True confessions

May 16, 2008 15:38

First I have to show off my new icon, courtesy of redscharlach. Miranda Richardson squeaking from the cupboard under the stairs is IMO the funniest moment in the entire Blackadder series.


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light fiction, katie fforde

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Comments 11

huskyteer May 16 2008, 15:24:17 UTC
That sounds like my snobbery of not touching modern thrillers with a bargepole while reading any amount of sub-Fleming pap from the 1960s.

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callmemadam May 16 2008, 15:27:51 UTC
I am not alone!

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kerrilouise May 16 2008, 15:41:53 UTC
I finally got around to reading Wild Designs after you mentioned it last time. It's been in the to be read pile for ages. I than read Stately Homes and have now borrowed a stack more from Bettina.

I'm not a huge chick lit fan though I do like Liz Young. I love romanace books though and just about any other genre you care to mention but rarely read anything like literature at all.

I want to be entertained by my reading not depressed.

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callmemadam May 16 2008, 17:04:37 UTC
Why do we read if not to be entertained? Not all great literature is depressing, though:-)

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rosathome May 16 2008, 16:58:43 UTC
I have really enjoyed Katie Fforde's books up until the last two or three. IMO, she's become lazy and formulaic in her writing, presumably partly as a result of having to churn them out year after year for her publisher. Going Dutch and Practically Perfect really aren't worth the money, I think. But I enjoyed Flora's Lot (for the update of Heyer's Grand Sophy) and a number of her earlier ones are very fun.

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callmemadam May 16 2008, 17:10:29 UTC
Good job I didn't pay much for Going Dutch then. There is a formula, as I suggested in an earlier post, but it's a very successful one. I'm enjoying Flora's Lot and not just because The Grand Sophy is one of my favourite Heyers. I see what you mean and must read it again pronto. The first I read, Stately Pursuits, was the one I liked least.

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debodacious May 16 2008, 18:49:00 UTC
I haven't read any Katie Fforde having been put off, completely irrationally, by not liking Jasper. But she sounds rather like my cup of tea, and I always trust your literary judgement as I thinks we have similar tastes, so I will check her out.

I love your icon too, but I must beg to differ; Percy's lump of purest green is my personal fave Blackadder moment.

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callmemadam May 17 2008, 06:36:01 UTC
I understand that Fforde/Fforde thing. I've never read Jasper. I've found all my Katie Fforde books in charity shops, so they're easy to find.

On Blackadder we shall just have to disagree:-). I could have picked 'Nicholas the Second who used to be bizarre' as a favourite line.

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callmemadam May 17 2008, 06:39:12 UTC
If you want a nice, light, romantic read, you can't go wrong. I have read a couple of other chicklit authors and they were nothing like as good.

I'm not sure if I've read The Key but several Miss Silvers have alternative titles. If you find you like Patricia Wentworth, you're set up for months. I had no idea she had written so many books!

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Katie Fforde anonymous May 19 2008, 10:01:55 UTC
I've said it before and no doubt will say it again, but Katie is an excellent writer because she knows her market and writes for it. Crime writer Hazel Holt once said to me that Angela Thirkell said that what ones' readers wanted was the same book over and over again. Katie writes for a certain market. This is why she's top of her particular tree. It's not chick lit but then it's not literary fiction either.
Katie's sister Jane Gordon-Cumming is also a writer. Try her book A Perfect Family Christmas (preferably at Christmas time.)

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Re: Katie Fforde callmemadam May 19 2008, 10:46:41 UTC
Comparisons with Angela Thirkell can't be bad. I think Katie Fforde's novels must be just like Mrs Morland's: 'good bad books'.
Thanks for the recommendation re Jane Gordon-Cumming; I'll certainly look out for the book.

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