Wednesday, May 29, 2019

The Spies of Shilling Lane by Jennifer Ryan

It's an achievement to come up with something new and fresh in a historical fiction genre that is bursting at the seams (specifically, WW II fiction set in England). Some of my favorites are The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows, Dear Mrs. Bird by A. J. Pearce, Mr. Churchill’s Secretary by Susan Elia MacNeal, and this author’s first novel The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir

Books set in England during this time period tend to be much different than ones set in Europe, in part because there is that keen focus on a smaller, unoccupied location where people lived  understated lives with can-do attitudes that helped them overcome the Blitz, rationing, and shortages. 

The author does that in her second novel by focusing on Mrs. Braithwaite, a rather unlikable middle-aged woman whose life is challenged and changed when she is no longer the reigning Queen Bee in her small country village and whose worry for her daughter Betty forces her to step outside her comfort zone.  She travels to London to see about her missing daughter, ostensibly with a job at the sewage works in London, and to give her what-for for not corresponding regularly. 

Barging into Betty’s rooming house on Shilling Lane, she immediately starts bossing its residents around, including the timid landlord Mr. Norris, a hesitant little man who is her contemporary.  In her search for the missing Betty, Mrs. Braithwaite sniffs out circumstances that are not as they should be, and that sets lively activities into motion.

While falling into "women's fiction" category, the book contains excellent scenes of wartime London and subversive groups working against the British government.  It is flavored by interesting characters, a fair amount of suspense, and some very funny descriptions.   Of course, no one is as they seem, and our Mrs. Braithwaite grows on the reader as well as on other characters, as she takes things into her own capable hands and starts seeing the world in new ways. 

One of my favorite quotes from the novel captures some of the flavor of the story:

     "You saw the European history books on Baxter's shelf. And the philosophy!" She [Mrs. Braithwaite] stood up, leaning across the card table. "Anyone who reads philosophy is bound to be suspicious."
     "Why is that precisely?" Mr. Norris said, affronted. "I'm partial to a spot of philosophy myself. Just because someone wants to consider other ways of thought, it doesn't make them evil."
     "It's unbiblical, not to mention un-British.”

Advance copy courtesy of Netgalley.  To be published on June 4 by Crown Publishing.
https://www.jenniferryanauthor.com/the-spies-of-shilling-lane

Sunday, May 19, 2019

"Searching for Sylvie Lee" by Jean Kwok

The disappearance of a beloved older sister, Sylvie Lee, and the search for her by her younger sister Amy is the ostensible plot of Jean Kwok’s newest book.   But we are told in the first chapter that Amy admires the quote by Willa Cather: “The heart of another is a dark forest, always, no matter how close it has been to one’s own.”

Amy gathers the courage to travel alone to The Netherlands to look for her accomplished older sister who traveled there a month prior to visit their dying grandmother, a woman Amy has never met, but who raised Sylvie in her first nine years of life.  Sylvie was sent to Holland due to her parents’ dire economic circumstances, but she returned to her parents at the age of nine to help take care of two-year-old Amy.  Amy adores her, and Sylvie’s disappearance with no word is unlike anything that she has ever done. 

Amy arrives in Holland with no understanding of Dutch or of the Dutch culture, which is so unlike her own upbringing in New York City.  She meets her mother’s cousin Helena, her husband Willem, and their son Lukas, who is Sylvie’s age and who grew up with her, along with Lukas’ and Sylvie’s Dutch friends, Filip and Estelle.  Amy is perplexed by this family she has never met but who had such a big influence on her sister’s life.  She is frustrated by the Dutch police, who don’t take her missing person’s report seriously, and she is mystified by Lukas’ assurance that Sylvie is fine and that she is just thinking things through. 

The story unfolds like a peeling onion, with chapters from the perspectives of Amy, Ma, and Sylvie, and we discover that family secrets are a dangerous thing, and they abide in multiples in this family of immigrants.  They are slowly revealed to Amy — and to the reader.

One of the great strengths of this book is the portrayal of the immigrant experience, with the longing for home and the need to fit into a culture that is inscrutable and often unfriendly.  It is made more complex by the situation of two families in two foreign cultures, and there are wonderful descriptions of individuals meeting and bumping up against these cultures.  The author does a fine job of highlighting these cultures through the use of language, and each character speaks English in a way that shows his or her own background—Ma with flowery phrases but awkward sentence structure, Amy as an American, Sylvie in Holland with phrasing that is obviously an English translation of Dutch (her native language). 

At one point, Ma says of Sylvie and Amy: “There descended such a barrier between me and my daughters, like a curtain through which you could only vaguely make out the figures on the other side.  The Brave Language [English] belonged to the devil with all of its strange consonants, a puzzle I could not solve, and they were constantly chattering in it: stories, joys, and pains.  I desperately tried to understand.  I never could.  I could not reach them and they barely noticed me.  I asked them to speak Central Kingdom talk but they ignored me as if I had been playing the lute for a cow.”

While the plot seems a little overwrought at times, the ideas that Kwok puts forth about families and their relationships, love and its complexities, and the hard life of and prejudices shown to immigrants are compelling and would make for excellent book discussion.  The description of life in Holland is fascinating, and the imagery of open and closed curtains in houses nicely captures the themes of the novel. 

To be released on June 4. 
Thanks to Netgalley and Harper Collins for an advance copy.  (Quotes are not from the finished copy.)


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