Afternoon Tea and Scones with the Lovely Ladies discussion
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What are you reading 2023.
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Tania, Gloucestershire Wild Daffodil.
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Jul 24, 2023 11:58AM

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Next up is, finally, The Tortoise and the Hare! :)
https://greyladiesbooks.co.uk/ A link to the Greyladies website, as I can' t put it in the comments. They do some very interesting books. I have ordered Silver Street, which looks interesting, and I so enjoyed Business as Usual.
I'm looking forward to seeing what you make of The Tortoise and the Hare.
I've never heard of Eva Tanguay, was she American?
I've never heard of Eva Tanguay, was she American?



Susan in NC wrote: "I just finished Middlemarch last night, had been on my TBR for years. The prose was dense, but interesting characters and story. I enjoyed it, not as much as Trollope, but glad I final..."
Conhratulations. I hope I can get to this before the year is out. I might take a week off work for it.
Bronwyn wrote: "I don’t think most people have heard of her. I never had. I spotted the book by chance and was fascinated. :)"
If I ever see it, I' ll pick it up.
Conhratulations. I hope I can get to this before the year is out. I might take a week off work for it.
Bronwyn wrote: "I don’t think most people have heard of her. I never had. I spotted the book by chance and was fascinated. :)"
If I ever see it, I' ll pick it up.

Thanks Susan, that seems a very sensible way of doing it. I shall save it for when the nights are drawing in.

I am on the second Lord Peter Wimsey novel Clouds of Witness and it is very entertaining.
One series I am really enjoying is by Bella Ellis. I have read the first The Vanished Bride and the second The Diabolical Bones: A gripping gothic mystery set in Victorian Yorkshire The series takes the Brontës and turns them into amateur detectives. The characters are really brought to life and you can imagine where they got the ideas for their novels. It is very clever and fab for a Brontë nerd like me.
The Bella Ellis series is yet another one I'd like to get to. I have ordered the first one from the library. They don't have the Jane Austen series yet.
I have just finished The Square Circle by Denis Mackail. It's a bit like Greenery Street, but instead of focusing on one married couple, it focuses on the residents of a London square. Not as delightful as Greenery Street, but very good.
Internet Archive has been taken to court by four publishers, and may have to remove a lot of its books so I've been reading the more obscure ones before the deadline for this which is tomorrow. I don't know how it will be affected, but at least I have now read as many of the ones that might no longer be available. I only use Internet Archive for the books that are out of print and otherwise unavailable, so I hope I will still be able to do so. The Square Circle rarely even turns up on ebay. Fingers crossed. Simon Thomas reviewed No leading lady: An autobiography by R.C. Sherriff, which is on there; he made it sound excellent, so hopefully I'll get the opportunity to read that.
I have just finished The Square Circle by Denis Mackail. It's a bit like Greenery Street, but instead of focusing on one married couple, it focuses on the residents of a London square. Not as delightful as Greenery Street, but very good.
Internet Archive has been taken to court by four publishers, and may have to remove a lot of its books so I've been reading the more obscure ones before the deadline for this which is tomorrow. I don't know how it will be affected, but at least I have now read as many of the ones that might no longer be available. I only use Internet Archive for the books that are out of print and otherwise unavailable, so I hope I will still be able to do so. The Square Circle rarely even turns up on ebay. Fingers crossed. Simon Thomas reviewed No leading lady: An autobiography by R.C. Sherriff, which is on there; he made it sound excellent, so hopefully I'll get the opportunity to read that.
I have just got back from WOMAD, which along with all the music and dance, also has a book tent run by Mr B's Emporium of Books, (famous Bath bookshop); whilst there I really enjoyed a talk given by Mike Dilger about his new book, One Thousand Shades of Green: A Year in Search of Britain's Wild Plants all about looking for plant specis during lockdown. I picked it up and have been reading it over the weekend and it's just as engaging as the talk was. I really love reading lockdown nature writing and this is a great example.




Susan in NC wrote: "Oh, that sounds delightful-I found it encouraging to hear of signs that Nature bounced back just fine when we were all out of the way. I saw a documentary last year on a British nature photographer..."
Me too. I love naturw writing and have read some great lockdown stuff, Goshawk Summer: A New Forest Season Unlike Any Other was my favourite. I'm lucky in that there are some wonderful places around me for walking and my Dad is a bit of an expert, so he's great at pointing things out. He has been running a dormouse project for 30 odd years, so I have been out with him while he's been checking the boxes. Dormice aren't something most people will get to see, being both arboreal and nocturnal. He has a friend who is an expert on bees; it's amazing spotting them when you know a bit about them, truely fascinating.
Me too. I love naturw writing and have read some great lockdown stuff, Goshawk Summer: A New Forest Season Unlike Any Other was my favourite. I'm lucky in that there are some wonderful places around me for walking and my Dad is a bit of an expert, so he's great at pointing things out. He has been running a dormouse project for 30 odd years, so I have been out with him while he's been checking the boxes. Dormice aren't something most people will get to see, being both arboreal and nocturnal. He has a friend who is an expert on bees; it's amazing spotting them when you know a bit about them, truely fascinating.
Susan in NC wrote: "I finished Cluny Brown: A Novel by Margery Sharp for this group the other day, then Business as Usual
by [author..."
Apologies for being a bit late with this, but I have set up the threads for this months books, so the [book:Cluny Brown|55814637] one is there now.
I loved Business as Usual and it would be a great fit for the group some time.

Apologies for being a bit late with this, but I have set up the threads for this months books, so the [book:Cluny Brown|55814637] one is there now.
I loved Business as Usual and it would be a great fit for the group some time.

I thought so, too.
Maybe next year? I would ceryainly be up for a re-read. Btw, did you read the Handheld Press copy, or the American one? It seems that some pertinent peices wrre cut out of the American one.

I am glad I was able to read the Handheld Classics edition through Scribd, I saw that as well, about pertinent bits being omitted in American edition. I would definitely be up for a reread next year, it’s fun and quick and charming.


I've also had trouble concentrating this summer! Convenience Store Woman is certainly an easy read, though I wish I had liked it more. Maybe it's because it's Norwegian, but Kristin Lavransdatter definitely feels like a winter read!
We have been having a rather cool, wet July here but whenever anyone complains about the rain I remind them what's happening in southern Europe. Oddly, despite the name, I feel The Summer Book by Tove Jansson feels quite cool. Maybe it's something to do with Scandinavian literature.

I loved The Summer Book (not as much as Fair Play), and agree it seems like cool weather. Those Scandinavians. ;) Maybe that’s part of it with Kristin Lavransdatter, it’s not the right weather, lol. :)
A couple of days ago, I finished He Went For a Walk by Dorothy Evelyn Smith. A lovely, heartwarming story about a young boy who just missed being bombed when he left the flat he was staying in to go for a walk. He's resued by a deserter who decides to help him get back to his home in Yorkshire.
I'm now enjoying The Happy Exiles by Felicity Shaw, a social comedy set in a colonial outpost.
I'm now enjoying The Happy Exiles by Felicity Shaw, a social comedy set in a colonial outpost.

I plan to continue with Women in Translation month but had a library hold come in, so am reading Testimony about the evangelical movement. I’ve been listening to a former fundie podcast and have gone down that rabbit hole a bit. 😂
Oh I do love libraries. Simon Thomas recently reviewed No leading lady: An autobiography by R.C. Sherriff on his blog and it sounds great. Online, copies are priced at around £120, but a quick look showed me that my library had a copy, so I am now reading it. I also plan to read The Fortnight in September this month. It's been a couple of years since I last read it, but it's a favourite.



I wound up reading Ungovernable (Victorian child rearing advice), When Darkness Loves Us (horrorish short story and novella), R.U.R. (play that originated the term robot) and The Go-Between (classic about a boy dealing with things he doesn’t understand). I’m now reading Seduction & Betrayal for #nyrbwomen23 and plan to start Gentlemen Prefer Blondes/But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes.
I'm going to be starting The Go-Between in a day or two. Really looking forward to it, I've been meaning to read it for years but put it off in the hopes I would forget the ending of the film.
Antoinette wrote: "I agree, Tania, Fortnight in September is a favourite. I am reading Angel right now by Elizabeth Taylor. What an interesting character Angel is!"
Angel is certainly a fascinating character, but one of the most hateful I've come across. It's still one of my favourites by her.
Susan in NC wrote: "I’m currently reading our October book, All Done by Kindness by Doris Langley Moore, because it sounded delightful, and is also in the book pool of another group!"
I will set up a thread for this one for you. I will be moving house at the end of the month, so will be busy and may be without internet access for a bit.
Antoinette wrote: "I agree, Tania, Fortnight in September is a favourite. I am reading Angel right now by Elizabeth Taylor. What an interesting character Angel is!"
Angel is certainly a fascinating character, but one of the most hateful I've come across. It's still one of my favourites by her.
Susan in NC wrote: "I’m currently reading our October book, All Done by Kindness by Doris Langley Moore, because it sounded delightful, and is also in the book pool of another group!"
I will set up a thread for this one for you. I will be moving house at the end of the month, so will be busy and may be without internet access for a bit.



Thanks, and good luck with your move!

Enjoying it very much!

I’ll be reading that one this month too.
I have finished Village in a Valley by Beverley Nichols, the third in the Allways Trilogy. I still prefer the Merry Hall trilogy, but loved this one as well. Makes me want to read many more of his books, and I have a very large pile of them waiting, so all good. Mary mentioned how hard it is to get hold of these books, but I found some are on Internet Archive, here is a link to this one https://archive.org/details/villagein...



Very frustrating, I know I read one of the Merry Hall trilogy from my library many years ago, but it is longer in the catalogue! I learned from a librarian in another group - not a GR librarian, but a real one! - that libraries tend to purge older titles no longer being borrowed in book sales. Sad!
My library system seems to put them into storage, they are available if you order them, but not out on the shelves.
That series you're reading looks rather good, I might have to investigate.
That series you're reading looks rather good, I might have to investigate.

That series you're reading looks rather good, I might have to investigate."
It’s excellent, very enjoyable! The casual open sexism women received constantly gets old, but it’s realistic.
I'm in the middle of moving house at the moment, so I haven't got a great deal of time for reading however, I have just finished The Go-Between and it has been such a treat to sink into this in the evenings. I'm also re-reading The Fortnight in September, which is one of my favourites, and I enjoy picking it up at this time of year.
I have also just started one if the katest Persephone titles which I have been looking forward to for a long time, Out of the Window by Madeline Linford, which has a very intriguing premise. Not far in yet, but I think it will be a goodie.
I think I will listen to Sparkling Cyanide while I'm working tomorrow.
I have also just started one if the katest Persephone titles which I have been looking forward to for a long time, Out of the Window by Madeline Linford, which has a very intriguing premise. Not far in yet, but I think it will be a goodie.
I think I will listen to Sparkling Cyanide while I'm working tomorrow.


I’m reading The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne for #spinsterseptember, but I’m falling behind. I hope to finish before the month ends. 🤞
I’m also reading But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes, but have paused that to focus on Judith. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes was really funny (and spinster-ish), so I’m looking forward to Lorelei’s and Dorothy’s further shenanigans.
I’m still reading with Dracula Daily and picking at He Knew He Was Right.
I watched the first season of A Discovery of Witches and was told I ought to read the books before I continue, so I’ve lightly started the first of those too.
It’s too many though. I’m not good at properly balancing so many! 😂
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