time but, as well, the complicated relationships that the Japanese had with any foreigner to their land.

In the Reading Guide at the end of the book, Mitchell posits that historical fiction endures in popularity because “it delivers a stereo narrative: from one speaker comes the treble of the novel’s own plot while the other plays the bass of history’s plot. Mitchell seems to have done a masterful job of all of these details and the book is fascinating for the window it opens onto the land and the time. It plays the treble and the bass equally well, and blends them into a harmonious whole.

The only complaint I have is the ending that seemed rushed to me – although at nearly 500 pages the story was probably long enough as it stands. 4½ stars


Now I have an empty space on my book shelf that Im actually quite proud of and, surprisingly, have no urge to fill again. What about you? Would you want to get more books to fill that empty space?

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff, Reading Challenges | 10 Comments Reading Challenge Completed: FOUR IN A ROW TBR Challenge October5

I’m always looking for a way to attack the unread books on my own shelves, so when Rebecca at Bookish Beck decided to host a new type of challenge, I decided to try it.

Her project is inspired by Phyllis Rose’s The Shelf –from LEQ to LES: Adventures in Extreme Reading for which Rose picked a shelf of the New York Society Library and after some housekeeping, read all the books on it. Rebecca’s is a variation for any set of four books in a row on my own shelf. See Bookish Beck for more details.

It was a lot of fun choosing the books to read and a great satisfaction in having an empty space on my shelf. I think Ill probably play again with another letter.

I started with Such a Long Journey which was Rohinton Mistry’s first book. I was able to read it because of the Faber Firsts series which celebrated Faber’s 80th birthday and brought to light the first published novels of a variety of acclaimed authors. Some were the book that made their career and reputation; others, like Journey are not so well known. In 2009, there was a faberfirsts.com website but Norton blocked me from visiting today, telling me that it is a known dangerous webpage. Ive never seen that message before, so Norton must have run into something.

I wasnt able to find the cover that I have on my edition so this will have to do.

For those of you interested in such things, here is the list of Faber Firsts provided on the cover of Such a Long Journey:

William Golding Lord of the Flies
P.D. James Cover Her Face
John McGahern The Barracks
Sylvia Plath The Bell Jar
Peter Carey Bliss
Kazuo Ishiguro A Pale View of the Hills
Paul Auster The New York Trilogy
Orhan Pamuk The White Castle
Hanif Kureishi The Buddha of Suburbia
Rohinton Mistry Such a Long Journey


#4BooksinaRow

Ill cover the other three books in this challenge in my next post. Have you read any of these first books? How did it compare to the authors later works?

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Books Read Summaries, Reading Challenges | 8 Comments 2020 Reading Challenge Completed WHATS IN A NAME? October1


Im not sure if I signed up officially for the very popular Whats In a Name challenge, hosted by Andrea at Carolina Book Nook, but I have been reading in order to finish it. Here are the titles Ive read.

Title that contains an ampersand: Daisy Jones the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid. Ive also used this book for two other challenges this year. Thats probably the greatest satisfaction Ill get out of it. Lots and lots and lots of hype, but I was disappointed. It just seemed clichéd.

Title that contains antonyms: I had difficulty finding a title for this category but finally settled on Alice Munros Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage. Somewhere in all those ships there must be opposites. Munro also gets lots of hype but its well-deserved and her work is enduring. I loved these stories.

Title of four letters or less: Akin by Emma Donoghue. The problem with having such a phenomenally successful book as Room was, is trying to live up to it ever after. I did enjoy Akin, the story of an 80-year-old man given temporary custody of his eleven-year-old great-nephew just before his scheduled departure to Nice. It was, actually, delightful, if a little predictable.

Title that contains a given/first name: Autumn Laing by Australian author Alex Miller. Ive had this book on my shelf for years, entranced every time I picked it up while dusting, by its cover. An elderly Autumn tells the story of an affair that she had with a man in her and her husbands group of friends. These things are always entered into so selfishly, with little regard to the consequences, both short and long-term. The fact that it would happen, though, was evident from nearly the beginning, but Autumn kept us waiting far too long and I expected something much more spectacular by the time she finally got the story out. All in all, not really a very spectacular book.

Title that has a reference to children: Jake and the Kid by W.O. Mitchell, a collection of short stories about a Canadian prairie farm boy whose dad is overseas in WWII, and the hired hand whos keeping an eye out for him. Canadians of a certain age will remember the magazines that came with the weekend newspaper: Weekend Magazine or the Star Weekly, depending on where you lived. I think I read both over the years and as a teenager fell in love with the stories of Gregory Clarke.

My bet is that in the prairie provinces, the stories were by W.O. Mitchell. These are heartwarming family stories: the kid is loveable and naive about the ways of the world, and Jake is a hero and not just the kids but also the readers. This book is going up on my keep forever shelf next to Greg Clarke.

Title with the word water, air, fire or earth: The Edge of the Earth by Christina Schwarz. The referenced edge of the earth is an island off the coast of California in 1898. The thing about Schwarz is that shes enjoyable enough to read at the time, but other than scattered scenes,almost immediately I forgot what happened. I found the same thing when I read her highly acclaimed Drowning Ruth in 2012.

And that, as they say, is a wrap. Have you read any of these? Are you participating in this challenge this year?

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff, Books Read Summaries | 4 Comments A Blue Heron vs. a Tight End September25

When my daughter was young, she brought me a copy of The Root Cellar by Janet Lunn, set in what was then modern day (1970s) Eastern Ontario and in Civil War era New York and Washington, and asked me to read it. We both fell in love with that book and have had special copies over the years, mine autographed by the author when she was one of the speakers at Read by the Sea in 2006. Now my daughter is reading it to her daughter. I decided it was time for another reread so that it would be fresh in my mind and I would be able to intelligently discuss it with my granddaughter.

In my reread yesterday, I came across this passage:

They startled a big blue heron away from his breakfast. He gronked crossly at them as he took off, his huge wings pumping up and down like some great prehistoric bird.


photo: Pennington Seeds


Isn’t the word ‘gronk’ just a perfect fit? I can hear him making that noise but, as usual when I run across words I haven’t seen, I turn to the mighty Google for a definition.

Here are the results:

From the Free Dictionary:
1. A repulsive substance, typically the dirt and lint that collects between the toes. Aka toe-jam
2. To go to sleep
3. To crash or stop working, as in a car or a computer

From the Urban Dictionary:
1. A person that is totally lacking in fashion sense, motor skills and/or social skills. Usually an extremely unpleasant person or an unwanted guest, but sometimes just someone who embarrasses himself. (mainly in Australian slang)
2. The super virus /sexually transmitted disease that has resulted from New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski having sex with everyones girlfriends, wives and favorite porn stars (yuck!)

I don’t know about you, but I prefer the way Janet Lunn used it, decades before it was ruined by a football player.

How about you? Have you ever used the word ‘gronk’?

P.S. Some of the links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff | 6 Comments Book Cover Trends September24

Even though Bill was soaked through from running errands on Tuesday afternoon, Hurricane Teddy turned out to be almost cuddly. We didnt lose power or internet, and there were no branches down on the lawn. In fact, we had no clean-up at all. Not something you want to be out in, but not much of a storm either.

Im on to thinking about other things. My inbox today contained a book review by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best, of a nonfiction book about death and grieving.

My inbox also contained mail from BookBub, with ebook bargains including this lucid and inspiring guide to modern marital bliss.

The covers are startlingly similar. Or is it just me?

P.S. Some of the links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff, What Are the Chances? | 8 Comments Waiting for Teddy September22

Were going to be slammed tonight and tomorrow morning by the end of Hurricane Teddy, but the past three days have been golden.

We started to clear a portion of our back acreage this summer and came up with some rocks, all of which we have not yet found a use for. I dont pay much attention to the landscape back here but every time I walk out of the barn, I see this display of weeds (maybe wildflowers is more accurate?). It strikes me as an ephemeral thing of beauty.

Whats the last unexpected beauty youve found?

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Things of Beauty, Weather | 10 Comments View from My Window 11Apr20 Leaden Sky of a Spring Morning April11

Yesterday, there was more snow; today was icier. Regardless, all of it was gone by noon.

There isnt much in the way of spring here on Nova Scotias North Shore. But wait until next month!

P.P.S. Any links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Friday Afternoon Views from My Office | 4 Comments Which One Should I Keep? March10

When I was in high school I read The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, and I was bowled over it. I always intended to read more by John LeCarré, so over the years I picked up his books here and there.

I now find myself with five of his titles on my shelf, and another book cull in progress. So I’ve decided to keep one of these listed below, so that I can read another LeCarré before I die. But which of these should I keep? Please help!

I have:
(from the George Smiley series)
#6 The Honourable Schoolboy (published 1977) and
#7 Smiley’s People (published 1979)

Standalone novels:
A Small Town in Germany (1968)
The Night Manager (1993)
The Tailor of Panama (1996)

I think I’d rather read a standalone than items published later in a series that I haven’t followed. But Im open to one of the Smileys if it does standalone.

So what do you think? Was Le Carré’s earliest work his best? Or did he mature into a knock-out artist? What title do you recommend? Im open to your thoughts, whether acquired by experience or reputation.

There’s space on my shelf for only one; all others are going the way of the charity store. Please help.

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff | 2 Comments 2020 Reading Challenges January15

Some of you may have been around in 2012 when I lost my mind and entered 63 (yep you read that right: sixty-three) reading challenges, 48 of which I successfully completed.

Since then, Ive sworn off challenges publicly.

Privately, I sometimes see if I cant meet the criteria for a favourite few. This year Ive decided to officially throw my hat in the ring for three challenges. Each of them can draw from books across a wide cross-section of topics and genres, and I like that variety. I hope to also make a couple of my months reading thematic because I always find that fun to do

So here are the three:

The very popular Whats In a Name, hosted by Andrea at Carolina Book Nook

the brand new Bookbloggers 2020 Fiction Reading Challenge hosted by Lynne at Fictionophile,

and the first Book Challenge by Erin of 2020 which runs from Jan 1st to April 30th. Erin hosts this through a Facebook group

Ive-sort of- picked out some titles already, but Im not committing at this early date.

Have you entered any of these? Which challenges sound like fun to you?

posted under Book stuff | 8 Comments First Book 2020 January2

PhotoBucket was down, guys! You might have noticed since every blinking image on my blog was unavailable for over a week!

Until I googled my problem, Id been trying for three days to get my First Book photo to upload to my PhotoBucket account, so I missed getting this post up in time to join in with Sheila (again!)

ANYWAY my first book this year was to be Marina Endicotts The Difference. As with last years book, its by a Canadian author and I hope that sets the tone for me to keep including lots of Canadian writing in my 2020 reading list. I say was to be because Im not quite finished the Penelope Lively novel I started on December 31st. (blush) Endicott is next.

What are you reading first this year?

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff | 4 Comments NONFICTION NOVEMBER 2019: Week 5 November25

Were in Week 5 of Nonfiction November: New to My TBR. (If you need an introduction to Nonfiction November, please visit the original post on Julie Merilatts blog JulzReads. This week is being hosted by Rennie from Whats Nonfiction.

It’s been a great month of reading fabulous posts about supercali nonfiction books. I had to rein myself in to keep my additions to my TBR to a (bakers) half-dozen.

I’m beginning to realize that essays are what thrill me in a nonfiction read. Three collections that I added this month:

How Life Imitates the World Series by Thomas Boswell.

Jane at Hotchpot Café tipped me to this one. I’ll be reading it and thinking of my late dad.

So You’re a Little Sad, So What? by Alicia Tobin.

Brandon at Every Read Thing says “I would put Alicia Tobin’s first book up against the best of David Sedaris it’s that good. I had a great time reading this one and I hope you do too.”

And Tobin is Canadian!

Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! by Richard P. Feynman.

RaiderGirl at An Adventure in Reading says: Feynman (winner of the Nobel Prize in physics) is well known for popularizing physics, and his ability to tell a great story. Science isn’t usually my thing, so I’m looking forward to stretching a little to take this one in.

Non-essay nonfiction that I added:


Shelleyrae at Book’d Out listed several books about true crimes by women. True-crime is another area I’m not usually much interested in reading but Cargo of Women by Babette Smith caught my eye.

Shellyrae said that it “focuses on the experiences of one hundred women who were sentenced to transportation to Australia, often for petty crimes, in 1829. It’s a fascinating exploration of their experiences as convicts.”

Sue at Whispering Gums reminded me that I must be the last person in the world to read The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skoot. But since there are new readers being born every minute, if I tackle it this year, I won’t be last anymore (right?)

Deb at ReaderBuzz also prompted my memory- this time about H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald.

I’ve been meaning to put this memoir on my TBR pile for a while now.

And last but not least, as they say, Annabel at Annabookbel let me know that Julie Andrews has a sequel to her memoir Home, which has been sitting unread on my shelves for years.

Now I must get to it and read the follow-up that Annabel recommended: Homework: a Memoir of my Hollywood Years

That wraps up Nonfiction November for me. I’m looking forward to hearing what everyone else added to their TBR lists.

Have you read any of my additions? Which would you recommend that I read first?

P.P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Nonfiction November | 10 Comments NONFICTION NOVEMBER 2019: Week 3 November13

Were into week 3 of Nonfiction November: Be/Ask/Become an Expert (if you need an introduction to Nonfiction November, please visit the original post on Julie Merilatts blog JulzReads. This week, I hope to be early enough to get my name in on the link-up, hosted by Katie at Doing Dewey


This past summer I had the pleasure of reading Celtic Knot, a fictionalized account of the assassination of Thomas Darcy McGee.

In school, we learned about McGees death, significant because his was the first political assassination in the new country of Canada, taking place just eight months after Confederation. Beyond that and the fact Fenians were allegedly somehow involved, I knew nothing. Although I realize that Ann Shortell, the author of Celtic Knot, took certain liberties with the facts as in any historical fiction, I am certain that I understand a lot more about the political situation in Canada at that time now that Ive read this than I ever learned in school!

But, I’ve decided, not enough. Over the past 50 years, Ive owned several cats, all of whom have been named after Canadian historical figures: (Sir Charles) Tupper, (Allen Napier) MacNab, Ikie (Isaac Brock), Laura (Secord), Nelly (McClung), (Pierre) Elliott (Trudeau), Fenian, and not least (Thomas DArcy) McGee. I think I have an unfed hunger for Canadian history!

My interest piqued, I found this two-volume biography of McGee by David Wilson: Passion, Reason, Politics 1825-1857 and Volume 2 The Extreme Moderate 1858-1868. There are also free ecopies of McGees own writings: his poetry and Popular History of Ireland.

So time and cost permitting Im going to become somewhat of an expert on Thomas DArcy McGee. Thanks to author Ann Shortell for rekindling that flame.

P.S. The protagonist in the novel Celtic Knot is McGees (fictional) Irish Catholic maid Clara Swift who was the closest to a witness to the murder that there was. Fifteen-year-old Clara is intelligent and observant and it is through her eyes that we see the tangled mess that is motivation for the alleged killer, the investigation, arrest and then trial of Jimmy Whelan. If you have any interest at all in Canadian history, political or not, I highly recommend that you read Celtic Knot.

Thanks to James who blogs at The Mirimichi Reader who brought this book to my attention, and to the author who kindly sent me a beautiful hardcover copy to read in exchange for my unbiased (except for my love of Canadian history!) review.

P.P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Nonfiction November | 3 Comments NONFICTION NOVEMBER 2019: Week 2 November5


Were into week 2 of Nonfiction November: Book Pairings (if you need an introduction to Nonfiction November, please visit the original post on Julie Merilatts blog JulzReads. This week, I hope to be early enough to get my name in on the link-up, hosted by Sarah at Sarahs Bookshelves


Since I didnt read a great deal of NF this past year, I have only one real pairing and not an original one at that. Way back in the spring when I was eagerly waiting for my turn to borrow Jennifer Robsons The Gown from the library, one of the bloggers I read recommended the nonfiction book My Wedding Dress: True-Life Tales of Lace, Laughter, Tears and Tulle edited by Susan Whelan and Anne Laurel Carter. Unfortunately, I didnt record who it was who mentioned this book; if it was you, please let me know so that I can give you credit, because it was delightful.

The editors, Canadian writers themselves, issued an invitation to a number of women writers, all with links to the Canadian writing scene, to submit an essay about their wedding dress. Amazon describes the book thusly:
These are intimate stories about relationships; not just those between men and women, but between women and their mothers, friends and children. And, of course, with their wedding attire – a relationship that is sometimes simple, sometimes complex, but always fascinating in what it tells us about individual lives and aspirations.

But dont be put off by the lace and tulle: this book contains a wide variety of wedding dresses, some not dresses at all, and covers a lot of different types of weddings ranging from very traditional to not-even-close. Each essay is accompanied by one or more photos submitted by the author.

I loved every story every one, I say.

I did read The Gown later in the year, but I was disappointed by it.

Would you have a story to tell about your wedding dress?

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Nonfiction November | 16 Comments NONFICTION NOVEMBER 2019: Week 1 October31


Although Im a little late out of the gate for this event (if you need an introduction to Nonfiction November, please visit the original post on Julie Merilatts blog JulzReads; Julz is also hosting this first week) I hope to keep up as the month progresses.

Heres the list of nonfiction books Ive read since last November, from my highest rating to my lowest. Ive included an asterisk next to those that I read at the urging of my fellow event participants.

1. *Oh, the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Seuss
2. My Wedding Dress: True-Life Tales of Lace, Laughter, Tears and Tulle edited by Susan Whelan and Anne Laurel Carter
3. *Micro Living: 40 Innovative Tiny Houses Equipped for Full-Time Living by Derek “Deek” Diedriksen
4. The Golden Age of Murder: the Mystery Writers Who Invented the Modern Detective Story by Martin Edwards
5. The Clever Gut Diet: How to Revolutionize Your Body from the Inside Out by Dr. Michael Mosley
6. *The Year of Less: How I Stopped Shopping, Gave Away My Belongings, and Discovered Life is Worth More than Anything You Can Buy in a Store by Cait Flanders
7. *Year of Clutter by Eve Schaub
8. *Fluent in 3 Months: How Anyone at Any Age Can Learn to Speak Any Language from Anywhere in the World by Benny Lewis
9. Marty Mann Answers Your Questions about Drinking and Alcoholism by Marty Mann
10. *Tree Houses: Fairy Tale Castles in the Air by Philip Jodidio
11. *A Glorious Freedom: Older Women Leading Extraordinary Lives by Lisa Congdon
12. The Blue Satin Nightgown: My French Makeover at Age 78 by Karin Crilly
13. *Between the World and Me by Ta-nehisi Coates

And two I did not finish:
* The Paper Garden: Mrs. Delaney Begins Her Life’s Work at 72 by Molly Peacock
All Things Consoled by Elizabeth Hay


Favourite and Most Recommended

The title of favourite is a close race between My Wedding Dress and Micro Living, but, honestly, the book I recommended most was Dr. Suess Oh the Places Youll Go. It probably seems flighty of me but I found some profound life advice in this book. You know: life is wonderful. Until its not. But pick yourself up, work hard, have patience, and life will be wonderful again, although perhaps in a different way. This book is so much fun to read that I think everyone should!


While many participants seem to have been reading memoirs, my nonfiction treats this past year have been, in large part, books recommended to me during last years event. I asked for advice on downsizing, simplifying, and major life changes after age 60. I received many suggestions, and have had some fine reading experiences this year because of them.

This year, I hope to broaden my nonfiction reading and beef up my TBR list with titles about a wider variety of topics. I feel a good month coming on!

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Nonfiction November | 7 Comments Friday Afternoon View from My Window 19Oct19 October18

On a cloudy afternoon, following a morning of drizzle, I can still see some autumn colour. Its amazing that, after the winds of Hurricane Dorian, the remnants of Tropical Storm Melissa, and the mini-tropical depression that pelted us with heavy rain and high winds yesterday, so many of the trees are still holding onto their leaves.

Its been a gorgeous fall here on the North Shore of Nova Scotia. And today, despite the rain and cloud, was another beautiful day: sweater-mild and glowing.


You might notice some differences in the landscape since, say September three years ago. Weve chopped down that scraggly pear tree in the foreground, trimmed up the alder in the rock garden, and the spruce tree has grown up past the power lines again. But the biggest change is a result of Hurricane Dorian in late August. We lost the hard maple tree at the very end of the driveway, and half of one of the tamaracks. Friends helped us clean it up the very next day.

We also lost a pine tree at the parking end of the drive, a small willow by the barn and what amounted to a large limb (in bits and pieces) from the big poplar tree by the house. We (and the house) came through unscathed.

I hope you enjoy this little piece of nature. Im not looking forward to the winter but, oh my, I do love the fall!

posted under Friday Afternoon Views from My Office | 6 Comments Older Entries View from my Window 11May21
12:00 pm, May 11, 2021 20 Books of Summer
9:12 pm, May 10, 2021 Vintage Movie Time: Outdoor Havens
3:13 pm, April 24, 2021 View from my Window 12Apr21
11:46 am, April 13, 2021 Reading Challenge Completed: BOOK CHALLENGE by ERIN Summer 2020
6:51 pm, October 14, 2020 #4BooksinaRow Challenge: Letter M Books
5:49 pm, October 11, 2020 Reading Challenge Completed: FOUR IN A ROW TBR Challenge
5:00 pm, October 5, 2020 2020 Reading Challenge Completed WHATS IN A NAME?
4:12 pm, October 1, 2020 A Blue Heron vs. a Tight End
4:51 pm, September 25, 2020 Book Cover Trends
12:32 pm, September 24, 2020 Adapting or what you need to know to make a move Community Life Cultural Differences Weather Water Sewage Country Living Country Benefits Country Hazards Outdoor Living Things of Beauty Wildlife Family Friends Just Me Book Reviews Picture Books Short Stories Books Read Summaries Book stuff Link-ups Book Beginnings The Friday 56 Mailbox Monday Nonfiction November Six Degrees of Separation Snapshot Saturday Top Ten Tuesday Wednesday HodgePodge Weekend Cooking What Are You Reading? Wondrous Words Literary Road Trip Atlantic Canada Books Ive Read pre-blogging What Are the Chances? Reading Challenges Reading Challenges 2012 2012 Wrap-Ups Reading Challenges 2010 Canadiana Grace in Small Things Friday Afternoon Views from My Office Afternoon Sightings Sites worth a visit Who do YOU appreciate?Follow Me on TWITTERReach out to those you love Living in the country resources Homesteading in rural IrelandTrials tribulations of a modern crofter Reading Book-related Connections Dwell In PossibilityFleur Fisher in Her WorldDesktop RetreatIn So Many WordsHeavenaliLakeside MusingA Work in ProgressA Penguin a WeekMary Okeke ReviewsBuried in PrintDesperate ReaderDiary of a Word NerdAmy ReadsRebecca ReadsKittling: BooksReading MattersBook ChaseJoVs Book PyramidDog Ear DiscsPining for the WestA Striped ArmchairBooks PleaseUnder My Apple TreeReader BuzzBeth Fish ReadsUtter BiblioNew Dork Review of BooksStuck in a BookPage Plucker Other Cool Blogs Yvettes Paintbox Pinterest UniverseBudget BytesInspired Home Office Videos to touch your heart Stand By Me Around the worldAntwerp Station Toe-tapper

It is a place for urbanites, ex-urbanites and ex-urbanites-wannabes to learn about moving to & living in the country - and the culture shock that comes with leaving the city for country life.

TAGS:ExUrbanis 

<<< Thank you for your visit >>>

Websites to related :
Lee Clarke's web site

  keywords:
description:

League Of Women Voters of Pullma

  keywords:
description:Making Democracy Work
Skip links Skip to primary navigation Skip to content Skip to footer

An Alternative Guide to Doctor W

  keywords:
description:
skip to main | skip to sidebarAn Alternative Guide to Doctor WhoYOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH Monday, June

합동총회신학원

  keywords:
description:
로그인 회원가입

Not Allowed

  keywords:
description:

Willow Creek Association | Servi

  keywords:Christian, Churches, Leadership, innovation, Local Church, Conference, Training, Resources, Books, Seeker
description:Since 1992, Willow Cree

域名FoodBGood.com待售

  keywords:
description:
Trustpilot Trustpilot 买方保护计划当您在DAN.COM购买域名时,您会自动进入我们的买家保护计划。关于我们如何确保

Ocean salmon trout steelhead stu

  keywords:
description:
Shelton Products accept most credits cards or Paypal You do not have to be a Paypal member to purchase products.

NAS ONDAS DA NET

  keywords:
description:
29 de set. de 2020 VELUDO - A história de uma Banda - 2020CAPÍTULO VII - "O Luar

AFTER DEATH

  keywords:
description:
skip to main | skip to sidebarterça-feira, 3 de setembro de 2013Surupo Transcending The Levels Of Consciousness
01 - Fr

ads

Hot Websites