Category Archives: Books

Books Women's history

Bring on Margery Allingham

… the good news is that most of her oeuvre is being reprinted. This is the TLS verdict:

whereas Allingham’s earlier works swelter under concert-party lights, rarely deviating, even at their most bloodthirsty, from a jaunty Cluedo-ish idiom – could it be “Poppy in the middle of the night in a cornfield with a dagger” (The Case of the Late Pig)? Was the weapon “a length of lead pipe, possibly stocking covered” (Traitor’s Purse)? “Surely Uncle Andrew didn’t go to church with a coil of rope, a revolver and a clock weight concealed upon him?” (Police at the Funeral) – the later novels revolve around recognizably modern, even prosaic, concerns. Indeed, they have some very twenty-first-century preoccupations: pensions, tax allowances, inheritance law and the fate of the “New Useless” – the “generation which would die of want and neglect” because “the young would be too overworked to look after them” (The Beckoning Lady).

Books Feminism

Fascinating and feminist

This book just went right to the top of my must-read list:

Chenciner’s study of 109 mountain women in Daghestan reveals a vast assemblage of signs, many shared with Turkic people, with Ossetians, with Hungarians and Sarmatians. Crosses, Stars of David and seven-branched trees (transposed into menorah) are seen not as the identity marks of either Judaism or Christianity but as part of an ancient Mesopotamian-derived cornucopia of protective symbolism. In Daghestan, the tattoos were made by elder women on girls, usually at the time of their coming of age….

AND …we can only be grateful for an author who does not tuck his debt to his vital local sources within a sentence or two, in “acknowledgements”, but names all 109 mountain women under their nineteen different villages.

Books Women's history

Nothing new about misplaced apostrophes

Arriving today from the irrestistible reaches of eBay’s antiquarian section is a humble little volume one of Mrs Jameson’s Memoir’s of the Early Italian Painters. I can’t blame the printer, but the later bookbinder definitely had problems with the concept of the apostrophe, much like today’s greengrocers.

Written inside in beautifully clear copperplate is:

Louisa Clarke,
the gift of her Aunt,
December 1851


I wonder who she was…

Mrs Jameson is one of my eBay favourites – she’s nearly always very cheap, which suggests she sold an awful lot of books.

She had a full if not always easy life – surely calling out for a modern biography, but I didn’t think there is one.

Books

How could I resist?

What Kind of Reader Are You?

Your Result: Obsessive-Compulsive Bookworm

You’re probably in the final stages of a Ph.D. or otherwise finding a way to make your living out of reading. You are one of the literati. Other people’s grammatical mistakes make you insane.

Dedicated Reader
Book Snob
Literate Good Citizen
Non-Reader
Fad Reader
What Kind of Reader Are You?
Create Your Own Quiz

(You can blame Purple Elephant’s Corner.)

Books History

In an age of collapse, what can you do?

Three stories make up Iain Pears’ novel The Dream of Scipio Separated by 1,500 years, they are united by the single eponymous manuscript — not Cicero’s famous piece but a later interpretation — and by a moral dilemma – what can one person do in the midst of a collapsing society? They also all take place on the much-fought-over soil of southern France.

The author of the manuscript is the first of these characters: Manlius Hippomanus, a neo-Platonic scholar made non-believing bishop in 5th-century Gaul, watching, at first with wry detachment, the collapse around him of the Roman civilisation. The second is Olivier de Noyen, the half-educated, half-barbarian scholar of the 14th century, who relocates the manuscript but finds it little help in his own struggles within the court of the corrupt papacy at Avignon. His copy is found by a 20th-century scholar, Julien, trapped like his predecessors in web of friendship, obligation and good intentions, he in the difficult moral territory of Nazi-controlled France.

It is the last of those stories that I found the least satisfying – this is well-explored territory to the point of cliche and the love story – of his romance with the (of course) Jewish Julia is far more central and the collapse of “civilisation” is here something rather less than that; only the collapse of a nation state that we know was resurrected. The worlds and times of Manlius and Olivier are by contrast far less known, and far more interesting; in neither case is romance a central part of the story.

As a whole, the novel is something less than its parts – a little too neat, the juxtapositions a little too obvious, but some of those parts of are satisfying indeed, particularly the creations of little set-pieces, such as the sad procession of quasi-scholars that Manlius assembles to march to court the Burgundian barbarian, in the hope that he can be persuaded to hold of the advance of the worse, as Manlius sees it, Visigoths.

Pears is an 18th-century specialist, but you can see his love of research and knowledge, and the play of history. The tale of how Sophia, the pagan hermit-scholar, the last of her school, becomes woven into credulous early Christianity, to emerge as “St Sophia”, is a historian’s in-joke – a playful aside to the way our understanding of the past can only ever be partial and twisted.

When the novel was published in 2002 this was an enjoyable, indeed academic tale. Yet just four years later, it looks considerably more timely. Given the threat we face from massive climate change we might not yet be in the position of any of these three men, but we might not be too far from it. I found myself imagining a fourth character in the tale, to the woven in from the 21st century.

Books History

Worth continuing with The Historian?

I’m slogging through the novel The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova, which caused a bit of a splash in the history blogosphere (and the publishing world) a couple of years ago. I’m up to page 176 and I’m really bored with all of the obvious vampire stuff, and the pace is a slow crawl (a bit like me on the final leg of today’s bike ride when I was on my own).

Is it worth sticking with for the next 500-something pages? Answers in the comments please!

This was fruits of a visit to Camden Oxfam, where I also picked up Iain Pears The Dream of Scipio, which I did enjoy. Review tomorrow probably when I have a bit more energy…

UPDATE: I’ve read another 50 pages and I’m still bored, so it has gone into the “return to charity shop” pile. Sorry air!