Last week, when I talked about the books I'd been reading, Deana mentioned that she'd just finished The Uncommon Reader -- a novellas about Queen Elizabeth II becoming a voracious reader. As a life long fan of Her Majesty (I was ten when she was crowned and successfully cajoled my grandparents into buying a television so that we could watch the coronation,) and as a life long reading addict, I immediately checked out the sample on Amazon. The novella opens with HM interrogating the French ambassador about Jean Genet, the homosexual/jailbird/writer.
Done. I downloaded the book and read it pretty much in one gulp. It was charming, watching The Queen go from a non reader to an addicted one -- somewhat to the chagrin of those around her
( she figures out how to read while in a car or coach and waving at the populace)I didn't want it to be over. So I read it again. Then I noticed a note at the end of the Kindle edition If you enjoyed this book... and they suggested another novel about The Queen. It was equally delightful and almost a seamless segue from one book to the other -- though in Mrs. Queen, HM is not a reader. In fact, she references the The Uncommon Reader and snorts, "Fancy making me out to be a reader. There's imagination for you. "I re-read this one immediately too. . Mrs. Queen Takes the Train review HEREFinally having gotten my fill of Elizabeth II, I picked up a book a friend lent me months ago. Written by John Berendt, the author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, The City of Falling Angels is a fascinating look at the non-tourist side of Venice -- the intrigues, the politics, the families, the history, the gossip. . .
I've been to Venice twice -- never for long and never with the sort of money it would take to see the things Berendt describes. But even as the lowliest of tourists, I was mesmerized by the charm and magic of this amazing city.
And as I read, Berendt mentioned that Henry James had set a short novel (The Aspern Papers) in Venice and immediately I flashed on the Queen Elizabeth of The Uncommon Reader -- "It was Henry James she was reading one tea-time when she said out loud, 'Oh, do get on.'"Exactly the way I have felt at times about James. But, as she reads more, HM begins to appreciate his work. So, finding the The Aspern Papers was a free download for the Kindle . . .