Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Keeper of the Door, 1952

Hehe, quibbling again!  Neither Max nor Olga had black hair or blue eyes.  Nice atmosphere, though. 

The back cover blurb's nice too: 


Did Dr. Max Wyndham hold the keys of life and death in his hands? And did he open the door intentionally to let Violet Campion pass through to the Beyond? Could she marry Max Wyndham and remain faithful to the memory of her friend? These are the torturing thoughts which troubled Olga Ratcliffe.

The events of that terrible night when Violet Campion died so tragically proved too much for Olga, and after many weeks of illness caused through brain fever, she recovered to find that memories of the past were beyond her -beyond her till the whisperings of the hated Hunt-Goring revived the awful fear that the real facts of her friend's death were being hidden from her.

How she discovered the truth and her final emergence from the valley of the shadows to ultimate happiness make an absorbing story, told by an authoress who not only gives her readers enter­tainment but solves with unerring skill some of the deeper problems which beset mankind.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Nettie and Sissie, by Penelope Dell

Just found on Ebay.  This looks interesting! 

"A Biography of the Best-Selling novelist ETHEL M.DELL and her Sister, Ella, written by their adopted niece."

Monday, August 2, 2010

Peggy By Request - it was okay

Done with Peggy. It was okay, but not as fabulous as some of the other novels. It took a looooong time to get to anything, and then I think the author actually missed some opportunity for buildup. Peggy and Noel had FUN times together when she was six and he was twenty-two! They should have at least reminisced about that and smiled together! But it was almost like two people met casually, liked each other and gradually fell in love in the normal course of things. There's some drama when disgraceful behavior on Noel's part is revealed, and Peggy reacts in a slightly unexpected way, which develops the characters-- but the solution, frankly, is pretty stupid and contrived, and so's the denouement. Peggy should have married Captain Turner, who loved her enough to fight for her! Nope, I wasn't overly impressed, and I'll just list it again on Ebay.