Showing posts with label McCall Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McCall Smith. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 03, 2025

Looking for You



Alexander McCall Smith writes so many books and so many series that I can barely keep up with him, just as a reader! But I enjoyed the first volume in this little series so I thought I'd try the second one too. Maybe because I've been in the mood for some gentler reads lately in antidote to all my mystery reading, this one suited. 

Katie Donald is still running her cousin's matchmaking company in Edinburgh, and starting to get the hang of it. Her cousin Ness is still in Canada. And her business neighbour Will is now un-engaged, but their relationship is still undefined, beyond friendship. 

It's told in a series of client stories, in which Katie and William help a range of people find a match, or at least try to. We meet a crashing snob who only wants someone with his level of social caché, which strains Katie's professionalism a bit. And there is a woman who met 'the perfect man' at a supermarket but didn't give him her name or contacts, or get his - and now hopes they can find him again. And there are others, with McCall Smith's trademark musings, asides and philosophical additions. Lots of small observations of the minutia that make up daily life, which enrich the narrative. 

If you're in the mood for a slower paced, charming read that is just easy and gentle, I'd recommend this series as a good pick. Just perfect for a peaceful read. 

Monday, March 23, 2015

Jane Austen, Alexander McCall Smith, and Bertie

I recently read two of Alexander McCall Smith's latest books...I can barely keep up on each of the series that he writes -- he's probably one of the only authors to whom the phrase "why can't they write as fast as I can read?" does not apply.

In any case, Volume 9 of the Scotland Street series, entitled Bertie's Guide to Life and Mothers (Random House Canada, 2015) follows the same structure of the previous books in this series. This series is first written as a newspaper column (in the Scotsman) and then compiled into the latest book. This go round, Bertie, the eternal 6 yr old, is having a birthday party. Finally! And his mother Irene once again tries to stifle all the boyish fun of it. But...she has won a trip to Dubai in a slogan-writing contest. Guess what might happen? McCall Smith is getting more and more creative about getting rid of Irene!

It also follows all the other characters who readers have become fond of reading about in the previous books -- Angus and Domenica, Matthew and Elspeth (and triplets), Big Lou, Cyril, Bruce and more. If you're a fan of this series you will, as a matter of course, read this book, if only to find out how Bertie gets along (I think he's everyone's favourite). If you haven't yet encountered this set of characters you will most likely be able to follow along anyhow, but the joys of all the backstory won't be there. Give the first one (44 Scotland Street) a go to see how it all began.



18633333Then I was on to a more unusual entry into McCall Smith's oeuvre. As part of a project to rewrite all of Jane Austen's works into more modern settings (I'm not asking why, just going with it...) he was asked to do a rewrite of Emma (Random House Canada, c2014)It's received mixed reviews, but I thought it was fairly good.

This could be because my expectations were low; not only do I find Austen's Emma a little dull, I'm also a bit suspicious of McCall Smith's standalone novels (I never find them as good as the series). So I was okay with him playing with this story.

He really does stick close to the original, which works in the sense of recognizing characters and seeing how they translate to modern-day England. But it doesn't work as well in the sense of era -- sometimes Emma feels like she is living in the 60s, but then she'll do something like pull out her cellphone. It's a bit unsettling!

In any case, she's a rich country girl who doesn't have much to do with herself, despite taking a course in interior design. So she ends up meddling with everyone's lives, and there are some pretty modern misunderstandings. Harriet is actually a fairly interesting side character in this take on the story, and her circumstances were the most fun to read about -- she lives in a school with a decidedly odd matron...

But of course, we all know how this one turns out, and McCall Smith does not vary the conclusion -- I do think that would be going too far! At least his Mr. Knightly is a little more young and sprightly...but still way, way too bossy for my tastes.

Have you read any of these Jane Austen Project rewrites? Would you? What do you think about an author 'rewriting' someone else's story?