I wrote a few months back about expanding the scope of my reading and trying out some new authors as part of implementing Mother Culture.
I mentioned that reading Charlotte Mason's Original Home
Education series and not relying on interpretations of her works (even though
I've found them helpful at times and enjoyed reading many of them) has helped
me understand the principles that undergird her methods.
Before I started reading Charlotte Mason's own writings
I'd often question this or that idea and wasn't always convinced it was going
to work for us. The long, slow reading of multiple books was one of those ideas
that didn't grab me at first - if I was reading something I'd always finish it
before I'd start something else. If I was reading a book aloud I'd never think
to stop at a good bit and leave everyone in suspense. I liked to keep going if
I thought I was on to a good thing - if I put the book aside we'd lose
momentum, or something.
After reading A Philosophy of Education I started to
assign my children a larger number of books to read over a longer period of
time than what they'd previously done and I cut down on the amount of reading
aloud I did over the week, extending the books over a longer time frame. I was
pleased with the results - there was better retention and I didn't feel so
rushed.
I decided to try
doing this in my own personal reading and started to read some meatier, longer
books knowing that I was not in a rush and could space the reading out. I kept
a record of when I started and finished each book and a note here and there
commenting on what I thought about it.
Here are some of the books I've read (or am still
reading):
Not a new author for me and possibly one of the easier to
follow Dickens plots - or maybe I'm just more used to him now.
Like all Dickens' novels there are many threads to this
story but the main characters are Amy, otherwise known as Little Dorritt, a
young woman born and bred in a debtor's prison, and Arthur Clenham, recently
returned to England from India after his father's death to face his cold, rigid
and severe mother, believing someone had been wronged by their family and
desirous of seeking justice for the wronged party.
Little Dorrit
takes the reader first to France, then England and on to Italy - which apart
from A Tale of Two Cities is his only
novel I can recall that leaves London. I loved Dickens's description of Arthur:
'Bred in meanness and hard dealing, this had
rescued him to be a man of honourable mind and open hand. Bred in coldness and
severity, this had rescued him to have a warm and sympathetic heart. Bred in a
creed too darkly audacious to pursue, through its process of reversing the
making of man in the image of his Creator to the making of his Creator in the
image of an erring man, this had rescued him to judge not, and in humility to
be merciful, and have hope and charity.'
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881)
I'm only half way through this book and I really don't know
what to think of it. I've been tempted to give up and have wondered why I'm
bothering with it at all. I've just come to an interesting section and I'm
hoping it will all fit into place and I'll understand why it is up there in the
must read classic pile.
I probably should have started with Crime and Punishment for my first foray into Dostoevsky territory -
it's shorter and a friend said that she loved it but I'd already started
reading the other for a bookclub I'm involved with so I've kept going.
The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)
My first introduction to Thomas Hardy was Tess of the D'Urbevilles, which I
thought was very fatalistic and quite depressing. I appreciate his style of
writing though; it is quite lovely and descriptive, but Tess, an innocent young
woman, was always in the wrong place at the wrong time, with everything against
her, and every way of escape barred to her. It was as if her fate were
determined by some malignant personality and would run its course come what
may.
The Mayor of
Casterbridge still retains some of this fatalism but it has more to do with
the character of the protagonist, Michael Henchard - as Hardy said in reference
to Henchard, 'Character is Fate.'
Young Michael Henchard gets drunk and sells his wife and
young daughter to Richard Newson, a sailor passing through the village fair.
The next day when Henchard is sober and remorseful he searches for his family
but it is many years before he sees his wife, Susan and her daughter again.
Twenty years later, with Newson missing presumed lost at
sea, Susan arrives in Casterbridge with her daughter to seek out Henchard and
they are reunited as man and wife. But has he learnt anything from the effects
of his rash behaviour?
The proverb, 'A double-minded man is unstable in all he does,' sums up Henchard's character. One minute he is behaving like a fool and plunges into erratic and callous behaviour, the next he is full of remorse and realises what an idiot he has been but then has to face the repercussions of his previous actions.
I think this book makes a powerful statement on the issue
of personal character and how much influence it has on our lives. Our
decisions, attitudes, actions and reactions over time reveal our true
character.
The temporary nature of Henchard's numerous episodes of
'repentance' showed that his basic character remained unchanged throughout his
life - he was a double-minded man. It brought home to me how essential it is to
be redeemed from our old way of life for real, lasting change to occur.
'Henchard......was incensed beyond measure when he learnt what the young man had
done......his voice might have been heard as far as the town-pump expressing
his feelings.....These tones showed that, though under a long reign of
self-control he had become Mayor and churchwarden and what not, there was still
the same unruly volcanic stuff beneath the rind of Michael Henchard as when he
had sold his wife at Weydon Fair.'
Opening Night by Ngaio Marsh
(?1895-1982)
A New Zealand crime writer and one of the 'Queens of
Crime' in the 1920s to 1930's alongside Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers and
Margery Allingham.
Opening Night is a murder mystery set in a theatre in England and involves Martyn Tarne, a
young penniless New Zealander trying to find work as an actress. She is taken
on as a dresser at The Vulcan Theatre where a suspected suicide turns into a murder
investigation. Ngaio Marsh's background included theatre production as well as
writing and painting and a number of her books were set in the theatre or
involved actors. Opening Night, in addition to being a good mystery, was also an interesting look into the world of
theatre life and acting.
Mystery Mile by
Margery Allingham (1904-1966)
A recent new author for me, Margery Allingham was a British
crime writer who published her first novel when she was seventeen. Albert
Campion is the eccentric and mysterious young amateur detective in this
particular novel.
When American Judge Crowdy Lobbett has attempts made on
his life his son convinces him to leave the country. On board the ship to
England Albert Campion comes into the story when he saves the judge from an
attempted electrocution and offers to take him and his son and daughter to an
isolated manor in England.
This book is an entertaining read and moves quickly but
it is well written.
I've only read this novel and one other, Black Plumes, which I enjoyed also. I
think Margery Allingham's writing style sits somewhere between Dorothy Sayers'
and Agatha Christie's and she has a neat sense of humour.
Some biographical details of this author are here.
Mr Albert
Campion
Coups neatly executed
Coups neatly executed
Nothing sordid, vulgar or plebeian
Deserving cases preferred
Police no object
I've really enjoyed the (mostly British) crime writers from this era. They wrote cleverly crafted, interesting stories without the shock value of more contemporary crime books and they feature likeable and sometimes quite eccentric detectives. They are also a good introduction to this type of writing for younger folk – I’d say around 15 years of age for the books I mentioned here.
7 comments:
I've read some Margery Allingham and really enjoyed. If you like that style I'd also recommend the Miss Silver series, oh and the Lord Peter Wimsey
Thanks for the recommendation Erin - hadn't heard of the Miss Silver series.
I love hearing what other people are reading ~ thank you for sharing! I've begun the same process of reading meatier books more slowly. They stick better this way.
I love to read book posts. My list keeps growing and growing, but like you, I am attempting to read some more difficult books to keep my mind expanding, instead of just the latest quick fiction. Thank you for sharing your list.
Thanks for the summary of the Mayor of Casterbridge, Carol. I have it on my Kindle, but haven't gotten around to reading it yet. Hopefully, soon. :)
Blessings,
Lisa
I read Vol. 6 of CM's writings several months ago. And like you, I found that it really helped me understand her philosophy and method much more. I'm currently reading Vol. 3 and portions of Vol. 1 as well.
My daughter ranked Tale of Two Cities, along with Great Expectations, as her top two favorite Dickens' novels. We've also seen the Masterpiece Theatre production of Little Dorrit.
It's interesting watching a theatre performance of some of the classics. I saw Northanger Abbey a couple of years ago and enjoyed it very much. You see the story from a different angle and get to appreciate some of the less prominent characters?
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