I’m almost at the end of my alphabetical review of the unread books on my shelves. This time it’s the turn of authors whose surnames all begin with the letter W. I do seem to have a large number of these including Naomi Wood, Virginia Woolf, Tim Winton, Colson Whitehead, Edith Wharton and Dorothy Whipple.
I’ve just pulled out three that I’ve owned for at least five years and read a few pages of each to help me decide whether I want to keep them.
Voss by Patrick White
I bought this about seven years ago when I decided it was high time I read more Australian authors. I hadn’t heard of Patrick White until then despite the fact he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973 . Voss is apparently his best known work. It’s set in nineteenth-century Australia, and is a story of the secret passion between an explorer and a naïve young woman.
My current edition of the book is actually a replacement for a copy I lost some years ago. So I should take that as a sign I really do want to read this book!
The Verdict: Keep. I’ve seen some comments that White’s writing can be challenging but that it’s well worth the effort.
Gone To Earth by Mary Webb
This is one of my many Virago titles. Published in 1917 it’s set in Shropshire where Hazel lives in a forest cottage. She’s a child of nature who attracts the attention of two men, the local squire and the local minister. The novel is about the choices she must make between the kind, platonic love offered by one man and the passionate but violent relationship offered by the other.
The plot sounds reasonable but I can see the style of writing will be an issue. It’s rather over-blown. The opening gives a taste of what I mean: “Small, feckless clouds were hurried across the vast untroubled sky – shepherdless, futile, imponderable – and were torn to fragments on the fangs of the mountains, so ending their ephemeral adventures with nothing of their fugitive existence left but a few tears. ”
This is a writer who doesn’t seem to understand that less is often more, and that if you’re going to use multiple adjectives, they had better have meaning. I’ve read this sentence several times and all it comes down to is that there are some clouds in the sky and then it rains.
The Verdict: This would severely test my patience so I’m letting it go
They Knew Mr Knight by Mary Whipple
My first Persephone book is a 1934 novel featuring a fairly ordinary family who get taken in by a dubious financier (the Mr Knight of the title). Celia Blake is a housewife who takes a dislike to Mr Knight but is steadfastly loyal to her husband and does enjoy the benefits of their connection to Mr Knight. Until things go horribly wrong and their swift climb is followed by just as rapid a fall.
The Verdict: Keep. Really enjoyed the few pages I sampled.
So that’s one down, two to remain. The little space this has opened up has already been filled however because as I was buying books for family and friends in the past week, I couldn’t resist the temptation to give myself an early Christmas present. Or three… four… maybe five…..
Sample Sunday is when I take a look at all the unread books on my shelves and decide which to keep and which to let free. The goal isn’t to shrink the TBR as such, but rather it’s about making sure my shelves have only books I do want to read.What do you think of the decisions I’ve reached? If you’ve read any of these books I’d love to hear from you.