Sunday, May 23, 2010

The Solitary Summer- Elizabeth von Arnim

210 pages

"May 2nd - Last night after dinner, when we were in the garden, I said, "I want to be alone for a whole summer, and get to the very dregs of life. I want to be as idle as I can, so that my soul may have time to grow. Nobody shall be invited to stay with me, and if any one calls they will be told that I am out, or away, or sick. I shall spend the months in the garden, and on the plain, and in the forests. I shall watch the things that happen in my garden, and see where I have made mistakes. On wet days I will go into the thickest parts of the forests, where the pine needles are everlastingly dry, and when the sun shines I'll lie on the heath and see how the broom flares against the clouds. I shall be perpetually happy, because there will be no one to worry me."

I absolutely loved this book. I can't think of another book that I have enjoyed more than this one. I found myself highlighting left and right- at least 1/4 of the book has been clipped on my Kindle!

It is about a woman (Elizabeth von Arnim) who spends an entire summer doing all the things she loves: spending many hours alone in her garden, reading, writing, playing with her children. It is not an entirely solitary summer because she has a family and servants, and at one point they must play host to a troop of soldiers. More accurately, she does not spend any time socializing or looking to other people for entertainment.

I highly recommend this book.
It is perfect reading for an afternoon by the pool or an evening in the shade of a favorite tree.

Some of my favorite quotes from the book:

"What a blessing to love books! Everybody must love something and I know of no objects of love that give such substantial and unfailing returns as books and a garden."

"I long ago have discovered that the less a person knows, the more certain he is that he is right, and that no weapons yet invented are of any use in a struggle with stupidity."

"Books have their idiosyncrasies as well as people, and will not show me their full beauties unless the place and time in which they are read suits them."

(on taking a walk at 3 a.m.)
"I stood for a few minutes motionless on the steps, almost frightened by the awful purity of nature when all the sin and ugliness is shut up and asleep, and there is nothing but the beauty left."

"but here was the world wide awake and yet only for me, all the fresh pure air only for me, all the fragrances breathed only by me, not a living soul hearing the nightingale but me, the sun in a few moments coming up to warm only me, and nowhere a single hard word being spoken, or a single selfish act being done, nowhere anything that could tarnish the blessed purity of the world as God has give it us."

"Experience has taught me that whenever anything is on the tip of my tongue, the best thing to do is to keep it there."

"I have, it is true, a great many friends-- people with whom it is pleasant to spend an afternoon if such afternoons are not repeated too often, and if you are careful not to stir more than the surface of things."

"How can you help being happy if you are healthy and in the place you want to be?"

"I could almost fancy sometimes that as I come down the steps, gentle hands of blessing have been laid on my head. I suppose I feel so because of the hush that descends on my soul when I get out of the close, restless house into that silent purity."

"I jolted over the roots into the gathering shadows more and more pervaded by that feeling that so refreshes me, the feeling of being absolutely alone."

"And was there ever such a hopeful beginning to a day, and so full of promise for the subsequent right passing of its hours, as breakfast in the garden, alone with your teapot and your book!"

There's more, but I must stop myself now!


Here are some links about Elizabeth's life and the home described in this book.

Historic Gardens Foundation

Former location of Nassenheide, site of Elizabeth von Arnim's German Garden, described in her book of 1898. Historic site.

on Wikipedia

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

My TBR Pile (Updated)

Update: I've added more books to my pile.
Thankfully, most of these are on my Kindle so I don't have a literal pile.

I have to admit, having a Kindle has got me addicted to collecting books (esp. when they're free!)
I know I won't read all of these books this year, but it's still fun organizing and adding to my "little pile." :-)

The books with a strike through them have either been read or removed from my list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The majority of these were free Kindle books.
A few are from paperback swap or library sales (aka my bath tub books ;-)).
I don't know if I will ever read every book on this list, but I do love having a large selection to choose from.

I've listed them in order of shortest to longest.


The Tragedy of Puddin'headWilson- Mark Twain- 118 pages READ
Weetzie Bat-Francesca Lia Block- 128 pages
Where Angels Fear to Tread- E.M. Forster- 128 pages
The Daffodil Mystery- Edgar Wallace- 134 pages
The Ghost Pirates-William Hope Hodgson- 136 pages
Jacob's Room - Virginia Wolf- 144 pages
Miss Map- E.F. Benson- 148 pages
Death of an Outsider(paperback)- M.C. Beaton-148 pages READ
The Evil Guest- Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu- 160 pages
Ghost Stories of an Antiquary- M.R. James-168 pages
The Body in the Library-Agatha Christie- 192 pages
The Divine Commodity- Skye Jethani-192 pages
Velvet Elvis -Rob Bell-208 pages
The Vanishing Man- R. Austin Freeman- 210 pages
The Solitary Summer-Elizabeth von Arnim 212 pages
Shakespeare's Landlord - Charlaine Harris-214 pages READ
Saving Sailor- Renee Riva-224 pages
The Monk who Sold his Ferrari- Robin S. Sharma- 224 pages
Tales of the Jazz Age - F. Scott Fitzgerald- 224 pages
Sin Boldly- 224 pages
Milrose Munce and the Den of Professional Help- Douglas Anthony Cooper- 240 pages
Stuck on Murder- Lucy Lawrence- 240 pages
The Last Time I Saw You- Elizabeth Berg 256 pages
Murder on a Girls' Night Out (paperback)- Anne George 256
One Bad Apple-Sheila Connelly- 272 pages
Poirot's Christmas 272 pages
Exposure- Brandilyn Collins- 272 pages
Sitting at the Feet of Rabbi Jesus-Ann Spangler, Lois Tverberg- 272 pages
The Curse of the Pharoahs (#2)- Elizabeth Peters-285 pages
Sew Deadly-Elizabeth Lyn Casey- 288 pages
Robin and Ruby-K.M. Soehnlein- 288 pages
Dark Pursuit- Brandilyn Collins- 288 pages
The Fence My Father Built-Linda Clare-294
Death of a Trophy Wife-Laura Levine-304 pages
Tender Graces- Kathryn Magendie-316 pages
You Can't Stop Me- Matthew Clemens- 320 pages
Grave Surprise- Charlaine Harris- 320 pages
Strawberry Shortcake Murder- Joanne Fluke- 320 pages
Daring Chloe-Laura Jensen Walker- 336 pages
As Young as We Feel - Melody Carlson- 352 pages
Sushi for One? - Camy Tang- 352 pages
Thyme of Death (paperback)- Susan Wittig Albert-352 pages
The People of the Mist-Henry Rider Haggard- 356 pages
Daisy Chain-Mary E. DeMuth- 368 pages
My name is Russell Fink- Michael Snyder- 368 pages
Primitive- Mark Nykanen and Deborah Smith- 384 pages
Shutter Island- Dennis Lehane- 400 pages
Rooms-James L. Rubart- 400 pages
Seeing a Large Cat- Elizabeth Peters- 432 pages
The Help-Kathryn Stockett- 464 pages READ
The Killing Room- John Manning-484 pages
The Complete Sherlock Holmes- 944 pages

Death of a Prankster & Shakespeare's Landlord


176 pages

From Publishers Weekly:
Wealthy local Andrew Trent, notorious for practical jokes that have far exceeded short-sheeted beds and whoopee cushions, has summoned his would-be heirs to his northern mansion with the false announcement that he has only a short time left to live. Braving the Highlands winter are his adopted son and his TV-star fiancee, two spinster daughters, his brother (with his brittle wife) and his scientist stepson (with his punk, pink-haired girlfriend and colleague). After Andrew is murdered in a prank that backfires, Macbeth wends his way through a tangle of family squabbles and secrets. Another murder and an attempt on a third victim follow in this readable tale that doesn't, however, bear close scrutiny. Illogic abounds and the final confession is precipitated by a wild coincidence.

This book has all the classic mystery elements: numerous suspects snowbound in a big mansion, red herrings, and a gathering of the suspects in the drawing room for the solution to be given by the featured sleuth.

Most Amazon reviewers gave this book low ratings, but I rather liked it. In fact, I'd say this might be my favorite Hamish MacBeth novel I've read yet.



214 pages

From Publisher's Weekly
While on a late-night jog in tiny Shakespeare, Ark., Lily Bard, 31, sees a furtive figure placing large plastic garbage bags in the local park and, untying one, discovers the body of her former landlord. In a quick but anonymous phone call (she is determined to avoid any questioning), she reports it to the police chief. With skill and wry wit, Harris, the author of the Aurora Teagarden series, soon reveals the horrific facts in Lily's background that explain why she is solitary, confrontational, obsessed with self-defense—and why she chooses, despite a first-rate education, to eke out a living as a cleaning woman. Realizing, however, that her fingerprints on the body of the dead man might make her a suspect, Lily subtly and insightfully queries her customers, some of them tenants of the murdered landlord, in the process meticulously evaluating their closets, drawers and motives. The renters are a well-defined lot: a happily promiscuous idler; a sanctimonious and hypocritical reverend; and an aging couple with much to grieve about. As Lily investigates, she develops a wary but cordial relationship with the police chief and forms a warmer tie with her karate instructor. But at the same time, someone has discovered the unspeakable facts about Lily's past and has begun stalking her.

I didn't really like this book. It wasn't very suspenseful and I couldn't connect with the characters. I found that I didn't really care to find out who the murderer was. I made myself finish reading it. After all, I had bought the book with my swagbucks gift card. ;-)
I don't think I will be reading more in this series any time soon.

2010 total: 14
Thriller & Suspense challenge: 7
currently reading: The Last Time I Saw You- Elizabeth Berg