My Week in Books – 7th January ’18

MyWeekinBooks

New arrivals  

The New Mrs CliftonThe New Mrs Clifton by Elizabeth Buchan (ebook)

As the Second World War draws to a close, Intelligence Officer Gus Clifton surprises his sisters at their London home. But an even greater shock is the woman he brings with him, Krista – the German wife whom he has married secretly in Berlin.

Krista is clearly devastated by her experiences at the hands of the British and their allies – all but broken by horrors she cannot share. But Gus’s sisters can only see the enemy their brother has brought under their roof. And their friend Nella, Gus’s beautiful, loyal fiancée, cannot understand what made Gus change his mind about their marriage. What hold does Krista have over their honourable and upright Gus? And how can the three women get her out of their home, their future, their England?

Haunted by passion, betrayal, and misunderstanding these damaged souls are propelled towards a spectacular resolution. Krista has lost her country, her people, her identity, and the ties that bind her to Gus hold more tightly than the sisters can ever understand…

KilledKilled by Thomas Enger (ebook, review copy courtesy of Orenda Books)

Crime reporter Henning Juul thought his life was over when his young son was murdered. But that was only the beginning…

Determined to find his son’s killer, Henning doggedly follows an increasingly dangerous trail, where dark hands from the past emerge to threaten everything. His ex-wife Nora is pregnant with another man’s child, his sister Trine is implicated in the fire that killed his son and, with everyone he thought he could trust seemingly hiding something, Henning has nothing to lose … except his own life.  Packed with tension and unexpected twists, Killed is the long-awaited finale of one of the darkest, most chilling and emotive series you may ever read. Someone will be killed. But who?

Song of Praise for a FlowerSong of Praise for a Flower by Fengxian Chu & Charlene Chu (ebook, review copy courtesy of the author)

For nearly two decades, this manuscript lay hidden in a Chinese bank vault until a long-lost cousin from America inspired 92-year-old author Fengxian Chu to unearth it. Song of Praise for a Flower traces a century of Chinese history through the experiences of one woman and her family, from the dark years of World War II and China’s civil war to the tragic Great Leap Forward, Cultural Revolution, and beyond. It is a window into a faraway world, a sweeping epic about China’s tumultuous transformation and a harrowing yet ultimately uplifting story of a remarkable woman who survives it all and finally finds peace and tranquillity.

Chu’s story begins in the 1920s in an idyllic home in the heart of China’s rice country. Her life is a struggle from the start. At a young age, she defies foot-binding and an arranged marriage and sneaks away from home to attend school. Her young adulthood is thrown into turmoil when the Japanese invade and ransack her village. Later her family is driven to starvation when Mao Zedong’s Communist Party seizes power and her husband is branded a ‘bad element.’ After Mao’s death in the 1970s, as China picks up the pieces and moves in a new direction, Chu eventually finds herself in a glittering city on the sea adjacent to Hong Kong, worlds away in both culture and time from the place she came from.


On What Cathy Read Next last week

Blog posts

Monday – I published my Five Favourite December Reads.

Tuesday – I shared my Top Ten New-To-Me Authors I Read in 2017 which included five established authors whose books I read for the first time and five debut authors.

WednesdayWWW Wednesday is the opportunity to share what I’ve just finished reading, what I’m reading now and what I’ll be reading next.   I also published my review of Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather, a book on my Classics Club list and, just as importantly, a book from my TBR pile!

Thursday –For Throwback Thursday, I shared my review of 1066: What Fates Impose by G. K. Holloway. As well as clearing another book from my stack of review copies from authors, this was also a book that counts towards my Historical Fiction Reading Challenge and the When Are You Reading? Challenge.

Friday – I published an extract from Kit Sergeant’s fascinating sounding historical fiction, 355: The Women of Washington’s Spy Ring.

Saturday –I introduced the first book in my Buchan of the Month reading project: The Power-House.  It was good to use my extensive collection of books by and about Buchan to research how the book came to be written and its reception at the time.  There’s still time to join me in my Buchan reading project.

Sunday – I published my review of Three Things About Elsie by Joanna Cannon.

Challenge updates

  • Goodreads 2018 Reading Challenge – 3 out of 156 books read, 3 more than last week
  • Classics Club Challenge – 7 out of 50 books read, 1 more than last week
  • NetGalley/Edelweiss Reading Challenge 2018 (Silver) – 2 ARCs read and reviewed out of 25, 2 more than last week
  • From Page to Screen– 9 book/film comparisons out of 15 completed, same as last week
  • 2018 TBR Pile Challenge – 1 out of 12 books read, 1 more than last week
  • Historical Fiction Reading Challenge 2018 – 1 book out of 50 read, 1 more than last week
  • When Are You Reading? Challenge 2018 – 3 out of 12 books read, 3 more than last week
  • What’s In A Name Reading Challenge – 0 out of 6 books read

On What Cathy Read Next this week

Currently reading

Planned posts

  • Review: Under an Amber Sky by Rose Alexander
  • Review: Oliver Loving by Stefan Merrill Block
  • Review: Shadows on the Grass by Misha M. Herwin
  • Review: The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen by Collins Hemingway
  • Throwback Thursday/Review: Carol by Patricia Highsmith

Buchan of the Month: Introducing… The Power-House

Buchan of the Month

The Power-House is the first book in my Buchan of the Month reading project. To find out more about the project and my reading list for 2018, click 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 to let me know you’re taking part.

What follows is an introduction to the book (no spoilers!). It is also an excuse to show pictures of my prized first edition of The Power-House (without dust jacket, unfortunately) found in a bookshop on the island of Iona, of all places. As Buchan might have put it, I had ‘tramped’ through the cold, wet rain that day in search of the shop and was rewarded with this treasure.

I will be posting my review of the book later in the month.


“You think that a wall as solid as the earth separates civilisation from barbarism. I tell you the division is a thread, a sheet of glass.”

The Power-House first appeared in Blackwood’s Magazine of December 1913. However, it wasn’t until May 1916, following the success of The Thirty-Nine Steps (published in 1915), that William Blackwood & Sons published The Power-House in novel form. Clearly they were hoping to cash in on the success of The Thirty-Nine Steps and this seems to have been an astute decision because, according to Buchan’s first biographer, Janet Adam Smith, The Power-House (priced at one shilling) had sold 24,000 copies by the end of 1916.

The Power-House DedicationIn the dedication to The Power-House, John Buchan writes, “I have printed this story, written in the smooth days before the war, in the hope that it may enable an honest man here and there to forget for an hour the too urgent realities”. He also wryly observes that the dedicatee, Major-General Sir Francis Lloyd, shares his own “liking for precipitous yarns”.

In describing The Power-House as a ‘yarn’, commonly defined as a long or rambling story, especially one that is implausible (although The Power-House is neither long nor rambling), it seems Buchan intended this first foray into the thriller genre to be a form of escapism from the troubled times the world was living through. In fact, he always used the self-deprecating term ‘shocker’ rather than thriller to describe his adventure stories.

The hero of The Power-House is Edward Leithen, whom Christopher Harvie describes as ‘the first and last of Buchan’s heroes’ and ‘the one closest in character to his author’. In fact, Leithen had earlier appeared briefly in ‘Space’ a short story by Buchan in his collection The Watcher by the Threshold, published in 1902. In The Power-House, Leithen recounts his story to a group of friends during a duck shooting trip, explaining “I once played the chief part in a rather exciting business without ever once budging from London”.

Although an early novel, The Power-House touches on a theme that will recur in later Buchan books, namely the fragility of civilisation. The period during which Buchan was writing The Power-House was a troubled time in his life. In 1910 he had unsuccessfully stood for Parliament and the following year his father died. This was followed by further family tragedy when his younger brother, Willie, died suddenly from an infection contracted while in India. Added to this, Buchan began to suffer from the digestive problems that would plague him for the rest of his life. It was a troubling time in world events as well. As Christopher Harvie notes, “The Power-House announces the terrific anarchy to be loosed upon the world”.

Janet Adam Smith describes Buchan’s recipe for The Power-House (and The Thirty-Nine Steps) as ‘brisk, improbable action played out against a realistic background’. In his autobiography, Memory-Hold-The-Door, Buchan describes himself as ‘a natural storyteller, the kind of man who for the sake of his yarns would in prehistoric days have been given a seat by the fire and a special chunk of mammoth’.

So find yourself a comfy reading spot and turn to the first page of The Power-House

Sources:
John Buchan, Memory-Hold-The-Door (Hodder & Stoughton, 1964 [1940])
David Daniell, The Interpreter’s House: A Critical Assessment of the Work of John Buchan (Nelson, 1975)
Christopher Harvie, ‘Introduction’ to The Leithen Stories by John Buchan (Canongate Classics, 2000)
Kate Macdonald, John Buchan: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction (McFarland, 2009)
Janet Adam Smith, John Buchan: A Biography (OUP, 1985 [1965])