An Edinburgh Reading List

Edinburgh Castle photo by flickr user CleftClips via Creative Commons

Edinburgh Castle photo by flickr user CleftClips via Creative Commons

by Tessa

If you are reading this the day it is being posted, then know that R & I are, as your eyes scan these words, fulfilling a friendship-long dream of visiting Scotland together, and celebrating her birthday along the way as well! (Happy future birthday, R!!)

In preparation for the trip I made myself a reading list of books set in Edinburgh. Of course, I only managed to read a couple of them, but I do plan to go back and finish the others someday.  Maybe you also have a Scottish-themed reading itch to scratch?  If so, I submit these titles for your perusal.

DISCLAIMER:

My method for finding them was a subject search in my library catalog so this is by no means a be-all, end-all list of Edinburgh fiction.  And it is not YA-specific.

BOOKS I DID READ:

gooseberry

The Gooseberry / Odd Girl Out by Joan Lingard

This is the only YA book on my list, and the only one that doesn’t have to do with romance or murder. Just a solid coming-of-age story. Poor old Gooseberry Ellie is true to herself even though she doesn’t really know what that means just yet, and her mom has to go and marry some boring old guy who sells insurance and lives in a bungalow, taking E. away from her street and her friends and her father figure, an old Czech pianist who is giving her lessons.

knotsandcrosses

Knots and Crosses (Inspector Rebus #1) by Ian Rankin

I felt obligated to read at least one Ian Rankin book before I went to Edinburgh (again). This is the first in his series about a hard-drinking Detective Inspector working in that city.  My Goodreads notes were thus: “I am left wondering what drug has a toffee apple smell. Spell it out for us squares, Rankin!  Also, I want to note that I figured it out on p. 150 and Rebus did on p. 200. But I was struggling with much less emotional baggage than he.”

Instead of reading more of these, I opted to watch the first season of Rebus and it was enjoyable, but I think Prime Suspect may have spoiled most other UK crime shows for me.  I’m not saying I wouldn’t watch more, though.

lamplighter

The Lamplighter by Anthony O’Neill

A serendipitous find for me – I had to weed it from my library’s fiction collection due space and circulation issues :’( , but ended up reading it, :D .

It’s a delicate story combining historical fiction, detection, metaphysics, the devil, fear, secret societies, gruesome murder, and religious conspiracy. Something for everyone.

By George Willison (1741-1797) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

By George Willison (1741-1797) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Boswell In Search of a Wife, 1766-69 by James Boswell

If you’re into history and diaries and affable cads, do yourself a favor and visit the diaries of James Boswell. At least read this Smithsonian article about him (but, spoiler alert, not if you want to keep the romantic notions of a happy marriage brought on by this section of diaries intact).

Boswell is quite famous for chronicling his life (and Sam Johnston’s life) through diaries. And here Yale collects his diaries, letters and other correspondence to show his feverish attachments and pursuits of various ladies in an attempt to find a wife / soothe his libido. This is also the period where he’s establishing himself as a lawyer via the Douglas case and being obsessed with the Corsicans. Any time one reads of Boswell one hears of his need for strong father figures, as if to replace his fractious relationship to his own father, and this is borne out in watching him through his letters. He is devoted to General Paoli of Corsica. When he is in London to cure his venereal disease before marrying he repeatedly moves apartments to be closer to various powerful friends as if to soak up their approbation and aura of power.

He’s witty and as truthful as he can be in representing his whims. It’s enchanting to be put into the times and watch him ordering post-chaises to take him around town, worrying about the entailment of the estate of Auchinleck (which can now be rented out for a holiday, true story) and fretting about the hot and cold reactions of an heiress he’s courting while at the same time he is supporting a married mistress who has bore him a daughter, getting drunk and sleeping with whores (and getting infected with who knows what), and fielding letters from his lady-love in Amsterdam (an author herself!).

Boswell never loses hope for the power of true love, even as he realizes he is usually in the throes of fickle lust, and even as he sabotages his own intentions for a strong relationship by getting drunk and sleeping with other women. He has feverish periods of happiness and low periods of melancholy.  Here are just a few examples from his own mouth:

28 APRIL 1766: “I write to you while the delirium is really existing. In short, Sir, the gardener’s daughter who was named for my mother, and has for some time been in the family as a chambermaid is so very pretty that I am entirely captivated by her. Besides my principle of never debauching an innocent girl, my regard for her father, a worthy man of uncommon abilities, retrains me from forming the least licentious thought against her. And, therefore, in plain words, I am mad enough to indulge imaginations of marrying her. …I rave about her. I was never so much in love as I am now. My fancy is quite inflamed. It riots in extravagance.”

17 MAY 1766. “…my love for the handsome chambermaid is already like a dream that is past.”

19 JANUARY 1768: “I was so happy with Jeany Kinnaird that I very philosophically reasoned that there was to me so much virtue mixed with licentious love that perhaps I might be privilege. For it made me humane, polite, generous. But then lawful love with a woman I really like would make me still better.”

“THURSDAY 15 JUNE [1769]. Mrs. Fullarton and her son, Snady Tait, Drs. Gregory and Austin, and Willy Wallace dined with us. I was not well, and in very bad spirits. At such times all the varnish of life is off, and I see it as it really is. Or why not may it be that there is a shade thrown over it which is merely ideal darkness? All my comfort was piety, my friends, and my lady.”

BOOKS I STILL WANT TO READ:

edinburghcityofthedead   townbelowground

Edinburgh: City of the Dead and The Town Below the Ground by Jan-Andrew Henderson

Goodreads sez: “Edinburgh: City of the Dead explores macabre events, paranormal occurrences, haunted locations, occult societies, witchcraft, and even spooky hoaxes to try to discover why Edinburgh is a city that appears to have more than its fair share of supernatural goings-on. Jan-Andrew Henderson brings each tale to life through realistic dramatic reconstructions. By focusing on the scariest incident in each and fleshing out the characters and dialogue, the author adds a terrifying extra dimension to some of the most gory and ghoulish stories imaginable.”

and: “The story of the Town Below the Ground is one of the most disturbing in the annals of Scottish history.” Do tell.

*brrrr*

mrsrobinsonsdisgrace

Mrs. Robinson’s Disgrace: The Private Diary of a Victorian Lady by Kate Summerscale

A woman is trapped in an unhappy marriage. Her husband finds her diary, misinterprets it, and files for divorce (UNHEARD OF). The diary is read in court! ! !  Possibly sort of based on a true story?? More info at Brain Pickings.

bodypolitic

The Body Politic by Paul Johnston

According to the header on his site, Paul Johnston is a “crime writer AND poet” (emphasis mine) so really how could this series go wrong?  This book is actually the first in a series featuring a guy (presumably detective) named Quint Dalrymple–again, that name is a really good sign for the book–set in 2020 in what is known as Enlightenment Edinburgh.

As Google Books explains: “The Council’s goal of a “perfect” city-where television, private cars, and popular music are banned, and where crime is virtually nonexistent-is shattered when a brutal serial killer is discovered among their ranks. Can the fearsome Ear, Nose and Throat Man be back to his grisly old tricks? The usually complacent Council is forced to turn to the man they demoted years ago-the irreverent, blues-haunted Quintilian Dalrymple-to catch the gruesome killer.”

anatomymurders

The Anatomy Murders, Being the True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh’s Notorious Burke and Hare and of the Man of Science Who Abetted Them in the Commission of Their Most Heinous Crimes by Lisa Rosner

The title about says it all, but here’s the description from the book’s webpage:

“On Halloween night 1828, in the West Port district of Edinburgh, Scotland, a woman sometimes known as Madgy Docherty was last seen in the company of William Burke and William Hare. Days later, police discovered her remains in the surgery of the prominent anatomist Dr. Robert Knox. Docherty was the final victim of the most atrocious murder spree of the century, outflanking even Jack the Ripper’s. Together with their accomplices, Burke and Hare would be accused of killing sixteen people over the course of twelve months in order to sell the corpses as “subjects” for dissection. The ensuing criminal investigation into the “Anatomy Murders” raised troubling questions about the common practices by which medical men obtained cadavers, the lives of the poor in Edinburgh’s back alleys, and the ability of the police to protect the public from cold-blooded murder.”

There are also 2 movies about Burke and Hare.  This is the one I plan to watch, because Simon Pegg:

burkeandhare

onegoodturn

One Good Turn (Jackson Brodie #2) by Kate Atkinson

“Two years after the events of Case Histories left him a retired millionaire, Jackson Brodie has followed Julia, his occasional girlfriend and former client, to Edinburgh for its famous summer arts festival. But when he witnesses a man being brutally attacked in a traffic jam – the apparent victim of an extreme case of road rage – a chain of events is set in motion that will pull the wife of an unscrupulous real estate tycoon, a timid but successful crime novelist, and a hardheaded female police detective into Jackson’s orbit.”Goodreads

wintersea

The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley

This could be a (great) time travel romance…

“In the spring of 1708, an invading Jacobite fleet of French and Scottish soldiers nearly succeeded in landing the exiled James Stewart in Scotland to reclaim his crown. Now, Carrie McClelland hopes to turn that story into her next bestselling novel. Settling herself in the shadow of Slains Castle, she creates a heroine named for one of her own ancestors and starts to write. But when she discovers her novel is more fact than fiction, Carrie wonders if she might be dealing with ancestral memory, making her the only living person who knows the truth.” - Author Description

troublewithmagic

The Trouble with Magic (Magic #3) by Patricia Rice

There is no way I could improve on this hook:

“Felicity Malcolm Childe’s gift for experiencing visions through touch has always felt more like a curse than a blessing, so she covers herself from head to toe. Only the maddeningly handsome Ewen Ives provokes tingles of pleasure rather than pain, but he is already betrothed. Her last hope is to go to Scotland to find the ancient book of spells that could free her from the burden of this gift.”

singerofsouls

Singer of Souls by Adam Stemple

SF Reviews dot net says it’s a “short and surprisingly grisly urban fantasy” about a guy who comes to Edinburgh to live with his Grandma, busk, and escape his life of drugs in Minneapolis.  When the Fringe Festival starts he realizes he can see the terrifying fey folk.

Count me in.

Re-read: The Secret Diaries Trilogy by Janice Harrell (and an elephant in the room)

Scholastic, 1994

By REBECCA, April 16, 2012

Secret Diaries Janice HarrellSecret Diaries Janice HarrellSecret Diaries Janice Harrell



characters:

Joanna: new girl in town, she is falling hard for Penn and the rest of his clique . . . but what are they hiding?

Laurie: has disappeared! Once Tessa’s best friend, now no one can find her . . .

Penn: handsome and wealthy, Penn holds the group together, but money can’t solve everything

Tessa: physics guru and gourmand, Tessa welcomes Joanna warmly

Stephen: Tessa’s boyfriend, he wants to get his grades up so he can follow Tessa to Princeton

Casey: computer whiz, misogynist, and all-around egomaniac, is Casey simply unpleasant or downright dangerous?

Cabin in the Woods Joss Whedonhook

When you’re new in town and you start dating a guy who is charming, handsome, and has use of a cabin in the woods, it can mean only one thing: obviously he and his friends are involved in something creepy and/or sordid. Ah, l’amour!

worldview

Joanna Rigsby has moved to town in her senior year to live with her workaholic father. On her first day at her new school she sees Penn, Tessa, and Stephen and is drawn to them and their friendship. As Joanna starts hanging out with Penn and his friends, though, she senses a strange undercurrent to their interactions. Her new friends seem secretive, they let horrible Casey order them around, they’re unusually concerned with the weather, and they seem to change the subject when she walks up unannounced, saying terribly unsubtle things like “what were we just talking about? Ah, yes, the —,” which, of course, no one ever says. Little by little, as we learn from the diary that Joanna keeps, Joanna begins to wonder if her new friends were involved in Laurie’s disappearance . . . or death.

But, but, but, there’s a cabin to spend the weekends in!

I actually think that the cabin thing is what originally sold me on this series. I read it when I was 13 or so, so driving up to your parent’s cabin with your friends, cooking, studying, taking walks in the woods—this all seemed mature and magical to me. And it still does.

“After dinner we gathered around the hearth . . . Casey stretched out full length on the couch, crunching a cookie. Stephen was sunk into one overstuffed chair, a leg hooked over one arm. Tessa sat on the other, a stainless-steel bowl in her lap, snapping green beans. I sat cross-legged, leaning against the couch, writing. Penn lay on his stomach, propped up with his arms, watching the flames as if hypnotized.

My pen hesitated. ‘I wish we could stay here forever,’ I said.

‘What?’ Tessa’s cheeks dimpled. ‘And give up our big ambitions?’

‘What’s your big ambition?’ I asked?

‘Well, first Princeton . . . And then I want to write cookbooks, become famous, and have wonderful children and give brilliant dinner parties where major world issues are settled between the chocolate mousse and the coffee!’

‘I have got to get into Princeton.’ Stephen gritted his teeth” (Temptation, 124-5).

Chocolate MousseThe Secret Diaries books are chock full of intimate, rainy scenes of friends studying in bakeries and libraries, friends cooking at the cabin, friends playing board games and talking about college applications. For this alone the series is a fun read. And, frankly, almost everyone will see through the mystery element pretty quickly–far quicker than Joanna, although she does figure it out at the end of book one.

what was the book’s intention? did it live up to that intention?

Even if Janice Harrell is no John le Carré, the series does a good job of showing how when the friends try to cover up the mess they’ve made they just dig themselves deeper. The characters’ motivations are solid and there are very few moments where you want to throttle anyone for making stupid decisions. You know who I do want to throttle, though: Casey. I want to enroll Casey in some kind of torturous psychological study as punishment for being one of the many things wrong with the world. Much of the story hinges on Casey’s ability to extort favors and get away with terrible behavior based on his threats to expose his friends, and that was painful to read, if dramatic.

Tom Riddle Diary Harry Potter

Tom Riddle's Diary

Joanna’s diary entries are, predictably, stupid and purple, which is surprising because her character is terse and undramatic. Indeed, Joanna is not the main draw here. Penn is kind and charming, but it’s Tessa and Stephen that I always wanted to be friends with. They’re a twin couple: attractive brunettes with shaggy hair and baggy clothes who you imagine rolling around and cuddling like puppies instead of making out. They are the best-developed characters, with quirks, hobbies, and multi-dimensional desires. Plus, Tessa loves to cook, so I always used to hope that we could convince Penn to turn the cabin into a destination restaurant and Tessa and I could run the kitchen. P.S., when I first read these, I (for some now inexplicable reason) thought Stephen was pronounced Stefan because of the “ph,” which is a name I like. Then at some point in the third book, I think, someone calls him “Steve” and it totally devastated me.

personal disclosure

Secret History Donna TarttBut let’s get to the elephant in the room: The Secret Diaries is a young adult, slightly-changed version of Donna Tartt’s magnificent novel, The Secret History, published in 1992. In The Secret History, Richard Papen moves from California to Hampden College in isolated Vermont (a fictionalized Bennington, where Tartt went to college and wrote the book) and is immediately fascinated by a clique of four friends: intimidatingly smart Henry, cultured Francis, buffoonish Bunny, and the twins, Charles and Camilla, all of whom study the classics with the most exclusive professor at Hampden. The prologue of The Secret History opens with Bunny’s death, and then the novel narrates the path to his death and its aftermath.

I won’t go into super-specific detail because it won’t be interesting to anyone who hasn’t read both. But I will say: if it were simply the basic plot structure, I would chalk it up to independent invention. There are, however, details in The Secret Diaries that seem so close to those in The Secret History that one almost wonders if they are homages. To give but one example: in The Secret History, Charles and Camilla are twins; in The Secret Diaries Joanna first says of Stephen and Tessa, “there was a boy-girl pair who looked so much alike I thought at first maybe they were brother and sister, but then I spotted them kissing one morning in a dark stairwell” (Temptation, 10-11). A totally unnecessary similarity, right?

Anyway, details like this seem like precisely the kind of thing that I would shy away from if I was writing a series that was the exact same plot as a book published two years before. So, basically, I’m curious what the deal with this is. While there are  a few instances of The Secret Diaries being misrecognized as The Secret History and one comment on a Donna Tartt fansite, I can’t find any mention of there being litigation over it or anything. So, anyone out there who has read both, I’d love to hear your thoughts: am I crazy, or are they the same story?

readalikes

Secret History Donna Tartt

The Secret History (1992) by Donna Tartt, of course. As I said, one of my favorites, it’s not generally called YA, but it certainly could be.

I Know What You Did Last Summer Lois Duncan

I Know What You Did Last Summer (1973) by Lois Duncan. A group of friends cover up a major mistake in an attempt to get on with their lives. But, as the blurb for this classic teen-whoopsie thriller says, some secrets just won’t stay buried! I never saw the Jennifer Love Hewitt/Sarah Michelle Gellar movie, but the book totally freaked me out as a kid.

Divine Economy of Salvation Priscila Uppal

The Divine Economy of Salvation (2002) by Priscila Uppal. Boarding school, secret society, clique, rites of initiation . . . you do the math.

Procured from: bought used, long ago

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