Monthly Archives: April 2023

Stig Abell : Death Under a Little Sky

The path meanders east, and Jake pauses again for breath, and to rest his aching arms. In the last half hour evening has truly come, the shadows are long, the air settling into the cool of the night, the breeze dropping down to a decorous whisper.

Jake Jackson, a burned-out policeman whose marriage has run out of steam is on his way to claim the inheritance his Uncle Arthur has left him. He is suffering from the trauma of many years of police work and the sadness of a marriage where the inability to have children has dried up his emotional life. The bequest comes at a good time for him. His uncle has left sufficient funds so that he need not work, and a large house full of music and detective novels into which he can retreat. The fact that Little Sky is in an out of the way place suits him very well. He needs peace and time.

Soon Jake is wild swimming, taking a daily cold plunge. There is no bathroom in his house. He also starts running, working his land, doing boxing training. In spite of his rigorous attempts at self-improvement, he is often assailed by doubt and despair. Soon, however, he meets a young woman, the local vet (she makes her rounds by bicycle) and develops other preoccupations. When will he see her next? How can he develop a friendship with a woman who has a young daughter?

With the finding of a bag of bones, things become even more complicated, and Jake has deep concerns as to whether he is leading Livia (the vet) and her daughter into danger.

This book is labelled as Jake Jackson number 1, and the author has a three-book contract with Harper Collins, so he will live to fight another day.

I do like a good self-improvement book and Jake tells us about his ventures into cooking and exercise. He does a great deal of walking and reflecting on the nature of the countryside.  

The river is becoming more and more visible, at first like a blue shoelace dropped on the land, and then something broader, the rich mingled marine colours of green, blue, brown. A few gulls squabble and shriek above him.

I found this book to be a comfortable read, in the way an Ann Cleeves book or an Elly Griffiths might be. There is the remoteness, the surly villagers, the love story, the man healing himself. The crime is, at first, only in the past, but one of the better developments was the introduction of a female journalist who had studied violence and abuse in the deep countryside,and whose researches become relevant to the story.

There are perhaps not enough suspects. I worked out the culprit because most of the other possibilities had been exhausted.

What I really didn’t like was the use of present tense, but that is perhaps a personal idiosyncracy.

If you like a slow-paced novel with not too much violence you may well enjoy this.

I really would have liked to know more about Uncle Arthur who built Little Sky and the library.

…a huge library, primarily of detective fiction, the sort of books that had been given to him throughout his childhood. All of the great English authors from the mid part of the twentieth century: Agatha Christie, Margery Allingham, Dorothy Sayers, Josephine Tey. And long shelves of Americans, their gaudy covers gleaming: Chandler and Hammett and Spillane….

Uncle Arthur had a pretty good jazz record collection too.

I’m hoping we might learn more about him in the next two books, which of course I’m going to read.

350 pages of pleasant diversion.

Archy and Mehitabel

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I recently came across this wonderful treat in the free and open access Zea E-Books at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska – Lincoln.

If you don’t know Archy and Mehitabel you’re in for a treat. If you do, here are a couple of little reminders. Archy introduces himself in a poem left on don marquis’ typewriter overnight:

Continue reading Archy and Mehitabel

Nina Stibbe : One Day I Shall Astonish the World

Nina Stibbe had a rather fortunate start to her writing life. At the age of twenty she went to work as a nanny to the children of Mary Kay Wilmers who was a long-standing editor of the London Review of Books. She lived in Gloucester Crescent, which at that time was home to some well-known artists and writers. Alan Bennett, Jonathan Miller, Claire Tomalin, Karel Reisz, Deborah Moggach and Michael Frayne were all neighbours. This was all new to a young girl from Leicestershire. The story goes that Nina wrote letters about this back to her sister Victoria. Somehow these letters became the basis for Nina: Despatches from Family Life which won Non-Fiction Book of the Year at the 2014 National Book Awards. Two years later this was adapted by Nick Hornby for the BBC as Love,Nina. Her book Reasons to be Cheerful won the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize in 2019. Continue reading Nina Stibbe : One Day I Shall Astonish the World

A N Wilson : Confessions : A Life of Failed Promises

‘Failed’ in what sense? Why does Andrew Wilson profess to regard his life as one of ‘failed promises’? Is it because he never got a tenured teaching position? Is it because he never got a PhD? Is it because his marriage to the academic Katherine Duncan-Jones failed? Is it because he never became an Anglican priest? Or a Catholic priest? Or ever firmly made up his mind about which religion he subscribed to? Continue reading A N Wilson : Confessions : A Life of Failed Promises