
Agatha Christie
Many a specific year featured a variety of interesting fiction, but 1937 was an especially eclectic 12 months for literature.
Their Eyes Were Watching God, Of Mice and Men, The Hobbit, the first Dr. Seuss book, and more.
That “more” includes Death on the Nile, which I finished last week. I’ve only read a handful of Agatha Christie’s mysteries, but this was a good one — considered among her best. An ingenious plot, many suspects with lots of personality, the ever-observant detective Hercule Poirot seeing what no one else sees. A novel with some flaws — the depiction of people of color (when they’re depicted at all) is cringe-worthy, though I suppose the book being “of its time” is a partial excuse. Also, the book’s leftist character is laughably caricatured. Fortunately, and not surprisingly, Christie does much better in vividly portraying a number of memorable women in Death on the Nile.
Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God is the 20th-century classic about the experiences of African-American woman Janie Crawford. John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men is the compelling novella featuring two migrant workers in Depression-era California. J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit, which of course would become the prequel to the 1950s-published trilogy The Lord of the Rings, is a delightful fantasy adventure story for “children of all ages.” And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street started Dr. Seuss on a kid-book career that would make him perhaps the genre’s most famous author.
The year 1937 also saw the publication of Ernest Hemingway’s To Have and Have Not, which I “Have Not” read (yet). In the memoir realm, there was Karen Blixen’s Out of Africa, which I have read — and enjoyed.
I’ll end by noting that some famous writers unfortunately died in 1937 — most notably Edith Wharton, H.P Lovecraft, and Peter Pan creator J.M. Barrie.
Any thoughts on 1937 fiction I mentioned and didn’t mention?
My literary-trivia book is described and can be purchased here: Fascinating Facts About Famous Fiction Authors and the Greatest Novels of All Time.
In addition to this weekly blog, I write the 2003-started/award-winning “Montclairvoyant” topical-humor column for Baristanet.com every Thursday. The latest piece — with a Pink Floyd-meets-local-news theme — is here.
I had no idea Tolkien first published in the ’50’s. Probably had more to do than we think with the visionary idealism which followed on the next decade.
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Thank you, Ana! Great observation! The 1950s-published “Lord of the Rings” was definitely liked/admired by much of the “counterculture” of the 1960s and early ’70s. Ironically, J.R.R. Tolkien was kind of a conservative guy in some ways.
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Haha, reminds me of Joseph Campbell. Hated everything about hippies, while providing their veritable road map! 🤭
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That’s an EXCELLENT analogy!
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Haven’t much to write about re 1937’s books– I own “Ferdyduke”, but have yet to read it, same for “Out of Africa”, and as an aside, looking around the interwebs, Agatha Christie is notable as 1937’s one-woman titan of industry, publishing 3 titles in the year.
But I have read “To Have and Have Not”, and unless you are a Hemingway completist, it’s not a book I’d recommend. It seems to a sort of catching-up publication, possibly, as constructed, meant to show Papa was still The Man of Letters to beat- part experimental fiction, part hard-boiled crime writing, part political prosody reflective of Hemingway’s recent Spanish Civil War experience, and the company he kept.
In other words, it’s made of parts struggling to become a whole anything, and in the process, readers are made to follow the ever-more degrading, cynical even murderous acts that the main protagonist, one Harry Morgan, boat captain, undertakes in the Caribbean– but without much readerly reward, a more than a bit of repellent racism and white supremacy in action, if unrecognized by its creator, who seems intent to portray his protagonist’s unforgivably bad acts as inevitable, as caused by his economic hardships– charterboat rentals being down during the Great Depression and all.
The Encyclopedia Brittanica, in its impressively short 2-sentence entry for the book, terms it a “minor novel”. And I would add, a deeply unpleasant one.
Yet, there are moments of great action writing in it, even if the actions are not great. Had he wished, Hemingway might have produced a truly great crime novel or three. Not sure he should have– but he could have.
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Thank you, jhNY! After reading your very interesting and convincing analysis of “To Have or Have Not,” I think I’ll skip it. He obviously did much better a few years later with “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” which I liked a lot. Not a huge Hemingway fan in general, but I do want to get to his “A Farewell to Arms” one of these days. I’ve read “The Sun Also Rises” and “The Old Man and the Sea” (mixed feelings about both) and some of his short stories.
Agatha Christie had three works published in 1937? Wow!
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I remember at school doing the likes of ‘Silas Marner’, ‘Of Mice and Men’, ‘Oliver Twist’, ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’ and ‘King Solomon’s Mines’.
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Thank you, africanwomenvoice! Those are some great literary school assignments! A couple of those novels have their flaws, but all memorable. While some students are apparently not fans of “Silas Marner,” I thought it was wonderful.
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Hi Dave, I’ll be back later to read the rest of the comments. I would like to add Adventures of the Wishing Chair by Enid Blyton (a lovely book for children), and On the Banks of Plum Creek by Laura Ingalls Wilder. I was surprised to see that book was published in 1937 as it seemed much earlier, but it was about Laura’s childhood. These are both exceptional writers. There was also The Broken Ear (Tintin #6). I was mad about Tintin when I was a girl and my son, Greg, has the entire collection as hardbacks (cost me a small fortune).
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Thank you, Robbie, for those great additions to the list of memorable 1937 books!
Laura Ingalls Wilder definitely feels like someone associated with the 19th century, though she of course didn’t become an author until later in life.
Re your Tintin reference, a small fortune is worth spending for certain books and editions of books (if there’s some money available 🙂 ).
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I agree and books are my splurge items 💓
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That sounds good to me! 🙂
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Wilder was born in 1867, so her fiction/memoir would feel as if she was writing out of an earlier era by the time her first book came to national prominence in 1932.
There has been some recentish controversy over the degree to which her daughter Lane may have helped her write the books, and it does seem some titles were more Wilder’s work alone than others.
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She definitely became a published author later in life than many writers. And I didn’t know about the possible help she might have gotten from her daughter!
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Hi Dave,
A few years back I did a Facebook quiz about What Classic Book Are You? Everyone else got an Austen or a Bronte. Me? I got “Their Eyes Were Watching God” which I had never heard of. I mentioned it to you and you told me it was a good book, so on the TBR it went. Well, here we are, however many years later, and I’ve finally started reading it. It’s not as good as an Austen or a Bronte, but I’m finding the characters quite compelling. I must admit though, that I’ve read a few heavy and depressing things lately and am actually in the mood for something fun, which Zora Neale Hurston isn’t quite delivering. Hopefully my next read will be a bit lighter…
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Thank you, Susan! We seem to be on the same timeline for “Their Eyes Were Watching God” mentions. 🙂 Yes, Zora Neale Hurston is not quite on an Austen, Bronte level (or an Eliot, Tolstoy, Toni Morrison, etc., level) but she was still quite a writer. And, yes again, “Their Eyes Were Watching God” is not exactly upbeat with its troubled marriages, depiction of sexism and racism, etc. Compelling, though, as you say.
By the way, I found Kent Haruf’s “Our Souls at Night” — which you recommended — in my local library a couple days ago. 🙂
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Possible spoilers for “Their Eyes Were Watching God”…
I like going into books knowing very little about them. I thought maybe this one was dystopian but I’ve decided now I was probably getting Hurston mixed up with another writer I’ve not yet read. Morrison? Zadie Smith? Never mind. I’ll figure it out when I finally tick them off my list.
Anyway, I knew this book was a little 232 pager, and Oprah said it was a great love story. About half way through I’m thinking love story?! Her husband’s horrible. I mean, maybe you could convince me he rescued Janie from a life of poverty, but it would be a stretch. She was just so unhappy, and to be honest, I was losing interest in the book.
Then after he dies and the new man comes the whole tone changed so much. He was so incredibly flawed, and she loved him anyway – one of my favourite kinds of stories ❤ By the end of the novel I cared very much about Janie and had fallen in love with the way that Hurston writes. But I gotta ask, what kind of name is Tea Cake!
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Thank you, Susan! I enjoyed your comment. Yes, “Their Eyes Were Watching God” has its ups and downs, but in the aggregate is an excellent read. What kind of name is Tea Cake? That’s a great question. 🙂
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Try The Holy Man. Funnest enlightenment short of the actual immortal Swami Beyondananda.
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Thank you for the recommendation, Ana! I see from an online search that Susan Trott wrote that book. It does sound good!
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Oh, it’s as easy to read as rolling downhill, and leaves you with a contented little smile and a lifted heart at the end, along with all the lessons the book manages to slip you along the way! Do enjoy.
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Nice description! 🙂 Fingers crossed that my local library has it the next time I visit.
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🤞
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“The Hobbit” is one of my favorite books – and as it happens, my favorite of the LOTR series. I reread the whole thing last year and I never fail to enjoy it when I do. What a world that Tolkien created, it is just absolutely a stunner. I’m afraid I haven’t read much Agatha Christie and I really need to remedy that!
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Thank you, M.B.! “The Hobbit” is definitely wonderful! Somewhat “lighter” than “The Lord of the Rings,” though hardly light in a number of its chapters. I think overall I like the more epic “The Lord of the Rings” a little better, but “The Hobbit” is SUCH an enjoyable read. And, yes, hard to beat Tolkien’s skill at world-building!
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Reblogged this on Dead & Buried.
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Thank you very much for the reblog, Lena! 🙂
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I also consider “Death on the Nile” was one of Agatha Christie’s best books. I enjoy the deductive reasoning, an if-then logic in her books.
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Thank you, June! “Death on the Nile” IS an excellent book! While it has flaws, the main “whodunnit” aspect is indeed absolutely ingenious. Plus the interesting characters and setting.
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Hi Dave, Death on the Nile is in my top 5 Hercule Poirot Agatha Christie books. I was never as fond of Miss Marple. Lord Edgeware Dies is also good (and I still need to write my review of it). My other favourites are And then there were none, Murder on the Oriental Express, and Five little pigs.
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Robbie, “And Then There Were None” is my favorite Agatha Christie novel of the ones I’ve read (only about five). I also think very highly of “Death on the Nile” despite its flaws.
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I liked Death on the Nile. She was a clever woman, no doubt about that.
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Very, VERY clever! Some of her mysteries were SO ingenious.
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I read Karen Blixen’s “Out of Africa” when I was young and enjoyed her courage and the “Of Mice and Man” showed me the importance of friendship! Thank you very much Dave for having me remined me of these books:)
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Thank you, Martina! Definitely a lot to be impressed by in “Out of Africa.” And the friendship depicted in “Of Mice and Men” is indeed the heart of the book.
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I have the book Their Eye Are Watching God but I haven’t read it yet, how good is it?
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Thank you for the comment, Arlene! I thought it was really good!
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Gonna read it one of these days. Thanks Dave😘
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I hope you enjoy it if you do, Arlene. I know it’s impossible to read everything we want to read. I’ve had some novels on my to-read list for years. 😦
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I had no idea The Hobbit was written that long ago. I knew Mulberry Street was the first book by Dr. Seuss, but didn’t know it was that old, either. I don’t have anything to add, but this was certainly interesting.
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Thank you, Dan! I know — “The Hobbit” and the first Dr. Seuss book don’t seem that old. Dr. Seuss’ “heyday” was definitely later, in the ’50s and ’60s, with “The Cat in the Hat” and “Green Eggs and Ham” and so on. 🙂
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I knew he wrote propaganda posters during WWII and I think he served in the Army but I assumed he started writing after that
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Thank you for that information, Dan! I’ve read that he was also an editorial cartoonist in the 1940s — with his caricature of Uncle Sam influencing the look of the later Cat in the Hat!
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He even made a film or two. The Seuss Museum is in Springfield, MA. I visited there after it reopened during the pandemic. Mulberry St. in in Springfield, not far from where the museum is.
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I didn’t realize there was a Seuss Museum is his hometown! That must indeed be a great visit.
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It’s relatively new. It’s in with a quadrangle housing four museums. We took our daughter to those museums when she was little, but the Seuss Museum wasn’t there at the time.
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Interesting that it’s relatively recent, Dan. Dr. Seuss ended up spending much of his adult life in La Jolla, California — I wonder if there’s anything resembling a Dr. Seuss museum there, too.
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Hi Dan, I am most envious of this visit. Did you post about it? I don’t recall reading about you visiting this museum although I know Jennie Fitzkee (A Teacher’s Reflections blog) has been there.
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I did a few posts from that visit. I don’t want to drop links on someone else’s blog, but if you search mine for ‘Dr Seuss’ you will find them.
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I’ll do that Dan. Thanks.
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Dan, regular commenters are always welcome to link here. 🙂 But thank you for your courteous thoughts. 🙂
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Hard to believe the Hobbit is of this vintage. And what a year for books in terms of some biggies. I had a look at fiction from that year because some of these giants were books I’d read and there’s two I’d read I see were popular at the time but almost forgotten now as are their authors almost and that’s AJ Cronin’s the Citadel. And the Family From one End Street which was very much a UK book. What a great post and nice tribute to so many authors.
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Thank you, Shehanne! I agree — hard to think of “The Hobbit” as being 86 years old. It feels ageless. Perhaps partly because fantasy fiction is not as grounded in the “real world” as general fiction is, so there aren’t as many cultural norms depicted that can later seem out of date. And, yes, every year has some good books that eventually fade from memory to some degree or are more known regionally than worldwide.
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I’ve got to add “Jane of Lantern Hill”, by L.M. Montgomery, to this list.
Added bonus; I worked in the sewing room building clothes for the telefilm. (in my younger days)
I adore Agatha Christie novels. I’ve read most, and love all the movies.
Yes, by today’s way of thinking, many novels of the past have notable problems in regards to race, and other social depictions.
I for one am intelligent enough to understand, and appreciate the history behind that. If we ban books (one of Dr. Suess’ was on the chopping block as I recall) because of this, we are not learning from history, but by hiding the truth bound to repeat it.
Seems mankind has a hard enough time in that regard.
Anyway… “Murder on the Orient Express” is on tonight. I’m going to have a good time watching and drawing!
Cheers, Dave!
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Thank you, Resa! I appreciate the L.M. Montgomery mention; “Jane of Lantern Hill” is one of the few works of hers I haven’t read. Great that the adaptation was part of your impressive film résumé!
Yes, books that were “of their time” were…of their time. Of course some authors were ahead of their time in avoiding too much stereotyping, but they were often the exceptions. Books should indeed NOT be banned.
Enjoy “Murder on the Orient Express” as you multi-task! 🙂
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It was a fab night and I got lots done.
I’m still waiting for “The Housekeeper” from my library. Big line-up!
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Glad the night went so well, Resa, as “The Housekeeper” looms nicely in your future. 🙂
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Hi Resa, I was pleased to see you mention LM Montgomery’s book here. I also thought of that one as I am a great fan of her stories. Emily of New Moon was my favourite series. How nice that your worked on the outfits for the telefilm. I agree about colonial books, they are the product of there era but some of them are still very beautiful (if you overlook the historical attitudes). I particularly love the depictions of Africa in Rider Haggard’s books.
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WOW Dave, you picked some excellent classics. Agatha Christie is certainly one of my favorite murder-mystery authors and Zora Neale Hurston’s “Their Eyes Were Watching God” is another favorite read of mine. John Steinbeck’s “The Pearl,” and “East of Eden” are also some of his books I enjoyed. I love how you composed a spotlight on some beloved authors. Thanks so much for sharing. 🤗🙏🏼😍
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Thank you, Kym, for the comment and kind words! 🙂 Zora Neale Hurston and Agatha Christie (born about four months apart!) were such different authors in genre, approach, etc., but I agree — both great in their way. As is John Steinbeck! “East of Eden” was definitely his most ambitious novel, though I like “The Grapes of Wrath” somewhat more.
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I agree with you Dave. Yes, how can I forget “The Grapes of Wrath,” my high school English class favorite assignment! You are so on it my friend. 📕📚📘 Happy reading! 🥰
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Kym, was that a high school class you taught or were a student in? I first read “The Grapes of Wrath” in high school. I thought it was riveting, and it had a big impact on my thinking.
Happy reading to you, too! 🙂
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Yep, it was when I was in high school Dave. I did however, re-read it several years ago as I was going through a few of my old books on my book shelves. And yep, it was riveting when I was in high school and I had a more heightened perspective after reading it as an adult! Cheers! 😊🦋😍
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Thanks, Kym! I reread it as an adult, too, and was also glad I did. I still have the now-ragged paperback from high school. 🙂
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I know what you mean Dave. My cover and pages are evident of how long I’ve had it and how much my fingers have walked through the pages. Whooohooooo!!! 😎📚😘
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Ha! 🙂 The more beat-up the book, the more read and loved! Especially the case with paperbacks…
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Oh yeah Dave, you got that one right!!! Thanks so much for a trip back down memory lane! 🥰
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You’re very welcome, Kym, and thank you for your great comments!
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My pleasure Dave! 😊
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🙂
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I just finished ‘Of Mice and Men’!
Death on the Nile was a good Christie book, I will also recommend ‘The Clocks’ and ‘Murder on the Orient Express”, if you haven’t already read them.
Best wishes.
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Thank you, Maggie! I will definitely read more of Agatha Christie. 🙂 I’ve only gotten to a handful of her novels. And great that you finished “Of Mice and Men”!
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Look out when you get them, though. Someone wrote a whole lot of mystery books under the name Agatha Christie, but they are not very good.
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I didn’t know that. I hope they were authorized by Agatha Christie’s estate. I’ll definitely avoid them.
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I believe the other author’s name is Sophie
Hannah. I hope she was authorized by the estate.
Other authors might have done some, too. She’s the only one I know, though.
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I wish authors would not latch on to the work of famous authors who came before.
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Yep. Saddening that they can’t think of their own things to write of.
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Indeed! 😦
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The world would be better if more people were creative.
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True! A lot of creative people in the blogosphere, though. 🙂
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☺
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I am delighted that you mentioned H.P. Lovecraft, Dave. A few months ago I read “The Shadow over Innsmouth” which is a horror novella written by H. P. Lovecraft in 1931. The story is set in a fictional town in Massachusetts and follows the protagonist’s investigation into the town’s dark secrets. I did not think that I would be engaged with a horror novella but, Lovecraft’s writing style is fascinating. Characterized by his use of cosmic horror, I was captured by his way of emphasizing the insignificance of humanity in the face of the vast and incomprehensible universe. Do we really know what lurks in dark places? His vivid descriptions of the town and its inhabitants create a sense of unease and dread throughout the story. I felt the tension and suspense and was surprised by the shocking conclusion. For once, I did not look at the end page.
Feel the dread that he created in a few sentences:
“Certainly, the terror of a deserted house swells in geometrical rather than arithmetical progression as houses multiply to form a city of stark desolation. The sight of such endless avenues of fishy-eyed vacancy and death, and the thought of such linked infinities of black, brooding compartments given over to cob-webs and memories and the conqueror worm, start up vestigial fears and aversions that not even the stoutest philosophy can disperse.” H.P. Lovecraft, The Shadow over Innsmouth
Thank you for another excellent post and follow-up discussion.
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Thank you, Rebecca! VERY well said! H.P. Lovecraft could indeed create quite an atmosphere and mood in his novellas as well as his short stories. One of his longest works, “At the Mountains of Madness,” is a haunting eye-opener, too. A shame he didn’t have more success during his relatively short life.
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Hi Rebecca, I have not read anything by HP Lovecraft but you have certainly stimulated my interest.
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You will find HP Lovecraft’s writing very interesting, Robbie. My first introduction to his work was through this blog. So thank you Dave for the introduction! I was fascinated by Lovecraft’s creation of the Cthulhu Mythos. As Dave noted, regrettably, despite his success as a writer, Lovecraft lived in relative obscurity during his lifetime and did not achieve widespread recognition until after his death. But here is a tidbit that I found interesting – he was a friend of Robert E. Howard, the writer of Conan the Barbarian.
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That is interesting. I watched that movie.
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I became an Agatha Christie fan when I came of age to read her novels. I’ve read all that I could find. Death on the Nile was one of my favorites. I was so engrossed in solving her murder mysteries that I never noticed the flaws in their characters. Until I moved to the USA, I had never heard of Dr. Seuss. For us in the British Caribbean, Enid Blyton (1897-1968) was the most famous author of children’s books. I read Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God just a few years ago.
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Thank you, Rosaliene! I agree that the murder mysteries in Agatha Christie’s novels are the main thing; the modern reader just has to kind of shrug off some un-PC stuff.
Interesting about Dr. Seuss — he was and is super well known in the U.S.; perhaps not as much elsewhere.
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Dr. Seuss is as well known in Canada as the USA, Dave. Not sure about anywhere else though. I devoured his books as a child and read them to my children when they were little. I could quote great chunks of a few of them 🙂
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Thank you, Patti! Glad to hear that Dr. Seuss was/is big in Canada! I also loved his books when I was a kid, and later read them to my two daughters. And, like you, I can still recite passages. 🙂 I read a biography of him once; kind of a prickly character who, if I’m remembering correctly, ironically didn’t have any children himself — though he became a stepdad in his second marriage.
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My immediate thought is that I really need to read Their Eyes Were Watching God!
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Thank you, Liz! It IS a novel worth reading. 🙂 A very interesting protagonist, and memorable takes on her life navigating work, marriage, sexism, and racism in the book’s time and place.
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You’re welcome, Dave!
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🙂
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One of the best opening lines of all time comes from The Hobbit: “In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hold, and that means comfort.” Can you read that without smiling and feeling compelled to read on?
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Thank you, Endless Weekend! Yes, “The Hobbit starts strongly, as you noted so well, and never lets up in strong character depiction, enjoyable entertainment, and rousing adventure.
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And awesome quotes! “There is nothing like looking, if you want to find something. You certainly usually find something, if you look, but it is not always quite the something you were after.” 🙃
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Absolutely — great quotes, too! 🙂
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A few years ago when I was volunteering at a public high school in KC, I read with them “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” and it was a terrific door into their thoughts about life now.
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Thank you, Bill! Your great comment reminded me that some literature is almost timeless — including an 86-year-old novel (“Their Eyes Were Watching God”) that could resonate strongly with a young 21st-century audience.
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Thank you to Robbie Cheadle for recommending “Death on the Nile”!
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Hi Dave, I am really pleased you liked it. Aggie makes a nice simple read but with lots of twists and turns. I read one when Terence was in ICU and I couldn’t focus on anything to heavy or complex.
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Thank you again for the recommendation, Robbie! And thank you, also, for that excellent, succinct description of Agatha Christie’s work. Yes, her books can be perfect reads for some situations. Hope the health of your family members is okay at the moment.
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Hi Dave, yes, everyone is okay. Thank you for asking 💚
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That’s great to hear. Hope there’s a long period ahead of good health for everyone.
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