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Archive for September, 2012

Library Lust

I have been thinking about children and reading a lot this week – inevitable, really, considering that I’ve just reread a couple of my own childhood favourites (Danny, the Champion of the World and This Can’t Be Happening at Macdonald Hall!) and am now reading a biography of A.A. Milne – so it seems the perfect time to feature this wonderful space.  Can you imagine being the lucky child who gets to retreat to this wonderful bookish nook, designed by Ann Wolf?  I think the curtains are my favourite feature; what child doesn’t dream of being able to close out the rest of the world to create a space where, as Wolf says, “your imagination can run wild”?

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Coming Soon

The books won’t be out until November 22, but the cover images for the Virago Modern Classics editions of High Rising and Wild Strawberries by Angela Thirkell have been released and don’t they look gorgeous?  Wild Strawberries holds a particularly special place in my heart as it served as my introduction to both Thirkell and Barsetshire.

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Dresden, as mentioned before, was surprisingly free of tourists.  Surely though the famous Saxon Switzerland (Sächsische Schweiz, which, let me tell you, is quite the tongue-twister when you’re out of practice with the language) region would be overrun with tourists?  Maybe even English-speaking ones?  Yes, we thought, that’s where they all must be, since they certainly weren’t at Moritzburg.  But no, there were no anglophones at the stunning Festung Königstein, a hilltop fortress perched above the Elbe, either.

The fortress is enormous.  We didn’t see the half of it during our visit but we did admire its most important offerings: the views.  Sitting on a plateau almost 250 meters above the river, you have a stunning panorama view of the hills, valleys and sandstone rock formations that Saxon Switzerland is famous for.  We were there on a warm but slightly hazy day so our views were not quite as spectacular as they might have been in cooler weather but they were still amazing.  It was easily one of the best days of the entire trip.

I even managed to find a beautifully-tended garden behind one of the residential buildings within the fortress walls (bottom image) to indulge my need to photograph flowers:

It was a wonderful day but, sadly, our last in Dresden.  Our three days in the area were brief but enough to make me want to go back, especially to explore more of Saxon (and neighbouring Bohemian) Switzerland.  I am very glad I got to see the city of Dresden but it was the surrounding areas I fell in love with.

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Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire from The Captive Reader and Marg from The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write up your post-feel free to steal the button-and link it using the Mr. Linky any time during the week. And of course check out what other participants are getting from their libraries.

I need to stop reading.  I am not sure that’s physically possible (in the last twenty years I think the longest I’ve gone without reading a book was a week, and that was only because I was too sick to concentrate) but it seems like what a good, responsible blogger would do in my current position.  I have a lot of reviews to write.  Like, a lot.  There are twenty alone for My Century of Books and just as many for my other challenges or simply for the edification of my readers (you really need to hear about The Adventures of Sally by Elizabeth von Arnim; it’s too wonderful to keep to myself).  But do I sit down and write these reviews?  No.  I pick up a book instead.  The last few weeks, in addition to my “normal” reading,  I’ve worked through all of Kristan Higgins’ romances (after having seen her mentioned a number of times by Lauren Willig) during what would usually be my blogging hours.  It was completely worth it as I had a lot of fun with those books (especially Just One of the Guys and The Next Best Thing – in case you’re looking for recommendations) but I’m starting to dread looking at my “to be reviewed” list now.  All this is to say, expect a quiet couple of weeks on the library loot front from now on as I attempt some catch up!

 

Summerhills by D.E. Stevenson – the sequel to Amberwell (which I borrowed and read in July).  It is funny reading that old Library Loot post now; in it, I said “I still have not made up my mind about D.E. Stevenson.”  Well, I certainly have now and I adore her (despite my disappointment with Miss Buncle’s Book).  I read this immediately after bringing it home and loved every moment.  I already have more ILL requests in for her other books.

Capital by John Lanchester – this is the only ‘big’ novel from 2012 that I’ve been desperate to read.  I’m sure I’ll get around to Sweet Tooth and NW next year or even the year after but everything I’ve heard about Capital – the good and the bad – has me excited to read it now.

A Thousand Farewells by Nahlah Ayed – I mentioned this in my book list for the Canadian Book Challenge so couldn’t resist picking it up when I saw it on the Fast Reads shelf at the library.  Ayed is a foreign correspondent with the CBC and has spent much of the past decade based in the Middle East.  This is a memoir of her experiences in the region, from childhood (when ”Ayed’s family gave up their comfortable life in Winnipeg for the squalor of a Palestinian refugee camp in Amman, Jordan”) to the present.

What did you pick up this week?

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When we travel, I am entirely responsible for planning our sightseeing activities and the more I researched the area around Dresden, the more obvious it became that there was one place we had to see: Moritzburg.

I love castles.  Maybe it is a result of watching too many Disney films growing up, being read too many fairy tales, or, more likely, being taken to the Czech Republic too many times, where castles are recklessly littered about the countryside.  Regardless, I love them, particularly colourful Baroque castles.  So when I realised that we were going to be but a half hour ride by city bus from Schloss Moritzburg while in Dresden, onto our itinerary it went.  After all, who could resist a visit to Cinderella’s castle?

I’m not sure how many of you are familiar with the Czech-German film Tři oříšky pro Popelku/Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel, though I’m going to guess very few.  From the early 1970s, it is a Christmas classic and one of my very favourite film adaptations.  I didn’t see it until I was in my teens but I instantly fell in love, thrilled to find a film version of the Cinderella story I’d grown up hearing from my grandmother.  Some of the filming was done at Moritzburg and during the winter the castle has a exhibit (in German and Czech) about the film that is apparently well worth seeing.  Sadly, we were there in the summer so rather than tour the inside of the castle (once you’ve seen a half dozen hunting castles, you’ve pretty much seen them all) we concentrated on exploring the grounds, which are beautiful.

There are actually two castles on the grounds: the large Schloss, an imposing yellow castle surrounded by an immaculate man-made lake, and the smaller Pheasant Castle, a delightful pink building a short walk away.  Both are lovely and the park that contains them is wonderful to walk through, containing forested areas, lake-side paths, and meadows.  We visited on a beautiful summer day and, like everywhere we visited in Saxony, there were very few tourists around – mostly grandmothers taking grandchildren on outings – so it felt as though we had the place to ourselves.

Though it was only a half-hour bus ride from Dresden, our day in Moritzburg really felt like a day in the country.  We spent hours wandering about the grounds and, when we got back to the town, we ate lunch next to a village green where white geese were sedately strolling under an avenue of trees alongside a ridiculously picturesque pond.  It was all rather idyllic.  And Dresden, once we got back to the city that night, was just as beautiful as ever:

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Library Lust

Time for something a bit more formal than usual.

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I reread Danny: The Champion of the World by Roald Dahl this afternoon for the first time in I don’t know how many years.  To be honest, I can’t remember the last time I read anything by Dahl and that upsets me a bit because when I was little, before I learned to read for myself, there was no author whose works were more familiar to me.  Before I came to know all the inhabitants of Avonlea intimately, before I had heard tell of the March sisters, even before I learned the directions to Neverland, I had half memorized (entirely memorized, in the case of Esio Trot) the works of Roald Dahl.

I don’t know why my father gravitated towards Dahl’s works.  Perhaps he had read James and the Giant Peach (published in 1961) and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964) in his childhood but our favourite books, the ones we went back to over and over and over again (like most children, I adored repetition), were books published when he was an adult and which we got to discover together: The BFG (1982), Esio Trot (1989), and Danny, the Champion of the World (1975).

Danny, for those who didn’t have the pleasure of meeting him either as children or adults, is a young boy who lives in a caravan with his father behind the filling station that his father owns and runs.  His mother died when he was only a few months old and so Danny’s entire life has revolved around his wonderful, amazing father.  He teaches Danny how to fix cars, showers him with love, and tells the best bedtime stories (including the story of the BFG).  Danny makes his feelings about his father quite clear from the beginning: “My father, without the slightest doubt, was the most marvellous and exciting father any boy ever had.”

When he is nine years old, Danny learns his father’s deep, dark secret: he is a poacher.  Or rather, he was before Danny was born – having been trained by his own father – but, now that Danny is older, is hoping to take it up again.  Especially since the local landowner Mr Hazell, an odious nouveau riche type who guards his pheasants and sneers at the locals, so thoroughly deserves to have his birds poached.  Danny, like any young boy, is intrigued.  When his father decides, on the eve of the big hunt, that Mr Hazell really deserves to be embarrassed in front of all his rich and important guests who hate their host but come for the excellent shooting, it is Danny who comes up with the cunning scheme which, when successfully carried out, makes him the Pheasant Poaching Champion of the World.

Dahl knew what he was doing when writing for children.  There is the stereotypical bad guy – Mr Hazell – but I think part of what makes this book so clever is how Danny slowly learns more about all of the adults in his life, whether it be his father, the village doctor, the local policeman, or even the vicar’s wife!  When you are little, these figures seem so distant and unapproachable and Dahl captures the moment of transition perfectly, when the child awakens to the fact that adults are people too and surprisingly complex ones at that.

But really, this book is entirely about Danny and his father.  Danny’s father is the parent all children wish for at one time or another.  All his attention and all his love belongs to Danny.  He makes a wonderful cosy home for them, shares all he knows about the natural world with his inquisitive son, and, most of all, he is fun to be with.  He lets Danny drive cars around the filling station, lays out midnight feasts when they can’t sleep at night, and just enjoys himself to the fullest.  He is daring and enthusiastic – without being reckless – and never happier than when sharing an adventure with his son.

It is suiting then that my memories of this book are mostly of my father.  The story had faded in my mind – though I did remember Danny’s ingenious poaching plan in stunning detail – but I have never forgotten being tucked into bed and listening to my father read this to me.  And every time he read it, because my father is not the kind of man who can tell a story once if he can tell it a dozen times, he would tell me about his grandfather, who, before coming to Canada, was a gamekeeper on an estate in Berkshire, responsible for keeping poachers like Danny and his father away from the pheasants.  And then he would tell me about his own childhood summers spent staying on his grandfather’s farm and so my bedtime stories turned into tales worthy of Danny’s father and, like Danny, I hung on every word.

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Library Loot: September 19-25

Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire from The Captive Reader and Marg from The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write up your post-feel free to steal the button-and link it using the Mr. Linky any time during the week. And of course check out what other participants are getting from their libraries.

Marg has the Mr Linky this week!

Surprised by Oxford by Carolyn Weber –Described as “the memoir of a skeptical agnostic who comes to a dynamic personal faith in God during graduate studies in literature at Oxford University”, this got a surprisingly good review in the Washington Post last year and I’d been eager to try it ever since.  I read it immediately after picking it up and, have to say, I was not particularly impressed.  It sounds intriguing but evangelical cant, terribly-written dialogue and a generally shallow exploration of why Weber was drawn to Christianity (as far as I can tell, a handsome young man started telling her bible stories – which she, a graduate student in literature, had apparently never read before – and that was all it took) made for a disappointing read.  On the other hand, the bits about Oxford are nice.

The Underwater Welder by Jeff Lemire – I loved Essex County and as soon as I discovered (through Ana’s review) that Lemire had a new book out I rushed to place a hold on it.

Painter of Silence by Georgina Harding – I have had a hold on this for ages but clearly it was fate that it arrive this week, since both Iris and Teresa have just posted their reviews, making me even more intrigued to get started.

What did you pick up this week?

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Library Lust

photograph by Ted Yarwood

Bright enough for you?

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If the first thing you notice about Dresden is its beauty, the second is the lack of tourists.  Part of it was the time of year we were there (what self-respecting European takes their August vacation in a city?) but, at the same time, this lovely city seems almost bizarrely unused to dealing with foreigners.  We spent three days in the area, staying in the city but also visiting sights outside of Dresden, and not once did we come across a single English-speaking tourist.  The only person we spoke in English with during the entire visit was the desk clerk at the hotel, who was delighted to get some practice.   German and Czech tourists dominate but, even then, they are surprisingly few.  It was a bit eerie and rather sad that such a wonderful area is so empty but it was also fabulously convenient – I hate crowds and there were definitely no line ups with which to contend.

Our first afternoon in Dresden the weather was perfect and as soon as we’d checked into our hotel (right on the Elbe with a view of the Old Town), we were off!  We walked for hours around the Old Town, admiring the Semperoper, exploring the Zwinger courtyard and balconies, strolling along Brühl’s Terrace and marvelling at the intricacy of the Procession of Princes mural, which is made up of 25,000 porcelain tiles.   We of course visited the Frauenkirche, which looks marvellous as part of the Dresden skyline once more.  The exterior is gorgeous but the interior is horrifically tacky, a riot of Baroque pastels done in cheap materials.  It was a quick tour of the major sights but, to be frank, it was all we were looking to do.  Dresden was our base for this leg of the trip, not a major destination in its own right.  It was the perfect place to come back to after long, busy days spent elsewhere when you longed for a good meal and a relaxed environment.

The most appealing thing about the city itself has to be the well-used park and paths that run along the Elbe.  Every day and night there were groups of friends, courting couples, and laid back readers sprawled out on the grass.  On the nearby paths, bikers, runners and pedestrians moved past at varying speeds and, wherever you were, you had stunning views across the river.  And if you got thirsty or hunger, thank goodness there were beer gardens nearby, one on either side of the bridge that leads to the Old Town.  It was all rather perfect.

Next up: we visit Cinderella‘s castle!

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