Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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Top Ten Books Read in 2019

December 31, 2019 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 11 Comments

Putting together this post was slightly more challenging for me than in past years, for the reason that I did very little reviewing in 2019 aside from a quick paragraph or two on Goodreads now and then—so most of it had to come from scratch and from memory.

As is customary for me, as late as autumn I was wondering whether I could come up with enough standout titles for a good list—I did a lot of re-reading old favorites this year, and where new-to-me titles were concerned I was facing a crowd of options that I’d found enjoyable but not super-outstanding. But then, three of the very best books featured in this post ended up tumbling in during the last couple months of the year! And I had my list…as I always do in the end. I’m linking up with Top Ten Tuesday, as I also customarily do.

The staggering thing about this list is that a full half of the titles are by living authors—most definitely a first for me! Here it is, in the order read:

The Piper on the Mountain by Ellis Peters

This was one of my favorites in the Felse Investigations series. While a group of college students, including series regular Dominic Felse, are on holiday in Czechoslovakia, one of them mounts a surreptitious inquiry into her stepfather’s suspicious death there a short time before. This one has a little more of a romantic-suspense flair than traditional whodunit structure—in fact it’s rather more reminiscent of Mary Stewart than other, lesser books that have been billed as “like Mary Stewart.”


The Huguenots: Their Settlements, Churches, and Industries in England and Ireland by Samuel Smiles

I had always assumed, from France’s being a predominantly Catholic country down through the centuries, that the Protestant Reformation had comparatively little effect there. I had a basic knowledge of who the Huguenots were and the fact of their persecution; but this book blew me away with the breadth and scope of their saga and its effect on the culture and economy of more than one nation. Smiles’ primary focus is on what the exiled Huguenots brought to England and Ireland in the way of art, trade, industry, learning, et cetera (hint: a lot), but he also grounds it in a comprehensive overview of the zero-tolerance policy pursued by the French Catholic monarchy that drove the Huguenots to flee their homeland. I came away marveling at how Americans are taught so little of what is a big part of our heritage by extension as well; and also with a much clearer understanding of how the Huguenot persecutions contributed to the conditions that led to the French Revolution—a comprehensive portrait of a nation cutting off its nose to spite its face if there ever was one.


They Saddled the West by Lee M. Rice and Glenn R. Vernam

Okay, yes, this is probably one of the most niche things you’ll see on anybody’s top-ten list this year! I never expected a book on the history of saddlemaking to be so fascinating. I picked it up purely on a whim, but I was captivated by the way the history of the American frontier and the development of the Western saddle and the entire saddlemaking industry were entwined on every page. Review here.


Girl Waits With Gun by Amy Stewart

This book pleasantly surprised me because it wasn’t what I thought it might be from the cover and some descriptions of it, a heavy-handed feminist screed. It’s more the story of a determined woman doing whatever she has to do to protect her family and discovering in the process that she’s more capable than she realized; and when she does need to do things that are a little unconventional, it’s not to the tune of every other character fainting in exaggerated horror. I’m picky about the tone and slant of historical novels, and I think Girl Waits With Gun does a good job of showing characters whose ways of thinking and acting fit the time they live in, but also letting them appear as normal human beings without constantly emphasizing how different or strange their ways are.

Children of the Desolate by Suzannah Rowntree

Fantasy set in 7th-century Syria is about as far from my typical reading habits as you can get, but Suzannah’s writing is so good, and I just loved what she does with the relationships between a family of characters in this novella (a prequel to her historical-fantasy series set in the Crusader States, which I haven’t begun yet). Review here.

Newsletter Ninja by Tammi Labrecque

I feel a little funny rating a how-to book so highly before I’ve actually tried out the methods and suggestions laid out in it, but I’m still doing it just because this book’s advice is so much more specific than most other books and articles I’ve read. To give just one example, you’ll hear “write a good onboarding sequence” just about everywhere, but Newsletter Ninja actually explains in detail what ought to be in a good onboarding sequence and the order in which you should arrange it. I highlighted the daylights out of this while reading it on my Kindle and I’m looking forward to applying what it teaches to my own author newsletter very soon.


A Desperate Fortune by Susanna Kearsley

I picked this one up in the cause of looking for historical romantic-suspense comp titles, and though I ultimately decided Kearsley isn’t exactly a fit for me in this regard (since A Desperate Fortune is apparently the only one of her novels without a supernatural or time-travel element), I enjoyed the book a lot. It does have a dual timeline, and the modern one was okay, but it was the historical half that I liked best (surprise, surprise). The story of the daughter of an exiled Jacobite family drawn into espionage in 18th-century France, it does a fine job evoking the time and place, and the relationship between the two central characters is subtly developed to a lovely conclusion.


Stepsons of Light by Eugene Manlove Rhodes

This one jostles The Trusty Knaves for the position of my favorite Rhodes novel. The plot encompasses a crisp and simple tale of crime and detection which is organically grounded in its setting, a wonderfully lifelike portrait of cowboy and ranch life in New Mexico of the 1880s and ’90s. Rhodes is just so totally unique among early Western authors for his lively, literate style and sense of humor and his quixotic championship of his corner of the cattle country and its people. The one knock on him is that he couldn’t write romantic subplots or female characters very well, and it’s a fair one; but the “love interest” in Stepsons of Light is small enough not to have a great effect on the overall story. And contrary to what most readers might say, one of my favorite parts is where Rhodes brings the whole story to a halt to devote a full chapter to an energetic, insouciant tilt against the bleak “realistic” fiction becoming fashionable in the early 20th century; to which I felt like giving three cheers.


The Enchanted Sonata by Heather Dixon Wallwork

Oh, my word. This was the Nutcracker retelling I didn’t know I needed. With a delightful Russian-esque candyland of an imaginary kingdom for setting, a pair of flawed but lovable protagonists, many cleverly re-imagined elements from the original story as well as a few tiny nods to other fairytales, The Enchanted Sonata is fun and heartwarming and was the perfect Christmas read.


The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig

Finally got around to this one after having it on my to-read list for ages. In 1910 Montana, a widowed homesteader with three young boys answers a quirky newspaper advertisement for a housekeeper. Not only is the housekeeper somewhat more than they bargained for, but she arrives with an unexpected brother in tow, who makes a vivid impression on the community when he takes over as emergency substitute teacher in the one-room schoolhouse. Gorgeously written, delightful characters—it would have been near-perfection if it wasn’t for a very frustrating ending. But I still enjoyed the bulk of it enough to warrant a top-ten inclusion. Brief review, with spoilerish consideration of the ending, here.

Stepsons of Light and The Huguenots are in the public domain—the latter not easily available digitally, though; I trekked my way through a jungle of typos in a scanned edition from Internet Archive. Children of the Desolate is available free exclusively when you sign up for the author’s newsletter; Newsletter Ninja and The Enchanted Sonata were Kindle purchases; and the rest were library borrows.

Previous years’ lists: 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011

Filed Under: Lists, Reading, Reviews

My Year in Books: 2018

January 9, 2019 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 3 Comments

According to Goodreads, I read 97 books in 2018. By my own count, about 15 of those titles were re-reads, which I think is a little higher number than usual. For whatever reason I find myself often wanting to revisit books I’ve already read these days. Sometimes it’s for a comfortable sense of something familiar; other times—especially with hefty classics that I read when quite young—I find it interesting to re-read books I haven’t read in years and see how I like them now at a different age, and hopefully a different level of maturity.

If you’re interested in the full list of what I read, you can click here to see it; but here’s some of the highlights. I’m going to repeat what I did last year and include the titles from my top-ten list in this roundup as well. Links go to my review where there is one.

Most, but not all of my re-reads were classics. I read through Jane Austen’s complete novels for a book discussion club that my mother and sisters and I held as part of my youngest sister’s senior-year literature studies (and oh my, was that fun!). On my own, I revisited Gaskell’s North and South and Kate Douglas Wiggin’s Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, both of which I liked as much or better than I remembered from years ago; Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, which I had more mixed feelings about; and Dickens’ Great Expectations (ditto). I found my ambivalence toward Elizabeth von Arnim’s The Enchanted April remained unchanged, and her Fraulein Schmidt and Mr. Anstruther to be a mix of charming and exasperating; but happily Helen MacInnes’ Rest and Be Thankful rewarded a second reading as well as it did the first a couple years ago.

New-to-me classics were represented by two Anthony Trollope novels: The Last Chronicle of Barset, which was a grand wrap-up to the Chronicles of Barsetshire series, and Can You Forgive Her? I wanted to put all my thoughts about the former into a review, but I never did get around to it—frankly, there are more than half a dozen books that I wanted to review this year, but just didn’t have the mental energy to do so. Can You Forgive Her? was unfortunately the first Trollope book that I can say I didn’t really care for. I just had a hard time liking or sympathizing with most of the characters.

Another hefty tome that I read most of in 2017, but finished up and reviewed early in 2018, was The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk.

I read a lot of nonfiction this year; not surprisingly, most of it history. (Take a deep breath; lots of long subtitles incoming!) The Lost Art of Dress: The Women Who Once Made America Stylish by Linda Przybyszewski, Cattle Kingdom: The Hidden History of the Cowboy West by Christopher Knowlton, and A Short History of Germany by Ernest F. Henderson all made my top-ten list. I had the distinction of being the only person on all of Goodreads to read Troy’s One Hundred Years: 1789 – 1889 by Arthur James Weise—understandable, since it’s almost purely of local interest to natives of a once-flourishing industrial city whose significance is now just a memory; but intriguing stuff to anyone who knows the area. The Affair of the Veiled Murderess: An Antebellum Scandal and Mystery by Jeanne Winston Adler was also rather interesting because of its local connections, but had significant shortcomings as a book.  The Good Years: From 1900 to the First World War by Walter Lord was also something of a disappointment.

Also enjoyed two interesting historical biographies: For the Glory: Eric Liddell’s Journey from Olympic Champion to Modern Martyr by Duncan Hamilton, and Fierce Convictions: The Extraordinary Life of Hannah More—Poet, Reformer, Abolitionist by Karen Swallow Prior; and a couple of memoirs about homesteading in Montana: Homesteading: A Montana Family Album by Percy Wollaston, and Up On the Rim by Dale Eunson.

In theology, standouts were Revival by D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones (also on my top-ten list), The Book of Revelation Made Easy by Kenneth L. Gentry Jr., and If Ye Shall Ask by Oswald Chambers. The highlight of general nonfiction reading was undoubtedly The Anatomy of Story by John Truby, probably the most unique book on writing that I’ve ever read and another top-ten pick. I also gleaned some useful ideas from Be A Free-Range Human by Marianne Cantwell, a book that I admittedly speed-read a bit but can definitely see myself referring back to when dealing with the nitty-gritty of entrepreneurship.

Westerns were rather thin on the ground this year. The Cherokee Trail by Louis L’Amour was unfortunately a flat dud; the short story collection All the Long Years by Bill Pronzini was quality writing, but too violent and profane for me to really enjoy. Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson, a young-adult novel about a girl holding down a homestead claim in Montana, was nice if not brilliant. I did enjoy two more good cavalry Westerns by Charles King, The Colonel’s Daughter and Marion’s Faith.

I always seem to read a good amount of mysteries! Standouts from this year included Death and the Joyful Woman by Ellis Peters (which made my top-ten list), The Girl at Central by Geraldine Bonner, Miss Pym Disposes by Josephine Tey, and She Faded Into Air by Ethel Lina White. The Dead Letter by Seeley Regester was a Victorian mystery-melodrama that had its good and bad points; The Case of Jennie Brice by Mary Roberts Rinehart and The Studio Crime by Ianthe Jerrold were both pretty good. I also came to the end of Mary Stewart’s romantic-suspense oeuvre this year with Thunder On the Right, which felt so much like an author’s first attempt that it’s hard to believe it wasn’t one. (For fun, after finishing it I did a personal ranking of the Stewarts on Twitter.)

I don’t care who knows it, two of the books I most enjoyed reading this year were children’s literature: Gone-Away Lake by Elizabeth Enright made my top-ten list, and The Saturdays by the same author was also so delightful I was almost tempted to squeeze them both onto the list as one item. I also enjoyed a refreshingly wholesome and upbeat young-adult book from the 1950s, Blueberry Summer by Elisabeth Ogilvie (hello, fellow Elisabeth with an S!).

I always look for a few new Christmas stories to enjoy around the holiday season, and this year I found Christmas Eve and Christmas Day by Edward Everett Hale, a mixed but entertaining short story collection from the mid-19th century. It was also fun to read the original story The Nutcracker and the Mouse King by E.T.A. Hoffmann and trace the origins of the beloved ballet, even though the ending did have me sort of laughing in bemusement. But my favorite Christmas discovery this year was a lovely little novelette/novella called The Little City of Hope by Francis Marion Crawford.

I’m not in the habit of handing out an award for worst read of the year, but all I can say is that I had better not read any more Anton Chekhov or he’ll be a shoo-in every year. (Though The Cherokee Trail and Bob, Son of Battle did give him a run for his money this year.) I only picked up The Cherry Orchard because of John Truby’s using it as an illustration in The Anatomy of Story, but frankly found Truby’s summary of the character conflict better than anything in the play itself.

And last, but certainly not least, novels and novellas of varying genres. Meet Me in St. Louis by Sally Benson, The Story Book Girls by Christina Gowans Whyte, and The City Beyond the Glass by Suzannah Rowntree were all top-ten picks. Island in the Sky by Ernest K. Gann, O Pioneers! by Willa Cather, and A Summer in Bath by Meredith Allady were in the nature of runners-up; and I also enjoyed The Wreck of the Mary Deare by Hammond Innes and Mrs. Tim of the Regiment by D.E. Stevenson.

Previous years’ reading roundups: 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012.

image: pixabay

Filed Under: Reading, Reviews

Top Ten Books Read in 2018

January 1, 2019 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 9 Comments

It’s the mo-o-o-st wonderful time of the year…time to compile my list of favorite books read in 2018! I’m linking up with Top Ten Tuesday as I do so.

This year’s list is a little unusual for me, in that for the first time since I started doing these posts, a full half of the titles are nonfiction. I think this is owing to a combination of circumstances—from my little pie-chart on Goodreads it looks like I read a little more nonfiction than last year; and besides that, my fiction reading seems to have been just a trifle…well, I won’t say lackluster, as there were plenty of books I enjoyed; but just not as rich as in other years. Not as many brilliant standouts. Hopefully that won’t be the case in 2019!  But anyway, on to the list.

As always, books are listed in the order read, not in order of favorites.

Revival by Martyn Lloyd-Jones

An excellent look at what revival means, and why and how we should pray for it. Heartily recommended for every Christian, and especially those who already feel a burden on their heart for the state of the church and of the world around them. I want to re-read this again sometime soon. (Brief review here.)

The Story Book Girls by Christina Gowans Whyte

I feel like this is an unlikely entry for a top-ten list, but the fact remains: it’s among the ten books I enjoyed most during this year. It may be here more because of my response to it at a time when I particularly needed a friendly, comforting sort of book to curl up with on a dreary day, than for any other reason. It’s just a comfortable, rather rambling old-fashioned book about the haps and mishaps of an ordinary, affectionate family—nothing particularly earth-shaking or brilliant, but with enough wit and genuineness to elevate it above the commonplace.

The Anatomy of Story by John Truby

This book is different than any other how-to book on writing I’ve ever read before. It’s the first book where, as I was reading, examples from good books and films I knew kept popping into my head to illustrate the points about story being made. The amount of pencil underlining and little flag bookmarks sprinkled through my copy testify to how useful I found most of the advice within. Not everything is equally helpful; some of the detailed plot breakdowns toward the end felt overwhelmingly complicated, and various bits of the sections on symbolism and world-building seemed like they could be matters of opinion. But in the areas where it’s good—specifically character, theme, and conflict—it’s very good.

The City Beyond the Glass by Suzannah Rowntree

A historical-fantasy retelling of “The Twelve Dancing Princesses” set in medieval Venice, this is probably the most page-turning, must-see-what-happens-next of Rowntree’s retellings so far; and rich with period detail as usual. I read it in a single afternoon!

The Lost Art of Dress by Linda Przybyszewski

This is my favorite book on fashion I’ve ever read. There was a time in the earlier 20th century when American women were considered some of the best-dressed women in the world, and this book reveals why. It takes a fascinating look at a generation of designers and fashion experts who taught American women how to apply the principles of art, as found in the natural world—harmony, proportion, balance, rhythm, and emphasis—to create and choose beautiful and tasteful clothing that suited them and their lifestyles. And how to do it on a thrifty budget. What’s so neat about this book is that it’s both a fun history lesson yet also practically inspiring, as you come to realize that the principles of art can be applied to choosing tasteful and flattering clothing in any era. I want to review this book in full one of these days, but for now I can tell you that it inspired me to dig out my sewing machine and alter some pieces already in my closet that just weren’t quite right, but have since become favorite outfits!

Gone-Away Lake by Elizabeth Enright

I probably would have liked this book if I’d read it as a kid, but I may have enjoyed it even more as an adult for the way it reminded me of my own childhood. The descriptions of what it’s like to be a kid, enjoying the simple pleasures of playing and exploring outdoors on a summer day, are spot-on. And I would have loved to have had the kind of adventures that the two kids in this book have—discovering the remnants of an abandoned old town, and listening to tales of its glory days from the two friendly and old-fashioned elderly residents who still live there. Full review here.

Meet Me in St. Louis by Sally Benson

Ah, this was charming. Anybody who knows the movie will find most of the familiar plot elements within these vignette-style short stories, but I thought the book had a much more authentic, homey feel to it—not everything seemed as expensive and glossy as in the movie. The Edwardian era is a favorite period of mine, and perhaps what I enjoyed most about this book is the way that Benson sketches for us, in relatively few words, the sights, sounds and smells of a pleasant suburban neighborhood and the little details of furnishings, clothes, food, and other aspects of everyday life at that time. (Brief review here.)

Cattle Kingdom by Christopher Knowlton

A deeply interesting book that looks at the economic circumstances leading to the cattle boom of the late 19th century, and the mistakes that led to its bust—but more particularly focuses on an element of American West history that probably few people are aware of: the large-scale investments made in the biggest cattle ranches by wealthy Eastern and foreign investors. It’ll give you a wholly new perspective on the familiar “big rancher vs. little homesteader” land conflict so often used in Westerns. While I don’t necessarily agree with every one of the author’s conclusions, particularly his repetition of certain cliches about the “mythical” nature of the cowboy at the end of the book, I found Cattle Kingdom far more intriguing and thought-provoking than I had initially expected. You can read my full review here.

Death and the Joyful Woman by Ellis Peters

I came to this whodunit in a roundabout way: I’d once watched an episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour by the same name, and when I learned it was based on a book, yet the book had some intriguing differences—notably a British setting instead of American—I was interested. (The Hitchcock episode really borrowed scarcely more than the character names and can only loosely be called an “adaptation”!) It’s a good mystery sure enough, but what raised it to a level above that for me was the sensitive development of the relationships between the characters, particularly the family dynamic of police inspector George Felse, his wife, and their teenage son, who pursues an independent investigation of the case himself and is really the novel’s protagonist. If subsequent books are equally good, I can rejoice at having finally found another good, literate mystery series to work through!

A Short History of Germany by Ernest F. Henderson

Owing to a desultory but growing interest in German history and culture and my own German heritage over the last couple years, I wanted to find a book that was a very basic introduction to German history, and this one fit the bill admirably. What I didn’t expect was to be so entertained by something that I initially thought was going to be rather dry. The often amazingly petty conflicts between kings, popes, emperors, electors and the like (which, unfortunately for their subjects, usually took a good deal of fire and sword to settle), and the continual appropriation of disputed territories by whoever had the biggest army at the moment, reminded me of nothing so much as a life-size game of Risk. Henderson has his shortcomings, naturally—e.g., as a secular historian, putting a political interpretation on most aspects of the Protestant Reformation; and a tendency to conflate the “heretics” persecuted by the Catholic church with thinkers who eschewed religion as a whole—but, his more detached view does give some perspective on what a remarkable and providential event the Reformation was given the state of things beforehand.

The Story Book Girls was a public-domain download from Project Gutenberg; A Short History of Germany is also in the public domain and so I got an inexpensive Kindle version for 99 cents. Revival and The Anatomy of Story were already-owned paperbacks (the latter was a Christmas gift last year!); The City Beyond the Glass and Death and the Joyful Woman were Kindle purchases; and the rest were library borrows.

Come back soon for my roundup post of my whole year’s reading, which ought to be up sometime in the next couple of weeks!

Previous years’ lists: 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011

Filed Under: Lists, Reviews

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