shewhomust: (dandelion)
[personal profile] shewhomust
For the last two days [livejournal.com profile] karinmollberg has been shepherding us around Bordeaux, showing us her list of things worth seeing, being patient with us when we dashed off down side streets or into shops or down holes in the ground - and when I lagged behind because I had stopped to take a photograph, which was often. I've had a wonderful time, culminating in a gourmet dinner with fireworks, and I look forward to writing all about it with many, many photos. But I think that will have to wait until I have more bandwidth, and better picture-editing software.

While we're waiting, have a book post. I have been reading Sisters of Fortune by Frances McNeil, which will be reissued next summer as Halfpenny Dreams by Frances Brody (the name under which Frances publishes her Kate Shackleton murder mysteries).

Frances is a friend and a client: here's the page I made about the forthcoming reissues for her website. She was kind enough to provide me with a copy of the original edition because I enjoy her writing, so this isn't going to be an unbiaised review. But I wanted to write about the book, because it was such a great read and because I think it deserves a signal boost.

If you followed those links, you'll see that it's being marketed as a saga, a genre which has its readers but probably meets even more snobbery than the crime and F&SF which are my genre staples. It is not a multigenerational family history, it is not sentimental and although it is set in the past (the 1930s) it treats the period with a sharp-eyed sense of history, of how things worked and how people felt about that.

It follows the lives of two girls, who are not in fact sisters. Each of them could be described as a 'daughter of the Bank' Lydia because her mother abandons a repertory theatre company to marry the owner of Thackrey's Bank, Sophie because she lives in the slums of Leeds's Bank district. Their lives too are overshadowed by Thackrey's Bank. Lydia and Rosa narrate alternate chapters, at first as children and then as spirited young women. If you are looking for books with strong female characters in a historical setting, this one is full of them: not only Lydia and Sophie, and her sister Rosa, but Lydia's actress mother Phoebe and her friend Ada, May who runs a second hand shop, even walk-on parts like Rosa's friend Fenella.

Terrible things happen to both Lydia and Sophie, and they are not brushed off lightly. But there's so much verve and so much life in the telling, that the result is not grim and dark. If anything, the sequence of events, one blow after another and the heroines' response to them, has the heightened colour of melodrama - in a good way.

If we must classify books into genres, I can see why both publishers felt that the depiction of life at a certain place and time would appeal to saga readers. If you aren't one of those, consider it as a novel - or maybe a historical novel. But given the strength of characterisation of team Sophie and Lydia, I wonder whether Piatkus considered targeting the Young Adult market - I think it could have great appeal there, too.

Date: 2015-09-25 02:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karinmollberg.livejournal.com
At least the weather was as ordered but I shall have to complain with the authorities about the rain on your departure day and since when do churches close on mondays? Not having suspected this, I gave M. Cro Magnon the chance to say "I told you so" meaning, how we should have done all the Patrimoine sightseeing on Sunday. Most irritating (of him to be right) but you were wonderfully patient with me and my list (I'll keep the rest for next time;) that was too long as it turned out because "wonderful is short while boring goes on forever" as the Swedish humourist Povel Ramel sang so sad as I am about that, I was so glad to see you after all this time of talking here on LJ (..thought I might give others a chance and you a pause from Mollberg Speak after two days of it;) and always afraid of tiring you or else boring you, but I must admit I had no idea about those fireworks! That must have been M. Montesquieu trying to make up for the rain, monday.

I looked up your links and think you are right on this being for young adults, as one just has to love the picture of the two girls mourning Valentino who was perhaps one of the first 'pop stars'. They look exactly like fans of some boygroup, quite touching and sweet how they dressed up!

Date: 2015-09-25 04:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shewhomust.livejournal.com
"Wonderful is short' and two days was wonderful - and it's important to save something for next time!

I'm glad you were intrigued enough to follow the links about the book. You are the person who gives me an excuse to write boring posts, and I am grateful.

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