Showing posts with label THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. Show all posts

Saturday, May 19, 2018

From Inside My Book Fort - - - "THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY" by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows


Welcome back to the book fort!





Today I'm sharing a snippet from one of the best books ever.

I wrote this about it here in Meanderings and Muses awhile back - http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/search?q=THE+GUERNSEY+LITERARY+AND+POTATO+PEEL+PIE+SOCIETY%22


And,

Here's what some others had to say about "THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY"  by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows - - - 






The zany title of Mary Ann Shaffer's first and, alas, last novel derives from an invented book club on the island of Guernsey in the second world war. The club is invented by the resourceful character Elizabeth McKenna, who, bumping into a German patrol after curfew with a crowd of revellers, makes the society up on the spot. In reality, the tipsy party had been consuming forbidden roast pig at Amelia Maugery's. This is less a historical novel than a bibliophilic jeu d'esprit by an ex-librarian and bookseller, posthumously published, and completed by her niece Annie Barrows . . .   More here:  https://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/aug/09/fiction4


“Delightful . . . One of those joyful books that celebrates how reading brings people together.”New Orleans Times-Picayune



“Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows have written a wondrous, delightful, poignant book— part Jane Austen, part history lesson. The letters aren't addressed to you, but they are meant for you. It's a book everyone should read. An absolute treasure.”—Sarah Addison Allen, author of Garden Spells


Enjoy!









Friday, January 8, 2010

Meanderings

This has been a rough week. It has snowed every day or every night, the temperatures have been arctic, the winds have been brutal with 50 mph gusts and the wind chills have been down in the minus figures.

Donald has had to plow us out every morning before we could go to work, then we'd still have to wait for the road crews to come plow our road (they have been doing a miraculous job). Today was just too much. This morning besides an additional few inches of fresh snow, it was coming down so hard and the wind was blowing so fiercely we had white-out conditions and we just said the heck with it and stayed home.


And I curled up in bed with a cup of coffee and one of the best books ever.


Every once in awhile you find a book that makes you remember just why you fell in love with reading.


Last year I kept hearing people talk about
THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY.




I was immediately suspicious and put off. That type of hype always does that to me. I should, however, remember that some of my very favorite books are books I originally shied away from for this very reason. Like - Harry Potter. When I finally got around to buying the first in the series,
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, the third was just hitting the shelves to a huge amount of hoopla which I thought was just crazy. Then I settled down to read and was a total goner by page 2 where we find a cat reading a map.

(Note to self: Just because it's popular with a lot of people, doesn't mean it isn't good. Pay attention to that!)

I ignored all the buzz about Guernsey until this year when my friend Judy B. mentioned it. Judy and I seem to gravitate towards the same books and writers and it's always fun when we're able to introduce one another to something or someone new. And I'm indebted to her for nudging me towards this lovely novel.

The story of
THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY is told through a series of letters written in 1946. We learn about the German occupation of the island of Guernsey. I'm not really a fan of World War II fiction, and I'm not normally a fan of novels coming at me in the form of letters. For having those two strikes against it, I was sure this book was not going to be my cup of tea. And then there's the title. Too clever,I thought; which would probably mean "too cute." I'm for sure not a fan of "too cute."

Once again, I was wrong. I was immediately hooked. Before I reached page 10, I was giving the book a loud shout-out to my reading friends (most of whom had, of course, already read it).

We do learn about the occupation, and there were horrors. We also meet an amazing cast of characters. They're a gentle, humorous, off-beat group and their stories range from joyfully heart-warming to silly to woefully heart-breaking. But they're all told in a voice that is true, clear, loving and respectful. I smiled, I laughed out loud and I wept. And I put the book down knowing that it's one that I'll cherish and remember forever.

When I talked to my friend Nan about it, she asked (as only Nan could do) "Will I want to buy it in hardback to take to the old folks home with me when I go?"


Yes. She will.

And so will I.

And. If I had pots of money, I'd buy everyone I know a copy. Shoot. I'd buy people I don't know a copy. I'd stand on a corner and pass them out to those who look worthy.

Here are a couple of blurbs - -


"A book-lover's delight, an implicit and sometimes explicit paean to all things literary." - Chicago Sun-Times

"One of those joyful books that celebrate how reading brings people together and sustains them through rough times." - New Orleans Times-Picayune

If you haven't read THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY, I hope you will. If you have already, I'd love to hear what you thought.




for full FTC disclosure.
I bought this book.
No payment of any kind has been made for the above stated opinion.