Saturday, September 30, 2017

Latvian Elegy

Title: Among the Living and the Dead: A Tale of Exile and Homecoming on the War Roads of Europe

Author: Inara Verzemnieks
Edition: W.W. Norton Company, 2017
Setting: Latvia and the US
Genre: Memoir, Family History

My husband asked me what I was reading, and I told him, "one of the saddest stories ever told."  Don't let that dissuade you, however, from reading this elegy to the author's Latvian family.  Verzemnieks is from a Latvian peasant family; this book recounts the family's history from the late 1880s to today.  And it's quite a history, from the superstitions and myths that ruled and gave meaning to her great-grandparent's lives to the ambition that led them to own their farm to the misery the family lived through during WWII and during Soviet control of their country.  

The writing is vivid:  just as her grandmother described her lost farm in Latvia so that young Inara would be able to feel, see, smell, and touch it, so grown Inara describes it just as vividly to the reader.  A voice is compared to "a match drawn across phosphorus", and the family farm is described as "the roof rises above the grass line to meet us, though its edges sag, brushing the ground in places, like the hem of a skirt coming loose.”  The stories her grandmother tells her about the myths and legends of Latvia seem almost like preparation for the stories of the war and aftermath which are like particularly terrible Grimm's fairy tales.  But this is also a hopeful tale, one of survival, one of resilience, one of peace found after grim struggle.

The narrative skips around through time, but the author's skill is such that I had no trouble following it.  The beauty of the writing and the story make this moving book highly recommended.

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Library Loot

This week from the library:

Among the Living and the Dead; A Tale of Exile and Homecoming on the War Roads of Europe, by Inara Verzemnieks.  Family history in Latvia and the US.  




The Wardrobe Mistress, by Meghan Masterson.  Historical fiction featuring one of Marie Antoinette's tirewomen.

What have you been reading?

Library Loot is courtesy of the Silly Little Mischief blog
 

Monday, September 25, 2017

Currently....


 Currently:












Reading: Among the Living and the Dead, by Inara Verzemnieks
Watching: Catching up on the final season of Indian Summers
Listening:The drone of the air conditioner (and am I ever glad to be able to hear it)
Art: Need to get my watercolors out
again
Drink: Water
Eats & Treats:Raspberries

Pleasure: Good neighbors and internet that works
Guilty Pleasure: Crazy Rich Asians, by Kevin Kwan
Worry: Nuclear War for starters
Anticipating: Autumn
Random Thought: Boiling water for a week will make you very grateful of safe tap water.
Find:  Women's Art Twitter account @womensart1

Photo By Martin.Heiss at the German language Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2516770

 

Monday, September 18, 2017

Who Doesn't Love a Gothic Novel?

Title: The Wildling Sisters

Author: Eve Chase
Edition: G.P. Putnam and Sons, 2017
Setting: Britain, 1950s
Genre: Gothic, Dual Timeline

Perhaps it’s because I read "Rebecca" at an impressionable age, but a juicy, well-written gothic novel set in a British country house? Sign me up!

The Wildling Sisters is a dual timeline novel set in the lovely English countryside in an old manor house called Applecote. In 1959, four sisters, Flora, Pam, Margot, and Dot Wilde, are sent there by their flighty and glamorous mother to spend the summer with their aunt and uncle. Of course, there’s a snake in the lovely Eden of Applecote; their cousin Audrey disappeared several years before, never to be seen again. The sisters spend the stifflingly hot summer dealing with the emotional wreckage of their aunt and uncle, flirting with two upper-class neighbor boys, and coping with the rivalries that come with that.

In the present, Jesse and her husband Will move into Applecote, along with Bella, Will’s daughter from his first marriage, and Jesse and Will’s baby daughter. Bella, filled with grief from her mother’s death and general teenage angst, is not happy with the move.

This is a lush, atmospheric novel with descriptive, suspenseful writing and memorable characters. Secrets, jealousies, and mysteries abound. The conclusion to both timelines is satisfying, although I felt that the story of the four sisters was compelling enough to stand alone – in these dual timeline novels, one always seems much more interesting, and for me it was the sisters.

This is the second book by Eve Chase that I’ve read and greatly enjoyed (Black Rabbit Hall was the first). If you enjoy a good atmospheric, gothic novel or books by Kate Morton, Rachel Hore, or Katherine Webb, this is probably one to seek out.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017