My plan at the beginning of 2016 was to read Orphan Lit and review it. Here are some of my favourite reads, in no particular order, some reviewed and some not, from last year and nearly all of them feature orphans!
Christmas Days: 12 Stories and 12 Feasts for 12 Days – Jeanette Winterson
I recently won a ticket to the Guardian Christmas event with Jeanette Winterson and Nigella Lawson where they spoke about traditions, recipes and memories and Jeanette red from her Christmas book. For the twelve days of Christmas, a time of celebration, sharing, and giving, she offers these twelve plus one—a personal story of her own Christmas memories. These tales give the reader a portal into the spirit of the season, where time slows down and magic starts to happen. From jovial spirits to a donkey with a golden nose, a haunted house to a SnowMama, Winterson’s innovative stories encompass the childlike and spooky wonder of Christmas. Perfect for reading by the fire with loved ones, or while traveling home for the holidays. The orphan narrative resurfaces in these Christmas tales featuring abandoned young children locked in or out of doors, trapped inside chests or treated cruelly as in Mrs Reckitt’s Academy for Orphans, Foundlings and Minors in Need of Temporary Office. Jeanette Winterson is a heroine of mine and this Christmas collection will become one of my treasured books. The perfect Christmas gift that I gave myself.
This is a strange book filled with old black and
white photographs of peculiar children, an
abandoned orphanage and a mysterious island. As the story opens, a horrific
family tragedy sets sixteen-year-old Jacob journeying to a remote island off
the coast of Wales, where he discovers the crumbling ruins of Miss Peregrine’s
Home for Peculiar Children. I felt the second half
of this book works more for a YA audience. The
film of the book was released in September 2016, and I look forward to watching
that soon.
This book made me cry and I don’t think I’ll ever quite
forget it. It is very well written and truly captures the voice of a traumatised
child in care. Leon experiences what it is like to be nine years old and taken
away from a mother and brother whom you love and adore. To be left alone in a
strange world where all your belongings have disappeared and living with a
stranger whose house rules you have to get used to.
Written from protagonist, Dawnay’s viewpoint, the book opens onto
eighteenth century life in London. We witness the terrible poverty and the way
orphans, and women were treated. Ultimately though, this is a feel-good novel
that re-writes the often terrible history of the neglected, nameless, and homeless orphan. This is
‘the age of sail, orphanages, the flora and fauna of islands, and even the
origins of all humankind’. Impeccably researched, at times I had to wear a peg
on my nose as the scenes of filthy London were so rancidly lifelike. In many ways this novel is the true definition of the
‘What if’ scenario. What if a poor female orphan was given an opportunity to
become educated. What would she become? If you like stories about independent
women, think Forever Amber, historical novels with a touch of romance,
then this is the book for you.
Katharine joined us at last year’s Finchley Literary
Festival where she spoke about The Fish Ladder, a beautifully written
travelogue, memoir, with exquisite nature writing, fragments of poetry and
tales from Celtic mythology. It explores the void, the hole, the
‘missingness’ that can quite suddenly engulf a person who has experienced
trauma as a baby or a young child.
I’m currently re-reading this book and enjoying
it even more. The writing is exquisite. The emotions of Jane Fairfax, the
orphan, captured perfectly. Abandoned outside an orphanage at birth in 1901, this
is a fairy tale about the transformation of Jane from servant to world-renowned
writer. At times the lyrical waves of prose remind me of a stanza in the way certain refrains are repeated
throughout the book – it’s very cleverly done. Mothers Day 30th
March 1924, Jane looks back at this one perfect day that will haunt her for the
rest of her life.
The inspiration for this novel came from Susan Beale’s
adoption files. The papers included interviews with her mother, grandmother and
one with her birth father. This is an extremely evocate, powerful and
well-written novel that has truly captured the essence of 1960s suburban, New
England and the plight and stigma of the unmarried mother.
This novel is about a missing boy. A missing book. A missing husband. A
woman who must find them all to find herself. But more than that it is about a
young boy who has been fostered. Louise uses a Lifebook throughout the
narrative – this is a book put together throughout a child’s time in care – to
fill in the gaps – in this instance Conor’s past. It is a clever device and not
one I had seen before. Exquisitely written and deeply touching, The
Mountain in My Shoe is both a gripping psychological
thriller and a powerful and emotive examination of the meaning of family … and
just how far we are willing to go for the people we love.
This Gothic novel was birthed to amazing reviews
and it was one that had been on my TBR for some time. Along with many other
people I also coveted the cover. From the first to the last page, I could not
get enough of this book. Set in the early 1890s, and told with exquisite grace and intelligence, this
novel is most of all a celebration of love and friendship, and the many
different guises it can take.
Another FLF guest, this novel is about a 16 year old
boy who is stabbed and killed by another 16 year old boy. The book follows the
trial of the boy accused of his murder and the narrator is the victim’s mum. A
truly harrowing and emotional journey as the protagonist goes through a tidal
wave of emotions dealing with that worst of all parent nightmares, losing a
child. Extremely well-written, the narrative explores the harsh realities
facing families who have lost children to knife crime.
Irenosen also joined as at the Finchley Lit Fest where
she spoke about Butterfly Fish, a powerfully told story of love and hope, of
family secrets, power, political upheaval, loss and coming undone. Let go and
fly with the flow of the narrative of this haunting and compelling magical
realism novel. The Benin scenes are particularly breathtaking. It is a story of
epic proportions, skillfully held together by Irenosen Okojie, an author to
watch out for in the future.
Another Finchley Literary Festival guest, Vaseem kept us all entertained
with his experiences in Mumbai that were the inspiration for the series. On
arriving in Mumbai he was greeted with the unusual sight of seeing an elephant
wandering down the centre of the road. This vision stayed with him and a
passion for elephants developed – after cricket and literature of course! A
well written book, easy to read and very entertaining with wonderful
descriptions of the vibrant city of Mumbai. It is the first in the Baby Ganesh
detective agency series, I have the second in the series on my TBR list.
All that is left for me to do now, is wish you a very healthy, creative, and booky New Year.