Books I've Read This Week (Vol. I, Issue 4)
When we parted at the end of last week's BIRTW, I was in the middle of The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory, told from the perspective of Anne's sister Mary. I really liked the book, especially the description of the role of women during that time. How did it end? Well, let's just say one Boleyn girl had a happy ending, the other not so much.
Another Philippa Gregory book that I highly recommend is Earthly Joys. John Tradescant is a master gardener, explorer, and collector of rare plants struggling between responsibility to family and loyalty to lord and king in the early 1600s. I fell in love with this book but it was almost painful sometimes to follow John and the seemingly foolish decisions he sometimes makes. The adventures of the Tradescants continue in Virgin Earth coming soon to a hold shelf near me (I hope).
Marne Davis Kellogg: Nothing But Gossip & Birthday Party
I finished off the Lilly Bennett, U.S. Marshall, series with two fun, quick reads about the adventures of Lilly and her friends and family in Roundup, Wyoming, with visits to Las Vegas and Italy, complete with celebrity cameos. Next on my list of MDK books is her stand-alone suspense novel, Insatiable. I'll be picking that up on Saturday.
Arthur & George by Julian Barnes follows the stories of an ophthalmologist turned famous detective mystery novelist and a persecuted and falsely accused half-Indian solicitor in early 20th century Britain. The book is divided into four sections, three of which are pretty good. I think the author wrote the last section to fill up empty pages when he realized that his deadline was further away than he had thought. Granted I lost interest when Arthur died. What? You didn't know that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had died? Well, sorry!
In my continuing study of things British, leading up to my trip there this fall, I've started Stonehenge Complete by Christopher Chippindale and The Intelligent Traveller's Guide to Historic Britain by Philip A. Crowl. I'm sure it will take me many days to read these books as they are dry and full of detail. I don't plan on reading many guidebooks from the library since they're mostly from several years ago but I liked the sound of these two.
Currently in my bag is An Imperfect Lens by Anne Roiphe, a story of science and love in 19th century Alexandria during a cholera outbreak. A French scientist working in Pasteur's lab is sent with a team to Egypt to study the cholera microbe and try to discover a cause. He encounters the affianced daughter of a Jewish doctor who helps out in the lab. I wasn't sure I liked this book at first because I tend to like dialogue-driven stories and this author is all about describing situations where the microbe is hanging around and being passed on, but it's growing on me.
That's all for now, but catch me next time on Books I've Read This Week.