It’s time for #6degrees, inspired by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best. We all start at the same place, add six books, and see where we end up. This month’s starting point is a Japanese mystery, Butter by Asako Yuzuki, which I have not read.First Degree
However, I was reminded of an author named Dorothy Gilman Butters who wrote Four-Party-Line (1954), a young adult novel about four recent high school graduates from different backgrounds who get jobs as telephone operators. Each young woman is likable despite personal challenges, and I found the details of their work quite interesting. Dorothy herself worked as an operator at one point but lived to see cell phones become ubiquitous.Second Degree
After writing children’s books for more than ten years, Dorothy Gilman dropped the Butters and started writing humorous mysteries about a middle-aged New Jersey housewife turned spy. In The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax (1970), Emily Pollifax receives a call from the CIA asking her to undertake a mission halfway across the world. At the time the series began, it was quite unusual to have a heroine of this age but Mrs. Pollifax and her skill in tight situations became extremely popular. As I have mentioned before, I once just missed meeting Dorothy Gilman at a party at the Black Orchid bookstore. By the time Bonnie, the owner, told me to look for her, she had gone home! Why didn't I send her a note saying how much my sisters I and liked her books? Third Degree
The original title of my next link is The Amazing Mr. Blunden by Antonia Barber (1969). I remember finding this delightful book for the first time as a child at the Brighton Public Library – a poor but worthy widow agrees to become the caretaker of an old house and is relieved to have found a good home for her children, Lucy and James. All goes well until the siblings realize their new friends are ghosts. Has anyone seen the movie?Fourth Degree
In The Ghost by the Sea by Eileen Dunlop (1996), just as in her book The House on the Hill, which I read recently, two cousins learn that a ghost is haunting the house and they have to find out why so the ghost can rest in peace. Dunlop is a Scottish author of memorable juvenile fantasies but only a few of her books were published in the US. Fifth Degree
As you can probably tell, I’ve always loved those books where the impoverished families inherit a mysterious old house in the country or have an adventure in one they live in already. Our Castle by the Sea by Lucy Strange (2019) falls into this category and was one of my favorite books last year. Set during WWII, it’s about sisters living in a lighthouse with their English father and German mother, confronted by local prejudice. My review.Sixth Degree
Another book about a figurative castle is by L. M. Montgomery, best known as the author of Anne of Green Gables. The Blue Castle (1926) is a standalone novel with an adult heroine, Valancy Stirling, emotionally abused by everyone in her family until she runs away to the Ontario woods for love and adventure.So I connected a Japanese mystery to a romance in the Ontario woods, with stops in New Jersey, Istanbul, England, and Scotland. Next month (July 6, 2024), Kate will start with the 2024 winner of the International Booker Prize, Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck.
Off the Blog: NBA Finals begin on Thursday – Boston Celtics vs. Dallas Mavericks!
8 comments:
Looks interesting, I'll look it up, I need to expand my reading.
Great chain. Particularly love that you found two books starting The Amazing...
Here's mine for this month. https://portobellobookblog.com/2024/06/01/6degrees-of-separation-june-2024-from-butter-by-asako-yuzuki-to-summer-at-the-ice-cream-cafe-by-jo-thomas/
Good idea to switch the chain in between. I never thought of that. LOL
My Six Degrees are all about murder.
I only just discovered the Pollifax books by Gilman, and while I've only read the first one, I have a copy of the second one, but am having a hard time finding the others. Lovely Amazing chain!
I really enjoy reading other people's chains as well as creating my own! Thanks for sharing, Joanne, and for visiting, Chris.
Marianne, there are no rules, although I try to stick to books I have read and not to repeat any.
Davida, I am not sure I have read every Mrs. Pollifax but I really enjoyed the ones I read. I am not surprised they are hard to find where you are. Keep an eye out for her adult standalones as well - The Clairvoyant Countess and The Tightrope Walker!
I love the first two links in your chain. I am sure I must have known about Dorothy Gilman's early books before the Mrs. Pollifax series but I had forgotten. I have read about half the books in the series, but it has been a long time. I would like to reread them, I even have copies of five of them, but I haven't acted on that yet. The Amazing Mr. Blunden sounds interesting, although I don't know about combining ghosts and time travel.
Nice to know there's love & adventure in the Ontario woods. Ha. I have not heard about this Montgomery standalone novel ... but being as I live in Canada it would likely would be sacrilegious admitting to that ... and saying I've only read Anne but not the whole series. So I should get cracking. I like how you started with Japan ... and ended with the Ontario woods.
Oh, I know there are no rules. I usually try to stick with the link I started with, if it's with words in the title, I go on like that etc. I know I don't have to. And I also try not to repeat a book I used before but and that is often tricky. And I hardly ever use books I haven't read, yet, but once that was the topic. I had a hard time with that. LOL
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