#BookReview The Stone Diaries by Carol Shields @WorldEdBooks

Welcome to the opening stop on the blog tour for The Stone Diaries by Carol Shields. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to participate in the tour and to World Editions for my digital review copy.


downloadAbout the Book

Widely regarded as a modern classic, The Stone Diaries is the story of one woman’s life; that of Daisy Goodwill Flett, a seemingly ordinary woman born in Canada in 1905. Beautifully written and deeply compassionate, it follows Daisy’s life through marriage, widowhood, motherhood, and old age, as she charts her own path alongside that of an unsettled century. A subtle but affective portrait of an everywoman reflecting on an unconventional life, this multi-award-winning story deals with everyday issues of existence with an extraordinary vibrancy and irresistible flair.

Format: Paperback (392 pages)                         Publisher: World Editions
Publication date: 22nd October 2020 [1993]  Genre: Literary Fiction

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My Review

I must admit it’s a little daunting to write a review of a book that has a foreword by Margaret Atwood.  However, I’ll do my best!  In her foreword Margaret Atwood describes The Stone Diaries as Carol Shields’ ‘glory book’ praising her ‘large intelligence’, powers of observation and humane wit. Originally published in 1993, The Stone Diaries was shortlisted for that year’s Booker Prize and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1995.  Most excitingly for me, it also won Canada’s Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction in 1993, a prize established in 1936 by the Governor General at the time, Lord Tweedsmuir (better known as the author John Buchan, of whose works I am a great fan, as regular followers of this blog will know).

The Stone Diaries is the story of a life, a long life punctuated by tragedy but also by moments of happiness and fulfilment. As the author notes, “What is the story of a life? A chronicle of fact or a skillfully wrought impression?” In this case, it’s a bit of both because, as the reader is warned earlier in the book, “Maybe now is the time to tell you that Daisy Goodwill has a little trouble with getting things straight; with the truth, that is.”

The story of Daisy’s life is told in a variety of narrative styles, including through letters and newspaper articles, and is accompanied by photographs and even a family tree.  As noted earlier, Daisy experiences a number of tragedies in her life, starting with the circumstances of her birth, but also periods of happiness, including motherhood.

Although there are moments of sadness, The Stone Diaries is also full of wit and humour.  For example, the scene in which Daisy reveals to her daughter, Alice, the facts of life and tries to persuade her that what takes place between her father and mother is beautiful, not ‘icky’.  Or the advice of Daisy’s prospective mother-in-law that “tomato juice ought never to be served at breakfast“, “that white shoes are worn only between Memorial Day and Labour Day” and that when travelling to the continent she should steer well clear of the ‘curious device’ she may find in her hotel bathroom. Or the advice in a women’s magazine that “the wearing of pyjamas in bed has driven many a man to seek affection elsewhere”.

One of the sections of the book I particularly enjoyed was that entitled ‘Work’. Although it starts with melancholy news, it also contains some very funny letters from appreciative readers in response to the gardening column Daisy writes for the local newspaper. “Dear Mrs. Green Thumb, Really enjoyed your dramatic struggle with the ant colony.  Also your words of enlightenment on the European leaf beetle”.   It has to be said Carol Shields creates inventive if rather violent deaths for some of her characters, including being crushed beneath a soft drinks vending machine.  (By the way, he deserved it.)

The Stone Diaries is the story of a century as well as a woman although the focus is always at the micro rather than the macro level.  Significant world events, even world wars, happen ‘off-stage’ as it were.   Although Daisy experiences bereavement and periods of depression, she also enjoys – if we are to believe her – lifelong friendships, finds fulfilment in work and family, and remains positive and resilient to the end of her life.

The Stone Diaries is moving, funny, compassionate and, as Margaret Atwood notes, a book that is “full of delights”.

In three words: Tender, assured, touching

Try something similar: Stoner by John Williams

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Carol Shields Author picAbout the Author

Carol Shields (1935–2003) was born in the United States and emigrated to Canada when she was 22. She is acclaimed for her empathetic and witty, yet penetrating insights into human nature.

Her most famous novel, The Stone Diaries, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, along with the Governor General’s Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Happenstance was praised as her tour de force, masterly combining two novels in one. The international bestseller Mary Swann was awarded with the Arthur Ellis Award for best Canadian mystery, while The Republic of Love was chosen as the first runner-up for the Guardian Fiction Prize.

In 2020, the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction, a North American literary award dedicated to writing by women, was set up in her honour. Her work has been published in over thirty languages.

#BookReview Imperfect Alchemist by Naomi Miller @AllisonandBusby

Imperfect Alchemist blog tour Twitter

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Imperfect Alchemist by Naomi Miller. My thanks to Lesley at Allison & Busby for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy via NetGalley.


Imperfect AlchemistAbout the Book

Two women. One bond that will unite them across years and social divides.

England, 1575. Mary Sidney, who will go on to claim a spot at the heart of Elizabethan court life and culture, is a fourteen-year-old navigating grief and her first awareness of love and desire. Her sharp mind is less interested in the dynastic alliances and marriages that concern her father, but will she be able to forge a place for herself and her writing in the years to come?

Rose Commin, a young country girl with a surprising talent for drawing, is desperate to shrug off the slurs of witchcraft which have tarnished life at home. The opportunity to work at Wilton House, the Earl of Pembroke’s Wiltshire residence, is her chance.

Defying the conventions of their time, these two women, mistress and maid, will find themselves facing the triumphs, revelations and struggles that lie ahead together.

Format: Hardback (352 pages)                 Publisher: Allison & Busby
Publication date: 19th November 2020 Genre: Historical fiction

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My Review

Subtitled ‘A Novel of Mary Sidney Herbert, Renaissance Pioneer’, in Imperfect Alchemist the author creates a potpourri from elements that will be familiar to readers of historical fiction set in the Tudor period. There’s the risk of accusations of witchcraft against women with midwifery skills or knowledge of herbal remedies, the intrigue and power struggles of the Elizabethan Court, and the social constraints that present women with little option other than marriage, motherhood or a life in service. Throw in the study of alchemy, a little romance as well as famous historical figures such as Walter Raleigh and John Dee, and you have all the ingredients for an engrossing story. Although the book’s structure is clearly designed to replicate the stages of the alchemical process, allusions to alchemy can be found throughout the book.

Mary Sidney emerges as a vibrant character but one, despite her status in life, not immune from an arranged marriage, the tragedy of bereavement and the risks associated with childbirth. What seem like opportunities are often followed by setbacks or unintended consequences.  The equal of her brother Phillip when it comes to literary creativity, I particularly liked Mary’s passion for words. “Honing a phrase to embody a thought was her pleasure. Metaphors were her passion, her liberation from the literal constraints that framed her existence.”   

Mary’s determination to give female characters a more prominent role in works of literature sees her influencing the poetry of her brother, Philip (“her dearest soul and partner of the mind”) and even, the author contends, the work of arguably the most notable playwright of the period.  The Circle, the literary salon Mary establishes, attended by the likes of Edmund Spenser and Ben Jonson, she compares to an alchemical experiment in which materials are “blended and distilled until the union of like and unlike might yield perfect knowledge“.

The inclusion of a first person narrator, Rose Commin, gives the reader another perspective on Mary and provides the opportunity for secondary storylines as well as a touching if unconventional friendship between women from vastly different backgrounds.  Mary’s encouragement of Rose’s artistic talent also allows the author to explore another kind of transformational process.  As Rose observes, “The more I worked with colour the more readily I could understand the layering and mixing of shades in terms of my lady’s alchemy, where painstaking combinations of dissimilar ingredients could produce a harmonious end result”.

In Imperfect Alchemist, Naomi Miller transforms historical fact into the engrossing story of a remarkable woman who was clearly ahead of her time. Like her leading character, the author has “steeped existing material in the tincture of her own imagination” to create a story rich in historical detail.  If the book has made you interested in reading more about Mary Sidney Herbert as a character, do check out the author’s recommendations.

In three words: Immersive, authentic, fascinating

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Naomi Miller
Photo credit: John Crispin

About the Author

Naomi Miller is a professor of English and the Study of Women and Gender at Smith College, Massachusetts, where she specializes in Shakespeare and his literary “sisters” – women writers of the Renaissance. Imperfect Alchemist is her first novel.

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