Friday, June 30, 2017

On the Reading Table

WHAT’S ON MY READING TABLE

So here's what I'm reading at the moment. Maybe your TBR list will become longer. What are you reading?


Nearness of You  by Dorothy Garlock

Hooper's Crossing, New York, 1952. The post-war boom seems a million miles away . . . especially for a sheltered librarian who longs for the adventure and excitement of the big city.

New York City. The hustle and bustle. The people and the excitement. It's all Lily Denton dreams about. But ever since her mother died, her overprotective father won't ease up on her. So she spends her days working at the library and her nights hoping life doesn't pass her by . . . until the Fall Festival. As tourists fill the streets, the crisp autumn air sneaks in-as does the thrill of a far more dangerous kind.

Some men have a gift for avoiding trouble. Professional photographer Boone Tatum isn't one of them. In fact, that penchant for trouble is exactly what landed Boone in this small town in the middle of nowhere in the first place. Yet the moment he meets beautiful Lily Denton and snaps her photograph, everything changes. Suddenly leaving is the furthest thing from Boone's mind-or his heart.

But danger has slipped silently into this sleepy town, marking Lily as its own. And Lily and Boone's dream of a life together is thrown into peril-unless Lily finds the courage to stand up for herself and a man she only just met . . . and can't live without.

The Bookman Histories  by Lavie Tidhar

An omnibus edition of the most exciting steampunk series of recent years.

Lizard Kings and swashbuckling pirates, secret government agencies and scuttling automata, tripods and airships.

There’s never been a series with quite so much adventure crammed between two covers!

Staying Strong: 365 days a year by Demi Lovato

Demi Lovato wakes up each morning and affirms her commitment to herself―to her health, her happiness, her being. Those commitments are the bedrock of her recovery and her work helping other young people dealing with the issues she lives with every single day.
Demi is a platinum-selling recording artist whose latest album―DEMI―is already a smash hit. She's about to embark on her second season as a judge on X-Factor, and just launched The Lovato Treatment Scholarship Program. And she is an outspoken advocate for young people everywhere.
Demi is also a young woman finding her way in the world. She has dealt deftly with her struggles in the face of public scrutiny, and she has always relied, not just on friends and family, but daily affirmations of her self-worth and value. Affirmations that steady her days and strengthen her resolve.
Those affirmations have grown into STAYING STRONG, a powerful 365-day collection of Demi's most powerful, honest, and hopeful insights. Each day will provide the readers with a quote, a personal reflection and a goal.
These are Demi's words. Words she lives by and shares with the people she loves and total strangers alike. They are a powerful testament to a young woman standing up and fighting back.

That's what's on my reading table, what's on yours?

Happy Reading!

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Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Charlotte Bronte's Teaching Career


I came across this article about Charlotte Bronte and wanted to share it with you. It came from http://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable



Charlotte Brontë’s Teaching Career
How the novelist’s work as a governess shaped her worldview—and her writing.
Tuesday, June 27, 2017


Beginning life as a governess was far more unpleasant for Charlotte Brontë and her sister Anne than it was for Jane Eyre. When only a little more than eighteen years old, Anne served for nine months (April–December 1839) as governess for the Ingham family in charge of their two oldest children. Her novel, Agnes Grey, recounts her disillusionment as she begins to learn what being a governess actually entails.
It opens with its eponymous heroine ironically recalling her happy anticipations: “How delightful it would be to be a governess! To go out into the world; to enter upon a new life; to act for myself; to exercise my unused faculties; to try my unknown powers.” In considering sources for John Reed, we have already met Agnes’ pupil Tom Bloomfield who introduces himself by showing her his trapped birds that he happily tortures. His sister Mary Ann, a six-year-old child, ignores her teacher, literally lying on the floor much of the time. Their mother persistently sides with the children and limits Agnes’ efforts to discipline them. A half year later, Anne Brontë became governess at Thorp Green Hall, where she was happier and remained for several years. After she left she began writing her governess novel Agnes Grey, which Charlotte had read before starting Jane Eyre.
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Years later Charlotte Brontë, discussing Agnes Grey with Elizabeth Gaskell, told her: “none but those who had been in the position of a governess could ever realize the dark side of ‘respectable’ human nature…daily giving way to selfishness and ill-temper, till its [i.e., “respectable human nature’s”] conduct towards those dependent on it sometimes amount[s] to a tyranny.” Here she echoes Jane Eyre’s description of John Reed’s “violent tyrannies,” and she remembers as well the ruthless power of his mother Mrs. Reed. Charlotte thought about liberty and justice frequently throughout her adult life. In a letter from 1848, she repeats similar assertions saying that a governess lived “a life of inexpressible misery; tyrannized over, finding her efforts to please and teach utterly vain, chagrined, distressed, worried—so badgered so trodden-on, that she ceased almost at last to know herself…her oppressed mind…prisoned,” and so became unable to imagine that other people might treat her with respect and affection. Here the whole repertoire of Jane Eyre’s first scenes—tyranny, shame, imprisonment—reappears in Charlotte’s summary of what it means to be a governess. She remembered her experiences, and those of her sister Anne, as she sat down to write that novel’s first chapters.
Charlotte’s first “situation” as a temporary governess began in May 1839, at an estate named Stonegappe, a large house of three stories set on a hillside surrounded by woods, enjoying a vista in the distance of the valley of the River Aire. Charlotte was to care for a young girl and her brother—the stone-throwing son of the Sidgwick family we have seen as a model for John Reed. For the socially awkward and impoverished Brontë, at age twenty-three, the inferior position of governess in a wealthy family was an almost intolerable position, far worse than teaching at Roe Head. She was ignored by adult family members, charged with insolent and rebellious children, and denied respect by all, though she considered herself not only more than their equal in terms of intelligence and ability but also a potential writer of genius. She speaks vividly on the ambiguities of being a governess in a letter to her sister Emily, first acknowledging the attractions of living in the home of wealthy people: “The country, the house, and the grounds are…divine.” However, for her none of this was available. Working as a governess took all her time. Viewing her as an employee drawing wages, the woman of the house, responsible to her husband to be an able manager of the staff and its expenses, Mrs. Sidgwick wasn’t interested in befriending as an equal this poor clergyman’s daughter or even in engaging her in conversation. Instead, like a good midcentury Victorian factory owner, she wanted to get as much work out of Charlotte, per hour, as she could. Of Mrs. Sidgwick Charlotte writes, she “does not know my character & she does not wish to know it. I have never had five minutes of conversation with her since I came—except when she was scolding me.” What galls Brontë is not only Sidgwick’s bossiness but also and, more importantly, her indifference to Charlotte as a person. And so when one of the Sidgwick children at dinner one day put his hand in Charlotte’s saying, “I love ’ou, Miss Brontë,” the mother broke in, before all the children in a tone of disdain, “Love the governess, my dear!”
Winifred Gérin, in her beautifully written biography of Brontë, pictures Charlotte in the Sidgwick’s handsome country home during a “long summer evening when she sat alone, her lap filled with Mrs. Sidgwick’s ‘oceans of needlework’…no one from the noisy self- absorbed house-party below to share her solitude.” Gérin goes on to tell us of Charlotte’s private space, which she herself had explored.
Charlotte’s bedroom…had deep window seats and Georgian panes to its window-frames, and through them a lonely girl could look down unobserved on the arrivals and departures, the gentlemen on their horses and the ladies in their carriages, that animated the summer scene.
Judging herself to be the plausibly lively and witty equal of these people, Brontë could only feel the pain of her solitude. Her months at Stonegappe were, then, largely unhappy ones, despite her expensive accommodation and a “holiday” with the family in a residence near the opulent spa resort of Harrowgate. Charlotte left this employment in July.
What we now see is how much Brontë drew from these experiences as she began to write Jane Eyre, including the stone-throwing son, the feelings of alienation and solitude, and, most poignantly, the experience of a well-appointed, comfortable country home in which, like Jane Eyre later, Charlotte from the upper rooms watched people happily enjoying themselves utterly oblivious to her and to what she might have to offer.

Curiously and significantly, Brontë used her experiences of subordination, exploitation, and humiliation not for Jane Eyre’s work as a governess, which she describes as easy and pleasant, but instead for Jane’s much earlier experiences at Gateshead Hall. The most dramatic instance is the way she transforms Mrs. Sidgwick into Mrs. Reed. This is Mrs. Reed: “A woman of robust frame, square-shouldered and strong-limbed.” She has a large face, “the under-jaw being much developed and very solid.” Her brow is “low, her chin large and prominent.” She dresses well and has “a presence and port calculated to set off handsome attire.” Typically, Brontë, with her lifelong interest in issues such as phrenology and the relationship of body to sensibility, finds revelation in the close scrutiny of the physical details of this woman. Her intractable will, narrow range of mind, and proclivity to dominance emerge in her jaw, brow, and shoulders, which project her authority and power to, paradoxically, the point of a calculated physical attraction. She is someone not of conspicuous intelligence or culture, but rather clever in managing others, and so keeping them “under her control.” All of this—her physical characteristics, her insistence upon dominance, her categorical indifference to Jane, are a fictional reworking of Charlotte’s powerfully antagonistic responses to Mrs. Sidgwick. For the thin, short, plain Jane—as for Brontë, who was physically just like her—Mrs. Reed made a formidable adversary.

Charlotte left the Sidgewicks on July 13, 1839, but by the end of the year she writes that she will probably have to take another situation even though, as she insists, “I hate and abhor the very thoughts of governess-ship.”
This prediction turned out to be accurate. Early in 1841 she arrived at Upperwood House, Rawdon, to care for two quite young children of the White family. As nursery governess caring for small children, Charlotte faced never-ending calls upon her time and attention—demands she had never faced before. Unsurprisingly her letters were soon full of laments. She complains the children are “wild and unbroken.” She found it impossible to fit comfortably into family life, wishing to “repel the rude familiarity of the children” while at the same time finding it difficult “to ask either servant or mistress for anything I want.” Soon she again found herself in angry opposition to a powerful older woman. She acknowledges in a letter that she’s been able to tolerate Mrs. White’s bad manners and boastfulness and even her lack of education—demonstrated in her inability to write and spell correctly. But “I have had experience of one little trait in her character which condemns her a long way with me…If any little thing goes wrong she does not scruple to give way to anger in a very coarse unladylike manner…[that] is highly offensive.” By August playing the role of governess is becoming insupportable: “It is the living in other people’s houses—the estrangement from one’s real character—the adoption of a cold, rigid, apathetic exterior, that is painful.” Charlotte left the Whites in December but more amicably than her separation from the Sidgwicks, with expressions of gratitude on both sides.

Charlotte Brontë’s unsuccessful efforts to find herself a suitable “situation” continued. In February of 1842, just a couple of months after leaving the Whites, Charlotte and her sister Emily traveled to Brussels to study French. At ages twenty-five and twenty-four, they were considerably older than the other pupils, native speakers of French. Charlotte characterized them to Ellen Nussey as “singularly cold, selfish, animal and inferior…their principles are rotten to the core.” This Yorkshire Protestant found the young Roman Catholic Belgians immediately antipathetic. Nevertheless, by August Madame Heger was sufficiently impressed by this strange pair of young women from Yorkshire to persuade them to stay on at the school as part-time teachers of English and music as well as continue their studies in French to the end of the year.
This return to the role of teacher became the basis for Charlotte’s first novel, The Professor, which she wrote upon her return to England. Rather than telling this story from her own, female, perspective, Brontë adopted a first-person male narrator named Crimsworth. For many years, she had written in the voice of a male narrator in the fantasy fictions about Angria that she shared with her brother Branwell, so this strategy of adopting a man’s perspective was nothing new for her. This narrator, Crimsworth, just like Charlotte, leaves England to teach in Brussels. Like Agnes Grey and the future Jane Eyre, he is at first excited about his new life. “Liberty,” he says anticipating Jane’s later desire, “I clasped in my arms for the first time and her smile and embrace revived my life.” All too soon, however, he finds himself shocked by his female students. Though they are supposedly reared “in utter unconsciousness of vice,” these girls take on an “air of bold, imprudent flirtation” with their male teacher, and he soon comes to the conclusion that “the root of this precocious impurity…is to be found in the discipline, if not the doctrines of the Church of Rome.” His assessment: “the mass of them [were] mentally depraved.”
A similarly flawed character with a European and Catholic background appears in Jane Eyre, again in an intriguing transposition. When Jane takes up her role as governess, she describes her new pupil, Adèle, a child of seven or eight years, chatting freely in French but “disinclined to apply” herself to her studies since she had not been systematically educated. Asked about her parents, she recalls her mother taught her “to dance and sing, and to say verse.” She recalls parties in which a “great many gentlemen and ladies came to see mamma, and I used to dance before them, or to sit on their knees and sing to them.” Jane accepts Adèle’s offer to perform, and “folding her little hands demurely before her, shaking back her curls, and lifting her eyes to the ceiling she commenced singing a song from some opera. It was the strain of a forsaken lady, who, after bewailing the perfidy of her lover, calls pride to her aid.” Jane observes, “The subject seemed strangely chosen for an infant singer; but I suppose the point of the exhibition lay in hearing notes of love and jealousy warbled with the lisp of childhood; and in very bad taste that point was: at least I though so.” “Rotten to the core” was the judgment Brontë made of her fellow female students in Brussels, and she clearly intends Adèle to represent yet another victim of continental decadence. As Mr. Rochester is later to put it, feeling sympathy for the destitute child of his French lover, he “took the poor thing out of the slime and mud of Paris” hoping to save her “to grow up clean in the wholesome soil of an English country garden.” The scene which the child recalls is indeed prurient. The little girl asked to sit on the knees of her mother’s adult male callers and sing songs of perfidy in love, trained—we see this in the folded hands, the tossed curls—to exploit the frisson of a sexualized child performing within the context of a morally corrupt Parisian setting. Charlotte Brontë’s righteous Protestantism rings loud and clear in this scene, and the challenge for Jane as governess is going to be not so much the obstreperous resistance of Agnes Grey’s writhing pupil Tom and his pen knife or Charlotte’s demanding charges at Stonegappe as it will be to somehow lead Adèle toward a healthier and more natural childhood; or, as Jane’s advertisement phrased it, “a good English education.”

Excerpted from The Secret History of Jane Eyre: How Charlotte Brontë Wrote Her Masterpiece by John Pfordresher. Copyright © 2017 John Pfordresher. With permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved.
Contributor
John Pfordresher is a professor of English at Georgetown University and the author of The Secret History of Jane Eyre: How Charlotte Brontë Wrote Her Masterpiece. He lives in Arlington, Virginia.


Happy Reading!

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Sunday, June 18, 2017

A Curious Beginning Review

A Curious Beginning (A Veronica Speedwell Mystery  by Deanna Raybourn

Genre:  Fiction

Publisher: Berkley

Source: Won from Lesa's Book Critiques
 https://lesasbookcritiques.blogspot.com/

Book Description:

In her thrilling new series, the New York Times bestselling author of the Lady Julia Grey mysteries, returns once more to Victorian England…and introduces intrepid adventuress Veronica Speedwell.

London, 1887. As the city prepares to celebrate Queen Victoria’s golden jubilee, Veronica Speedwell is marking a milestone of her own. After burying her spinster aunt, the orphaned Veronica is free to resume her world travels in pursuit of scientific inquiry—and the occasional romantic dalliance. As familiar with hunting butterflies as she is fending off admirers, Veronica wields her butterfly net and a sharpened hatpin with equal aplomb, and with her last connection to England now gone, she intends to embark upon the journey of a lifetime.

But fate has other plans, as Veronica discovers when she thwarts her own abduction with the help of an enigmatic German baron with ties to her mysterious past. Promising to reveal in time what he knows of the plot against her, the baron offers her temporary sanctuary in the care of his friend Stoker—a reclusive natural historian as intriguing as he is bad-tempered. But before the baron can deliver on his tantalizing vow to reveal the secrets he has concealed for decades, he is found murdered. Suddenly Veronica and Stoker are forced to go on the run from an elusive assailant, wary partners in search of the villainous truth. 

Review:

This was a wonderful read with a smart, education woman who isn't afraid to go after what she wants and lives life her way. When the Baron comes and takes her to a man's house and is told to stay with him to keep her safe, little does she know what's in store.

I like that Veronica is portrayed as a woman who's travelled on her own, has dalliances with men because it's healthy and fun and isn't your typical Victoria woman.

If you like historical novels and mysteries then this is the book for you. It's told from Veronica's point of view and has adventure, humor and is an all around good read.

Happy Reading!
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Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Reasons to Read before Bedtime


I came across this from https://www.bustle.com/p/9-reasons-why-you-should-read-before-bed-63326 and wanted to share with you.




9 Reasons Why You Should Read Before Bed

What does your typical bedtime routine look like? Do you snuggle under your recently washed sheets around 10:00 pm, a mug of warm milk in one hand and a Tolstoy novel in the other? Or do you flop into bed between one and five in the morning, eyes bloodshot, clutching your phone to your heart as you desperately scroll through photos of baby sloths? We all struggle to stick to a healthy bedtime routine. But if you can make it to bed with your favorite book, you might have a better night's sleep. Here are just a few of the reasons why you should read before bed.
Now I know what you're going to say, book-lovers: "Every time I read before bed, I end up staying up until dawn finishing my book! That can't be good for my skin and general temperament!" And no, medically speaking, it's not a great idea to read instead of sleeping. But if you can stick to just a chapter or three at bedtime, it could actually be good for your health.
So pry your phone out of your trembling hands about an hour before bed, and settle down with a good book (hot milk optional):

You’ll retain more
When you sleep, you brain dumps all of your short term memory goo into the long term memory goo-reserves (in a manner of speaking). That means that the things you read right before bed stick with you better in the long run. Read a book before drifting off, and you won't forget any minor plot points.

It’s screen-free time
We all know that we'll sleep better if we cut down on screens right before bed. And yet... most of us still fall asleep with our phones/laptops/video calculators pressed lovingly against our faces. But if you set aside bedtime for reading an analog, paper book, you get that rare screen-free time that your eyes desperately need.

It’s a calming ritual

If you have trouble getting to sleep, many doctors and bloggers will recommend a calming ritual to perform every night before bed. Reading is the perfect kind of ritual: it forces you to lie down and cut out the distractions, it's quiet, and it doesn't get boring because you're always reading something new.


You can’t skip it

Unless there is something terribly upsetting going on in your life right now, you go to sleep every single day. You can't skip bedtime more than once in a very great while without totally falling apart at the seams. So, if you make a habit out of reading before bed, you'll set aside time for reading every day, and end up reading more books than ever before.

You’ll de-stress

Reading is shown to reduce stress levels. And I don't know about you, but as soon as I get under the covers I immediately start ruminating on all of the things I have to do and all of the times I embarrassed myself in the third grade. Reading will ease some of your classic nighttime anxiety, so you can actually fall asleep instead of staring and the ceiling and worrying about honey bee deaths.

 

You’ll have better dreams

Do I have a very scientific source for this? Maybe not, but I've always found that whatever I read or watch right before bed heavily affects my dreams. So maybe steer clear of the Stephen King late at night, but feel free to read about exciting fantasy realms that you'd like to visit in your sleep.

You’ll be more focused

Not only does reading boost your concentration in general, reading before bed will help you concentrate more on whatever it is you're reading in the moment. You won't be battling ten thousand other distractions. You don't have to deal with other commuters. No one will (hopefully) stop you to ask what you're reading. Reading before bed is one of the few guaranteed moments of reading in peace.

You can read in privacy

It's a little easier to be emotionally open when you're reading in your own bed, and not at your work computer while your co-worker chews with their mouth open. You're free to laugh or ugly cry or Google word definitions to your heart's content when you're safe in your own bed.

It’ll help you sleep


It's true: reading before bed gives you a more restful night's sleep. Specifically, reading a book made of genuine paper (sorry, kindle-heads) will calm your brain and help you transition peacefully into dreamland without any glaring screens. So put aside that Netflix show based on a book, and pick up an actual book tonight before you hit the sack.

Happy Reading!

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Thursday, June 8, 2017

If You Liked...


If You Like…Try These

This is a new feature that I'll do from time to time. I know a lot of us like a particular author or genre and this post will hopefully help you discover new authors.

This time I'm highlighting books to try if you're a fan of The Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon. This list is from https://www.popsugar.com/.


The Queen of the Tearling  by Erika Johansen

This page-turner is about a young woman thrust into a position of power, learning many lessons about trust as she battles a fearsome enemy.

The Fortune Hunter by Daisy Goodwin

While The Fortune Hunter focuses on 19th century Austrian aristocracy, the tale is so much more than that. A love affair between a poor man, an heiress, and a wife trapped in a loveless marriage, this tale will have you drawn in within minutes.

Everything Forbidden by Jess Michaels

Something of a historical Fifty Shades of Grey, this erotic novel focuses on a young British woman who enters into a 90-day contract with a notoriously sensual neighbor. You'll grip the edge of your seat as you read through Miranda's sexual awakening and are certain to feel disappointment as the novel comes to an end.

The Midnight Witch  by Paula Brackston

Edwardian era witches, forbidden love, and a battle of dark magic are just a few of the captivating aspects of this novel. Will protagonist Lilith choose love or loyalty? You won't be able to put this book down until you find out!

Veil of Time by Claire R. McDougall

Another time-traveling romance, this book explores a modern woman's experiences as she falls in love with a man in ancient Scotland. While it is similar in concept to Outlander, the novel differentiates itself by focusing on royals instead of rebels. You won't be able to get enough!

Bound to the Highlander by Kate Robbins

A story of honor, duty, and love, this novel takes place in the same Scottish highlands that captivate Outlander readers. You won't be able to put down the novel until you find out the fate of Aileana, the beautiful woman at the center of this tale.

The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley

This novel follows the women in King Arthur's life, from his mother to his sister. Each woman has a unique journey, so you're in for multiple gripping love stories during this enchanting read.

The Daring Ladies of Lowell by Kate Alcott

A tale of scandal, murder, and romance, this novel is set in 19th century Massachusetts. You'll find yourself rooting for the protagonist as she boldly begins a new life for herself, encountering many interesting characters along the way.

Mine Till Midnight by Lisa Kleypas

In this captivating tale, the expectations of British society are turned upside down by a forbidden romance with between a high-society lady and a man with a dark past.

Mrs. Poe  by Lynn Cullen

A wife, a mistress, and a world-famous author make up the scandalous triangle at the center of Lynn Cullen's historical novel. This gripping story about Edgar Allan Poe's scandalous affair will have your "telltale heart" beating out of your chest.

Brazen by Katherine Longshore

Following in the steps of The Other Boleyn Girl, this book focuses on scandal and romance during Henry VIII's reign. Forbidden love between a wife and her husband, treason in the king's court, and strange Tudor-era traditions will keep you hooked until the last page.

Longbourn by Jo Baker

Pride and Prejudice reimagined through the eyes of the servants, Longbourn features all the best of Jane Austen's romance from a reimagined perspective that will keep you hooked until the conclusion.

Scarlet  by A. C. Gaughen

While there have been many retellings of Robin Hood over the years, none of them have been quite this sexy. Scarlet focuses on a woman in Robin Hood's band of thieves, keeping up with the "merry men" and capturing their hearts along the way.

Waterfall by Lisa T. Bergen

Featuring an American teenager transported back to medieval times, the first book in the River of Time series will have you plotting a way to get yourself stuck in 14th century Italy. There are tons of hot Italian guys, a few daring sword fights, and plenty of steamy romance to keep you hooked on these pages.

Hemlock by N.J. Layouni

When a heartbroken woman finds herself transported into ancient Scotland, romantic adventures ensue. If you liked Outlander, you'll love the similar plot of this fun romance.

Beautiful Wreck by Larissa Brown

This novel is unique in that it takes place in both the future and the past. From an unhappy future back to the days of the mighty Vikings, the story focuses on Ginn, a futuristic woman who falls for an ancient, unexpected hero. If you loved the time travel in Outlander, you'll adore this book!


Happy Reading!

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