Worthwhile Books
Books have to be heavy because the world's inside them. - Cornelia Funke
Friday, February 6, 2026
D. E. Stevenson quote on the Art of Living Well
Friday, January 23, 2026
Old Herbaceous by Reginald Arkell
He is in
his eighties when the story begins, sitting by his cottage window looking over the
gardens he used to tend. He wonders that gardeners who earn more than he ever
did somehow seemed to care less about making things look their best. He never
felt that he was just a paid man working for a wage. He felt that the place was
his – and so it was, in a manner of speaking…. People said that big gardens
were finished; that everything belonged to everybody and nothing to anybody. He
didn’t believe that. The world started with a garden and a thing that had been
going all that time wouldn’t end so easily.
Old Herbaceous is not
a “Christian” book by any means. The narrative makes it clear that Pinnegar is not a
church-goer (much to the chagrin of a long line of village vicars), but there
are many episodes of grace that make it a delight. First there is his adoptive
mother. Then the school teacher, Mary Brain, who teaches him to identify and love wild flowers. Then there is Mrs. Charteris. And the elderly lawyer, Mr.
Billiter. Pinnegar’s life is an uphill climb all the way, but these men and
women demonstrate a kindness and generosity that fortify him for the challenges.
The writing
is delightful. As a young boy, Herbert enters a bouquet in a flower show. While he
waits for the judges to make their decision, he sees the most lovely, laughing
lady – not a day over eighteen. Young Herbert stood in the center of the tent
with his mouth wide open and promptly fell in love, for ever and ever, amen.
Later, when he leaves school and needs employment, he is hired by this lady and her husband to work as an under-gardener. He knew much more than she did about plants, but she reveled in teaching him their Latin names; and, so, his puppy love develops into an enduring friendship that is one of the mainstays of the book.
Not only is this a gardener’s memoir of his work and relationships, but it is also gives a glimpse of what it was like to live through various historical events, including two world wars. As WWII approaches, we read: Of course, it had all happened before, but Mr. Pinnegar, now nearing seventy, wasn’t quite the man he had been twenty-five years ago. In those days he had taken on every job that was going – carried the village on his shoulders; even found it in his heart to laugh when they dug up the flowers and planted potatoes along the borders. But not this time. He began to feel a fierce resentment against everything and everybody mixed up in this mad endeavor to the destroy the gracious pattern of the world he had known…
This is easily
one of the sweetest books I’ve ever read, but not sickeningly so. Plenty of
pathos and sadness balance out the moments of charity and beauty. Best of all,
you don’t have to know a thing about gardening to love this book.
Blessings,
Thursday, January 8, 2026
Beauty by Roger Scruton
Thursday, January 1, 2026
Reading Year in Review 2025
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Surfeit of Lampreys by Ngaio Marsh
I kept
wondering how Marsh was going to turn this happy-go-lucky tale into a murder
mystery, but I needn’t have worried. The murders do happen, and their
gruesomeness is in stark contrast to the fun-loving Lampreys. Another welcome
contrast to the murderous mayhem is Alleyn’s sidekick, the unflappable
Inspector Fox. Shortly after a horrific murder, Fox appears in all his
placidness, which is quite a comfort to the reader. With each successive novel, I
love him more and more!
I always
enjoy the literary references sprinkled throughout Marsh’s books. This one
included nods to Dickens, Shakespeare, Hans Christian Anderson, and even
Beatrix Potter. She even threw a bone to Charlotte Brontë fans with this
conversation between Henry Lamprey and Robin, a young family friend:
“What do
you think of us, Robin? You’re such a composed little person with your smooth
head and your watchfulness.”
“That
sounds smug and beastly.”
“It
isn’t meant to. You’ve got a sort of Jane Eyre-ishness about you. You’ll grow
up into Jane Eyre, I daresay, if you grow at all….”
And then there is the great writing: From Chapter Nine: Alleyn had been confronted with the Lampreys for only some twenty minutes, but already he had begun to feel a little as though they were handfuls of wet sand which, as fast as he grasped them, were dragged through his fingers by the action of some mysterious undertow.
From
chapter Thirteen: Alleyn began to feel as if Tinkerton was a bad cork and himself an
inefficient corkscrew, drawing out unimportant fragments, while large lumps of
testimony fell into the wine and were lost.
The novel
contains a touch of romance and a fair bit of light profanity. Nevertheless, this was one of
my favorite entries in the series so far.
Any other Ngaio Marsh fans out there?









