Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

  • Books
    • Novels and Novellas
    • Mrs. Meade Mysteries
    • Historical Fairytales
    • Short Fiction
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact
  • Search
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Goodreads
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube

Books for Dessert: A Tag

July 24, 2017 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 4 Comments

“Delicious” is an adjective I often find myself using to describe a really good book, so a tag comparing books to different flavors of cake seems somehow fitting; and it seemed like a nice light bit of amusement for the midst of a summer vacation—so accordingly I picked up the challenge from Jenny Freitag at The Penslayer and here are my own answers:

chocolate cake // a dark book I enjoyed

The Unforgiven by Alan Lemay

I don’t usually go dark, except with chocolate. So it seems both fitting and a bit unfair that chocolate, obviously the best flavor on this list, should be equated with darkness. Anyway. The Unforgiven sets a tone of foreboding and impending danger from the very first page—and pays off on that—but it also pulled me in right away by making me care about the characters and needing to know what happened to them, and also by quality writing. I did let my eyes skim down the page during a couple of particularly brutal fight scenes. But if you like historical Westerns and don’t mind them tough, go for it.

vanilla cake // a light read

Summer Half by Angela Thirkell

I could put down any one of twenty different books in this spot at different times, depending on my mood. But I’m going with Summer Half, because it’s one I find myself coming back to periodically when I want something light, like a dependable snack. Amusing and dry and so-very-British, with boarding schools and croquet and boating and afternoon tea and a mix of sensible and nit-witted characters…this is one of my comfort-food types of fiction.

red velvet cake // had mixed feelings

A Room With a View by E.M. Forster

On the one hand, it’s a thoroughly charming, easygoing, witty Edwardian-era little novel…on the other hand, it’s the kind where flaws in the author’s philosophy and a vague feeling of something just less than satisfying in the way a romantic relationship is developed leave you with a niggling unsatisfied feeling. Enjoyable with just a touch of exasperating.

cheesecake // recommend to everyone

The Chronicles of Barsetshire by Anthony Trollope

I’ve never had cheesecake that I can recall, but it does seem ubiquitous, so I guess it fits. I’m going the classics route here—and I’m also cheating by putting down a whole series, because I can’t pick just one of the four (out of six) I’ve read so far (The Warden, Barchester Towers, Doctor Thorne, and Framley Parsonage) as a representative. Anyway, I’ve been running around trying to get people to read Anthony Trollope ever since I started this series. Livelier in action than Austen, not so bombastic as Dickens or Thackeray, with a cheerful brand of satire and a wonderful knack for creating lovable characters—if English lit is your thing, you’re missing out by not reading Trollope.

coffee cake // didn’t finish

Waverly by Walter Scott

What’s up with this category? Have you ever seen a coffee cake that didn’t disappear in crumbs altogether too soon? But anyway…after loving Ivanhoe, I thought all Scott novels would be exactly the same, and I plunged into Waverly with high expectations, only to flounder to a stop after a few chapters, highly puzzled. I was just bored. Don’t know whose side the fault was on, but I’ve never felt the inclination to try again.

tiramisu // left me wanting more

The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard

I’m trying to remember…have I ever tasted tiramisu? I have a vague feeling that I may have, and that it was something terribly gourmet and sophisticated. Or I may have just seen it in a cookbook. But sticking strictly to the analogy, I thought all but a few of Leonard’s crisp, hard-bitten Western short stories were terrific, and so I basically wish he’d written twice as many (especially since I tried one of his Western novels and didn’t care for it).

cupcakes // 4+ book series

A Fairy Tale Retold series by Suzannah Rowntree

The Bells of Paradise // Death Be Not Proud // The Prince of Fishes // The Rakshasa’s Bride // + more to come

It’s funny, but I find I just don’t tend to read many series besides mystery series, which are only connected by the central detective. And these novellas are really only connected by all being fairytale retellings. But they certainly fit the bill: short, delicious literary treats, rich in writing and imaginative settings. Can’t wait for the next one.

fruitcake // not what I expected

Railroad West by Cornelia Meigs

After loving my first two Meigs books, I went into this one highly excited because I was expecting the same thing in a promising setting: the Western plains in the 1870s. But it turned out to be a little different: rather dry, a little more focused on the railroad than the people, and leaving some eminently likable and promising protagonists sort of standing on the sidelines instead of getting deep into their hearts and minds like in Swift Rivers. Not a bad book, just not what I’d hoped for.

strawberry shortcake // favorite american novel

The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington

I’ve talked about this one enough times, haven’t I? It’s my personal nominee for Great American Novel (if such a thing exists), partly because I just think it’s a fine book, and also because I think its portrait of turn-of-the-century upheaval during the Industrial Revolution is a more universally American experience than, say, admittedly wonderful but more region-specific novels like To Kill a Mockingbird or Gone With the Wind. It’s one of the perpetually-underrated novels I’m always waving in people’s faces. Do read it.

 

images: Pexels, DesignNPrint // pixabay – MaxStraeten // morguefile

Filed Under: Lists, Reading, Tags

Summer Reading 2017

June 1, 2017 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 12 Comments

Can it really be time to post this already? The last couple weeks of May have been so chilly and rainy, I could hardly believe it when I realized the beginning of June was upon us. Of course, I’ve been planning my summer reading list since winter, as I always do. And it’s an absolute hodgepodge of genres, as it always is. This year it seems like even more of a hodgepodge than usual—but I probably say that every year, too!

D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones: The First Forty Years, 1899-1939 by Iain H. Murray
The Lark by E. Nesbit
The Dean’s Watch by Elizabeth Goudge
The Lost Girl of Astor Street by Stephanie Morrill
Indian Country by Dorothy M. Johnson
Love’s Labour’s Lost by William Shakespeare
When Life Was Young at the Old Farm in Maine by C.A. Stephens
Lords of the Land by Matt Braun
Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart
Greenery Street by Dennis Mackail
Redwall by Brian Jacques
Cheerfulness Breaks In by Angela Thirkell
O Pioneers! by Willa Cather
The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk
Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey
Beau Geste by P.C. Wren
Voyage to Somewhere by Sloan Wilson
For the Glory: Eric Liddell’s Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr by Duncan Hamilton

Also as usual, making it up ahead of time meant that I pillaged the list a couple of times when looking for something to read right now—Framley Parsonage by Anthony Trollope and West is West by Eugene Manlove Rhodes were originally on here, but I read them early.

I planned to roll some research reading for Dearest Lieutenant into my summer reading, hence The Caine Mutiny and Voyage to Somewhere. Though that project is on hold at the moment, I left those titles on anyway; I may just push them to the end of the summer when I could be ready to start working on it again (or maybe they’ll provide the impetus to get back to work). A few of these titles depend on my ability to track down a copy—interlibrary loan, here I come again!—and I really hope that other Thirkell readers are right, and Cheerfulness Breaks In marks the beginning of an upswing in the series, because the last few titles were rather disappointing. Based on how much I liked the earlier books, though, I’m willing to give a few more tries.

Have you read any of these books? What’s on your summer reading list?

image: ‘Love Story’ by E. Phillips Fox | Wikimedia Commons

Filed Under: Lists, Reading

The Girl From Kilpatrick’s and Other Stories: a new collection of “lost” stories by B.M. Bower

May 24, 2017 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 6 Comments

If you’ve been around my blog or following me on Goodreads for a while, you probably know how I love old books. Classics, of course, but I also love discovering the charming “hidden gems” of yesterday’s popular fiction. This began for me when I first got a Kindle, and discovered how many public-domain books that I’d never even heard of were available for free as ebooks. As I got better acquainted with the public domain, though, I discovered that there were even more books that hadn’t made it to easy-access platforms like Kindle or Project Gutenberg. They’re available, in places like Internet Archive, but often in hard-to-read scanned editions that are full of glitches and typos. It’s pleasing yet frustrating to find another book by a favorite author and have to struggle through error-ridden pages where you spend half the time guessing what the words are supposed to be.

I’ve long daydreamed about “rescuing” some of these obscure books by producing clean, readable ebook editions. And last month I made my first experiment in that direction, with a short story by Booth Tarkington, The Spring Concert. I cleaned up the text, using the photo scan version at Internet Archive for comparison; I formatted it for Kindle. I even put my slowly-improving Gimp skills to use and made the cover myself. And for a finishing touch, I included a few of the original black-and-white illustrations from the story’s first magazine appearance in 1916.

But I’m even more excited about my second public-domain venture. Remember I mentioned in one of my weekend roundups that I’d discovered a treasure-trove of old fiction magazine archives? I immediately began looking through them for stories by favorite authors, initially just with the idea of reading them (using the FictionMags index for reference). At the top of my list was B.M. Bower. Though her pre-1924 novels are widely-available in the public domain, she wrote dozens of short stories for magazines, most of which have never been republished in book form. And so…

The Girl From Kilpatrick’s and Other Stories on Kindle

Here is the result: a collection of eight B.M. Bower short stories originally published in magazines between 1903 and 1907, which haven’t seen the light of day since!

If you’re like me and enjoy Bower’s novels, you’ll be delighted with these stories too. (My own personal favorites are “At the Gray Wolf’s Den,” “The Sheepherder” and “Pecos the Peeler,” but I enjoyed them all.) Each story stands alone, but Bower fans will recognize the lead characters in a couple of them from supporting or cameo roles in the Flying U series. Since it’s not my own work, aside from the formatting and design, I’ve put only the most nominal price of 99¢ on the ebook—and speaking in a strictly literary sense, that’s a pretty darn good bargain for eight good stories like this!

Do I have more “lost treasures” in mind for rescue? Absolutely! I don’t have any schedules or timeframe (cleaning up the text and formatting is rather tedious and exhausting work, so one can’t make a steady diet of it), but I definitely have some more titles in mind, and next on the list are some lesser-known works by another Western author. Stay tuned!

Filed Under: Reading, Short stories, Westerns

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • …
  • 19
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · BG Minimalist on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in