Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
City of light by Lauren Belfer
Buffalo, New York - 1901. Electricity is stilled viewed as scary magic by some and a possible economic boon by others. The city is preparing for the Pan American Exposition and there is a environmental controversy brewing about the affect of power generating plants on the free flowing waters of Niagara Falls. The drama in the story centers around Louisa Barrett. As head mistress of a well regarded private school for girls, a confirmed spinster, and a significant figure in the intellectual life of the city, Louisa has access to some of the most powerful political and business circles in Buffalo. But Louisa has secrets to keep - some her own and some of the students she teaches. The book is 689 pages but there are many different layers to this story - life at the beginning of the 20th century - the role of women - the beginning of the electrical age - so it's a big story to consider and worth the read.
Labels: Historical Fiction
First Impressions by Charlie Lovett
The subtitle is A Novel of Old Books, Unexpected Love and Jane Austen. I'm not a Jane Austen fan so it was a bit of a slow start but once the mystery, revealed in parallel and alternating chapters, kicked in, I was hooked. One story begins in 1796 with a young Jane Austen as the central character. The other is a contemporary story in the English countryside where the young book lover, Sophie Collingwood, is grieving the loss of her favorite uncle and the further loss of the family's extensive library. The object at the center of attention in both is the one and only copy of a little book written by the Rev. Mansfield, close friend of Jane. The book was once in the Collingwood library. In the book was a story that would grow up to be Pride and Prejudice. Did Jane Austen steal her most famous novel from her elderly friend and is this mystery somehow connected to her uncle's mysterious death? The fact that Lovett moves so easily between the style of the Victorian novel and contemporary writing was one of my favorite parts of this book - one every bibliophile would enjoy.
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