Friday, April 11, 2025

Rachel's Holiday: Marian Keyes

I was initially drawn to Marian Keyes' Walsh family series when Moira at Clothes in Books reviewed The Mystery of Mercy Close. That book is a mystery; the protagonist, Helen Walsh, is a private investigator. When I saw it was part of a series, I wanted to read the previous books, in order, even though I knew that they were not mysteries. I first read Watermelon (about Claire, the oldest daughter). Now I have read Rachel's Holiday, the second book in the series.


The story is set mostly in Dublin. Rachel is the third daughter in a family with five daughters. She has supportive parents, although there are communication issues in both directions. In her late twenties, she has been living in New York but she overdoses on drugs, almost dies, and her family brings her home to Dublin to go into a rehab facility called The Cloisters. Rachel mistakenly thinks it is a luxurious spa and is eager to go. The majority of the book takes place at the rehab facility, which treats people with various addictions. It was an emotional, immersive book, but it could have been shorter.


My thoughts:

  • I liked the depiction of the rehab facility.  I don't know how accurate it was, for the time it was written, or for now. But the approach to the actual rehabilitation process seemed valid. The story continued after she left the facility and covered how she adjusted to recovery from her addictions. This sounds like it would be a sad story, and there were plenty of low points. But there is also humor throughout.
  • I empathized strongly with Rachel, even though her experiences and what she was looking for in life seemed very different from mine. I liked the emphasis on how the events in one's childhood can mold you, and how different personalities react to the same childhood experiences. 
  • This book had more emphasis on romance than I care for. It also had a little more sex and too much detail in that area than I wanted. However, I don't want to give the wrong impression, for most readers it would be fine. 
  • There are a lot of interesting characters, both those going through rehab and the counselors. None of them got the attention and character development that Rachel did, especially since she is the narrator of the story, but they offered looks at different types of addictions and different reasons behind it.
  • Most of the books I read set in Ireland are crime fiction; it was interesting to read about family settings, daily life, and relationships in a non-crime fiction setting. 
  • Overall I enjoyed the book. I intend to keep reading the books in this series as long as I like them. And I will read The Mystery of Mercy Close for sure.



-----------------------------

Publisher:   William Morrow, 2002. Orig. pub. 1998.
Length:       565 pages
Format:      Trade Paperback
Series:       Walsh Family, #2
Setting:      Dublin, Ireland
Genre:       Fiction
Source:      I purchased this book.



Friday, April 4, 2025

Six Degrees of Separation: From Knife to Valley of the Kings

  

The Six Degrees of Separation meme is hosted by Kate at booksaremyfavoriteandbest. The idea behind the meme is to start with a book and use common points between two books to end up with links to six books, forming a chain. The common points may be obvious, like a word in the title or a shared theme, or more personal. Every month Kate provides the title of a book as the starting point.

The starting book this month is Knife: Meditations after an Attempted Murder by Salman Rushdie. I haven't read this book; I don't read many memoirs. And when I first read about Knife, I did not think I wanted to read it. But having since read many reviews that have praised the book, I do plan to read it. 


My first link is to another memoir. In 1946, Agatha Christie published Come, Tell Me How You Live, a memoir of the time she spent with her second husband, Max Mallowan, at archaeological digs in Syria. I have not read that memoir yet either, but it is on my shelves to read.


Next is a mystery novel by Agatha Christie, Murder In Mesopotamia (1936), set at an archaeological dig in Iraq. This novel is part of the Hercule Poirot series. One of the members of the expedition is murdered. Poirot happens to be passing through the area and is called on to look into the death. The story is narrated by Nurse Leatheran, and that is what I liked best about the book. 



The books in the Gideon Oliver series by Aaron Elkins series feature a forensic anthropologist who often works at archaeological digs. In Curses, Oliver is invited to an archaeological dig on the Yucatan Peninsula. Both my son and I have read a few books in this series. The first book in this series was published in 1982. 


My next link is to a novel in a historical mystery series that I read years ago, the Amelia Peabody series by Elizabeth Peters. Amelia begins her adventures in archaeology in Crocodile on the Sandbank, which is set in 1884 in Egypt.  


The fifth link of my chain, also set in Egypt, is a nonfiction book, The Tomb of Tutankhamen. The author, Howard Carter, was the leader of the excavation and this is his firsthand account of the discovery of the tomb and the artifacts discovered. This book is from my husband's bookshelves and he has several other books on this subject. We visited the Tutankhamen exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1978. 



Staying with Egypt and archaeology sites, the last book in my chain is another of my husbands books, also nonfiction, Valley of the Kings by John Romer. The Valley of the Kings is an area in Egypt where tombs were constructed for pharaohs and nobles for nearly 500 years. Per the Preface of this book, it is a nonfiction account of "two interlinked stories: the first is the history of the travellers and scholars who studied and excavated the royal tombs of the valley; the second is that of the tombs themselves and the motives and methods of the people who made them."



My Six Degrees focused on archaeological sites in fiction and nonfiction. If you did this month's Six Degrees, where did your list take you?

The next Six Degrees will be on May 3, 2025 and the starting book will be a book longlisted for the 2025 Stella Prize, Rapture by Emily Maguire.



Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Short Story Wednesday: Two Books of Horror and Strange Stories

  


Today I am sharing two of my husband's short story books, which lean toward the strange and the weird. Normally these are not the sort of stories I prefer, but I think I will be trying some stories from both of these in the future.


Nightmare Flower 
Stories by Elizabeth Engstrom
Introduction by Lisa Kröger

Description from the back of the book:

This collection of eighteen short tales, a novelette and a short novel takes the reader inside the dark imagination of Elizabeth Engstrom, author of acclaimed horror classics like When Darkness Loves Us

In these stories, you will read about a woman asked to be complicit in her own mother’s death, a grandmother with a macabre hobby, a bizarre, phallic-shaped flower that portends evil for a married couple, a father whose son is caught up in a sinister government experiment. These are weird and unsettling tales that will linger with the reader.

​In her introduction to this new edition, Lisa Kröger writes, “There are true horrors that await readers in all of Engstrom’s works ... reminds me of another giant of horror literature, Shirley Jackson.”

Elizabeth Engstrom is an American author of speculative fiction, who grew up in Illinois and Utah. This book was originally published in 1992 by Tor. Many of the stories in it were published between 1986 and 1991; others were published for the first time in the 1992 Tor edition. 



Scotland the Strange: Weird Tales from Storied Lands
Edited by Johnny Mains

Description from the back of the book:

From misty moors, crags and clifftops comes a hoard of eighteen strange tales gathered by Johnny Mains, award-winning anthologist and editor of the British Library anthology Celtic Weird. Sourced from Scotland’s storied literary heritage and bustling with witches, ghosts, devils and merfolk, this selection celebrates the works of treasured Scottish writers such as John Buchan, Robert Louis Stevenson, Dorothy K. Haynes and Neil M. Gunn alongside rare pieces by lesser-known authors – including two tales translated from Scots Gaelic.

Brooding in the borderlands where strange folklore, bizarre mythology and twentieth-century hauntings meet, this volume promises chills and shivers as keen and fresh as the wind-whipped wilds of Scotland.

The stories in Scotland the Strange were published between 1818 and 1976. Each story is preceded by one or more paragraphs about the author. 

Here is a list of the stories and authors in Scotland the Strange:

  • The Hunt of Eildon / James Hogg
  • The Murder Hole / Catherine Sinclair
  • The Doom of Soulis & The Seven Lights / John Mackay Wilson
  • The Devil of Glenluce / Eliza Lynn Linton
  • The Cavern of Steenfoll: A Scottish Legend / Wilhelm Hauff, translated by S. Mendel
  • Ticonderoga / Robert Louis Stevenson
  • "Death to the Head That Wears No Hair!" / David Grant
  • The Ghosts of Craig-Aulnaic /Anonymous
  • The Stag-Haunted Stream / Mrs. Campbell of Dunstaffnage
  • The Two Sisters and the Curse / Translated by Rev. John Gregorson Campbell
  • The Outgoing of the Tide / John Buchan
  • Assipattle and the Mester Stoorworm / Elizabeth W. Grierson
  • Black-Haired John of Lewis, Sailor / Translated by Rev. James MacDougall
  • The Moor / Neil M. Gunn
  • Good Bairns / Dorothy K. Haynes
  • The Lass with the Delicate Air / Eileen Bigland
  • The Inheritance / Simon Pilkington
  • The Curse of Mathair Nan Uisgeachan / Angus Wolfe Murray