I think A Door in the Hedge has been re-printed -- I saw it in the children's section of a bookstore last week.
I just checked Amazon and it was re-issued in 2003 in paperback.
We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Well, do I feel all behind the times! But I'm glad, cause I can read it again.
Anyone read The Heaven Tree trilogy by Edith Pargeter
God, yes. Worth reading, Beverly. In one of the Kate Shugak mysteries by Dana Stabenow, Kate is on a salmon fishing boat in the middle of the Bering Straits, crying over The Heaven Tree Trilogy. I love that.
It's a marvelous trilogy about art, love, death, family, vengeance, and forgiveness. Written in Pargeter's lucid prose. These are not people of now, they are people of then, and you love them and hate them in equal measure. I loved it.
The Brothers of Gwynedd Quartet, oddly enough, didn't have nearly as much impact, possibly because it's less fictional. But I really liked A Bloody Field by Shrewsbury, which is all about Prince Hal and Hotspur.
Pargeter also wrote a marvelous sequence of novels about a WWII-era soldier, while the war was ongoing. Which makes it that much more compelling, since she didn't know how it was going to end when she started it. I forget the name, will have to research.
I love McKinley but I had problems with Spindle's End, don't remember why. I admit I like her earlier stuff better, as well. That could be purely emotional.
Betsy, it wasn't the arranged marriage. It was the slap. I think that sort of self-righteous attitude (See? I told you I would do it!) would have made the master of the house progressively more difficult to live with. I wished to do great damage to him with that poker. In a proactive, this is going to be more trouble to you than it's worth sort of way. So I guess it's a good thing the author had a more pliant woman in that scene, one who was willing to put up with a little wedding night domestic violence.
... I don't remember curious circumstances regarding the conception of Ripsie's firstborn. Borowis?
Thanks, Suela. I actually have read--and loved--the middle book. And started the first. It was just so daunting a beginning I couldn't really get a running start on it. Plus, I think my attention span has shortened. It's all that web-surfing and instant gratification, I tell you! But I will assay it once more, once I pull up my socks.
OK, hivemind: a colleague's asked me for book recommendations, and while I can cover several genres, spy novels ain't one of them. So I figured (since I'm reading The Wisdom of Crowds ) that all of us are smarter than no single member, I'd ask all of us. What are the key spy novels to read?
(edited in order to use actual English grammar)
What are the key spy novels to read?
Anything that says "John le Carre" on the spine.
And I'm a fan of the original Bond novels, rather than the shlocky movies; in the books, Bond always gets his heart broken and rarely gets the girl.
Some of Nevill Shute's are spy-ish, though I think he's better known as a war author.
Robert Ludlum. If your rec-recipient is into spoofs at all, "The Road to Omaha" is downright hysterical. What's the other Road book, "Road to Gandolfo"? Omaha is better.
For straight up Ludlum, "Parsival Mosaic." Twisted spy plotlines and a romance that made me smile.
Alan Furst appears to be gaining ground on Le Carre for intensely-realistic spy novels. I read Night Soldiers, and thought it was brilliant. Very well written, complicated characters, great intrigue.