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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Purple Book Club



Autumn Reading for the Purple Book Club



Here is the list of suggested books.


Please make your 1st and 2nd choice in the comment box. I’ll collate the votes and put the most popular book choice on the Book Forum. Then we can all get reading!




A Toss of a Lemon

Padma Viswanathan

About Brahmin life in India over several generations of a woman's family. A great chronicle and narrative.



Daphne

Justine Picardie

The story begins in 1957 when Daphne du Maurier discovers her husband's affair. She's researching her biography of Branwell Bronte and the mysteries of the Bronte sister's manuscripts is the second storyline. The final interwoven strand is that of a modern day PhD research student with a du Maurier fascination.



Finding Pegasus

Terry Church

A true life story that later inspired the Horse Whisperer. One woman's search to have a greater understanding of her horses and inner peace for herself .



Notes from an Exhibition

Patrick Gale

The fragments of a successful, but enigmatic and tormented, artist's life are slowly revealed to her Quaker husband and their grownup children after her death.



Suite Francaise

Irene Nemrikovski

Irene Nemirovsky was a successful writer in 1930’s Paris. She’d been born in Russia and her family fled to France at the time of the Russian Revolution. When Germany occupied Paris, she and her husband fled to the countryside with their 2 daughters. Although she had converted to Catholicism, she was arrested and sent to Auschwitz where she died. Her husband also later died there. After evacuating from Paris to a small town in the French Countryside, she had begun writing what would become Suite Francais



The Birth House

Amy McColl

Tradition clashes with modernity set in a small Nova Scotia village in the early 20th century, this is reminiscent of the works of Annie Proulx and Chris Bohjalian.
(infertility, difficult labour, breech births, unwanted pregnancies, and even unfulfilling marriages, they're all in this book?)




The Brief History of the Dead

Kevin Brockmejer

O.K. I know I promised no more frozen waste stories but this comes well recommended.


'In a city between earth and heaven the inhabitants all have one thing in common. They all know Laura Byrd, and more importantly, she knows them. She stranded in the cold expanse of Antarctica oblivious to the importance of her survival, while they roam the city in search of the reason for their coming together.'


The Memory Keeper's Box

Kim Edwards

About a family who have a baby with Downs syndrome, there is a shocking act of betrayal. Lots of grief and secrets



The Friday Night Knitting Club

Kate Jacobs

Love, life, knitting and yarns and everything else - a bit like Purple Coo really



The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society Mary Anne Schaffer


Set in 1946, a writer receives a letter from a Guernsey farmer who has found a book she once owned. A wonderful correspondence ensues between the writer and various members of the Potato Peel Pie Society (romance , humour and tragic historical detail)



The Uncommon Reader

Alan Bennet

A deliciously funny novella that celebrates the pleasure of reading



Wintersmith

Terry Pratchet

3rd title in the Tiffany Aching (Discworld) series. An imaginative yarn. Winter mistakes Tiffany for the Summer Lady and falls in love with her - All of T.Ps usual magical larks.



44 Scotland Street

Alexander McCall-Smith

Vintage McCall Smith, tackling issues of trust and honesty, snobbery and hypocrisy, love and loss, but all with a great lightness of touch.

(The painting is The magician by Gustave Singier)

20 comments:

JanetD said...

I would like to vote for In search of Pegasus, totally different from any book I'd read but sounds intriguing LL

Westerwitch/Headmistress said...

1st Choice wintersmith

2nd Choice wintersmith

next 10 choices . . . wintersmith . .

So there neah - see I did vote this time . . .

Westerwitch/Headmistress said...

Waves Chainsaw . . . .

toady said...

1. Friday Night Knitting Club because SBS has kndly sent it to me and am enjoying it so far.
2. Guernsey LPPS - sounds intriguing.

Toady

Inthemud said...

What an interesting selection of excellent titles. I will pick one I didn't nominate because I've heard it is brlliant and one I did because I'm already reading it and finding it such a good read

1) The Uncommon Reader

2) Finding Pegasus

snailbeachshepherdess said...

1 Daphne
2 The Birth House

could we have a shorter time span to read the book this time please? Creeping away head down >>>>I kept wishing for it to hurry up so I could have another to start on>>>>yes I know it was my fault coz I threw the last one at the wall....but I have now read Two Caravans a listed book from a previous vote and The Friday Noght Knitting Club form this one....swot.. Iknow!!!

Pondside said...

1) The Friday Night Knitting Club

2)The Birth House

Frances said...

1st choice The Uncommon Reader

2nd choice 44 Scotland Street

I would be happy to read any of the other books, as well. Thanks to everyone for the suggestions!

Wooly Works said...

#1: 44 Scotland Street
#2: The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.

Norma Murray said...

1. Friday Night Knitting Club
2. Notes from an Exhibition

patsy said...

Hmmm, I suggested 44 Scotland Street, easy holiday reading but I wonder if it's high brow enough for serious literary review?
Alan Bennett's Uncommon Reader I read ages ago as I love anything by this author.
So..
First choice, "A Toss of Lemon", I love a book that takes you somewhere you've never been, and the chronicle over several generations sounds fascinating.
Second choice, just because of the title! The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.

And thank for your time spent on this Lampworkbeader!

Withy Brook said...

44 Scotlanf Street
Finding Pegasus.

NOT wintersmith grrrr.

Kathleen said...

#1: A Toss of a Lemon

#2: The Friday Night Knitting Club

sumarell said...

1. Uncommon Reader

2. Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society

Cait O'Connor said...

The Uncommon Reader
Notes from an Exhibition

Milla said...

the patrick gale for me. Love Alan Bennett but the book can be read in half an hour so does it really need 3 months??

Kitty said...

1. 44 Scotland Street - favourite book, an excuse to read again. Agree with Patsy not high literature, but plenty of characters to discuss (and someone can explain an 'en brosse' haircut to me).
2. Unconmmon Reader
3. Knitting club

Exmoorjane said...

1. GLPPS
2. Toss of a Lemon
3. The Birth House

Ivy said...

Found it at last!
1st choice:
The Friday Night Knitting Club
Kate Jacobs


2nd choice:
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society Mary Anne Schaffer

Hannah Velten said...

1st Choice: Finding Pegasus

2nd Choice: 44, Scotland Street

Hope this comes inside the deadline! Mootia x