Monday, 21 October 2024

THE TOWN HOUSE and THE HOUSE AT OLD VINE by Norah Lofts

 5 GOLD stars (or possibly 10!)


On Amazon (universal link)
On Goodreads





How I discovered this book: the series is an all-time favourite of mine and I haven't read it for years - during a short hospital stay the time was right to return to it!

In a Nutshell: Family saga and chronicle of social change over 6 centuries.

This wonderful trilogy starts with the tale of Martin Reed, born the son of a serf in 1381, the year of the Peasants' Revolt.  Freed from his bonds, circumstances take him and his beloved, Kate, to the Suffolk town of Baildon, where they live in dire poverty and squalor.  In time, Martin builds a house.  This is the story of that house, and Reed's descendants, each new chapter told by one character further down the line.

Throughout the books, ghosts appear in the form of family characteristics (though sometimes in actual manifestations, too).  Cold fingers on the neck of the old man who hears his grandson saying that he longs to be a travelling musician, while knowing nothing of his ancestry.  The cunning trickery of a small girl is mirrored two centuries later.  The beauty, of course, is that we know more than the characters, which means that their innocent statements are often more pertinent than they realise.

I have several favourite characters in these first two books (I'm still re-reading #3); one which interests me a great deal is that of Ethelreda, a young girl who survived the flooding of the Fens during the land reclamation of the 17th Century.  All she knew, until she was found near death in her boat, was her life on a little island with her father.  Nothing else existed.  Every chapter is an utter gem, though.  I recommend this trilogy with every molecule of my reading brain!!!


Monday, 14 October 2024

UNHUMANS by Jack Posobiec and Joshua Lisec

4.5 out of 5 stars



How I discovered this book: Recommendation

In a Nutshell: The Secret History of Communist Revolutions (and how to crush them)

A highly readable and succinct overview of the worst communist revolutions of the past few centuries, making one realise why far left overlords do their best to blank out history - otherwise, why would anyone welcome in such a regime?  Because the great, just realignment of society never happens.  For the common man, everything gets much, much worse.  You thought you were living in a dictatorship before?  At least you could work for a living, own land, come and go as you pleased....

'Nothing is clearer in history than the adoption by successful rebels of the methods they were accustomed to condemn' (The Lessons of History, Will and Ariel Durant).

Any criticism of the Chinese Communist Party was condemned as right wing extremism; academics and writers were encouraged to speak out, air their viewpoints, after which they were forced into labour camps.   In Stalin's Russia, the peasants worked on the collectivised farms, but died of starvation.  In Mao's China, in the state-owned farms, the workers lived in dormitories.  They owned nothing but weren't very happy.  Anyone who owned cooking utensils was forced to smelt them down, to feed Mao's desire to be a great steel producer. All the farming equipment, too.  This policy resulted in the death of tens of millions.  Peasants resorted to eating sawdust, leather and manure.  Cannibalism was rife, and celebrated.  Churches were completely destroyed.  One would be forgiven for thinking that the aim was to create Hell on Earth.

Castro sold himself as a liberator, to a naïve population who had no idea how much worse their lives would be under his communist regime.  Posobiec and Lisec write about Cambodia, about Marxist Chile, about South African apartheid.  Every time, the results of the new order are the same.  Those at the top become richer, and millions of ordinary people die.

I felt that the 'how to crush them' section was a little idealistic, but it's a good book and I'm glad I read it.