Sunday, October 31, 2010

Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge Wrap Up



I find it hard to believe, but it's true; today is the last day of October and thus the end of the second Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge. What initially began last year as medium in which I could share with other readers my love for all things Betsy-Tacy has grown to be so much more than I ever imagined. I am thrilled to connect with a vast number of Maud Hart Lovelace fans and to watch as a new generation of readers discover this wonderful author and these fabulous books for the very first time.

As this is the wrap-up post for the challenge I have opened a Mr. Linky where all participants of this year's challenge can come and link up any and all Maud related posts from their blog. Even if in the last few weeks you have left a comment with a link to your blog I encourage to you re-post it here. This is a great way for me to connect with each of you (I've tried to stay on top of all your posts, but I may have missed a few) and an awesome way for you all to connect with each other.



Thank you for participating! I hope you all have had as much fun as I have reading Maud's books and learning about Betsy, Tacy and Tib, Emily, Winona and Carney (and all the rest of the Deep Valley crowd and beyond). I hope you have enjoyed learning more about Maud herself and maybe even been tempted to check out some of her other works or to take a trip to "Deep Valley" (a.k.a. Mankato). Most of all I hope you're planning to keep reading and return next year for the third Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge! Maud's books are indeed modern classics, little gems of literature and I can't wait to do it all again next fall! See you all then -- and hopefully in between on other topics.

Winner Announced: Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge Give-Away #4


It's time to announce the winner for the final Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge give-away! This week's prize is a Betsy-Tacy themed book bag/tote courtesy of Book Club Girl.

.

And the winner (thanks to random.org and my husband's unknowing assistance) is...

Congratulations Kate! Please email me (libraryhospitalblog AT gmail DOT com) your mailing address and I'll arrange to have the tote shipped to you.

P.S. I'm starting to plan for next year's MHLRC, so if you have ideas, suggestions, or donations for the challenge please feel free to email me; I'd love to hear your thoughts!

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Upcoming Deep Valley Re-Release Parties & Radio Interviews



Even though the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge is nearly at an end that doesn't mean all the celebrating is over.

Missed out on the October book release parties and book signings? There are still some scheduled for November and early January:

  • November 1-5. Join Mitali Perkins on Twitter for a "tweet-read" of Emily of Deep valley Follow @MitaliPerkins and watch for hashtag #kidclassic.
  • Tuesday, November 15 at 7pm ET. Join Book Club Girl (Jennifer Hart), Mitali Perkins and Melissa Wiley on Blog Talk Radio Tuesday, November 15th at 7pm ET. These ladies will be discussing Emily, Carney, Winona, & all things Maud.

  • Saturday, November 20 at 3pm. Join Melissa Wiley at Reader's Inc. Bookstore in La Mesa, CA (near San Deigo) for the Betsy-Tacy Re-Release Party. (Pre-registration required.)

  • Saturday, January 8, 2011. ALA Midwinter in San Diego. Look for Mitali Perkins and Melissa Wiley at the HarperPerennial booth.

Friday, October 29, 2010

You Are What You Read!

The age-old saying "You are what you eat" has spurred on healthier eating habits, so will the latest "You are what you read" movement spur on healthier reading habits?

Consider that statement for a minute. Does it startle you or excite you? Does it make you worried or proud?

Scholastic has launched a new website: You Are What You Read where browsers can:
  • Discover new books through an interactive web that shows how users’ Bookprints are connected.
  • Find and connect with users across generations and from around the world to see the books in their Bookprints.
  • Compare their Bookprints to those of the participating "Names You Know," and find out if they share a book in their Bookprint with famous athletes, award-winning entertainers, world-renowned scientists, or iconic business leaders.
  • "Favorite" other books they like and check out what similar users enjoy reading.
  • See which books have been chosen as Favorites from around the world Share a book in the real word through Pass It On, which encourages users to give a favorite book to a family member, a friend, or even a complete stranger.
  • And Coming Soon: Users can join ongoing conversations about books and Bookprints in "Book Buzz," a live feed of comments, news, and reviews.
Which five books have influenced you? Are they books from your childhood or from this year? Leave a comment and let me know which five books have influenced your life. Or better yet, create your own post stating the five titles and why or how they have influenced you. And then don't forget to head over to Scholastic and create your own reading footprint!

Related Links:

Happy reading!

Friday's Fave Five - Maud Hart Lovelace Style

As we are drawing to the end of this year's Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge I want to do things a little different for this week's Friday's Fave Five. Instead of just listing five favorite things from the previous week I am going to list five favorite things either about Maud Hart Lovelace as an author or about her books.

1. Maud Hart Lovelace. I have very few selective "favorites" in life. When it comes to authors I have many I like, but few that could be called "favorites". But if I had to name just one author out of all that I enjoy it would have to be Maud Hart Lovelace. I love her writing style, I love her sense of humor and I find her stories fascinating. I just love her books.

I also love that the Betsy-Tacy series is based on Maud's real life experiences, her friends and family, and the thoughts and feelings she had as a young girl and a young woman. When I read them they are not only a delightfully entertaining, but they feel real as if I am reading the adventures of a friend. Maud was born with some amazing gifts. Writing was one and the other was the ability to capture her life and put it down on paper for others to enjoy and relive through their imagination.

But writing aside, I also have a lot of respect for Maud as a person. When I read The Betsy-Tacy Companion (the only thorough biography of Maud Hart Lovelace) last year I grew to appreciate her even more. Maud had a happy and fulfilling life. She was loving and kind and was loved by her friends and family. She brought joy through her books as well as her day to day life. She had true faith and I can only imagine she must have been a wonderful person to know and call "friend."

2. Joe/Delos. Some may argue that Joe isn't really based on Maud's husband because Betsy meets Joe as a young teenager and Maud didn't meet Delos until well into her 20s. And yet, it appears a great deal of Joe is based off Delos. With this in mind I have always favored Betsy's Wedding because it is the first opportunity the reader gets to really know Joe/Delos. Within this book it is also clear how great a match Joe and Betsy are. They are truly happy together, the best of friends and lovers. From what I've read this was also how it was for Delos and Maud and that makes me happy; happy to know that while the fictional couple appear to live "happily-ever-after" the fact remains the real-life couple did too and that's what really counts in the end.

"Delos and I are mutually agreed that marrying each other
was giving the perfect answer to life."
~ MHL, 11/28/1931

3. The importance of reading. I love reading and writing and almost anything book related. So it fits well that one of the aspects of Maud Hart Lovelace's books that I love is how important reading is to the characters within. Betsy loved to read and write, as does Joe. And Emily and Carney have their share of reading in the Deep Valley books. Betsy's early visits to Deep Valley's public library are a big deal in Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown and although the library takes a lesser role as Betsy becomes distracted with boys during high school Maud still manages to include the library and reading in general as an important and beloved aspect of life for Betsy and her friends.

In recent years I've found it especially fun to note the books mentioned within a book I am reading. Sometimes I find new titles to read and other times I can't help but laugh in agreement when a character expresses an opinion about a book I've also read. One of my top favorite reads of all times is Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Shuttle. I was thrilled last year when I discovered this was a book that Betsy also read with her friends (see Betsy Was a Junior, Chapter 7). I think in a way it is almost an inside joke between authors and readers when a book is mentioned within a book. I love it.

4. The timelessness of her books. Maud's stories are set 50-100+ years ago (depending on which one you pick up and read) and there are definitely aspects of the books that date them, yet they all give a feeling of timelessness. Times may have changed, but overall people don't change. They still have the same basic hopes and dreams fears and desires it's just how they are manifested that has changed. I love how rich the characters are. Family matters; character and ethics matter; faith matters; the American dream matters. I love the fact that the lessons learned within each story are just as applicable today as they were when they were written (or in some cases, when they occurred).

5. The music. There are LOTS of songs woven into Maud Hart Lovelace's books. I am so glad she chose to include so much of the popular arts -- music, theater, books, etc. I think it is fascinating for readers of the 21st century to see what was popular for young people 100 years ago.

One of my many favorite scenes in the Betsy books is the one when Joe FINALLY asks Betsy for a dance and she scratches a name for him. It is the point in the series where the reader finally gets a glimpse of what is to come:

"In five minutes the news had spread around the hall. Joe Willard had asked Betsy Ray for a dance. She had scratched off a name to give him one... The tenth dance ended and there followed the brief intermission during which boys took leave of their old partners and sough new ones. Betsy waited for joe. He did not come. Mamie Dodd started to play the piano. It was a new song Betsy liked, "The girl I'll call my sweetheart, Must look like you..."

Couples moved out to the floor, circled. Still Joe didn't come.

Betsy stood alone. She would stand there only a moment She knew the proper thing to do if you were stranded without a partner, although she had seldom found herself in that undesirable predicament. She started to move toward the cloak room but first her eyes circled the hall and she saw Joe almost running up the stairs...

Betsy smiled. Joe put his arm around her and they moved out onto the dance floor. He danced well, not smoothly like Dave, nor with Tony's rhythmic skill but with zest and in perfect time. He whirled her as she had never been whirled before."
(Betsy Was A Junior, Chapter 22)
I really wanted to find the music or lyrics from the song that Betsy and Joe dance to, but it seems to be lost in the passage of time. I did however find a similarly titled song, Let Me Call You Sweetheart written by Leo Friedman that the Betsy Tacy Society has included in their CD Maud's Music of Deep Valley. (I should mention here I really WANT a copy of this CD!) It was written the same year, 1910, and although the lyrics are different I think it is close enough to count. I chose a piano solo as it reminded me of Mamie Dodd. I can almost see in my mind's eye Joe whirling Betsy across the floor as she thinks, "I wonder what about next year..." Enjoy!



Happy friday and happy reading!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

All Things Maud


With only a few days left in the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge I thought now would be a good time to share some of the links and tidbits of information I've discovered over the last year. Some of these may be new to you, others may not. Either way I hope you'll take a moment to check them out. Enjoy! (Oh, and if you know of a related link that I missed please feel free to leave a comment with the link.)

The Betsy-Tacy Society: "Celebrating the spirit of the Betsy-Tacy books, and the writings, books, and life of Maud Hart Lovelace. The Betsy-Tacy Society was established in 1990 as a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving the Betsy-Tacy books written by Maud Hart Lovelace." More about The Betsy-Tacy Society Mission.

The Maud Hart Lovelace Society was established to "promote and preserve the works of Maud Hart Lovelace, author of the Betsy-Tacy series and other children's and adult novels."

Maud Hart Lovelace Book Award - Celebrating 30 years!
Sponsored by the Minnesota Youth Reading Awards
The Friends of Deep Valley Libraries was founded in 1977 to raise money for the mural in the Maud Hart Lovelace Wing at the Blue Earth County Library (located in Mankato). This group supports libraries in Blue Earth County and North Mankato Taylor Library.



The "Sibley" Sleeping Porch
(Marion Willard's home, present day. Photo courtesy of Melissa Wiley)





Maud Hart Lovelace Books Reviewed - A Library is a Hospital for the Mind


And just for a little Betsy-Tacy fun, here's a recording of The Merry Widow Waltz:



Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Gentlemen From England by Maud & Delos Lovelace

361 pages
Published in 1937
by The MacMillan Company
New York, NY


Although Maud Hart Lovelace is best known for her books for children and young-adults (e.g the Betsy-Tacy series) she also penned a few novels for adults, two of which she collaborated on with her husband, Delos. Gentlemen from England is the second of these two, the other being One Stayed At Welcome, which I read and reviewed for last year's MHLRC.

The Plot:
To Crockett County, Minnesota, in the decade following the Civil War, comes a colony of English gentry to establish great bean farms, at the instigation of a clever promoter who has persuaded them that they can obtain for a pittance vast estates, more beautiful and more profitable than any in England.

The plot centers around Richard Chalmers, third son in an English family, who loves farming and comes to America full of ambition. In Rainbow, he is thrown without preparation into the maelstrom of a new and strange life. How he becomes involved with one woman and falls in love with another; how scandal makes him virtually an outcast in the town; how the land to which he has turned for refuge fails him; how he rescues an enemy from lynching, and how he organizes the Rainbow Riders and comes back into the town's favor make exciting reading." (Summary courtesy of the 1937 edition)

My Thoughts:
Gentlemen From England is a darker story than most that Maud Hart Lovelace fans have come to love and expect. Still, and in spite of this, Gentlemen From England ranks as a favorite read of mine for the year. Sure, some may call it a "pot boiler" for it has a LOT of drama, but I honestly don't agree with that label. Yes, there is plenty of drama, but it is a well researched and well written novel and it makes for an exciting and compelling read; a book that I just didn't want to put down.

The darker aspect of this novel comes in the form of some pretty tough topics, especially for 1937 when the novel was published. Issues like spousal abuse, extra-marital affairs, alcoholism, gambling, animal abuse, teenage pregnancy, suicide, and social ostracization are the most serious. But the story also deals with the loss and failure typical for frontiersmen and women of that era. It thankfully also includes a good share of achievement, redemption, second chances, and of course love. And what makes this such a enjoyable read is that the good and the bad are handled with a fair amount of delicacy. The reader knows what is going on without having to know every graphic detail. It is enough to know that one character kicks a dog without having to read the details of the time he kills a horse. Or that another character falls in love resulting in an unplanned pregnancy without the love scenes so vividly portrayed in modern novels.

The only other "dark" aspects of this book include the use of mild profanity by certain characters and the influence of astrology by one character. The profanity startled me at first, but I was able to overlook it as it felt in character with those who used it. In other words, typical for the time, place and person. As for the astrology, I admit it was a bit of a hang-up for me since its something I don't believe in. I found it distracted me from appreciating the character, but in the end her personality won me over and I was able to ignore the part I didn't agree with.

Within Gentlemen From England the Lovelaces tell a few love stories, some end tragically, others with hope of a future and still others with definite happiness, but what is interesting is that below the surface of these human relationships there is another love story, one more subtly woven, that of an Englishman and the land.

Overall I took the good with the bad and found in the end that I really really really enjoyed this story. It has everything that a general reader could enjoy -- adventure, drama, tragedy, romance, comedy, history. No, it's not a "pot boiler". I think it's an excellent book and worthy of being read by Maud Hart Lovelace fans.

The good news it isn't really out of print. I mean it is, but it isn't. In 1993 the Minnesota Historical Society reprinted Gentlemen From England and copies are still available through their website. This edition includes an introduction by Sarah P. Rubinstein that details the extent of research the Lovelaces conducted in order to write the novel. Although I've yet to read the introduction (my copy of the book is still on its way to me), I think it will only add to the enjoyment of this book.

The copy I read was a first edition borrowed through ILL. I checked online and copies like the one I borrowed are valued over $100 a piece. (Yikes!) Oh how I'd love to own one of these, but just cannot afford one at that price.

For those interested, but not quite committed you can read sections of the book on Google, but be warned this is not the novel in its entirety. Several pages and chapters are missing, including the whole last quarter. But if you ask me just go and get a copy to read. If your library doesn't own a copy, check Inter Library Loan. Even if you have to pay to borrow (as some ILL programs require) it is usually only a couple of dollars. If you are a committed MHL fan like I am you might consider springing and paying the $9-13 plus shipping for your own copy. If you choose the latter I think you'll be pleased.

Happy reading!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

What's On My Nightstand: October

I am pleased to say I finished all but one of the books on my nightstand last month! October was a good month for reading and I hope November will be just as good. There is something about autumn that just begs one to find a quiet corner, pick up a book, and read.

As October winds down I am working to finish The Gentlemen From England by Maud & Delos Lovelace. I expect I'll have it finished before the week is half over. This is my last planned read for the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge, the rest Lovelace books I've yet to read will have to wait for next year.

Once that is completed I plan to finish The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, which is the current read for my book club. I began The Moonstone last week and only set it aside so I could finish up the aforementioned MHLRC. I need to get back into The Moonstone and finish it before the second week of November, which seems quite possible as it is a riveting read and not terribly long.


So that will bring me into November, and for the rest of the month I'm not yet certain on what is next. I might pick up The Moving Finger by Agatha Christie, the next in the list of books I must read for my personal AC reading challenge. Or there is that John James Audubon biography by Richard Rhodes that I've been eying for some time. The list of "to be read" is always longer than time allows so I am sure I will not be at a loss for something to read. I guess we'll just have to wait and see...


What about you? What are you currently reading? What's waiting on your nightstand? Leave a comment or head over to 5 Minutes For Books and link up your own "Nightstand" post.

Happy reading!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Russian Winter by Daphne Kalotay

466 pages
Published in 2010
by HarperCollins Publishers


Russian Winter is hot off the presses as of September 7, 2010. I first learned of it when I read Jennifer's post at Book Club Girl on September 6th. Jennifer's passion and excitement for this book made me want to run out immediately and get a copy to read... Which I nearly did.

The cover art is mysterious and appealing. The plot description (some of which I've posted below) is intriguing. As for the book itself... I found it to be quite a compelling read.

The Plot:
"Set in both modern-day Boston and post-WWII Moscow, Russian Winter the story of Bolshoi ballerina Nina Revskaya as she becomes a member of Stalin's cultural elite before escaping to the West following a terrible betrayal. Decades later, she has decided to auction off her famed jewelry collection—including the rare set of amber that a Boston professor, Grigori Solodin, translator of the works of Revskaya's late poet-husband, believes may hold the key to a long-kept secret. The literary mystery Grigori sets out to solve—with the help of Drew Brooks, a young associate at the Boston auction house—reaches much deeper: to the cost of making art and trying to live and love under circumstances of enormous repression." (Summary courtesy of the author's website.)

My Thoughts:
As I stated above, I found this book to be quite a compelling read. Although to be honest, the first fifty pages were a tad slow, but once I got past them the story took off and I was riveted until the very last page. Russian Winter is suspenseful, it is romantic, and it is tragic. But above all it is a page turner.

I know little of Russian history and literature. I'm ashamed to admit I've only read one Russian novel to date and that was earlier this year (The Brothers Karamazov). It was a difficult read, but it was excellent and it wet my appetite for further books about Russia or by Russian authors.

I realize that Russian Winter is an American novel, but it is more than just another novel by an American author. It is written by a woman who knows her Russian history and who is in fact of Russian decent. (I read somewhere that it took Daphne six years to research and write Russian Winter even though several of the characters or settings are based on family history.) I found the history woven throughout the story not only interesting and educational, but also quite poignant.

The flashbacks to post-WWII Soviet Russia give the reader a glimpse of what life was like for the citizens of Russia during Stalin's reign as dictator and it is a depressing glimpse. What's even more discouraging is the fact that there are people today in America who tout socialist ideas as if they are the long lost answer to the problems in our world. Never mind that these same ideas were tried by Stalin and failed miserably. So much can be learned from the Russian people and their history, from what they endured and what they lost. And in the bleakness of this fact I found what I liked best about this book. From it I found a subtle warning of how difficult times have been and how much we can learn from the past and make something better of the future. How there are wrong choices made, but there is always a chance for redemption.

If you haven't guessed already Russian Winter is a sad story. Yes, it is a story of beauty, but also of ugliness. There is love, but there is also hostility. There is loss, but thankfully there is some redemption. And this is also where I struggled with my own feelings about the story. I really thought I could love this book except for the main character. I hated the decisions that Nina made. I found her to be self-centered and reckless. Decisions she thought harmless ended up with disastrous consequences and the decisions she thought would only impact her own life ended up hurting those she loved. She does get her chance at redemption, but for me it almost felt too late and I couldn't help feeling as if I should grieve for what could have been.

Still, overall I did enjoy Russian Winter. It was unlike any book I've read this year. It was a fascinating story. The plot is basic enough, but the story itself was so much more. I thought I knew where the story was going, but then there was a twist I didn't expect. For a first-time novelist, Daphne Kalotay did well. Her writing is quick-paced and engaging. She drew my emotions into the story to the point where I cared about most of the characters and I was in suspense over the mystery of the jewels.

I have to admit I am a sucker for happy endings and in my opinion Russian Winter fell short of that, but it didn't fall short of telling a realistic story. I hope Daphne Kalotay has much success with this book and I look forward to seeing what else she writes.

-----------------------
Related Links:

Amazon.com: Interview with Daphne Kalotay
Daphne Kalotay's Website
Russian Winter: Book Tour
Reading Guide

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge Give-Away #4



We're in the home stretch, it's the final week of October and thus today is the start of our final give-away for the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge.

One lucky reader will win a Betsy-Tacy themed book bag/tote:


The tote is 12"x 11" and fits three or four books depending on thickness. The front includes one of Vera Neville's illustrations from the Betsy-Tacy "high school and beyond" books and information about Book Club Girl's blog. The back includes a quote from Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown. (I have one of these bags passed on to me by a blogging friend and I LOVE IT!)

To win this tote you must:
1) Be a participant in the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge.
2) Be a resident of the USA. (Sorry, next year I'll make plans to extend the challenge.)
3) Be reading or have read a book by Maud Hart Lovelace during the month of October.
4) If you blog you should have a post reviewing your experience posted by no later than Saturday, October 30th.
5) Leave a comment with a link to your post by or before midnight on Saturday, October 30th.

This tote is courtesy of Jennifer (a.k.a. Book Club Girl), an avid reader and blogger; fan of Maud Hart Lovelace; and the Vice President, Associate Publisher for Harper Perennial and Harper paperbacks at HarperCollins Publisher. Jennifer is also the one who donated the brand new copies of Emily of Deep Valley and Carney's House Party/Winona's Pony Cart for this challenge.

As such I thought it would be fascinating to learn more about Jennifer's own history with these wonderful books and what it took to bring them back in print for a whole new generation of readers. And who better to interview then the lady who helped make it happen: Jennifer Hart!

Library Hospital (LH): When did you first encounter the Betsy-Tacy series and/or Maud Hart Lovelace?

Jennifer Hart (
JH): My mother was an elementary school teacher and the librarian at our church so I grew up surrounded by books. She introduced me to Betsy-Tacy when I was pretty young and I re-read the first four books for years and dreamed, like Betsy, of being a writer. I wrote a newspaper about our street as well as stories, and I dyed sand and put it into bottles. If I had been brave enough to climb a tree, I too would have had a cigar box nailed to a branch with my writings inside. It wasn't until I was about 12 that I discovered Heaven to Betsy and I remember so clearly opening it up and the excitement I felt to find out that Betsy's story continued, and that she too was becoming a teenager, just as I was. Plus, with the now grown up illustrations by Vera Neville, it looked as though Betsy was achieving a prettiness and elegance I longed for at that age. Honestly, I was giddy.

LH: What inspired you to get HarperCollings Publisher to reprint the Betsy-Tacy and Deep Valley series?

JH:
It was during a Library Lovefest blog talk radio interview between our Director of Library Marketing Virginia Stanley and librarian Nancy Pearl (link to 5/1/2008 show) that I learned that the high school and beyond books (as the final 6 books in the series are called) were no longer available. I mentioned this to my boss, the publisher of Harper Perennial, and it was she who suggested we reissue them as Harper Perennial Modern Classics, a line that includes such classics as To Kill a Mockingbird and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.

That summer before the first set of reissues came out, I attended my first Betsy-Tacy Convention in Mankato, MN and met hundreds of passionate fans just like me. I sat on a panel with Carney's granddaughter and Cab's grandsons and was struck even more with the historical significance of these books. And I heard from many fans that Emily of Deep Valley was their favorite of all of Maud's YA books. So, as I left Mankato (aka Deep Valley), I felt that our work wouldn't be complete without bringing the three books in the Deep Valley series back into print as well.

For the high school and beyond books, we largely picked up the existing books and the back matter that had been prepared for their last reissue. And we added forewords by Meg Cabot (Betsy was a Junior/Betsy and Joe) and Laura Lippman (Heaven to Betsy/Betsy in Spite of Herself). The foreword by Anna Quindlen had been written some years back. All three of these acclaimed and bestselling writers were so generous with their time in writing the forewords and then helping to promote the reissues.

What was exciting for me about the Deep Valley reissues, in addition to procuring fabulous new forewords by the writers Melissa Wiley and Mitali Perkins, was that I could build the back matter from scratch, as nothing had been previously published in the backs of those three books. Julie Schrader, the former executive director of the Betsy-Tacy Society and author of the amazingly comprehensive book, Maud Hart Lovelace's Deep Valley, provided wonderful background material on Emily and Winona, as well as a new bio of Maud. Amy Dolnick, who wrote a book about Carney's House Party called, Future in a Handbasket: The Life and Letters Behind Carney's House Party, provided the background material about Carney. I was even able to sneak my own name into that book, as I took a photo of Carney's sleeping porch while in Mankato that is included in the back. And Teresa Gibson, who gave a presentation about Vera Neville at the convention, wrote a wonderful essay about the illustrator and the books include that along with a photo of Neville-about whom very little has been written or known.

And Melissa and Mitali have been so generous of their time and their promotional power, I couldn't have asked for better collaborators on this set of reissues, or the last.

LH: If you had to pick just one Maud Hart Lovelace book as your favorite which one would it be? And why?

JH:
This is always such a tough question. I guess it would be Heaven to Betsy, as I just love that introduction to the first year of high school. But Betsy and the Great World also shares a special place in my heart. I love going along on Betsy's travels and the ending makes me cry every time.

LH: Who is your favorite Deep Valley character and why? And who do you most identify with within Maud's books?

JH:
Betsy of course -- because I identified with her as a child, a teen, and now, as an adult raising my own children, I can see how well Maud "got" the teenage years.

LH: If you could ask Maud Hart Lovelace one question what would it be?

JH:
I'm curious about the gaps between some of the books - most notably between Betsy and Joe and Betsy and the Great World. A LOT happens in those intervening years, most notably the breakup and Betsy's brief college career, and I'm curious why she chose not to write about them.

LH: What has been your funniest or best experience since your involvement in republishing these books?

JH:
Meeting so many fellow fans - first at the convention and now daily on the very active Maud L listserv of fans**, I certainly no longer have that "I thought I was the only one!" feeling when it comes to Betsy-Tacy fandom. It's been amazing to work with Melissa Wiley and Mitali Perkins and to meet people like Kathy Baxter -- a diehard fan who actually made it into the high school house before it was torn down and who met "Carney" and Maud. Now when I go home to NH, I almost always see new friends from the New Betsys group in New England, during ALA this summer I was able to relax one evening at the home of another fellow fan, and at mid-winter ALA this winter I hope to meet up with others as we try to search out the site of Uncle Keith's orchard. And I can hardly wait for the next Betsy-Tacy Convention that's being planned for the summer of 2012.

~*~

Once again I would like to thank Jennifer Hart (and HarperCollins Publishers) for the donation of the Maud Hart Lovelace books (three Betsy-Tacy books in 2009 and two Deep Valley books this year) to the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge. I would also like to extend my thanks to Jennifer for giving away one of her cute little totes for this week's give-away and for taking time out of her weekend to share some of her own Betsy-Tacy memories, thoughts, and the story of the reprinting process. Most of all thank you to Jennifer and her colleagues at HarperCollins Perennial for working so diligently until the Betsy-Tacy and Deep Valley books became once again available for readers everywhere. Thank you for not letting them become just another reading treasure lost in the passage of time.

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Notes & Related Links:

**Maud L Listserv: The Maud Hart Lovelace on-line discussion list is an electronic mail discussion group focusing on all things Betsy-Tacy as well as conversations of more general interest. This is not a Betsy-Tacy Society sponsored list but many members subscribe to it. To subscribe, send an email to listserv@listserver.mtsac.edu and put Subscribe Maud-L in the body of the message space. Make sure to type Maud-L with a capital L, and do not sign your name or put any other text in the message space. You'll receive a welcome message with further instructions shortly after you send your email. For further information go to The Betsy-Tacy Society Links page.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

It's Saturday! And we have a winner!

It's Saturday AND it's the 23rd of the month and that means...

Semicolon's Saturday Review of Books. Each week readers and bloggers head to Semicolon's blog to link up their reviews for books they read in the previous week. I already linked up my review from this past week, have you? Join the 47+ bloggers and link up! Or head on over to see what other bloggers have to say about what they just finished reading.


Tomorrow is the October edition of the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge Carnival! In addition to linking up blogger reviews of Agatha Christie's novels ACRCC highlights a particular blog each month. I was excited to learn earlier this week that yours truly, A Library is a Hospital for the Mind, has been chosen and will be highlighted in this month's ACRCC. In addition to this there will be a number of links to other bloggers' Agatha Christie reviews.

Didn't know about this reading challenge? Want to participate? If you have read a Christie novel and want to participate in the November carnival then head to the Carnival collection page to enter your blog link. I've been participating for over a year and I can honestly tell you it's a lot of fun.

Last, but certainly not least it's time to announce the winner for this week's Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge give-away.

This week the winner will receive Straight from the gift shop of the Betsy-Tacy Society -- a 3½" x 8½" "Betsy making lists" notepad!


And now, once again with thanks to Random.org and my husband's uneducated assistance we have have a winner. The winner this week is:


Congratulations Shari! Please email me your mailing address so I can get the notepad on your way.

For everyone else, thanks for participating! We have one final give-away, which I will post tomorrow. (Check back before the end of the day.)

I can hardly believe we're into the final week of October, which means we only have one more week of the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge. Thank you all for participating, for sharing your thoughts, and spreading the world. Enjoy your reading this week! Don't forget to come back here throughout the week for my final MHLRC posts and on Sunday to link up your reviews or final posts.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Friday Fave Fives

It's been a busy week, though not quite as hectic as last week. The following are five things for which I enjoyed most from my week:

1. Autumn. I love the cool crisp days of autumn. I love when the leaves begin to change colors, but have not yet dropped. I took this picture yesterday at a farm where we went pumpkin picking.2. Three year-olds and Pumpkin Excitement. As I mentioned, we went to a farm yesterday to pick out pumpkins. There was lots to do besides pumpkin picking and my daughter had a blast. She picked out a pumpkin that she said was "just my size." We saw lots of farm animals. I love watching life through her eyes, it's always so exciting.

3. Book of the week. I took a break from everything on my nightstand to read a book that while not exactly connected to the Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge is closely related. I read That Dodger Horse by Delos W. Lovelace, Maud's husband. It was a lot of fun to read and I'm hoping to post a review early to mid next week. I particularly enjoyed the book because Delos has his own writing style, yet I can still see parallels between his writing and that of his fictional counterpart, Joe.

4. Surprise of the week. Along the topic of the MHLRC... Since I own all the books in the Betsy-Tacy and Deep Valley series I am now on the hunt for the rest of Maud's books. This has proven a little difficult as 90% of the other titles are out of print and those that can be found tend to be expensive. So you can imagine my surprise and excited when I discovered an affordable copy What Cabrillo Found. I ordered it and was doubly surprised when it arrived within only a couple days. I probably won't have time to read it this year, but I'm fine with saving it for next fall when we return for the 3rd annual Maud Hart Lovelace Reading Challenge.

5. Song of the week. Walking On the Stars as performed by Group 1 Crew. It's not the greatest video (fan made), but it was the best I could find. Enjoy!


Have five favorite things from your week you'd like to share? Head over to Living To Tell The Story and link up your post.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Five Little Pigs by Agatha Christie

216 pages
Published in 1942
by G. P. Putnam's Sons
reprinted by Berkley Books in 1984
New York, NY


I love reading a fresh story and Five Little Pigs by Agatha Christie (also published in the USA as Murder in Retrospect) is certainly that. Five Little Pigs, one of Christie's little-known Poirot novels is also the first novel where the murder occurs in the past; in retrospect to the detecting by Poirot. This alone makes it a unique read for Christie fans.

The Plot:
"Amyas Crale's passion for painting and women made him famous. His murder made him infamous. Sixteen years earlier his jealous wife was tried, convicted and sentenced to life for a notorious slaying. Now their daughter Carla, a young woman convinced her mother is innocent, has presented Hercule Poirot with a brilliant challenge: to clear her mother's name by returning to the scene of the murder and finding the fatal flaw in the perfect crime." (Summary courtesy of AgathaChristie.com)

My Thoughts:
Five Little Pigs was a captivating and quick read. As I read several clues seemed to jump off the page. Maybe this is due to the fact I just finished reading Agatha's autobiography last month, or maybe I've just read enough of her books to pay attention to the details that matter. Either way it was a fun read and although it is a tricky mystery I puzzled through drawing conclusions and in the end I was pleased to find led me to solve the "who" and "why" before Poirot had a chance to assemble the witnesses and begin his methodical recreation of the crime. I count this a victory for me as a reader even if I missed a few minor details.

Something else that I noticed while reading was the little bits of Agatha's personality sprinkled throughout the story. Intended or not, these details appear in the form of certain character personalities or in observations and opinions made by the characters or in some cases the unseen narrator. The two strongest examples both involve Hercule Poirot. At one point Poirot contemplates the the frequency in which he encounters crimes with a nursery rhyme theme (i.e. One, Two Buckle My Shoe and now Five Little Pigs). This was something Agatha Christie also observed within her autobiography. Another such instance is when Poirot remarks on his preference for psychological crimes versus those revolving around a romance, which was popular amongst readers and publishers. Again, this was how Agatha felt. While I must admit to personally enjoying the relational aspect of her mysteries it was in her mind a disruption to the scientific aspect of the crime to include the distraction of a romance.

Overall I really enjoyed Five Little Pigs. For some writers it would be difficult to tell a story where the main event occurs 16 years in the past, but Agatha is successful in weaving the past and present together to give readers yet another entertaining and suspenseful mystery.

Up next, Miss Marple in The Moving Finger.

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Click here to read my other reviews of Agatha Christie novels.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Tuesday Teaser: The Moonstone

"I wonder whether the gentlemen who makes a business and a living out of writing books, ever find their own selves getting in the way of their subjects, like me?"
~ Gabriel Betteredge in The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, Chapter 2, page 27

Monday, October 18, 2010

Quiz: Which Deep Valley Character Are You?

I posted this last year, it was a lot of fun and since we have some new participants in this year's challenge I thought it might be a great post to re-run. Here are my results -- although I don't remember my answers from last year they must not have changed much because I got the same answer.

What about you? Take the quiz and then come back and leave a comment to let me know which character you are most like and if you agree or disagree and why. Have fun!

Which Betsy-Tacy character are you?
Your Result: Betsy Ray
 

As a child, Betsy is lively and imaginative, a story-teller and a ring-leader. As she grows up, Betsy is popular with both boys and girls because of her fun spirit and love of a good time. She loves traditions, having fun, parties, and boys, but she sometimes undervalues herself and her talents. In the end she learns to love her true self and comes to realize and value her love of writing, and makes her dream a reality. Although she has had many beaus, she ends up with the one best suited to her (Joe Willard!), who understands her love of writing and encourages her to be her real self.

Carney Sibley
 
Tib Muller
 
Winona Root
 
Emily Webster
 
Tacy Kelly
 
Julia Ray
 
Irma Biscay
 
Which Betsy-Tacy character are you?
Quiz Created on GoToQuiz