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Monday 24 September 2012

Books.

So, I know that I live in Hobart in 2012 yet most of the time I inhabit a parallel universe which depends largely on what I'm reading. I've tried to keep myself sane during the two long weeks of school holidays by skiving of here and there for a comforting little read. Mercifully, my children who can read, are also bookaholics....maybe because I mastered the art of reading while breastfeeding, so it must have been by very early association. Or maybe it's just because I'm a total TV tyrant and they have had no choice.

Late last week, Emma from Two Little Pirates left a comment mentioning Partick and Taggie O'Hara from Jilly Cooper's Rivals. So of course, ever since then, I have been spending an inordinate amount of time thinking about if I were a character from a Jilly Cooper novel, who would I be. Brushing my teeth....on the yoga mat.....etc etc etc Have you ever asked yourself the same question? Hmm. And then I started thinking about Rupert Campbell - Black, but I digress..........So, after a great deal of thought I think that I would have to choose Daisy from Polo......what about you?

I have been a bookaholic forever, and have a proven track record of using books as an escape route. Back in the days when most of the girls in my boarding house nursed massive crushes on Boy George, I was infatuated with The Scarlet Pimpernel. And more recently, when I was pregnant for the first time, while other women in the same situation may have been reading What to Expect When You Are Expecting I took mine back to the shop and swapped it over for The Sea, The Sea as I spent the better part of the ten months working my way through Iris Murdoch's oeuvre....all 26 novels. I can also tell you what I was reading during each of my four confinements, much to my obstetrician's horror....Margaret Drabble's The Millstone, Patrick White's A Fringe of Leaves, Richard Flanagan's The Accidental Terrorist and then ten years later it was back again to Iris Murdoch and The Message to the Planet.

So, back to the more pressing issue of how have I entertained myself over the school hols. Firstly with this:



I must admit to not being that interested in Wallis Simpson beforehand, yet I was utterly riveted to this book. I stayed up too late most nights, when the children were in bed, reading it. I was shocked in Chapter Three by the claim that Wallis may have suffered from intersexuality and could really have been more of a man than a woman. Who would have thought. And then there were the revelations about her time in China, where it was supposed that she may have picked up various bordello techniques.....of the kind to inspire such infatuation that it could cause a king to abdicate. Not to mention the fabulous jewels and the designer frocks all accompanied by the debilitating poison of unhappiness which pervaded their married life. 

And then I moved onto this:


Which was also unputdownable. A story of one family's occupation of the same house, Knole,  over 400 years or 13 generations......and over that time the Sackville family saw it all. For ages, I have been fascinated by Vita Sackville - West and have read most of her books and been in awe of her gardening prowess at her own home Sissinghurst, where she moved after her marriage. (I've been to Sissinghurst on a pilgrimage to see the garden and climb to the top of Vita's tower). Vita was the only child of the 3rd Lord Sackville. She grew up at Knole and loved the house as an extension of herself. Because of her gender she knew from childhood that it would be her male cousin Eddy who would ultimately inherit Knole and not her. (Eddy was supposedly Uncle Davey in Nancy Mitford's The Pursuit of Love). As compensation, Virginia Woolf wrote the novel Orlando for Vita which allowed her to take possession, in fantasy, of the sprawling renaissance palace that she had been denied in fact. What an incredible gift. But then of course, Vita and Virginia were lovers. Don't be shocked, but during her marriage, Vita had affairs with women while her husband had affairs with men. 

And to think that Jilly Cooper has a reputation for being racy. It just goes to show that sometimes fact can be right up there with fiction.

Rx

17 comments:

  1. I think the best thing about reading books is that you never feel alone or lonely. Books have always kept me company, particularly if I ever travelled by myself. Now I have to hide to get anything approaching alone time with a book...

    When I was a little girl I used to tell my Mum that books were like friends. (I promise I did have real friends too!)

    Might have to get my hands on that Wallis Simpson book. And I adore Jilly. She is one of my favourites.

    Take care Romy.

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    1. Yes, I know what you mean about alone time...I am in dire need of some yet as I type this my 4 year old has just vomited all over our bedroom floor so it looks like I'll have at least two at home tomorrow! I reread most of my Jilly library over the last summer hols and loved every minute! Rx

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  2. Have been wanting to read Iris Murdoch's The Sea, The Sea for years, so thrilled that you've recommended it.

    Lots of people have been talking about the Wallis Simpson biography. I can believe she studied Asian techniques!

    Have you read 'Portrait of a Marriage'? It's the biography of Vita and Harold, written by their son. It's fascinating. They had an open marriage and yet were so in love, right to the end. And of course Sissinghurst was their love sonnet to each other.

    Great post Romy!
    xx

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    1. Thanks Janelle, I love 'The Sea, The Sea' it is a fab read! I've read 'Portrait of a Marriage'....it is an incredible story and it inspired my pilgrimage to Sissinghurst, I just had to see it for myself. Over the hols I borrowed the dvd version from the library and put in on spasmodically until my children became too concerned by some of the lesbian scenes (not that the ones I saw were particularly graphic!). Rx

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  3. OK Romy, you have me totally inspired now by these books. I've always been a little fascinated by both Wallis Simpson and Vita Sackville-West. Of course I wished I had even a minute amount of Vita's gardening prowess, but a girl is always allowed to dream. I named my first cat after Wallis Simpson. He was a boy so maybe I was on to something! Have you read The Paris Wife? I think you'd enjoy it if you haven't. Amanda x

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    1. Hi Amanda, yes I've read 'The Paris Wife' and loved it....it was so beguilingly written. I must also admit to being just a tad under the spell of old Ernest myself even though he was a notorious womaniser but couldn't he write Rx

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    2. If you're interested I wrote a post about 'The Paris Wife' way back at the start of the year.......http://hobarthousewife.blogspot.com.au/2012/02/curious.html

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  4. And Rupert Campbell-Black - maybe it's time I revisited Jilly! School holidays are starting at the end of this week here...

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    1. Yes, Rupert.....! School hols would be a perfect time to revisit Jilly.....there is a park down the road from my house that used to have one of those horse see-saw rocking-horse thingies in it and for years my children called them 'Spotty' and 'Fantasma' after the ponies in Polo! Rx

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  5. Oh I wish I had the concentration span to read. I'm always so distracted lately.
    I have read 'Portrait of a Marriage' about Vita, a fascinating read and as you say fact is stranger than fiction! x

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    1. I've read 'Portrait of a Marriage' too and you're right...if you tried to explain the plot to someone who hadn't read it they wouldn't believe it! Rx

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  6. Dear Romy
    How interesting to hear that Uncle Davey was based on a real person, a cousin of Vita's. Enjoyed him in Pursuit of Love and Love in a Cold climate and even more in Don't Tell Alfred where he finds a way to get rid of the redundant ex Ambassadress. She loved her role in Paris so much that she wouldn't leave the Residence even when her husband departed and continued to receive admiring visitors (believe she may have been modelled on Diana Cooper -though she didn't of course outstay her term). All of Nancy Mitford's characters are so magical and memorable. Best wishes, Pamela

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    1. Hi Pamela, yes I was amazed by the Uncle Davey fact too yet it was made by Robert Sackville - West in 'Inheritance' so I assumed that if anybody knows it would be him! It was funny, when I was reading the book about Wallis Simpson I couldn't help but think that maybe Nancy may have loosely based Veronica Chaddesley Corbett on Wallis as there seemed to be quite obvious similarities? I wonder. It was also funny reading quotes by Diana Mosley about 'Cake'....the Mitford's pet name for the Queen Mother! They knew them all. You're right....magical and memorable. Rx

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  7. Ah Romy, what a fascinating post. I love the way your mind works. So much to ponder. I've never read Jilly Cooper. But I read The Millstone for HSC English Lit and A Fringe of Leaves at Uni. I loved the Tasmanian setting for the latter. I've only read Virginia's A Room of One's Own but have always wanted to read her others. And I've meant to read Orlando for about 20 years since I saw the captivating film with Tilda Swinton. Ah, even more we have in common! J x

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    1. Oh Jane, you have a treat in store if you haven't read Jilly......I suggest that you log on and order 'Riders' from the library directly! I'd lend you mine but it's terribly tatty, as only frequently read books can be! Rx

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  8. I would definitely be Taggie as she is the tall Mum. Always had a soft spot for Fen though, and wished she popped up again like the others.

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  9. I like the story of the book Inheritance. It is not available on Book Depository. Could you let me know from where you bought this book?

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I LOVE hearing your thoughts! Rx