The Classics Club Challenge: Three Men on the Bummel

Three Men on the Bummel is the sequel to Jerome K. Jerome’s hilarious Three Men in a Boat.  In Bummel, the same set of three friends – J., Harris and George – convene for another madcap vacation.  On their first adventure, they punted the Thames from Kingston to Oxford, encountering all kinds of characters, engaging in various hijinks, and bickering companionably all the while.  This time, they’ve decided to work out their energies – pent-up from days spent toiling in their various Victorian offices – via a bicycle tour through Germany.

A few things have changed since the boating holiday.  George remains a bachelor, but Harris and J. have both acquired wives and children, and the reader is treated to a particularly funny chapter in which the men strategize about how to get their wives to agree to their planned journey.  They’re successful, of course, or the book would have ended around chapter three… but the conversations don’t go entirely as planned and while Harris and J. are quite agreeably pleased with the results, the reader is left with a sneaking suspicion that Mrs. Harris and Mrs. J. had something up their sleeves all the while.

The wives’ permission secured, the fellas set to planning their trip and discuss overhauling their bicycles, in another of the funnier scenes from the book.  J. is absolutely determined not to have his bicycle overhauled, feeling strongly that you can either overhaul a bicycle or you can ride it, but you can’t do both, and for his part, he prefers to ride.

I have had experience of this ‘overhauling.’  There was a man at Folkestone; I used to meet him on the Lees.  He proposed one evening we should go for a long bicycle ride together on the following day, and I agreed.  I got up early, for me; I made an effort, and was pleased with myself.  He came half an hour late: I was waiting for him in the garden.  It was a lovely day.  He said:—

‘That’s a good-looking machine of yours.  How does it run?’

‘Oh, like most of them!’ I answered; ‘easily enough in the morning, goes a little stiffly after lunch.’

He caught hold of it by the front wheel and the fork, and shook it violently.

I said: ‘Don’t do that; you’ll hurt it.’

I did not see why he should shake it; it had not done anything to him.  Besides, if it wanted shaking, I was the proper person to shake it.  I felt much as I should feel had he started whacking my dog.

He said: ‘This front wheel wobbles.’

I said: ‘It doesn’t if you don’t wobble it.’  It didn’t wobble, as a matter of fact–nothing worth calling a wobble.

He said: ‘This is dangerous; have you got a screw-hammer?’

I ought to have been firm, but I thought that perhaps he really did know something about the business.  I went to the tool shed to see what I could find.  When I came back he was sitting on the ground with the front wheel between his legs.  He was playing with it, twiddling it round between his fingers; the remnant of the machine was lying on the gravel path beside him.

He said: ‘Something has happened to this front wheel of yours.’

‘It looks like it, doesn’t it?’ I answered.  But he was the sort of man that never understands satire.

In further preparation for their trip, they discuss the schedule and make some very high-minded resolutions about getting early starts every day, including at the beginning of their trip, leading to my favorite chapter of the book.  George spends the final evening before departure at Harris’ house, and J. muses on the dangers of being a houseguest in a home with children.  I read the chapter on the Metro and attracted quite a few stares with my weeping, which was due to a combination of mirth and desperate resignation: it seems that Victorian children were just as apt to get up before dawn and make a ruckus as present-day children are.  The more things change, the more they stay the same.

I knew that if he slept at ‘Beggarbush’ he would be up in time; I have slept there myself, and I know what happens.  About the middle of the night, as you judge, though in reality it may be somewhat later, you are startled out of your sleep by what sounds like a rush of cavalry along the passage, just outside your door.  Your half-awakened intelligence fluctuates between burglars, the Day of Judgment, and a gas explosion. You sit up in bed and listen intently.  You are not kept waiting long; the next moment a door is violently slammed, and somebody, or something, is evidently coming downstairs on a tea-tray.

‘I told you so,’ says a voice outside, and immediately some hard substance, a head one would say from the ring of it, rebounds against the panel of your door.

By this time you are charging madly around the room for your clothes.  Nothing is where you put it overnight, the articles most essential have disappeared entirely; and meanwhile the murder, or revolution, or whatever it is, continues unchecked.  You pause for a moment, with your head under the wardrobe, where you think you can see your slippers, to listen to a steady, monotonous thumping upon a distant door.  The victim, you presume, has taken refuge there; they mean to have him out and finish him.  Will you be in time?  The knocking ceases, and a voice, sweetly reassuring in its gentle plaintiveness, asks meekly:

‘Pa, may I get up?’

You do not hear the other voice, but the responses are:

‘No, it was only the bath–no, she ain’t really hurt,–only wet, you know.  Yes, ma, I’ll tell ’em what you say.  No, it was a pure accident.  Yes; good-night, papa.’

Then the same voice, exerting itself so as to be heard in a distant part of the house, remarks:

‘You’ve got to come upstairs again.  Pa says it isn’t time yet to get up.’

Eventually, the trio departs for Germany and, despite protestations that this is not a travel book and the reader would do well to look elsewhere for detailed descriptions of scenery, we are treated to some lovely passages about the cities the friends tour during the trip.  As expected, there are more shenanigans – such as an encounter with a man with a watering hose while out cycling in the countryside and a scheme to convince George to give up drinking German beer.

I found Three Men on the Bummel enjoyable, for the most part, but it suffered in comparison to its predecessor.  Three Men in a Boat felt really fresh and new; Bummel felt like a sequel seeking to capitalize on the success of the prior book.  (I have no idea if that’s true, but it did read that way.)  It became repetitive, and there were certain tropes and scenes that have not aged well.  These flaws took the book from a four-star read to a three-star read for me.

I still liked it.  It’s hard not to like a visit with George, Harris and J., and it’s hilarious to eavesdrop on their bickering.  There are some truly genius throwaway likes (such as when J. nonchalantly notes that when his Uncle Podger tries to leave the house in the morning, he’s always surrounded by a gaggle of children, and the child with the stickiest face is “always the most affectionate.”).  But for future Victorian hilarity, I think I’ll revisit Three Men in a Boat.

Three Men on the Bummel, available here (not an affiliate link).

 

 

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? (May 6, 2019)

Y’all.  I’m zonked.  It’s been a WEEKEND, and before that, it was a WEEK.  Is there a happy medium between sunshine-filled, soul-satisfying weekends and weekends that feel like one long screeeeeech?  Because I’m looking for that.  This weekend was the latter.  I had the trifecta of kid-shrieking excitement: a trampoline birthday party on Friday evening, a Chuck E. Cheese birthday party on Saturday, and an afternoon at Scramble – the noisiest, wildest, most overwhelming and overpriced indoor playground in D.C. – on Sunday.  The birthday parties were made worse by the fact that Peanut hated them.  She was afraid of the trampolines (don’t ask me to explain that, because it’s not like she’d never seen a trampoline) and Chuck E. Cheese is her personal hell.  It’s mine too, so I was sympathetic, but at the same time – I’m trying to teach her the lesson that we show up for our friends.  Even when we don’t want to.  Part of me is like – well, shoot.  She hates this, and so do I.  We should just decline the invitations if it doesn’t make either of us happy to force ourselves to these birthday parties.  But – we show up for our friends and that’s just what we do.  (And for what it’s worth, she has fun after she’s warmed up a bit – even at Chuck E. Cheese – and the other moms are loving, kind women that I enjoy spending time with, so we’re both actually fine.)  So I’m gritting my teeth and getting through, and so is she – and we rewarded ourselves with pimiento cheese and the Kentucky Derby on Saturday afternoon (what a terrible decision by the stewards though, right? Maximum Security was clearly the best horse in the race, and now I think we can count 2019 out as a Triple Crown year).

As if two birthday parties in a weekend wasn’t bad enough, Nugget needed to run off some energy on Sunday, but it was raining cats and dogs, so the playground was out and we were left with Scramble, which I like even less than Chuck E. Cheese.  Because the thing about Chuck E. Cheese is – yes, it’s loud and bright and overstimulating, but I love their “everyone who comes together leaves together” policy.  (If you haven’t been to a Chuck E. Cheese party recently, they now stamp hands at the door.  Every party that arrives gets the same stamp.  And the stamps are invisible, so the only way to read them is under a special light.  No kid goes out the door without an adult with a matching hand stamp.  So every molecule in my brain is screaming from the flashing lights and screaming kids and beeping video games but I am not afraid of my kid being dragged off by a stranger or wandering out the door and into the road if I blink or turn away to tend to their sibling.  And removing that one source of anxiety makes the rest bearable.  At Scramble, it’s a total free-for-all, there are always at least ten kids crying and a contingent of roaming big kids who get their kicks by bullying the littler ones, and I am constantly terrified when Nugget goes into the two-story play space that he’ll come out somewhere I can’t see him and end up drifting out the door and into the parking lot or being bundled into a white van and driven away.  I’m a lawyer; we dwell in the Land of Worst-Case Scenarios.  We spent two hours at Scramble on Sunday afternoon and I had a low-grade panic attack the entire time.)  But I don’t want to give the impression that the weekend was all bad.  The best part was – Zan came over on Sunday morning!  We spent a couple of hours chilling on the couch, watching Spider-Man (Peanut made sure to call Zan’s attention to her personal favorite part of the movie, when Peter Parker’s pizza gets stuck to the ceiling), sipping homemade sparkling water from the Sodastream, and catching up on life.  It was restful and peaceful and definitely set me up for, at least, the afternoon.  And now another week dawns and I’m making it work.


Reading.  It was a busy week at work, which usually translates to a slow reading week, but not this time.  My giant doorstopper Edith Wharton biography was due back at the library on Saturday, so it was crunch time and don’t say I can’t deliver when it’s crunch time.  Since it’s absolutely enormous and clearly a health risk to haul on the Metro, I also made my way through the rest of the Wendell Berry essay collection I was reading at the beginning of last week, then burned through Outer Order, Inner Calm in one day (there are some margins in that book, I don’t hate it) and started Factfulness, which is as uplifting as promised.  I finally finished Edith Wharton on the playground on Saturday – just in time to return it to the library and dust off my shoulders.  On Sunday, I flipped back and forth between the first volume of Giant Days – which I read almost straight through with one eye on Nugget belly-flopping down slides at Scramble – and Good Omens, both for my book club on Wednesday and in preparation for the show dropping on Amazon Prime later this month.  So – yes.  A busy week.  The early part of this week will be dedicated to polishing off the rest of both Good Omens and Factfulness and then – I’m not sure what next.  I still have a tall stack from the library, but it’s gradually dwindling.  I’ll try to focus on that, but I did just get a lovely new Folio Society edition of Sense and Sensibility, so good intentions may not prevail.

Watching.  The usual, mostly.  Snippets of what the kids were watching.  Zan got to experience the majesty of Spider-Man on Sunday, but we were talking the whole time and I missed most of my favorite lines.  (Not all, though.  In my universe it’s 1933, and I’m a private eye.  I like to drink egg creams and I like to fight Nazis.  A lot.)  The only grown-up watching was on Sunday night – the Harvest Festival episode of Parks and Recreation – one of my favorites – take that, curse!  Man, that show is just brilliant.

Listening.  The usual: podcasts, podcasts and more podcasts.  The episode of Sorta Awesome on “Burnout” was excellent, as expected.  And I felt so seen by Sarah and Meagan as they talked about fumbling toward the school year finish line on The Mom Hour.

Making.  Well – not much.  It was one of those running-around-screaming weekends, as I said above.  Not a lot of time spent jamming to folk tunes while kneading sourdough and chopping veg in my kitchen, or hacking through the basement purge project.  I did make a couple of things, though.  A work document.  (If I’m counting last week, I made a LOT of work documents.)  Progress on my 2018 family yearbook – photos are selected through our Cornell trip last June.  And phone calls to catch up with my high school BFF (milestone alert – her daughter has pierced ears now!) and favorite aunt (currently on a trip to Santa Barbara – I told her she MUST go to the Botanic Garden) while Nugget played pirates on the playground with a new friend.

Blogging.  A Classics Club book review for you on Wednesday, and my May garden to-do list on Friday.  Check in with me then!

Loving.  New podcast alert!  This week I started listening to The Literature Lady Podcast, which just launched (so you can get caught up quickly) and currently has three episodes available.  I’ve been following The Literature Lady, PhD on Twitter, where she hilariously tells the stories of forgotten heroines from history using GIFs, and she’s one of the only reasons I’m still occasionally meandering over to that platform right now.  Her podcast is awesome in all the same ways – the tagline is “telling the tales of badass women from history and literature.”  YES, MOAR THIS.  I started with episode two, about Temperance Flowerdew, survivor, and how Captain John Smith was an @$$hole.  LOVING.  Go listen right away, and check out her Twitter feed while you’re at it!

Asking.  What are you reading this week?

Fields of Gold: Daffodil Picking at Burnside Farms

While I may not have spring fever, one thing I love is the sight of blossoms and blooms everywhere!  I’ve come to enjoy flowers more in the past few years, and Peanut has always loved them.  So the chance to pick flowers directly from the field is a huge treat for her, and I love the sight of flower fields exploding in color.  Longtime friends might recall that we went tulip picking at Burnside Farms out in Haymarket, Virginia, back in 2017.  We couldn’t go in 2018 because a freak storm killed all of the flowers – the farm calls it “the great tulip tragedy of 2018” – so I really wanted to make the trip in 2019.  But as it turned out, the only day that ended up working out was at the very tail end of the season.  The tulip fields were picked over and what remained was barely worth picking.  But the farm put out a note on social media that “the daffodils are the star of the show” at the end of the season, and encouraged would-be pickers to come on out and grab some golden blooms.  That sounded good to me, and we loaded up and drove out to Prince William County for a day of sunshine overhead and at our feet.

We had a little trouble finding the field, but once we finally located it, it was brimming over with golden blossoms!

Nugget consented to pose for a couple of pictures in the flower fields, then handed me his basket, asked me to pick him some flowers, and wafted off toward the bounce house and playground with Daddy.

Just the girls, then?  Works for us.

Peanut had a glorious time choosing daffodils and picking them.  She struggled a little with the tulips two years ago – picking a lot right near the head of the flower – but was able to remember to pick near the base this year.  She even got a couple of bulbs, and since it was the last weekend of the season, we had the option to buy the bulbs too.  I did, and planted them in my front garden a few days later.

Peanut wanted to head over to the tulip fields and see what was left.  I warned her that she wasn’t going to find much, but she was able to spy a couple of tulips that looked good enough to take home.  So with our large bouquet of daffodils, we brought back a small posy of tulips.

After she’d had her fill of picking, we joined the boys in the play area.  They had a bounce house, a bounce pad, a big inflatable slide, a playground, tractor swings and a playhouse.  Nugget was in his element.

After playing for awhile, the kiddos had a snack and then we headed over to sort and wrap our flower haul.  Look at this glory!

Definitely another successful year in the flower fields.  I love this activity and am so glad that we found a flower farm and have been able to make the trip out there twice now!  I’d love to make it a spring tradition, weather permitting.

Thank you for a glorious morning, Burnside Farms!  We’ll see you in a few months for the Summer of Sunflowers!

Reading Round-Up: April 2019

Reading is my oldest and favorite hobby. I literally can’t remember a time in my life when I didn’t love to curl up with a good book. Here are my reads for April, 2019

Moon Tiger, by Penelope Lively – I’ve been wanting to read more Lively and I thought I’d begin with her classic Booker prize-winning novel.  Claudia Hampton, a famous and bestselling popular history author, is on her deathbed, but her mind is still churning away.  Claudia thinks she is going to write a kaleidoscopic history of the world, but instead her memory turns through the significant events and people in her life, when she was much younger, all sharp edges and flaming hair.  The fixed, central point of Claudia’s life is her love affair with a tank commander in Egypt during World War II.  Moon Tiger was beautiful, heartbreaking, frustrating at times (Claudia could be maddening) and unlike anything else.

A City of Bells (Torminster #1), by Elizabeth Goudge – Captain Jocelyn Irvin is looking for a place to heal his body and soul and decide on his next step in life, and he settles upon Torminster, a cathedral city where his grandfather is a canon.  The city of Torminster adopts Jocelyn and immediately starts dictating his life and before he knows it, he finds himself set up as a bookseller, enjoying the company of two of his precocious little cousins and falling in love.  But there is a dark mystery that preoccupies Jocelyn, his love, his grandfather and his cousin Henrietta and Jocelyn soon finds that he can’t rest until he has solved it.  I really enjoyed this story, but as with Goudge’s other work, the best parts are her gorgeous descriptive passages on houses, gardens, and the beauties of nature.

The American Agent (Maisie Dobbs #15), by Jacqueline Winspear – I love every visit with Maisie and this one was a good installment in the series.  Maisie has been tapped to investigate the murder of an American journalist with a complicated past.  Was Catherine Saxon killed because she asked the wrong questions in her reporting, or was her murder something personal?  While Maisie tries to untangle the knots, she is – as always – dealing with a host of personal issues, including the pending adoption of her evacuee, Anna; her worries about a dear friend; and the possibility that she might be ready to open her heart to a new relationship.  I always enjoy a visit with Maisie, and this was a good one.

The Familiars, by Stacey Halls – You know how you pick up a book that looks like it is going to be right in the middle of your wheelhouse, and you’re SO worried that it will disappoint?  The Familiars occupied a heavily overlapped space in my personal Venn diagram, and it did NOT disappoint.  The Middle Ages, a women-centered story, pregnancy, witchcraft – check, check, check, check.  I loved it.  Bonus: while the book itself is fictional, all of the main characters – Fleetwood, Alice, Richard – and many peripheral characters were all real people, sending me down a fascinating rabbit hole of actual historical documents online.

Another Self, by James Lees-Milne – I knew that I should have stayed focused on my library stack, which constantly grows more and more out-of-control, but my recently acquired copy of James Lees-Milne’s memoir of his childhood years and of being a young man proved impossible to resist.  Lees-Milne, for those who don’t know him, is largely responsible for making the National Trust what it is today, for preserving lots of English national treasures, and for being one of the snarkiest diarists of the twentieth century.  His memoir was excellent fun, and I can’t wait to read the diaries now.

The Handsome Man’s De Luxe Cafe (No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency #15), by Alexander McCall Smith – I’ve fallen behind on the adventures of Mma Ramotswe, but I always enjoy a visit and a cup of red bush tea with her.  As with many of the No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency books, the actual mystery took a backseat to stories about the agency and the characters associated with it.  Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni has had to lay off one of his employees, and Mma Ramotswe comes up with an idea to soften the blow, but it might (probably will) backfire spectacularly.  Meanwhile, Mma Makutsi is trying to start a new business, and it turns out that 97% at the Botswana Secretarial College might not give her everything she needs to run a successful restaurant.  It’s a good thing Mma Ramotswe always has everyone’s backs.  This wasn’t my favorite installment in the series, but it was still delightful.

Women Heroes of World War II: 26 Stories of Espionage, Sabotage, Resistance and Rescue, by Kathryn J. Atwood – I’ve been reading a lot about World War II lately, it seems.  I stumbled upon this book while looking for more information about one of the women profiled in Last Hope Island, and it was fascinating – and distressing.  I’d love to read more about so many of these brave women.

The Glimpses of the Moon, by Edith Wharton – I really enjoyed this lesser known work of Wharton’s – it didn’t eclipse (<–pun, not sorry) my love for The Age of Innocence, but it was a solid second.  The story of the mercenary marriage between Nick Lansing and Susy Branch, and the unexpected turns their relationship takes, was such fun to read.  I love Wharton’s writing, and this one was particularly atmospheric as the characters drifted between Lake Como, Venice, Paris, and London.  I can see myself re-reading it before long.

The Mother-Daughter Book Club (Mother-Daughter Book Club #1), by Heather Vogel Frederick – A re-read for me, I was craving something light and wholesome during a stressful month at work, and a visit with Emma, Jess, Megan, Cassidy and their moms was just what the doctor ordered.  I’ve read the entire series before, and each book is better than the last.  I think I’m going to work my way through the whole series again – I need it – and I am already looking forward to Much Ado About Anne.

An Elderly Lady is Up to No Good, by Helene Tursten – I was a bit skeptical, but decided to give this short collection of inter-related short stories a try, and MAN am I glad I did.  Maud is a crotchety octogenarian who just wants her peace and quiet, a cheese plate, and to surf the web and travel the world.  Unfortunately, circumstances are always conspiring to steal away her peace – whether by noisy or interfering neighbors, ex-lovers’ engagement announcements, or shady antique dealers.  But Maud is up to any challenge and she’s not above committing a little murder.  I loved this!

Our Only World: Ten Essays, by Wendell Berry – I’ve been meaning to read Berry’s essays for some time now, and thought I’d give them a try via the library before committing to the new Library of America collection.  I’m glad I went the library route, because… I didn’t love them.  Some of the points about land use and conservation were incredibly wise, but Berry lost me with his essay “Caught in the Middle,” in which he rambles about abortion and gay marriage.  I forced myself to continue, because I think it’s valuable to read other perspectives.  But his rantings about abortion, in particular, struck me as ill-informed and poorly constructed, with the added insult of being totally sanctimonious.  The only reason I didn’t throw the book at the wall was that I was reading it on the metro.  I may try Berry’s fiction at some point, but I’m not in a rush, and I’ll be taking a pass on any more essay collections.

In general, a really good April!  I read a lot of good stuff, and there were some contenders for the annual top-ten list – especially the Lees-Milne memoir, the adventures of a bloodthirsty elderly lady, The Glimpses of the Moonand The Familiars.  I also spent a chunk of April reading Hermione Lee’s doorstopping biography of Wharton, which I am hoping to finish up in the next week – so you’ll be seeing more references to Edith soon.  I’m looking forward to May reading – I have some excellent library checkouts to read through, and I think I have the library stack under control enough that I might actually get to read something from my own shelves.  Wouldn’t that be a treat?