Review 2734: Review-Along! Lady Audley’s Secret

Yesterday FictionFan was hosting a Review-Along of Lady Audley’s Secret, a book I thought I read long ago but did not really remember. I wasn’t able to participate yesterday because of Literary Wives, but today I can.

As I said, I thought I had read Lady Audley’s Secret long ago, but apparently I was wrong. Nothing in this book was familiar.

Lady Audley is newly married. She is a young, beautiful, child-like woman who was working as the governess for a doctor’s children when she met the much older Lord Audley. He is enchanted by her, but his daughter Alicia thinks she is superficial.

After we meet Lady Audley in her beautiful old home, the narrative skips to a young man, George Talboys, returning to England after three years in Australia. He left his young wife and child in the care of her father, because his father disowned him when he married, and the couple has run through his money. So, he departed to seek his fortune and is returning a wealthy man, eager to see his wife. However, he is stunned after he finds a newspaper announcement that she has died.

His friend Robert Audley, Lord Audley’s nephew, takes pity on him, and the grieving Talboys moves in with him. Sometime later, Robert thinks it will enliven George to visit his family at Audley Court. The young men repair to an inn nearby. First, Lady Audley makes excuses to delay a family dinner, and then she has to travel out of town because an old friend is on her deathbed.

We think we already understand Lady Audley’s secret when George catches a glimpse of her in her carriage and becomes preoccupied. The next day the two young men are fishing when Robert falls asleep by the stream. When he awakens, George is gone, yet he is not in their room at the local inn. He was last seen walking toward the dark lime avenue where Lady Audley was supposed to be. Robert assumes George returned to London, but he is not there, and his things have not been disturbed.

When George doesn’t resurface or respond to advertisements and Robert can find no evidence that he took a boat to Australia, as Lady Audley claims, Robert begins to have dreadful thoughts. He begins trying to trace Lady Audley’s past.

I can imagine that this Sensation novel made quite an impact on Victorian society. I thought it moved along pretty well and only was frustrated by the number of times conscientious Robert tells Lady Audley what he’s found out and what his next move will be, hoping she will go away and not wanting to give his uncle a shock. But Lady Audley thinks her husband will believe anything she tells him.

There are a few little perplexing complaints against women in general in the book, but otherwise, I thought the story was quite entertaining, gaining most of its impetus from a contest of wits. It also has an interesting secondary character in Robert’s cousin, Alicia.

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Review 2733: Literary Wives! Interpreter of Maladies

Today is another review for the Literary Wives blogging club, in which we discuss the depiction of wives in fiction. If you have read the book, please participate by leaving comments on any of our blogs.

Be sure to read the reviews and comments of the other wives!

This month we’re saying goodbye to Naomi of Consumed By Ink, who has been a member of the club for a long time. Good luck, Naomi!

My Review

Interpreter of Maladies is a collection of short stories mostly about Indian or Pakistani immigrants but a few about residents in India. Only a few of the stories seem suitable for our discussion purposes in Literary Wives.

In “A Temporary Matter,” married couple Shoba and Shukumar deal with the consequences to their marriage of the death of their baby in a premature birth. During a Boston winter, the city announces planned power outages in their neighborhood. They find that they are able to talk in the darkness lit by candlelight.

In “When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dinner” a woman remembers a man from Dacca who lost everything in the war for Bangladesh. He has had no contact for some time with his wife and daughters. Ten-year-old Lilia’s parents invite him to dinner every night, and then they watch the news.

The “Interpreter of Maladies” is an English-speaking tour guide taking Mr. and Mrs. Das and their children around an area of India. Although they look Indian, they act and dress like American tourists, and Mr. Kapasi learns they were born in America. When Mrs. Das learns Mr. Kapasi also works as an interpreter of Gujarati in a doctor’s office, she seems to misunderstand his function.

“A Real Durwan” is the story of Boori Ma, who lives in a storage room on the roof of an apartment building and sweeps the stairs. She speaks of a better life before the Partition, but disaster strikes when her quilts are ruined in a storm. This story seems to be about the incomprehension of the better off for the difficulties of the very poor.

Back in the States again, Laxmi tells her friend Miranda about her cousin’s problems in “Sexy.” Her cousin’s husband has met another woman and is leaving her. Miranda has kept secret her affair with a married Indian man named Dev, but her encounter with Laxmi’s cousin’s young son makes her re-evaluate her affair.

In “Mrs. Sen’s,” young Eliot stays with Mrs. Sen after school every day. She is having a hard time adjusting to life in the U. S., especially the isolation and difficulties shopping because she doesn’t drive.

Twinkle keeps discovering gaudy religious artifacts in the house she and Sanjeev have bought—statues and large pictures of Jesus and shrines in the yard in “This Blessed House.” `She thinks they’re hilarious and puts them on display. He thinks they should dispose of them because they’re not Christians and worries about what people will think. Sanjeev is a very successful management type who has married after short acquaintance because it’s time. But he is disturbed by Twinkle’s outgoing personality. A house-warming party helps him look at her another way.

Another roof dweller in India is the subject of “The Treatment of Bibi Haldar,” a woman who suffers from seizures. After charms and homeopathic remedies fail to heal her, one practitioner recommends marriage. But her brother and sister-in-law don’t want to spend the money to marry her off and she is eventually forced to live in the rooftop shed because her sister-in-law is afraid her condition is contagious.

In “The Third and Final Continent,” an Indian man marries before taking a job in an MIT library in 1964. The summer before his wife arrives, he takes a room in the house of a 100-year-old woman.

What does this book say about wives or about the experience of being a wife?

Actually, when the story is about marriage, it is more often from the point of view of the husband. Only a few of these stories lend themselves to our usual discussion, and anyway in Lahiri’s stories, more things are implied than stated. But certainly the isolation immigrants experience in the States is a common theme of much of her work, and that isolation often reflects itself in the characters’ marriages.

In “A Temporary Matter,” the marriage of Shukumar and Shoba was apparently a love match, and now it is foundering because of the death of their baby in a premature birth. When the two begin talking by candlelight, Shukumar seems to be hoping they can become closer again, but Shuba is leading up to something else. Noticeable in this story is Shukumar’s incomprehension.

The glimpse that Mr. Kapasi gets into the Das’s marriage in “Interpreter of Maladies” isn’t one he wants, but why does Mrs. Das confide in him in the first place? This story is more, though, about Mr. Kapasi’s lack of understanding of the type of person Mrs. Das is.

“This Blessed House” is about a newly married couple trying to understand each other, or more particularly, Sanjeev’s lack of understanding of Twinkle. I have noticed that Lahiri often works from the man’s point of view when observing marriage, and she does so again here. Sanjeev is so worried about what other people think that it takes a party at his house, in which his guests clearly like and admire his wife, for him to start to appreciate her qualities.

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In “The Third and Final Continent,” the unnamed narrator has married Mala, a woman he hardly knows. When she arrives from India, it is his relationship with old Mrs. Croft that brings out her first smile.

Culture shock and isolation are big themes in Lahiri’s literature, and many of the marriages she examines seem to be filled with incomprehension and more isolation. But not all. In her looks at marriage, she seems to be saying we’re all strangers to each other and some of us can bridge the gap while others cannot.

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Review 2732: Tea on Sunday

Alberta Mansbridge is having a tea party. She’s an elderly woman of fortune who controls a family business and is philanthropic to many causes and people in need. However, she doesn’t suffer fools and abandons anyone who tries to cheat her.

When the guests arrive on this snowy Sunday afternoon, no one answers the door. The guests become alarmed, but the house is secure, so they call the police. Inside, they find Alberta dead, strangled. No one has broken in, so Inspector Corby guesses that one of the guests arrived early and killed her, and we know this is true from the Preface.

What quickly becomes obvious is that none of the guests seem likely to have killed Alberta, and none of them have alibis except the wife of Alberta’s nephew, Anthony Seldon (a most unlikable wife, by the way). Anthony seems to be the one with the biggest motive, since he is likely to inherit much, but he claims not to know that. The two most suspicious characters, Barry Slater, a young ex-con, and Marcello Bartolozzi, an Italian conman, are not likely to have cut off their own income streams, although Barry disappears before the police arrive and remains missing for some time.

The others are Myra Heseltine, an old friend with whom Alberta had fallen out; Ewan Musgrave, her doctor; John Armistead, manager of her company in Yorkshire; and her lawyer, Russell Holdeworth.

This novel spends a lot of time up front with the interviews of the guests. I’ll say up to one third of the book. It’s definitely not an action mystery, but it doesn’t lag, either. I found it interesting that the murderer seemed obvious a good 80 pages before the end, but the evidence was needed. Overall, I found this novel interesting of approach and entertaining.

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Review 2731: Breaking the Dark

I read a couple of Lisa Jewell’s earlier books and noted that she was moving into thriller territory (the first one was domestic drama), so I made a note to myself to try one. I got this one because it showed up in my Amazon suggestions without bothering to read about it. My bad.

When I picked it up to read it, the first thing I noticed was the word “Marvel.” Now, my husband and I went to some of the superhero movies way back when, but at some point, we just decided we were done. And now I live in a movie desert in which the only theater for miles carries almost exclusively what my family calls “movies for 14-year-old boys” or animated movies, which my husband doesn’t like. So, I don’t go to the movies very often.

I scanned a New York Times review of the book, but I didn’t see hints of anything, so I started reading it. However, there are hints in the book, and at about page 70, it was clear that the main character is some sort of retired superhero. I said, nope, not doing this.

So, if you’re still interested, this appears to be the first in a series about Jessica Jones, a private detective. Amber Randall, middle-aged and wealthy, tells her that her two children went to visit their father in England and came back acting like different people. Jessica is reluctant to take the case, but Amber gets her to follow them, and Jessica has to admit that there’s something strange about them. So, the plan is for Jessica to go to Engand and try to figure out what happened.

For a thriller, it’s a fairly slow starter, since this is pretty much all that happens in the first 70 pages except for appearances of a mysterious little girl.

Oh, and this may sound picky, but the first thing Jessica does is go feed a neighbor’s cat, a cat she doesn’t know, and she leaves the door open so it gets out. Now, who would do that? with any animal except a fish, I mean? or something in a cage. It provides an excuse for the first hint that Jessica is not what she seems.

The novel is well written, and I suspect it’s fine for anyone who wants to read about superheroes, but I don’t.

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Review 2730: The Backyard Bird Chronicles

I am not really a bird watcher, but we have feeders out and I enjoy trying to identify the more distinctive birds who come to our feeders (not so much all the different kinds of little brown birds). I heard about this book from a radio interview a year or so ago, and it has taken this long for it to percolate up to the top of my pile.

In the interview, Amy Tan mentioned that she had started watching birds more avidly after she developed a condition that didn’t allow her to drive safely or be out alone. She doesn’t mention this in the book, just says she doesn’t drive, but talks about her childhood fascination with bugs and other things she found along a creek that somehow kept her looking down instead of up.

However, she began to observe birds seriously in 2017 and also returned to drawing. She had lots of questions about birds and felt she could answer some of them by drawing them accurately.

The result is a bird journal that she kept until 2022, when she decided to start a new journal that looked up even more, out of her own backyard and into the wooded places beyond. The journal is full of drawings, one for each journal entry, starting out fairly rudimentary (although better than I can draw) and getting more complex. Some of the entries are lighthearted, the drawings accurate but with quirky captions or imaginings of what the birds are saying or thinking. Although most of the drawings are black and white, there are two sections of colored illustrations, and other colored drawings pop up all over the journal.

Tan is a wonderer, and she has questions about a lot of things—what does it mean when a bird does this? can birds play? (I think she proves that they can) how much of their behavior is instinct and how much learning or even thinking?

One of the stories Tan told on the radio that had me hooked is how she got a hummingbird to eat out of a small feeder right in her hand. That entry is the first one in the book. How cool is that?

Although it’s more full of questions than answers, this book is a good one for anyone who is even vaguely interested in birds, like I am.

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Review 2729: Mrs. Kimble

In 1969 Richmond, Virginia, Birdie Kimble is blindsided when her husband Ken leaves her to run off with a teenaged student at the college where he’s a pastor. The young mother of two children, she has no idea how to cope and takes to drinking instead. Her bills unpaid, her car breaking down, and her children unfed and uncared for, she comes close to having her two children, Charlie 6 and Jody 2, taken by protective services.

A few months after leaving Birdie, Ken Kimble appears in Florida with his young girlfriend Moira at her parents’ house. Although Ken is in his 40s, he now looks like a hippy. There, he meets Joan, a Jewish reporter from New York who is staying in the house she inherited from her wealthy parents while she recovers from a mastectomy. She likes Ken and invites him to stay after he and Moira break up. Soon, he has transformed himself into a real estate dealer with the help of her uncle—oh, and he’s discovered he’s part Jewish. She becomes Mrs. Kimble number two.

There’s another wife to come after Joan dies of a recurrence of her cancer, leaving Ken a wealthy man. This time, he marries Dinah, the girl who used to babysit for him and Birdie.

The tales of these three marriages are told from the points of view of the wives with an occasional look at what’s happening with Charlie. This is the story of a man who is charming, but it seems as if there’s no there there, a man who reinvents himself to get what he wants with no regard for morals or ethics.

It was interesting to me to read that Haigh began this novel as a story about Birdie and her children but became interested in exploring Ken Kimble. However, that’s what she doesn’t do, or only by inference. Despite some obvious preferences—for very young women, for example—Joan, who is near his age, is probably only acceptable because of the money—he is basically unknowable. And the section about Birdie, which is the longest, was almost unbearable to me because she is so hopeless and helpless. I’m sure there are women like this, but I just wanted her to snap out of it. She finally does, sort of, but it takes years.

I found the book relatively interesting, but it is not a favorite.

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Review 2728: Held

Held is a poetic musing on some deep subjects framed in the fluid story of mostly one family, with a perplexing few sections about Marie Curie. It begins during World War I and goes forward for some time before looping backward and forward between (mostly) descendants and ancestors.

Returning painfully disabled from World War I, John reopens his photography studio. John and his wife Helena have a deep connection, but John is troubled by his war experiences. After he hires an assistant, an image that shouldn’t be there appears in a photograph, making him wonder if some essence of the dead exists after death.

John and Helena’s story takes up about a third of the book, and then we travel forward to 1951 and a very short section in which Helena agrees to model for a famous artist and awakens her own artistic tendencies, buried since the death of John. We also briefly meet their daughter, Anna.

Then it’s 1984, and Peter, Anna’s partner, is relieved to welcome home his daughter Mara, a doctor who works in war zones. Mara has met Alan, a journalist, who seems to share with her the same deep loving connection that each member of this family has with the others, and with their friends.

These are some of the bones of the stories, but these characters are thinkers as well as feelers, and they consider some weighty subjects. Nature is also intimately entwined in these stories.

I understand that many readers have found this novel difficult, especially because of its fluid structure and many characters. None of this bothered me, but I am not a person who dwells on the meaning of life, so I felt I was missing a lot of the more esoteric content. I still enjoyed it. It’s absolutely beautiful, and the kinds of relationships depicted are to be admired. The characters are good and kind.

I read this for my Booker Prize project.

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Review 2727: Lessons in Crime: Academic Mysteries

Another British Library Crime Classics volume features mystery stories set in schools. Many of these seem a little more benign in general than their usual collections, only a couple featuring actual murders. In fact, it’s almost halfway through the book before we encounter an actual murder, although earlier there is an attempted one.

In “The Greek Play” by H. C. Bailey (1932), Reggie Fortune’s goddaughter invites him to her school play because she thinks something disturbing is happening. It is.

Sherlock Holmes and Watson visit a school from which a wealthy man’s son has disappeared in “The Adventure of the Priory School” by Arthur Conan Doyle (1904).

Another student disappears in “The Missing Undergraduate” by Henry Wade (1933).

I really enjoyed “The Gilded Pupil” by Ethel Lina White (1936) about a governess who is unwittingly used to trap a wealthy man’s daughter.

“Murder at Pentecost” by Dorothy L. Sayers (1933) doesn’t feature Lord Peter Wimsey but Montague Egg, and some schoolboys help solve the murder of the master.

Schoolboys assist again in the search for a diamond hidden in what was once a private home but is now a school in “Ranulph Hall” by Michael Gilbert (2000).

It’s Raffles versus an old school nemesis during a reunion in “The Fields of Philippi” by E. W. Hornung (1905).

The anatomy professor is substituted for the corpse in “Lessons in Anatomy” by Michael Innes (1946).

I intensely disliked Detective Chief Inspector Dover in “Dover Goes to School” by Joyce Poster (1978). Fat, slovenly, lazy Inspector Dover seems to solve the crime by accident in a story I think was supposed to be funny.

“When the Deaf Can Hear” by Malcolm Gair (1959) is an almost too basic story about the disappearance of some club money.

“Low Marks for Murder” by Herbert Harris (1973) follows languages master George Faraday as he plots to murder the headmaster.

The three most repellent sixth formers in existence form the main characters in “The Harrowing of Henry Pygole” by Colin Watson (1974).

“Dog in the Nighttime” by Edmund Crispin (1954) is very short, as Gervase Fen expeditiously solves the mystery of another missing diamond.

Headmaster Richard Lumsden’s cruelty to a boy is repaid in “Battle of Wits” by Miriam Sherman (1968).

Finally, “The Boy Who Couldn’t Read” by Jacqueline Wilson (1978) features another cruel instructor.

Some of these stories of comeuppance are too far over the top, and at least one story is so abbreviated that it made me think it might be an incident taken from a longer book. In general, like all such collections, the stories are mixed in interest and craft. Overall, the feel of the volume is a little more lighthearted than usual with these collections, with some exceptions that are notably cruel.

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Time for another Classics Club Spin

It seems like we just had one, but it’s time for Classics Club Spin #44. How does this work? Classics Club members post a numbered list of 20 of the books on their lists. The club picks a number, and that determines which book for the club you will read next. Lists have to be posted by this Sunday, May 17, and the deadline for reading the book is Sunday, July 5.

I don’t have much left to read on my current list, so this will be very repetitive:

  1. The Princess of Cleves by Madame de La Fayette
  2. Cecilia, Memoirs of an Heiress by Frances Burney
  3. Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens
  4. Les Misérables by Victor Hugo
  5. The Methods of Lady Walderhurst by Frances Hodgson Burnett
  6. The Tavern Knight by Rafael Sabatini
  7. The Princess of Cleves by Madame de La Fayette
  8. Cecilia, Memoirs of an Heiress by Frances Burney
  9. Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens
  10. Les Misérables by Victor Hugo
  11. The Methods of Lady Walderhurst by Frances Hodgson Burnett
  12. The Tavern Knight by Rafael Sabatini
  13. The Princess of Cleves by Madame de La Fayette
  14. Cecilia, Memoirs of an Heiress by Frances Burney
  15. Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens
  16. Les Misérables by Victor Hugo
  17. The Methods of Lady Walderhurst by Frances Hodgson Burnett
  18. The Tavern Knight by Rafael Sabatini
  19. The Princess of Cleves by Madame de La Fayette
  20. Cecilia, Memoirs of an Heiress by Frances Burney

So, there it is, my list! Happy reading, everyone!