Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Congratulations Therese!

I drew names from a hat - my favorite technique - and my old mission companion Therese (T-baby) won the pumpkin mix. Of course I picked the one in England and now have to go to the post office and figure out how to send overseas. I do feel sorry for the rest of you and will consider the cd pleas, though I am a scattered mess around here so you never know.

Is anyone making the cookies? I want to hear about it!

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

The Daughter of Time


I chatted very briefly once with a woman at church about books, and I mentioned that I love mysteries. The next week she brought me two of her favorites, and luckily they were both pretty short so I had a shot at finishing them.

The first was The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey. I make no claim to be especially well-read or a great knower of authors but I admit I was taken aback when, in his glowing introduction, Robert Barnard (a fellow mystery writer) proclaimed Ms. Tey to be one of the greatest mystery writers of all time. Not only that, but several singular and collective sources point to The Daughter of Time as one of the best mysteries of all time. I'd never heard of either of them. So I was obviously anxious to jump in.

It wasn't quite what I expected. It was neither thrilling nor suspenseful. But it was admittedly enjoyable and sometimes gripping. Basically a police detective, hospital bedridden with a broken leg and bored senseless, becomes intrigued by a painting of Richard III his friend brings him. A student of faces, he decides the face in the painting does not match the legend associated with Richard, which is that he was a monster and murdered his two young nephews. He orders books and eventually acquires a research assistant to run back and forth to the British Museum, and through historical facts and deductive conversations they conclude a new truth about Richard and his nephews. The title comes from an old proverb:

"Truth is the daughter of time."

True, it was remarkably well-written and a fun piece of deductive detection to follow - good for keeping your brain tuned - but just not very exciting. Especially when you don't know - or care - anything about British history whatsoever, which is what the whole book is about. You're lucky to remember where your keys are. So yes, I'd say it was good. But it's #4 on the Mystery Writers of America Top 100 Mysteries of All Time, so it must be really good if you're a mystery writer, and really really good if you're a Richard III supporter.

Friday, April 25, 2008

The Great Brits

Well I talked to Dave tonight - they have found and "moved in" to their house but do not have much internet access (except at the library) until May 7 so he asked me to do a quickie update for our overlapping readership. They're in an awesome 5-bedroom Victorian townhouse in town and don't know what they'll do with all the space. Cry me a river. Their stuff doesn't arrive for another few weeks so they have crappy loaner furniture from the base but at least they're out of the temporary flat and can start to settle in. They are making friends at work and at church, and in fact many people are in both circles, so it feels like a close community. So that's the gist - email me if you want their phone number and I'll decide if you deserve it.
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