Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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Top Ten Books Read in 2023

January 2, 2024 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 12 Comments

Miracles on Maple Hill by Virginia Sorenson

Miracles on Maple Hill by Virginia Sorenson

A relatively rare appearance by a children’s book on my top-ten list, and actually the first book I finished in 2023, this is a post-WWII story of a family moving out to the countryside where their mother grew up in hopes of benefiting their father, who is dealing with wartime PTSD. Sometime after finishing it I realized that this is a perfect adult-child companion book with Hal Borland’s This Hill, This Valley, published within a year of Sorenson’s novel and an entry on my last year’s list: This Hill is a nonfiction chronicle of observing the beauties of nature over a year spent on a New England farm, and Miracles on Maple Hill is the child’s viewpoint on the same thing, told in story form. It’s also similar to Elizabeth Enright’s Gone-Away Lake in being a story of average city kids discovering the joys of living in the country, and the history and heritage connected with it, but where the former is a carefree summer vacation, Maple Hill strikes some deeper notes of dealing with real-life challenges.

A Tale of a Lonely Parish by Francis Marion Crawford

A Tale of a Lonely Parish by Francis Marion Crawford

This is the third Crawford book I’ve read, and three times he has succeeded in astonishing me. The title basically encompasses the essence of the book—a handful of people living in a quiet out-of-the-way English village—but as their interactions and relationships with each other slowly develop and their secrets are revealed, it morphs into a page-turning drama. It’s hard to describe it any better than that. Well worth reading.

Simple Money, Rich Life by Bob Lotich

Simple Money, Rich Life by Bob Lotich

I took a lot from this book on managing finances from a Biblical perspective. It’s not so much a flat how-to manual (though it does have a lot of sound practical advice on how to deal with financial problems like debt and over-spending); the core of the book is its insights on the right attitudes towards money: on viewing the management of it as stewardship, and how faithful, sincere giving brings blessings in many ways—all laid out in a very encouraging, energizing tone.

The American Senator by Anthony Trollope

The American Senator by Anthony Trollope

Surprise, surprise, Trollope shows himself able to gently satirize both English customs and American character a thousand times more agreeably than Dickens ever managed to do in that regrettable mid-section of Martin Chuzzlewit. Just kidding; not a surprise, really. The American Senator himself is not even the protagonist, more like a connecting thread running through the usual quiet, engaging drama of several families trying to sort out who is to marry whom and inherit what. When Trollope gets into a good stride with this kind of thing there are few classic novelists I enjoy better.

Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life by Marta McDowell

Beatrix Potter’s Gardening Life by Marta McDowell

I am not really one for gardening how-to books, but I do like books showcasing gardening beauty from which you can glean inspiration for your own garden. This one is just that: a book on the various gardens that Beatrix Potter visited, worked in, and incorporated into her art throughout her life. It’s a wonderful blend of gardening, art, literary background, and bits of history—it’s particularly intriguing to see examples of Beatrix’s painting and sketching in different styles than appear in her children’s books, and also how specific locations from the Lake District hills, farms, and gardens made their way into her stories, sometimes featuring in other artwork first along the way.

The Provincial Lady in America by E.M. Delafield

The Provincial Lady in America by E.M. Delafield

This might actually be the funniest in the Provincial Lady series. It’s amusing on multiple levels to read a humorous take on America through English eyes, and interesting to note which ordinary things about American life strike the narrator as most odd or foreign. (Having the Provincial Lady abroad actually minimizes the series’ weakest point, her occasional tendency to seem emotionally disconnected from her family by her complaints and snarkiness at their expense. When separated by an ocean, she can only think of them affectionately!) At its most basic, the witty, shorthand-diary style in which events are described is just hilarious.

The Singing Sands by Josephine Tey

The Singing Sands by Josephine Tey

As brilliantly unique a plot concept as Tey’s novels always display, a story that delves deeper into Grant’s inner life and emotions than any of the others, and a sensitive and moving novel in its own right in its exploration of healing from struggles with anxiety—a bittersweet yet satisfying conclusion to the Inspector Grant series, and to Tey’s all-too-short body of work. Favorite fiction read of the year. Read my full review here.

Open Range by Lauran Paine

Open Range by Lauran Paine

This book pleasantly surprised me in a low-key way. It takes a situation that has been turned into a cliché by decades of movies and paperbacks, but elevates it above the average by working it out in what feels like a much more historically authentic way, and by the immersive descriptions of the land, weather, and the nitty-gritty of a cowboy’s work and the beats of honest emotion it hits at key points in the story.  Read my full review here.

Birdmen by Lawrence Goldstone

Birdmen: The Wright Brothers, Glenn Curtiss, and the Battle to Control the Skies by Lawrence Goldstone

This one hit multiple sweet spots for me: old-time aviation and turn-of-the-century popular history. It’s a colorful tapestry of daredevil air exploits and the tangles of patent law (both sometimes equally jaw-dropping in their own way), populated with characters like a sometime inventor but more effective swindler named Augustus Herring, and one John Moisant, who built his own airplane and turned to aviation after multiple failed attempts to lead a revolution in a South American country where the new government was inconveniencing his family’s business interests! (I’m not sure whether my favorite anecdote was the King of Spain sulking because his wife didn’t want him to risk going aloft in an airplane, or the Wright brothers trying to sell an aircraft sight-unseen to the U.S. government with only affidavits from witnesses assuring them that it could actually fly.) A fascinating, roaring good read.

An Episode of Sparrows by Rumer Godden

An Episode of Sparrows by Rumer Godden

Godden is one of those authors who generate unsettlingly vivid emotion from a combination of understatement and a wealth of carefully noticed detail: the sights, sounds, textures, and little practicalities of her characters’ worlds. In this case that world is a genteel square and a neighboring working-class street in postwar London with a complicated and uncomfortable relationship between them, the story a simple one of street children trying to secretly build a garden among the rubble of bombed buildings. It’s not a perfect novel; there are a few things about it that irked me or I quibbled with, but its beauty and ability to get under your skin are undeniable.

* * *

Six of this year’s top ten were Kindle reads. Open Range was a Kindle Unlimited borrow; A Tale of a Lonely Parish and The American Senator are public-domain and available free. (The Singing Sands and The Provincial Lady in America are—ahem—public-domain in other countries.) The rest were library borrows.

Previous years’ lists: 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011

Filed Under: Lists, Reading

Top Ten Tuesday: My Top Ten Mystery Novels

August 22, 2023 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 14 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday is a pick-your-genre list week, and as it happens, I’ve discovered that for the first time in my recollection I have a clear top ten in my beloved mystery genre, so I’m sharing that list today. When a novel is as brilliant as the ones on this list, it’s hard to find just what to say about it, so I’m keeping my descriptions brief. Just trust me, if you like mysteries, you should definitely read them.

The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey

The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey

Ironically, my top mystery of all time is unique in not being a murder mystery at all. A country lawyer finds himself defending two women accused of kidnapping and beating a young girl, in a case that turns into a frenzied media sensation. Like all the best of Tey’s work, it stands as a fine novel as well as a mystery, with shrewd character development and startlingly relevant insight into human nature.

The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey

A hospital-bound Scotland Yard inspector trying to while away boredom becomes absorbed in trying to solve a centuries-old “cold case”—was Richard III really responsible for the deaths of the Princes in the Tower?—through studying historical records. The way that Tey gradually unfolds a gripping narrative entirely through her protagonist reading books and having conversations in one room is incredible (I stayed up practically all night to finish it the first time I read it).

Murder Must Advertise by Dorothy Sayers

Lord Peter Wimsey goes undercover as an advertising copywriter to investigate the death of his predecessor, who took a suspicious fall down the office staircase. There’s more going on in the office than meets the eye—the plot is deliciously intricate and its pointed commentary on the advertising business still rings true today.

One Corpse Too Many by Ellis Peters

When former soldier turned monk Brother Cadfael discovers that there is, literally, one corpse too many among the bodies of prisoners executed after the siege of Shrewsbury, he realizes that someone is attempting to hide a murder among the casualties of war. I was blown away by how masterfully Peters blends the classic elements of the murder-mystery plot with an eleventh-century setting, by the vividly drawn characters and page-turning suspense.

Arrow Pointing Nowhere by Elizabeth Daly

The seventh book in Daly’s highly underrated Henry Gamadge series, and one of the most unique plots from an author especially gifted at coming up with original concepts. A cryptic message dropped from a window presents Gamadge with the challenges of finding out who in the house sent it, making contact with them, and figuring out what crime they want him to investigate.

The Book of the Dead by Elizabeth Daly

Like most of the Gamadge novels, the plot of this one hinges on literature: some odd notes found scribbled in the margins of a volume of Shakespeare, linked to a death that doesn’t seem to have been murder—but something suspicious is still going on. I don’t know whether this one or Arrow Pointing Nowhere takes the prize for sheer originality.

Green For Danger by Christianna Brand

This might be the mystery that integrates its setting in a very specific time and place most deeply into the plot. The place, an English manor house converted into a hospital during the Blitz; the murder victim, a bombing casualty who dies on the operating table; the suspects, the attendant doctors and nurses, whose motives for murder are closely bound up with their wartime experiences.

A Murder is Announced by Agatha Christie

The Miss Marple that makes the best use of the English-village setting, with a cast of entertaining characters, a pleasingly layered and twisting plot, and of course that memorable beginning: a puzzling ad in the local paper announcing that a murder is to take place!

The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie

I’ve had different favorites among the Hercule Poirot novels over the years, but I think this one is objectively the cleverest. Poirot takes on the case of a serial murderer who seems to be choosing his victims at random, by the letters of the alphabet—and sending taunting letters to the detective challenging him to figure it out.

Death and the Joyful Woman by Ellis Peters

I count several of the Felse Investigations series among my favorite mysteries, but this was the first I read and probably the best on its own merits. A police inspector’s teenage son, painfully smitten with a young woman accused of murder, is determined to find the evidence to clear her on his own.

What are your top mystery novels? Do you spot any favorites here?

Filed Under: Lists, Mysteries, Reading

Summer Reading 2023

June 1, 2023 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 1 Comment

I’ve been so busy this spring with my day job and other practical matters that I’ve done barely any reading at all. In my leisure moments I’ve been too sleepy for anything but a few whodunits and some comfort-perusing of old favorites. For that reason, I’m really looking forward to the time when I’ll be able to relax with some pleasant summer reading! But in the interests of true relaxation, I’m also keeping my reading-list aspirations modest. For the second year in a row, I think there’s a sort of summery tinge to the selection of books I’ve chosen (links to brief reviews added later):

The God of the Garden by Andrew Peterson
Bransford of Rainbow Range by Eugene Manlove Rhodes
The Red House by E. Nesbit
Desert Brew by B.M. Bower
Poor Dear Theodora by Florence Irwin
The Singing Sands by Josephine Tey
The Princess Bride by William Goldman
Ten Days With Julian and Little Bunny, by Papa by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Mystery Ranch by Arthur Chapman
The Seasons at Eagle Pond by Donald Hall

I was really tempted to add a few more, a handful of historical nonfiction books that I randomly want to read because they look interesting, but I didn’t want to even casually commit myself to “must read these by the end of the summer or I won’t have finished my summer reading list!” I’ll put down the titles just for fun, though, because lists of books are my idea of fun. If I have the time and impulse, I might also read:

The Black Hand: The Epic War Between a Brilliant Detective and the Deadliest Secret Society in American History by Stephan Talty
Birdmen: The Wright Brothers, Glenn Curtiss, and the Battle to Control the Skies by Lawrence Goldstone
The Black Legend: George Bascom, Cochise, and the Start of the Apache Wars by Doug Hocking

(I really ought to write a niche nonfiction book someday just for the fun of coming up with the subtitle.)

what’s on your summer reading list?

image: “Woman Reading” by Clovis Didier

Filed Under: Lists, Reading

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