Merry Christmas

Teaga, a Leonberger, in her Christmas cracker hat Merry Christmas!  I hope Santa brings you many lovely books and that you have a wonderful day.

I’m taking a break until New Year’s Eve (although we’re still dealing with any last-minute orders at Glenogle & Bell) and I’m looking forward to some wintry beach walks, highly-charged board game sessions and curling up with some of the marvellous books on my to-be-read bookcase.

lots of love, Ness. x

PS – this is our much-loved, much-missed Leonberger, Teaga. She thought she ws a princess and I think she looks rather regal in her Christmas cracker hat!

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Advent calendar 24th December – The book I’d most like to find under the tree

The Dorothy L. Sayers Mysteries Collection bookThis is an almost impossible question for me to answer. If a book is in print and I want it, then I acquire it, either purchasing it myself or if it might be a title for Glenogle & Bell subscribers then I ask the publisher for a reading copy. So if I’m dropping Christmas present hints (too late now but my birthday is in early February…) then it needs to be a book that I wouldn’t ordinarily buy for myself.

I adore Folio Society books – those beautiful cloth bindings, the slipcases which although not pretty in themselves save the books inside from bumped corners, and the the paper… oh the smell of their paper! Folio editions are produced in short print runs and so if I’m too late for a copy or too stingy to buy one at full price then I have to hunt around for a secondhand copy.

I’ve written before about how I adore the novels of Dorothy L Sayers and if I was to unwrap anything under the tree it would be one of the two box sets – this one or preferably this one as it contains Gaudy Night – that The Folio Society produced. And I still haven’t read most of the Lord Peter Wimsey short stories. But as no-one buys me books for fear of duplication maybe I’ll just have to treat myself…

I hope you’ve found this Advent Calendar interesting and that I’ve suggested a few books that you might want to discover yourself. As I spend so much time with new books I’ve enjoyed looking back and thinking about what are my favourite books and which have influenced me the most. Thank you for reading along with me.

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Advent calendar 23rd December – My book of the year

Life After Life, Kate Atkinson‘s novel which told the story of Ursula Todd again and again through the twentieth century, was a massive success winning prizes and enthralling readers. For her next book, A God In Ruins, she turned her attention to one of the more minor characters, Ursula’s brother Teddy as his life develops after his time as a World War Two bomber pilot, a life he sometimes didn’t expect to have. I won’t talk more about the plot as the meaning, the essence of the book is revealed in the final chapters but the title comes from Ralph Waldo Emerson: “A man is a god in ruins. When men are innocent, life shall be longer, and shall pass into the immortal, as gently as we wake from dreams”.

Many have lauded this book as Kate Atkinson’s masterpiece and that is how you choose a book of the year I think. Not a thriller that everyone’s talking about or a Twitter-hyped non-fiction memoir, but a novel that will stand the test of time. It’s out in paperback on New Year’s Eve.

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Advent calendar 22nd December – My favourite Christmas book

Doing Christmas by Sarah GarlandLike books set in Edinburgh, there are so many Christmas books to choose from, but my favourite is Doing Christmas by Sarah Garland. We came across this when The Son was a baby and that sun-faded, slightly chewed board book is very precious to me. I love Sarah Garland’s illustrations and when we had the bookshop we stocked all of her books simply because – and we sold masses too as customers fell in love with her work.

Doing Christmas is the wry and warm story of a family of three – harrassed mother, bright-eyed five(ish) year old and mischievous toddler – getting ready for Christmas and the arrival of Granny who’s all red sports car and wine bottle-clinking bag, supplemented by wildy inappropriate gifts. They all have a lovely day of food and family and the obligatory post-lunch walk and it’s utterly charming. I love it very much and it’s as much a part of our Christmas as The Snowman.

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Advent calendar 21st December – A book set where you live

44 Scotland Street

Living in Edinburgh, I have a multitude of books to choose for this category. Rebus roams the streets solving crime, as does Isabel Dalhousie while Jean Brodie visits Cramond – formerly a village now a suburb – on the edge of the city. Esme Lennox is confined in an asylum, giving an insight into how ‘inconvenient’ women were treated in the 1930s and ’40s in Maggie’s O’Farrell’s wonderful The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox while in Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh we come face-to-face with the heroin addicts of 1980s Edinburgh. If I still lived in my home town of Worcester things would be harder – Radclyffe Hall was born in the county and MC Beaton’s Agatha Raisin lives in nearby Evesham but that’s about it.

The book I’ve chosen though is 44 Scotland Street by Alexander McCall Smith, originally written as a daily serial for The Scotsman newspaper. Scotland Street is a real place, although there’s no number 44, and the characters that live in the flats that make up that building are very real to anyone who lives in the city centre as I do. There is Irene, the painfully pushy mother of the hapless Bertie; Angus the painter and ostensible master of Cyril, the dog with a gold tooth; Bruce the narcissist and Pat his luckless flatmate; anthropologist Domenica McDonald… so many, all so sharply drawn and, although exaggerated, instantly recognisable to anyone who walks through the New Town past those flats and drinks coffee in the cafes there. Edinburgh is a village and these are its people. Almost. Well worth reading if you haven’t already – the way that McCall Smith uses language is a joy and his story-telling is warm and perceptive.

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