Buchan of the Month: Introducing Memory Hold-The-Door by John Buchan

Buchan of the Month

Memory Hold-The-Door is the eleventh book in my John Buchan reading project, Buchan of the Month.  You can find out more about the project and my reading list for 2018 here.  If you would like to read along with me you will be very welcome – leave a comment on this post or on my original challenge post.  Memory Hold-The-Door is also a book on my Nonfiction November 2018 reading list.

MemoryHoldTheDoorWhat follows is an introduction to the book.  It is also an excuse to show a picture of my lovely 1964 edition of the book complete with dust jacket*.  I will be posting my review of the book later in the month.

In her biography of John Buchan (created Baron Tweedsmuir of Elsfield in 1935 upon his appointment as Governor-General of Canada), Janet Adam Smith writes: ‘The end of a job is a time for stocktaking and looking back.  Tweedsmuir had been purposefully looking back on his life, for all through 1939 he was at work on his autobiography.’  Andrew Lownie, in his 1995 biography of Buchan, reports he had in fact started writing his autobiography in the spring of 1938, signing a contract for it with Hodder & Stoughton in July of that year.

Buchan told a correspondent the book was ‘not an ordinary autobiography or any attempt to tell the unimportant story of my life; but rather an attempt to pick out certain high lights and expound the impressions made upon me at different stages’.  Buchan made a deliberate choice not to write about anyone still alive, including family members.

On 5th February 1940, Buchan told his sister Anna, ‘I have finished my novel [Sick Heart River] and my autobiography’. The following day, Buchan suffered the cerebral thrombosis that ultimately proved fatal and he died on 12th February.

Memory Hold-The-Door was published in the UK by Hodder & Stoughton in August 1940 although excerpts first appeared in The Sunday Times in March, April and June of that year.  It was published in the US under the title Pilgrim’s Way by Houghton Mifflin on 27th August 1940, with excerpts first appearing in The Atlantic Monthly in May, June and July.

Janet Adam Smith reports that two extracts from Pilgrim’s Way were included in an article on the books President Kennedy liked in the ‘J. F. K. Memorial Issue’ of Look, published on 17th November 1964.  The article included a commentary by Mrs. John F. Kennedy: ‘Pilgrim’s Way, the memoirs of John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir, he once said was his favourite book.  He gave it to me before we were married.  The part for which he cared most was a portrait of the brilliant Raymond Asquith…who was killed in action in World War 1.  The poignancy of men dying young always moved my husband – possibly because of his brother Joe dying in World War II.  I think the first line [‘He disliked emotion, not because he felt lightly but because he felt deeply’] could have been written of John F. Kennedy.’

* The front flap of the dust jacket of my edition of Memory Hold-The-Door contains the following note: ‘It was known throughout his Governor-Generalship of Canada that Lord Tweedsmuir was working quietly at the autobiography which it was his intention  to publish immediately on his retirement.  One copy of the completed manuscript reached London only a fortnight before his death: the other with his final verbal corrections, was at that moment being re-typed in Ottawa; and it was from this type-script, unaltered, that the book was printed – with the addition of two peculiarly beautiful chapters entitled “Pilgrim’s Rest” which were found among his papers.’  [The two chapters referred to are from a book about fishing Buchan was planning to write at the time of his death.]


Sources:

Kenneth Hillier & Michael Ross, The First Editions of John Buchan: A Collector’s Illustrated Bibliography – A Complement to Robert G Blanchard (Avonworld, 2008 [1981])

Andrew Lownie, John Buchan: The Presbyterian Cavalier (Constable, 1995)

Janet Adam Smith, John Buchan: A Biography (OUP, 1985 [1965])

Blog Tour/Book Review: The Price of Compassion (The Golden City #4) by A. B. Michaels

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I’m delighted to be hosting the final stop on the blog tour for The Price of Compassion (The Golden City #4) by A. B. Michaels.  Thank you to Amy at Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour.  (If you’re a book blogger who loves historical fiction, I can recommend signing up as one of Amy’s tour hosts.  She tours some great books!)

You can read my review of The Price of Compassion below.  You can also read an excerpt from the book here.  See the other great book bloggers who have taken part in the tour by visiting the tour page where you’ll find links to their reviews of the book, extracts and other content.

If you’re a US resident, the tour page is also where you can enter the giveaway for a chance to win a $25 Amazon gift card.  However, don’t hang about as entries close TODAY (12th November 2018) at 11:59pm EST.  Please read the terms and conditions for the giveaway.


The Price of CompassionAbout the Book

April 18, 1906 – San Francisco has just been shattered by a massive earthquake and is in the throes of an even more deadly fire.  During the chaos, gifted surgeon Tom Justice makes a life-changing decision that wreaks havoc on his body, mind, and spirit.

Leaving the woman he loves, he embarks on a quest to regain his sanity and self-worth. Yet just when he finds some answers, he’s arrested for murder – a crime he may very well be guilty of.

The facts of the case are troubling; they’ll have you asking the question: “Is he guilty?” Or even worse…”What would I have done?”

Format: ebook (296 pp.)    Publisher: Red Trumpet Press
Published: 27th August 2018         Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Price of Compassion on Goodreads


My Review

The reader first meets Dr. Tom Justice in his prison cell, arrested on a charge of murder.  Jonathan Perris, the legal counsel employed to defend him by (friend or maybe more?) Katherine Firestone, is frustrated at Tom‘s unwillingness to talk about what happened.  He sets out to investigate, seeking out witnesses, talking to people who knew Tom and constructing a timeline of the events leading up to the crime with which Tom is charged.

Jonathan’s investigations, conducted with the help of his legal assistants, are interspersed with extended flashbacks, starting with Tom’s childhood on a farm in Nebraska, his teenage years, his medical studies and his move to San Francisco’s Chinatown.  In a neat touch, each chapter of the flashback sections starts with a quotation from someone who knew Tom.  The reader gets an insight into Tom’s early interest in medicine and healing courtesy of his grandmother, his eagerness to learn about not just what remedies work but how and why they work, and his questioning approach to the received wisdom (I use the term loosely) of the time about what is in a patient’s interest.

This is a very skilfully constructed book.  The changes in timeline and location are handled in such a way that the reader never feels lost.  Instead, a picture of Tom’s character gradually emerges that, looking back having finished the book, seems completely consistent with his actions when they are finally revealed.   Details about the murder are gradually introduced.  As well as the mystery element of the story line, the book includes the dramatic events of the San Francisco earthquake, its terrible aftermath and the darker ( or perhaps ‘tarnished’ would be more appropriate) side of the so-called ‘Golden City’.  I also learned some fascinating facts along the way, such as the existence of ‘railway surgeons’.  Yes, who knew there was such a thing?

The suspense is expertly maintained throughout, keeping the reader as perplexed as Jonathan about the the truth of what happened and why Tom acted as he did.  Only at the end is the full truth revealed leaving the reader, as the book description suggests, to ponder the question “What would I have done?”.

The author creates an interesting dynamic between Tom, Katherine and Jonathan, all of whom at some point face a moral dilemma between staying true to their principles and sense of duty, or following their hearts.   The dramatic and emotional ending to the book provides an intensely satisfying conclusion, for this reader at least.

Not having read any of the earlier books in ‘The Golden City’ series (The Art of Love, The Depth of Beauty and The Promise), I was worried about how The Price of Compassion would work as a standalone read. I needn’t have worried.   Using turn of the century San Francisco as the stage and scenery, as it were, the author has created a cast of characters who have ‘walk-on’ parts in some books in the series and starring roles in others. It’s very cleverly and skilfully done, making the series accessible at any point although I would clearly now recommend reading the series from the beginning.

I loved The Price of Compassion and I’ve added all the previous books in the series to my wishlist as well as Josephine’s Daughter, the next book in the series due out in 2019.  I’ve also signed up to join A. B. Michaels’ Readers Group via her website (details below) and received a thank you gift as a result – a free copy of The Art of Love, the first book in ‘The Golden City’ series.

I received a review copy courtesy of the author and Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours.

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In three words: Suspenseful, engaging, authentic

Try something similar…The Devil’s Half Mile by Paddy Hirsch (read my review here)


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About the Author

A native of northern California, A.B. Michaels earned masters’ degrees in history and broadcasting, and worked for many years in public relations and marketing. Now that she’s an empty nester, she has time to write the kinds of stories she loves to read. Her historical series, ‘The Golden City’, follows characters who make their way in turn of the twentieth century San Francisco. She says: “I love creating flawed characters I can relate to, who have to make difficult choices, and who long for happiness like the rest of us. So much was happening in the early 1900’s that help shape my novels. Once I tear myself away from the underlying research, they are fascinating stories to write.”

Currently Ms. Michaels lives in Boise, Idaho with her husband and two furry creatures who are unclear on the concept that they are just dogs. In addition to writing, she loves to read and travel. A dabbler in fabric art, she also plays bocce in a summer league. Her latest stand-alone novel, The Price of Compassion, is Book Four of the ‘Golden City’ series. It will be followed by Book Five, Josephine’s Daughter.

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