Fans of Norah Lofts discussion
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Books For Potential Group Discussion Archived 2019


I thought it might help us to see which titles do not have their own threads. Some titles are listed, but the discussion didn't go far.
We do not have threads for (fiction):
Brittle Glass, The
Crown of Aloes
Fall of Midas, The
Hauntings (short stories)
Heaven In Your Hand (short stories)
Her Own Special Island (aka Uneasy Paradise)
Here Was a Man
Hester Roon (thread but little discussion)
King's Pleasure, The
Letty (aka A Calf For Venus)
Little Wax Doll, The (aka The Devil's Own, The Witches)
Lost Queen, The (aka The Lost Ones)
Lute Player, The
Requiem For Idols
Walk Into My Parlor
You're Best Alone
It is a confusing list because we have discussed many of these in related threads. Please tell me if I have included any titles here for which there is already a lengthy discussion.

Shall we start at the top and do The Brittle Glass next?



Here Was a Man (1936 - about Sir Walter Rawley)
Requiem For Idols (1938)
The Brittle Glass (1942)
You're Best Alone (1943)

Gosh I've just spent ages looking round threads - got caught up in a load of stuff about 'Out of this Nettle' which I've just read - but I didn't know where best to post.
For those of you who don't know, my husband is Norah's publisher now. We're just a two-person team so it's slow work but I've just set up a Facebook Fan page for her on https://www.facebook.com/pages/Norah-...
It would be great if you could come along and like it if you are on Facebook. It will have all the latest republishing news on it.
At the moment my husband is just finishing the e-Book of 'The Lute Player' which should be up by the weekend.
Next up is the e-Books of the House Trilogy. Those were sub-licensed to a bigger publisher than us (History Press) but their books were so carelessly edited - scanned without checking - and with such small type that Clive, Norah's son, has returned them to us.
Thanks for reading, Maggy




Please do feel free to post on the page about your Layer wood map and anything else any of you think or know about Norah - i think it's a perfect place to share our knowledge of Norah and her work.

If any of you do watch the movie "Jassy," it is a great experience for NL fans, but here's just a reminder that NL's ending was NOT the happy one shown in the movie! I loved the country roads that looked just as I pictured Layer Wood would look. The name of the house, Mortiboys, was changed for the movie, and I cannot imagine how that helped the story line. ?? Unnecessary changes by movie directors seem very disrespectful of the writer IMO.
Back to the subject of our next group discussion, we
already have 2 votes for The Brittle Glass, which takes place mainly in Bywater in County Essex, a break from the Layer Wood locale. I would be happy to read it again as well. What say you all?

But I don't believe Jassy would have snitched on Dilys to Nick, and I don't believe she refused to sleep with him (nor that he would have respected her refusal!).





Werner, too many books, too little time! Just received a Nook and as soon as I get a cover for it, it's going to travel with me. May need to get a bumpersticker that says, honk when the light turns green. Of course, I won't read and drive.
Mary, I'd love to read your book someday.




In another thread, Tanya suggested a discussion of attitudes about love in NL heroines. I think we could possibly do this discussion, as well as a book discussion since the first one might rely a great deal on our memories. Tanya brought up a line from AOAA about one woman's worshipful gaze toward the lord of the manor. Maybe men's attitudes should be included as well.
If there is an interest in this topic, I will be glad to start the thread.
Anybody have a preference for the next book? There is a list in message 104 of all the books not yet discussed here.

I wonder, are people still interested? I'm still willing to lead the discussion if so .

It seems like long ago now, but Peggy brought up the Knight's Acre Trilogy, and we haven't a single thread on it yet. Could we finish up the discussion of TSAFL and then start the trilogy? That would probably take us to Christmas!



If you do read the Hunger Games trilogy sometime, I hope you like it. (Some readers feel that Collins dropped the ball badly in the third book, Mockingjay, but since I haven't read it yet I don't know if I agree.) I'll be continuing to pray for your eyesight!


While I'd be happy discussing any of NL's novels, I wonder how much interest there is in doing one of the short story collections?

So far, we've had two suggestions for the next group discussion, The Brittle Glass, and the Knight's Acre Trilogy. But not many have responded yet. As for a short story collection, two titles have not obtained their own threads yet, Heaven in Your Hand and Hauntings. Hauntings might be fun to save for October. Do you have access to those short story titles, Ayah?
I hope I am not irritating everyone, always stressing that "not done yet" list!

Hauntings: Is There Anybody There? is on my to-read shelf, and the local public library has a copy. Of course, October is the month that my Supernatural Fiction Readers group does its annual common read. Since we've done a Lofts novel as a common read twice in that group (last year as a joint read with this group), I'd be more inclined to pick something by a different author this time, for the sake of more variety. But if whatever title we pick in that group is a quick read, and I finish it in time, I might be able to read the Hauntings collection in the latter part of October, and still take part in this group's discussion. I'd certainly be game to do that!

Apologies for the late reply.
I work in Media Studies, subfield Whiteness Studies. I look at how media help Americans decide who's white. Specifically, I look at Eastern European Muslim immigrants and the news language used to talk about those communities, versus other Eastern European non-Muslim immigrants. I've also done a bit of publishing in white working-class masculinities.
I do have access to the short story collections. Are "Saving Face and Other Stories" and "I Met a Gypsy" in the queue as well, or have they been done?
Agreed, "Hauntings" would be great for October.


Looking again at our discussion lists, we have done a group discussion on "I Met a Gypsy" in 2011. However, regarding "Saving Face", a thread was started for it in 2009 (found under Topics", not "General") and a few questions were answered, but there was no real discussion, so we could continue to add to that thread if the group wants to do a group discussion of it. Of course, a reader can also add to that thread anytime they are reading that book (as far as I know).

The characters and story lines are amazing. But I am feeling a bit depressed too by the overall sadness of the stories. Life goes all wrong so often. Does anyone else feel this way?


Warning: There may be some spoilers from here on.
The second book of hers that I read (after Eleanor the Queen) was Silver Nutmeg, and the ending really shook me. Bless This House was more optimistic. Then a few years later I found The Scent of Cloves serialized in Ladies' Home Journal and read it very warily, afraid that its similarity to Silver Nutmeg would have it end the same way--and was relieved by the foreshadowing that Julia would be an old woman in England one day. Then came The Town House, with one misfortune after another! On first reading, I supposed that Maud was Dennis's daughter and considered Nicholas's reflection on her resemblance to her grandfather a piece of dramatic irony. On subsequent rereadings, however, I became increasingly convinced that any resemblance between her and Dennis was a figment of Anne's guilty conscience! Anyway, as you can see from the words "subsequent rereadings," by then I was hooked, and even books like Jassy and White Hell of Pity couldn't sway me!



There seem to be a bit of interest in reading Bless This House as a group read. So far Janice, Sylvia and I are keen. Anyone else? It a book which would lend itself very well to a group read, with pretty discrete chapters and sections.




"Barbara, I actually could do it in December (and read Mockingjay in January) --if you think people in the group wouldn't be too distracted by Christmas and other holidays in December to do a read? (Personally, I read all the time, in holiday seasons as well as non-holiday times!)
What do we think ? BTW, Goodo Karyl!
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Books mentioned in this topic
Here Was a Man (other topics)Here Was a Man (other topics)
A Rose for Virtue (other topics)
Crown of Aloes (other topics)
Crown of Aloes (other topics)
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I'd be happy reading almost anything really ( except The Claw or Checkmate which I have to pretend that NL didn't actually write)
PS Joanne, it may be a typo when you said you had read both the ones in the House ( At Old Vine) series, but just in case it isn't , there are three in all, The Town House, The House at Old Vine and The House at Sunset. I 'd hate you to miss one accidentally , such a great set of stories