Advent calendar 5th December – The Book I Wish I’d Written

One Good Turn by Kate AtkinsonThis was a really difficult category to choose a book for. I looked along the shelves at home and there were so many I could have chosen but I decided in the end to pick One Good Turn by Kate Atkinson. It’s a crime novel – second in the adapted for tv Jackson Brodie series – but it’s so much more. Complex in its plot, rich in its characters, precise in its language, Stephen King called it “the best mystery of the decade”. One violent act of road-rage is witnessed by many and it’s implications and the resulting events spin out from that. Jackson Brodie is the main protagonist, but Atkinson tells the story from the point of view of a number of other characters.

I’d love to have written this because it takes the familiar crime novel tropes, embraces some (Brodie drinks too much and has a very particular taste in music) and discards others, keeping only the ones she needs for her story and then executes that story beautifully. There’s a depth that seems effortless but obviously isn’t. Crime writing is often dismissed as somehow lesser but Atkinson reminds readers that it is more than just disposable holiday reading but rather a genre which reminds all of us of our own mortality and morality.

If you haven’t discovered the Jackson Brodie series then go and buy Case Histories as soon as you can. And do leave a comment telling me which book you’d love to have written.

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Advent calendar – 4th December. Favourite scary book

Dracula by Bram Stoker - almost the original and certainly the best vampire story. Vampire stories originate in centuries old legends from eastern Europe, made it into literature with a now little-known novel by John Polidori but hit the big time with the perennially popular Dracula by Bram Stoker in 1897. Other vampire stories, spinning off into werewolves and the like, have proliferated since with teenage vampires, Hammer House of Horror vampires and even a semi-reformed vampire hospital porter who flatshares with a ghost and a werewolf.

But Dracula is still the best for a Hallowe’en read under the covers or by the fire on a stormy night. And I love this edition from Penguin, all French flaps and deckle edges. One for your Christmas list.

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Advent Calendar 3rd December – Most memorable opening line

I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith. Folio society editionSo many options for this leap to mind*, but my choice is from Dodie Smith’s I Capture the Castle. It’s almost the perfect book but that opening line: “I write this sitting in the kitchen sink” is so memorable, humorous and intriguing. I re-read this book every year or two and always find delight in it. The copy in the picture is my Folio Society edition. There are other editions in the house – a wrinkled, reading in the bath copy and a more respectable paperback… Smith is best known now for 101 Dalmations but this is her masterpiece.

*Iain Banks’ The Crow Road was a close second with “It was the day my grandmother exploded.” Tricky things, pacemakers.

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Advent Calendar 2nd December – Favourite Cover

Day 2 of the Glenogle & Bell advent calendar is favourite cover and I've chosen Chris Riddell's illustration for Coraline by Neil GaimanChoosing a favourite cover was really hard – design has really come on in the last few years and there are some very eye-catching book jackets around. To make my shortlist though, I wanted to pick a book that had went beyond just fabulous graphic design. Chris Riddell’s illustrations are wonderful (he’s a great writer too – for confident younger readers his Ottoline and Goth Girl series are brilliant and The Son loved the Fergus Crane series) and the work he’s done with Neil Gaiman has produced some award-winning books. The Graveyard Book was one of the first he illustrated (shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal while the narrative by Gaiman won the companion Carnegie Medal) but I prefer this edition of Coraline by a whisker.

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Advent Calendar 1st December: Childhood Favourite

AdvFor the first day of the Glenogle & Bell advent calendar it's a childhood favourite and this is one of mine: Jill's Gymkhana by Ruby FergusonThis book comes under the heading of a childhood favourite and a comfort read and I’ve re-read it so many times. It’s the story of Jill Crewe who moves to the country with her widowed mother and desperately wants to learn to ride. How she manages to learn and how she acquires her first pony finally achieving her goal of riding in her first gymkhana is the meat of the book but it’s told in a humourous first person narrative that never talks down to the reader. I love it still and it’s also amazing how many ‘Jill-isms’ have made it into my life – to this day I’m wary of swinging a bucket in case I hurt my wrist [see a later book in the series] and I share her view of chickens as being rather soulless creatures.

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