Phoebe Daring by L. Frank Baum
This is the second of a two-volume series that started with The Daring Twins, a story of how the twins restore their family's lost inheritance with the help of Toby Clark, a teen-age orphan. Toby broke his foot helping the Darings and walks with a limp as we begin this second which features the twin Phoebe. Her brother has gone off to college after the twins graduated high school in the first book.
In this second volume Toby is falsely accused of stealing money and papers belonging to Mrs. Ritchie, a widow who doesn't trust banks and stores her money as well as her papers with her lawyer Judge Ferguson in a locked box that he keeps with other such boxes in a secure cupboard. The orphan Toby has been taken on by the lawyer as a clerk. When the Judge dies and the box goes missing Mrs. Ritchie accuses him of taking her box.
When evidence of the theft shows up at Toby's little shack by the river and he is arrested, Phoebe decides to try to find out who is the real thief in order to free her friend. While it looks like Toby is being framed, the true extent of the situation is much more complex and takes all of Phoebe's resources to uncover the truth.
The book starts slowly and it was almost the middle of the book before I became caught up in the mystery of the stolen box. Baum wrote several girl detective mystery series and if you liked the others you may find this one interesting.
Sunday, May 10, 2020
Saturday, May 09, 2020
Saint Joan of Arc
Saint Joan of Arc by Vita Sackville-West
Vita Sackville-West (March 9, 1892 – June 2, 1962) was a successful novelist, poet, and journalist, who is most remembered now for her close friendship and relationship with Virginia Wolff. She was the inspiration for Wolff's androgynous Orlando. She published this book 15 years after Joan of Arc was declared a saint in the Catholic Church. So it is probably the first major biography of Joan published after her sainthood. In her Foreword she says "that Joan of Arc presented fundamental problem of the deepest importance" and whose "strange career... remains a story whose conclusion is as yet unfound."
What the author attempts to do is to gather all the first hand accounts, and to arrange Joan's story in roughly chronological order. When contemporary narratives differ on a point, she speculates as to what might be the truth. What I found most difficult in reading the book is that she quotes many of the sources in the original French, assuming her readers have a more than passing knowledge of the language. She also relates the story of Joan's guiding voices in a straightforward manner, not giving them a Divine or medical explanation.
I found the author related Joan's life in a sympathetic way that a female author could better provide than some of the male efforts to tell her story.
What the author attempts to do is to gather all the first hand accounts, and to arrange Joan's story in roughly chronological order. When contemporary narratives differ on a point, she speculates as to what might be the truth. What I found most difficult in reading the book is that she quotes many of the sources in the original French, assuming her readers have a more than passing knowledge of the language. She also relates the story of Joan's guiding voices in a straightforward manner, not giving them a Divine or medical explanation.
I found the author related Joan's life in a sympathetic way that a female author could better provide than some of the male efforts to tell her story.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)