7 Jun 2026

A future Chalet School girl (by Elinor M Brent-Dyer)

A future Chalet School girl by Elinor M Brent-Dyer
(Amazon UK link)
There are some of the Chalet School series by Elinor M Brent-Dyer which I have read multiple times over the decades. There are others which I have apparently read only three or four times at most, as I find that I have forgotten most of the story and even some of the people. One of the latter category is ‘A future Chalet School girl’. I last read it in 2016, but couldn’t remember anything about it when I reread it in the past couple of days.

It’s one of a handful of books in this series which doesn’t feature school life at all. Not everyone appreciates them, but I always liked Joey Maynard, mother of 11 and a ‘foundation stone’ of the Chalet School.  In this book, she and her family go for a long summer holiday in the Tiernsee, where the original Chalet School was located. And they have an extra visitor - fifteen-year-old Mélanie. 

We meet Mélanie in the first chapter, in tears as she argues with her aunt. Mélanie’s parents, we learn, are travelling abroad so she’s being brought up by her aunt and uncle. She’s very fond of them, but he has been offered a promotion which means locating to Switzerland, and they’re not willing to leave their niece behind. She is horrified at the thought of leaving the school she loves, and all her friends, and tries to persuade her aunt to let her board. 

5 Jun 2026

Between friends (by Kathleen Rowntree)

Between friends by Kathleen Rowntree
(Amazon UK link)
I’m enjoying re-reading my collection of Kathleen Rowntree novels. She only wrote nine, but they cover quite a variety of settings and people. They’re primarily character based, but with a different focus in each one.

‘Between friends’, which I last read in 2004, is firmly set in a small village in the UK. It was written in 1992 as a contemporary modern novel. And it features a highly unusual situation, one which I had vaguely recalled even more than twenty years after reading.

Tessa is the main character, although there are many viewpoints given in the course of the novel.  The opening sentence tells us - very cleverly - that something life-changing has happened in her kitchen, although there are no obvious signs. Sunlight continues to stream in, and Tessa continues pouring coffee for her good friend Maddy. I assume they’re both around forty. 

Maddy has made a comment about something which she could only have known about if she had spent some time with Tessa’s husband Nick. And Tessa knows, in a moment of intuition, that they are having an affair. Nick is a serial philanderer, and she has decided to forgive him each time one of his brief interludes ends. She loves him, and he’s a good provider, a good father, and mostly they get along very well.

1 Jun 2026

The Essex serpent (by Sarah Perry)

The Essex serpent by Sarah Perry
(Amazon UK link)
As is so often the case when starting a book for our local reading group, I had not heard of either the author or the title. Sarah Perry is a British writer who has had four books published so far. ‘The Essex serpent’ was her second novel, published in 2006.

It opens with rather a depressing prologue, following a young unnamed man going for a walk next to a river on New Year’s Eve. It doesn’t spell out what happens, but it’s clearly not something positive. We don’t learn more about this incident until later in the book.

The novel takes place over the course of the following year, and is set in Victorian England, towards the end of the 19th century. The main character is a woman called Cora whose husband has just died. She is somewhat sad, but also feels free at last; it’s evident that he was seriously abusive, though, thankfully, there are no gratuitous details. Cora is rather a strange character, possibly because she was married at a young age, and never really had the opportunity of developing her own style and personality.

31 May 2026

The great omission (by Dallas Willard)

The great omission by Dallas Willard
(Amazon UK link)
Several writers whom I respect have recommended books by the late Dallas Willard. He was an American Christian writer and thinker. I read one of his books some years ago, and decided to put a couple more on my wishlist. I was given ‘The great omission’ for my recent birthday, and decided to start reading it a few weeks ago.

It’s not the kind of book to read in one sitting - at least, not for me. And this book, as explained at the beginning, wasn’t written as a single book anyway; instead it’s a collection of articles or transcripts of talks. So while they’re grouped somewhat by subject, and set as chapters, there’s inevitably some overlap. Some chapters are slightly more formal in style than others, too. Most days I read one chapter - around ten pages - and found that was enough. Sometimes I read two chapters if they were shorter, but it wasn’t always easy to keep my focus.

The main premise of the book is that many Christians - at least, in the US, and when this was written - talk about Jesus as Saviour, and read the Bible, and attend Christian events or church services. But they haven’t understood that the ‘Great Commission’ tells us that we should make disciples, not just people who say the right things and get involved with nice groups. Disciples are those who learn from their teacher, and if we say we are followers of Jesus, then our aim should be to become more Christ-like.

29 May 2026

Anne of Green Gables (by Lucy Maud Montgomery)

Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery
(Amazon UK link)
After finishing my re-reading of the ‘Emily’ books by Lucy Maud Montgomery last month, I decided I would reread her better-known series, starting with ‘Anne of Green Gables’.  I was slightly surprised to find that I reread this older children’s/teenage classic as recently as 2018, on my Kindle. But although I remembered the basic outline of the book - one I have read several times over the decades - and most of the characters, I had still forgotten a lot of the detail.

I hadn’t, however, forgotten the wonderfully written first paragraph of the book, describing a brook that twists and turns until it reaches Rachel Lynde’s house. There it runs entirely smoothly; not even a brook could misbehave in front of Mrs Lynde. It’s an excellent example of ‘showing’ rather than ‘telling’ a person’s character, although it could easily be missed: it doesn’t really make a very exciting start to the book, and is probably the longest single sentence I’ve ever come across.

Rachel Lynde isn’t the most important adult in the book. Her friends Matthew and Marilla, a brother and sister in their early sixties, are the real heroes. Marilla works hard to look after her house, Green Gables, while Matthew works on the farm. The story is set in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island. He’s a reticent man, but realises he’s getting older and can’t manage on his own. So, after discussion with Marilla, they decide to adopt an 11-year-old orphan boy from an orphanage. In 1925, when this book was published, adoption was evidently a rather more straightforward procedure than it is these days.