I have read 'Jude the Obscure' by Thomas Hardy, and now I need therapy.
Showing posts with label rural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rural. Show all posts
31 May 2025
01 March 2025
Do Fear the Reaper...
I'm sucker for a good story idea, so when someone recommended a book about a vicar who also happened to be a serial killer, it certainly got my attention. I had to read 'The Reaper' by Peter Lovesey.
08 December 2020
#SheToo
'Tess of the D'Urbervilles' by Thomas Hardy
As long-term readers of this blog know, I struggle with The Classics. I'm sure I'm not the only one, just as I'm sure everyone has their own reason for avoiding Austen, distancing from Dickens, or backing away from the Brontës.I myself have been hiding from Hardy ever since we did 'The Mayor of Casterbridge' at school. I don't remember much about the experience, but since then have always associated Hardy with impenetrable, long-winded prose and depressing plots. But a recent encounter with 'Tess of the D'Urbervilles' may have changed all that. Well, the first bit anyway.
30 March 2019
Broken Hearts, Broken Minds
'When I Had a Little Sister' by Catherine Simpson (4th Estate, 2019)
Well, it's going to be a bit of a challenge to write this post, but nowhere near as tough as it must've been for Catherine Simpson and her family to decide to share 'When I Had a Little Sister', a powerful story of family, grief and mental illness.
The 'Little Sister' of the title is Tricia, who, following a lifetime dogged by mental health issues and depression, killed herself in December 2013 at the age of 46. Beginning with this terrible event, Simpson describes the feelings and formalities of the immediate aftermath, then reflects on her family's past and how the tough, stoic attitude of generations ultimately led to tragedy. Tricia, Catherine and their eldest sister Elizabeth grew up together on the ancestral Lancashire farm, living in the farmhouse where Tricia's life would eventually end. The apparently idyllic surroundings belied a childhood dominated by tough and eccentric personalities, whose influence would echo down the generations. Eventually, having exhausted their shared experiences, Simpson cautiously turns to her sister's journals, filling in the gaps and discovering a whole life that no-one knew her sister had. The book ends where it began, with Tricia's death, and the effect of the tragedy on the family closest to her.
Well, it's going to be a bit of a challenge to write this post, but nowhere near as tough as it must've been for Catherine Simpson and her family to decide to share 'When I Had a Little Sister', a powerful story of family, grief and mental illness.
The 'Little Sister' of the title is Tricia, who, following a lifetime dogged by mental health issues and depression, killed herself in December 2013 at the age of 46. Beginning with this terrible event, Simpson describes the feelings and formalities of the immediate aftermath, then reflects on her family's past and how the tough, stoic attitude of generations ultimately led to tragedy. Tricia, Catherine and their eldest sister Elizabeth grew up together on the ancestral Lancashire farm, living in the farmhouse where Tricia's life would eventually end. The apparently idyllic surroundings belied a childhood dominated by tough and eccentric personalities, whose influence would echo down the generations. Eventually, having exhausted their shared experiences, Simpson cautiously turns to her sister's journals, filling in the gaps and discovering a whole life that no-one knew her sister had. The book ends where it began, with Tricia's death, and the effect of the tragedy on the family closest to her.
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