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Currently reading anything by a British writer?
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Werner
(last edited Jun 25, 2019 10:12AM)
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Jun 02, 2010 05:20PM

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I am reading two Norah Lofts. I own about 53 Norah Lofts books (as you know). I also own some Mary Stewart books which I read over from time to time and Winston Graham who wrote Poldark which was very popular the year I lived in England (1975). Poldark was all the rage like Edward Cullen is right now.

I am a huge fan of British authors of all genres. I am in my mystery/detective mode so I am currently reading On Beulah Height by Reginald Hill. It is one of the Pasco/Dalziel detective series which I love. Also starting on Murder of a Dead Man by Catherine John. I have only read one of her other books and liked it so I picked this one up at the library.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2002/...
I must get her biography



http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2002/...
I must get he..."
Barbara....I just finished the latest Ruth Rendell
The Monster in the Box: An Inspector Wexford Novel and must say that I was disappointed. I am a great fan of her books, especially the Wexford series but I couldn't seem to raise much interest in the story. Have you read it yet? I feel that her books written under the Barbara Vine nom de plume are inconsistent in quality but for the most part are worth reading.

I do like the Barbara Vines , though The Minatour and The Blood Doctor were strangely disappointing and predictable somehow, though as well written as ever . No Night Is Too Long is far and way the best BV I think, don't you?



As I've said before, I think of Stephen R. Lawhead as a British writer. My Goodreads friend Jackie and I have just started a buddy read of Hood, the first volume in his re-telling of the Robin Hood legend, the King Raven trilogy.

http://www.amazon.com/Going-Into-Dark...


Somehow I thought it would be easy once retired...





Moving on now to "To the Lighthouse" by Woolf. What a relief.






Silly of me to have let her lie on the shelves so long. Her writing is excellent, sharp humor/wit, decent plotting, most interesting characters. I'm in the process of slowly rebuilding a collection I (sadly) gave away. Happy reading!

Gail.....you and I are sisters under the skin......I also have read and continue to read Sayers, Allingham, Christie,Crispin, et al. What wonderful writers they were!!! I have a soft spot in my heart for British mysteries, including the more modern Ruth Rendell and PD James books. The only non-British mystery writer that I really, really love is Rex Stout, the creator of Nero Wolfe. I have all of his 40+ Wolfe books........and now that there are no more, I am re-reading them......my bedside books.








Here is a reasonable bibliog. list.
http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/l/n...
I like all the historicals, and all the Suffolk based ones, the House Trilogy in particular, and the ones actually called The Suffolk Trilogy.
There are also ones with biblical motifs, such as How Far To Bethlehem and Esther, beautifully visualised. And one based loosely on a famous journey to California in the pioneeing days, undertaken by the Donner Party and the tragedies that overtook them. Road to Revelation it's called ( aka Winter Harvest)
My personal favourites are Jassy, to See A Fine Lady, and Hester Roon - which are none of the above really, but have as their theme young working class rural woman and the way in which they manage various life events. Sounds like nothing much but the quality of her writing is superb.
For detailed discussions , you could look at the Fans of Norah Lofts threads here on Goodreads, though of course they contain many spoilers as the contributers have read all her books a dozen times!

I finsished "To the Lighthouse" by Woolf and loved it. It wasn't as challenging as "Mrs. Dalloway", but a very fine book.
Right now I'm re-reading "Middlemarch" and easing my way through some mysteries and odd lot books around the house.



"Sane people did what their neighbors did, so that if any lunatics were at large, one might know and avoid them."
If one reads carefully, this stuff pops up all the time, Wharton being particularly witty. Great writers need not be heavy-handed. Such a relief.
By the way, Tey is a favorite of mine; I've read all of hers in the past two years except one. Brat Farrar, which has been replicated many times but never quite so well, is a favorite, as is the unique The Daughter of Time. Some disparage her work, but I can't for the life of me see why.
As a light read, I just read completely (for the very first time) L'Engle's "A Wrinkle in Time". I would recommend it to you, Werner, as it explores good and evil and quite explicitly uses Judeo-Christian references. My daughter loved it and read the whole series often as a child. I just perused it at the time for suitability; now I know why she loved it so.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I think that Tey is disparaged because she doesn't play by the "rules"....she sometimes witholds clues from the reader........doesn't matter to me.
Her The Daughter of Time is a masterpiece of historical mystery. I just finished re-reading with delight both Brat Farrar and The Man in the Queue.

Yes, a lot of the classical writers have a wonderfully delectable sense of humor, be it broad, ironic, satiric or whatever. Austen, Swift and Trollope are other examples that come to mind.
Although I've read and liked some of the work of the "Golden Age" British mystery writers, Tey is one I haven't read so far. Interestingly, though, I read one bio-critical article on her that really slammed The Daughter of Time, on the grounds that the Inspector and his assistant palpably don't have the slightest clue between them of how to go about historical research in a library. (It was probably written by a librarian. :-) )



Werner, have a wonderful time in Australia. I love that country and the warm people there. Take a look at the Southern Cross for me!!!!

I forgot to mention that I recently read Quiet As a Nun by the great historian/biographer, Antonia Fraser. It's an ingriguing little mystery that takes place at a convent. The nuns and the students they teach are well-developed and the plot, while slight, is interesting.

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