This winter has been a disappointment: it’s bloody cold, but with no snow. It’s impossible to keep our house warm, even with extra loft insulation and new double-glazed windows (home ownership is boring and overrated), so I’m ready for signs of spring. Maybe by the time I review a second batch of seasonal reads in February, winter will truly be on its way out.
A Place Called Winter by Patrick Gale (2015)
This was our January book club read. We’d had good luck with Gale before: his Notes from an Exhibition received our joint highest rating ever. As he’s often done in his fiction, he took inspiration from family history: here, the story of his great-grandfather Harry Cane, who emigrated to the Canadian prairies to farm in the most challenging of conditions. Because there is some uncertainty as to what precipitated his ancestor’s resettlement, Gale has chosen to imagine that Harry, though married and the father of a daughter, was in fact gay and left England to escape blackmailing and disgrace after his affair with a man was discovered.
There are very evocative descriptions of the pioneer life, lightened for Harry by his relationship with his closest neighbours, siblings Petra and Paul. The novel covers the First World War and the start of the Spanish flu epidemic, which provide much fodder for melodrama, but somehow I don’t mind it from Gale. Harry himself is so diffident as to seem blank, but that means he is free to become someone else in a new land. My other main criticism would be that the villain is implausibly evil. Some of our book club members also thought there were too many coincidences. Gale really makes you feel for these characters and their suffering, though. Sexuality and mental health, both so misunderstood at that time, are the two main themes and he explores them beautifully. In that both are historical fiction where homosexuality is simply a fact of life, not a titillating novelty, this reminded me a lot of Days Without End by Sebastian Barry. (Free from mall bookshop)
A Winter Book: Selected Stories by Tove Jansson (2006)
[Translated from the Swedish by Silvester Mazzarella, David McDuff and Kingsley Hart]
A brief second review for Nordic FINDS. It’s the third time I’ve encountered some of these autofiction stories: this was a reread for me, and 13 of the pieces are also in Sculptor’s Daughter, which I skimmed from the library a few years ago. And yet I remembered nothing; not a single one was memorable. Most of the pieces are impressionistic first-person fragments of childhood, with family photographs interspersed. In later sections, the protagonist is an older woman, Jansson herself or a stand-in. I most enjoyed “Messages” and “Correspondence,” round-ups of bizarre comments and requests she received from readers. Of the proper stories, “The Iceberg” was the best. It’s a literal object the speaker alternately covets and fears, and no doubt a metaphor for much else. This one had the kind of profound lines Jansson slips into her children’s fiction: “Now I had to make up my mind. And that’s an awful thing to have to do” and “if one doesn’t dare to do something immediately, then one never does it.” A shame this wasn’t a patch on The Summer Book. (Free from a neighbour)
Original rating in 2012:
Rating now:
Averaged rating:
And a DNF:
Winter’s Tale by Mark Helprin (1983)
Laila (Big Reading Life) and I attempted this as a buddy read, but we both gave up on it. I got as far as page 53 (in the 600+-page pocket paperback). The premise was alluring, with a magical white horse swooping in to rescue Peter Lake from a violent gang. I also appreciated the NYC immigration backstory, but not the adjective-heavy wordiness, the anachronistic exclamations (“Crap!” and “Outta my way, you crazy midget” – this is presumably set some time between the 1900s and 1920s) or the meandering plot. It was also disturbing to hear about Peter’s sex life when he was 12. From a Little Free Library (at Philadelphia airport) it came, and to a LFL (at the Bar Convent in York) it returned. Laila read a little further than me, enough to tell the library patron who recommended it to her that she’d given it a fair try.
Any snowy or icy reading (or weather) for you lately?
I’m not surprised you DNFd Winter’s Tale—I’ve not read it but have heard it’s deeply Marmite, and from the knowledge it’s sometimes shelved as magical realism, I’ve never felt the urge to pick it up! So sorry to hear about your cold/insulation problems; it’s shocking how hard it is to keep heat in. Here’s hoping for an early spring!
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s been a while since I sank into a proper doorstopper; it’s a shame this one didn’t work out!
We think the weak link now is draughts coming up between our bare floorboards in two rooms and the hall, so we’re going to get insulation under them soon.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good idea! Amazing the tiny cracks a draught can whistle through.
LikeLike
Patrick Gale can do no wrong on my eyes. and I remember enjoying A Place called Winter quite a while ago now. I STILL haven’t read any Jansson, but it looks as if you wouldn’t recommend A Winter Book as my starting point. Winter’s Tale? Just … naah. This renter is here to tell you that we have the best landlords anyone could wish for and delightful accommodation.but we are STILL freezing. I think we can expect no better from a property whose foundations date from the middle ages.
LikeLiked by 2 people
The Summer Book was an excellent one from Jansson if you’re looking for one of her adult books rather than a Moomins adventure.
Our house is Edwardian and hadn’t been modernized when we moved in. In fact, it had barely been touched since the 1970s. So we have a lot to do to make it warm in the greenest ways possible. At least when we identify a problem we can get it sorted out; if we’d waited on our landlords to fix things in the previous place, we’d have been waiting forever.
I went for a walk to our local park this afternoon and found lots of snowdrops out, so that cheered me up.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good! Meanwhile, at home, you’ll have to heat the person, not the space. It sort of works. And it’ll be lovely when you get it right. Cool in the New Summer Temperatures!
LikeLiked by 1 person
We have an electric throw blanket for that reason. But our infrared panel heaters were struggling to even get the place to 12C during the coldest weeks. It was lovely and cool here in the summer, though, even in a heatwave.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I keep meaning to look for more Patrick Gale after enjoying A Place Called Winter.
LikeLiked by 2 people
He has a big back catalogue to explore. Some of his early works have very bizarre titles!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting! Is there one you recommend?
LikeLike
Notes from an Exhibition is the only other one I’ve actually read, but I’d highly recommend it. (As to the weird titles: The Aerodynamics of Pork, Little Bits of Baby, Tree Surgery for Beginners, etc.)
LikeLike
May I suggest either Notes on an Exhibition or Take Nothing With You! Mind you, I also enjoyed his Perfectly Good Man and Mother’s Boy. His short stories Gentleman’s Relish are a bit different (and evil).
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I really enjoyed the Gale as did our Book Group. I read the Helprin back in my 20s when it first came out and loved it then – I couldn’t read it now!
LikeLiked by 1 person
He’s been our book club star thus far. Meg Wolitzer has also been reliable, although we liked The Wife much more than Belzhar.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Funny story: the patron came in and I told her I’d read about 100 pages of Winter’s Tale and it wasn’t for me. She said, “Okay, fair enough,” and then she started telling me I needed to read another of his books, A Soldier of the Great War. It’s also a DOORSTOPPER. I immediately said, “Thanks, but I’m not going to read him.” I was firm without being mean, ha ha. My co-worker said she was impressed by how I remained strong! My patron is well-meaning but she is a little too forceful sometimes. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ha, she’s persistent for sure! It was good of you to try her suggestion, but I agree I wouldn’t pick up anything else by Helprin, at least not for a long while.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Have to put in a good word for Mark Helprin’s “Paris in the Present Tense”. Wonderfully interesting story and characters all in an endlessly fascinating city……..and a love story too!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I agree the Jansson title is a mixed bag, but I’d still like to revisit it – and the iceberg tale sticks in my mind too, a weird mix of real and surreal. I also want to reread the pieces in Art in Nature, the first Jansson I read, with some impressive short stories.
And yes, old houses – they eat your money and still there’s always more to do to make them more habitable. Commiserations.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It certainly feels like a money pit right now. At some point in the future I guess we’ll be able to look back and say we’re happy with it and we’ve made it better.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’ve read a few icy thrillers. Loved The Drift by CJ Tudor which was very silly.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It probably didn’t get very cold up your way! I often shelve CJ Tudor books at the library, but have never felt tempted to pick one up.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This reminds me that I have two more Patrick Gale books on my shelf that I haven’t read! Sorry this one was a bit of a let down for you and your group. Still, I loved it.
LikeLike
I wouldn’t call it a letdown; despite a couple of quibbles, it scored highly for us. He’s been a reliable author. Our library has Take Nothing With You as a book group set, so we could do that one a few years down the line.
LikeLiked by 1 person
A few YEARS? Well, I think Take Nothing With You is probably his most personal, almost autobiographical work, and I might say, even his very best. Mother’s Boy was really very good, but Take made me cry!
LikeLike
We’ve only repeated authors twice as we try to maintain a variety of genres and subjects: older vs. newer books, fiction vs. nonfiction, light vs. serious, etc.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Floorboards are a one – there is something you can do with sawdust and glue put between them, I seem to recall (I’d look that up if I were you!) but the wind does whistle up through them. Our last remaining draft is from a weird cover to a hole (coal hole?) inside the front door; fortunately we have an inner lobby door with a good draught excluder around it. I would recommend changing your front door and getting the draught excluders that are two black snakes joined by a flat piece that goes under the door and with elastic bands to keep them on, our lobby door one has been a game-changer.
Sorry: nice books, nothing cold here as I didn’t read my Icelandic sagas. I seem to be mainly about housing here!
LikeLiked by 1 person
We’re going to get a handyman to insulate under the hardwood floors (about a six-inch depth) with either traditional or hemp stuff. It’ll be a very disruptive week but I hope we’ll feel the benefits. Then probably carpet in the lounge and moving some rugs to where they’re useful. We love our old front door with its stained glass but had new draught excluder brushes around it and put up a door curtain behind it. Those round-the-door snakes sure sound useful! Did you buy them, or make them yourself?
LikeLiked by 1 person
We bought them, off Horrible Amazon unfortunately but you can probably get them elsewhere if you need to. Door curtains are great but our hallway / house is incredibly dark and would be more so with one.
LikeLike
Oh yes, our house is north-facing and very dark at the front as well, but it has been worth it to keep some cold air out.
LikeLike
Glad I don’t have to feel guilty about not reading Jansson’s Winter Book. Sounds like I should just wait for summer and re-read her Summer Book!
LikeLike