The Bookman’s Tale: A Novel of Obsession – Charlie Lovett

AuthorCharlie Lovett
PublisherPenguin Books
Date28 May 2013
EditionKindle-edition
Pages369 (print)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB00AFPVQN0

“But Amanda was dead – buried nine months ago in the red earth of North Carolina, an ocean away. A heartbeat away. And this painting, so much older than Amanda or her mother or her grandmother, could not possibly portray her. But it did.” (Quotation page 3)

Content

When Amanda Byerly dies at the age of only twenty-nine, she leaves her husband Peter, filled with deep grief. He leaves America and moves to the cottage in Kingham, England, which they had bought and renovated together. Here he leads a completely secluded life, withdrawn from everybody, friends and family. Until one cold February day he enters a bookshop in Hay-on-Wye and flipping through the pages of an old, beautifully bound book, he finds a piece of paper, a definitely Victorian watercolour. The painting shows a woman who looks like Amanda. His grief, together with his curiosity as an antiquarian bookseller tell him that he had to solve this mystery, to find out everything about a hundred-year-old portrait of his wife, born 1966, hidden in a first edition from 1796 about Shakespeare forgeries. Who was the artist of the watercolour, which shows only the initials B.B. and could this quest bring Peter Byerly back to real life?

Theme and Genre

This novel is about old books, bookbinding and restoring, about valuable collections of antiquarian books, but also about friendship, family, family secrets and love. It is a story of fiction with historical literary background.

Characters

The main character of the story is Peter Byerly, bibliophile, booklover and expert for antiquarian books. Historical characters, Shakespeare and other Elizabethan writers, famous book collectors and librarians as well as famous forgers surround him.

Plot and Writing

The story moves between four storylines, the actual researches of Peter Byerly take place between February 15 and February 22, 1995, with an epilogue in June 1995. The second timeline is the story of Peter and Amanda, and takes place in Ridgefield between 1983 and 1994. The two historical timelines cover the period between 1592 and 1720 and from 1856 to 1876. This combination of fiction and facts is interesting and fascinating, lively and still believable.

Conclusion

An interesting, entertaining story and a cozy, enjoyable read, not only for booklovers.

Howards End is on the Landing: A year of reading from home – Susan Hill

AuthorSusan Hill
PublisherProfile Books
Date6 August 2010
EditionKindle
Pages244 (print-version)
LanguageEnglish
ASINB003ZDNWMC

“I found the book I was looking for in the end, but by then it had become far more than a book. It marked the start of a journey through my own library.” (Quotation page 1)

Theme and Content

It was an early autumn afternoon, when Susan Hill’s travel through the shelves begins. She was looking for this one book and found many others, long forgotten or never read.

Therefore, she makes the decision to begin a special reading year, reading just books from her shelves, without buying new ones. During this reading year, the author would also shorten the internet hours. It was not a kind of resolution or mission for her, just a personal decision to re-explore read and unread books in her house, although she soon finds out, that there are books for much longer than one year.

Plot and Writing

This book is a kind of diary, a story about Susan Hill’s life as reader, as author of fiction and non-fiction, and her own publishing company, Long Barn Books. She shares with us her memories about her childhood and youth in Scarborough and about the related books she still loves and keeps on her shelves, together with the newer children books that her daughters loved when they were children. There are memories of interesting BBC interviews for “Bookshelf” and of enriching conversations with other well-known authors. One chapter is about writing fiction and she remembers: “Writing fiction was not regarded as something you did as a set task at a set time every day, let alone with a regular target of words. Those who saw things this way had never, of course, tried either and certainly never had to work to a deadline, let alone earn a living by writing.” (Quotation page 184). While sharing her stories and memories with us, she takes books out of the different shelves to find forty books for this reading year, finally sharing her list of the “Final Forty” with us. “I am taking out far too many books. I need at least another year of reading from home. But now I have reached the landing and here it is. Howard’s End.” (Quotation page 234)

Conclusion

Howards End is on the Landing is a book about a lifetime of reading and writing, an interesting, enjoyable read for passionate readers where one will find inspiring titles not yet read but could also, like me, feel confirmed to do the same, start a year of reading through your own shelves of still unread books.