
I nearly didn’t bother with this post and am only really doing it to complete the record of my reading year 2019. I have read a little more than most months, mainly because I have been laid up the whole month. Pain is very soporific though, so I haven’t really read that much more. Anyway, all in all a good reading month.
I began December with Leonard and Hungry Paul by Rónán Hession, a touching debut novel. It’s a fairly simple story about friendship, about the ordinary uncelebrated people in the world who are capable of changing everything for someone, in small, quiet ways. Leonard and his best friend Hungry Paul see the world a little differently to many of the people around them, united by their own brand of humour, their love of board games and fascinated by facts.
Mrs Tim Gets a Job by D E Stevenson from the delightful Dean Street Press is the third in the Mrs Tim series. In this novel we see Hester take up employment in a Scottish hotel while her husband remains in Egypt waiting to be de-mobbed and her children are away at school.
Deep Waters; mysteries on the waves edited by Martin Edwards – is a fabulous collection of golden age short stories. Each story has water somewhere at the heart of it, pieces written by a host of famous golden age names, and several that were new to me.
A review copy from Virago that I was very excited to read was The Street by Ann Petry. The Street concerns a beautiful, bright young woman who wants only to make a good and honest home for herself and her eight year-old son Bub. Lutie Johnson has already had a lot to put up with in her life – and she is determined it will be better for her son. Lutie is an extraordinary character, the novel brilliant and devastating.
Another good novel from Dean Street Press was Peace, Perfect Peace by Josephine Kamm, which perfectly demonstrates the domestic and emotional difficulties that came along after the war ended. What Josephine Kamm does well in this novel is to show us how with the coming of peace not everything in the garden was immediately rosy.
Spill Simmer Falter Wither by Sara Baume was a Christmas gift last year, it was definitely time I read it. I thought it was a brilliant novel, though it is a little dark in places. It’s poignant exploration of loneliness and loss and the extraordinary restorative nature of friendship. In this case the friendship is between a man and a dog. Two misfits, cast adrift by the world around them, come together, and find companionship and understanding.
Another Christmas gift from last year was Turtle Diary by Russell Hoban, a new author to me. A quirky tale of two lonely people, told in two voices, the novel is ultimately a touching portrayal of how they re-define their lives. Turtle Diary is a novel about freedom – what it means and how it’s achieved. Told in the alternate diary entries of William G and Neaera H, it is the story of an obsession; the release of sea turtles from the zoo into the English Channel.
I read Christmas mystery The Night of Fear by Moray Dalton on my kindle – such a compelling story I flew through it. Scotland Yard detective Hugh Collier is visiting his friend Sergeant Lane when news comes in of a sudden death in a large country house a couple of days before Christmas. Collier accompanies Sergeant Lane to the house where they find a Christmas house party in some disarray. A game of hide a seek in the dark had been in progress – the guests sporting fancy dress, when one guest; Edgar Stallard had been found dead in an upstairs gallery.
With my kindle all primed and ready to go – I then finally read The Sum of Things by Olivia Manning. The third book in the Levant trilogy, and the sixth book overall in the epic Fortunes of War novels, I found it as unputdownable as the previous five volumes.
Having so loved I’m Not Complaining by Ruth Adam fairly recently, I found a copy of one of her later novels on ebay. So Sweet a Changeling – one of four books from 2019 I still have to review – portrays the emotional ups and downs and official struggle, a couple have to adopt the little girl they have been caring for.
I received The Paying Guests by Sarah Waters as part of my bookcrossing secret Santa parcel and it looked so good, I decided to read it straightaway. Despite being very nearly 600 pages, I found it a very quick read, although not all the characters are that likeable, I found it readable and compelling.
It seemed ages since I had read a Muriel Spark novel, regular readers will know what a fan I have become. Aiding and Abetting one of her later novels is a wonderfully strange take on the Lord Lucan mystery.
So that was December – and I have made absolutely no plans for my January reading at all. I am going with mood. My book group will be reading and discussing Girl, Woman Other by Bernardine Evaristo, which of course I have already read, and which made it onto my books of the year list. I am going to be catching up with reviews over the next week or so I hope, still struggling to get everything done, but I’ll get there. I have begun the new year reading a Persephone book – well I do have several tbr – I’m about 150 pages into Milton Place by Elisabeth De Waal and finding it very good indeed.
Tell me about what you read in December – I always love to know.
I was debating with myself whether to include a December summary, especially since I was sick for the past few days and unable to do much reading or writing, but it’s a bit unfair on the last month of the year, isn’t it, to get forgotten in the rush to put together lists of the year or the decade? Glad you got to write about yours, and it sounds like you had a very nice month of reading indeed!
Yes, I feel the same every year. Like I have to squeeze in a Dec round up. I did have a good month reading wise, everything else was a bit pants though.
I listened to The Paying Guests audiobook several years ago and loved it. You’re right, it is a long one, but it does go by quickly somehow. Happy New Year to you!
Definitely the kind of book you speed through. She certainly knows how to tell a good story.
Absolutely!
Really sorry to hear about your pain, Ali. I hope you get some respite in January.
I have The Street and Spill… in my TBR so great to hear how highly you rated them.
Thank you, it has been a bit miserable. Really hope you enjoy Spill… and The Street.
Sorry to hear you’ve been unwell and in pain, and hoping things get a bit better soon. I have had to return Bernardine Evaristo to the library and rejoin the reservation queue (Islington libraries has free reservations and my partner works in the central library building though not in the library, so when I reserve too many books I do this a lot for the in demand titles). I don’t know whether you’ve read any of her earlier books but I really really really loved Mr Loverman.
Thank you. I hope you get Girl Woman Other to read soon. It’s heartening to know it’s been so popular. Other people have recommended Mr Loverman so it’s high on my wishlist now.
All of these sound pretty good. I like the sound of Leonard and Hungry Paul. 🤠🐧
Oh Leonard and Hungry Paul is a lovely book. I bought a copy for my sister, she just finished it and really liked it.
And now you can feel that you’ve fully completed the year! My December included a re-read of Miss Buncle’s Book, which was more clever and amusing the second time around; Ruth Adam’s A Woman’s Place: 1910-1975, a terrific non-fic read that helps me better understand (especially as an American) the underlying state of women and the domestic situation in novels; and finished the month with Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit because I love me some Wodehouse!! I do hope you enjoy Milton Place. It was a lovely book. The daughters are done with a bit of a heavy hand, but there’s still some truth there. Milton Place, Anita and Mr. Barlow are beautifully drawn.
I really want to read A Woman’s Place, it’s one of the Persephone books I still have to get. It’s years since I read any Wodehouse, great fun. I am enjoying Milton Place might even finish it today.
Some great reads there Ali, despite the pain – well done! Having no plans for reading is a good thing as far as I’m concerned. Currently trying to avoid committing myself to things I won’t be able to do!! 🤣🤣
Oh gosh yes, January is dangerous with all the new challenges and readalongs that get touted about. I know I can’t commit at the moment.
I’m glad I don’t do a monthly round-up apart from my TBR post as I would never have fitted it in! As it is, I have likes but not so many comments; I think I’ve bombarded people! I managed to read 16 books in December which was a record for the year and probably last year, I think, and mainly down to actually having over a week off, and reading two TINY books on Christmas afternoon! I can’t wait to read Milton Place myself. I’m going to read Christmas books, too, mainly so I don’t have to squish them onto my shelf!
Perhaps those posts will generate more comments /views later. Some people take Internet breaks over Christmas. Now people are going back to work and everything starts returning to normal. 16 books in December is fantastic, well done. Enjoy whatever you choose to read, you have some lovely ones to choose from.
You know what? You’re right – I’ve had a small stream of comments on them days after publishing! I’ve got the oldest book on the TBR and one of my Christmas books (the fattest one!) on the go at the moment, which is lovely.