Saturday, 31 January 2026

Oh, I Love That Book!

I took a book to read in the dentist's waiting room. I had recently decided to reread this book again because I love it. It makes me laugh out loud, and is a good antidote to cold winters and depressing news reports. 
Traffic was good, and the journey to East Harling went very smoothly. I had left home in good time [two weeks before, there was one diversion and three lots of roadworks with temporary traffic lights] so I got there with 20 minutes in hand. I checked in, and then sat down, swapped driving glasses for reading glasses, and opened my book. 
A couple of minutes later, the door opened. In came a 
mum, with baby in pram, and Grandma bringing up the rear. The chap who was waiting leapt up and rearranged chairs to accommodate the bassinet. Everyone settled down, and then the young woman said "Oh, I love that book!" I realised she was talking about my paperback.

I quickly swapped over my glasses [she was seriously out of focus] and we spent the next 10 minutes talking about EMD's characters, and the perceptive descriptions of the children, and longsuffering husband Robert. I said I had one of those. "Does yours ever complain that he has not had sufficient breakfast?" she asked. "Occasionally" I said. This young Mum was utterly delightful, about the same age as my Liz [who also enjoys DOAPL] "I have never met anyone else before who has read it!" she enthused. "What do you think of the Vicar's Wife character?" she asked. We covered an awful lot of ground before she was called through to the treatment room. It quite took my mind off gloomy thoughts about the possibility of root canal work. [which mercifully did not materialise]
I don't seem to have ever reviewed this book on my blog, which surprises me. I think I last read it during the pandemic, when I was here on my own at Cornerstones, running Grandma's Nursery for Rosie. There had just been an article in the Guardian about the book, and it was already here on the shelf at Cornerstones.
You can pick it up and put it down without 'losing the thread' so it's ideal for an 'analogue bag' It won't be to everyone's taste - but if you are stuck for something different, please d
o give it a try! It's a first person narrative, similar to Three Men In A Boat in many ways. The punctuation is rather random, and she uses capitals frequently, so characters have names like Our Vicar's Wife, and she skips speech marks. You get a line like Then Lady B. said Did I Want Coffee? and I replied Not Just Yet. 
Perhaps I should write a book in this style
I was in John Lewis, and a Complete Stranger said You are our Neighbour Daphne. And when I said No, I was Angela, she pointed to my Beloved Husband, and asked Well why are You with Him? He looks just like Daphne's Boyfriend...
I suspect nobody would publish it

26 comments:

  1. It sounds like just the right book for this time of year, to bring a smile and a little sunshine into our lives.
    You should DEFINITELY write that book, it could easily be a best seller!

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  2. I loved it too, have my own copy to keep -it's a good one for re-reading although I haven't so far.
    That meeting in JL is a puzzling mystery!

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  3. I love this book, and re-read it at times, also another favourite is Cold Comfort Farm, which I re-read occasionally. Three Men In a Boat and Diary of a Nobody are firm favourites too. Just the sort of books to take to the dentist. Regards Sue H

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    1. Yes, Yes, Yes! to all those three. Miserable cows, recalcitrant canned food, belligerent door scrapers - and no butter in Hell!

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  4. I love that book, and the sequels, too. I read up about it on Wikipedia; Time and Tide was a real magazine! Sadly no longer published or I would have subscribed At Once. It was written as a regular column for the magazine.

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    1. Currently on Book Two [Provincial Lady Goes Further]

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  5. You have sparked my memory and I think I will now seek out the book. I am still ploughing through Bridge of Clay by Markus Zusak and still have about a quarter to read by Wednesday for my Readers’ Group. It’s a very long and confusing read. Catriona

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    1. I looked at some reviews of the Clay book. I suspect you will need the gentle ramblings of the Provincial Lady, after that, to recover !

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  6. Available free on Open Library.
    I liked The Provincial Lady in Wartime.
    I enjoyed Joyce Dennys’ Henrietta books and D E Stevenson’s Mrs Tim series, they are like keeping up with old friends. I suppose blogs are somewhat similar.

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  7. I do not know either of those, I shall check them out. Thank you for the recommendations! Yes, blogfriends are great [and so generous with lovely suggestions for books and recipes]

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  8. I bet that made for a brilliant time waiting for the dentist, usually everyone is sat so stony faced, until a toddler gets them smiling. Funnily enough my Mum has always written with random placed capital letters, sometimes whole words, and hardly any punctuation.

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  9. I too Love That Book, do you read Barbara Pym? She makes me laugh out loud πŸ˜‚ x
    Alison in Devon x

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    1. Havent read any BP for years. I did enjoy her stuff though

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  10. I also love this book. It lives on my bedside table. It is the easiest thing to read, you can plunge in anywhere and enjoy it. It is so interesting as it is a contemporary account of things in the 1930s and wartime, how people thought etc. One incident intrigued me, one evening they completely run out of milk and there is no way to get anymore until the next day. Nowadays we would just drive to the nearest shop or garage, even on a Sunday. A different world.

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  11. Haven't read DOAPL for years, I shall have to look out for a copy. I'm reading a Cathy Kelly at the moment. Xx

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  12. On my list now to read. Thanks.

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  13. That sounds like a great book. Some books just ask to be kept and reread periodically, don't they?

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    1. This one has earned a permanent place on my bookshelf

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  14. It sounds like an interesting book. Our library doesn't have a copy, though.

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    1. It is Very English, and I am not sure its well known in the USA

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