regshoe: Black and white illustration of a young woman in Victorian dress, jauntily tipping her wide-brimmed hat (Gladys)
A treat written for Hurt/Comfort Exchange—Bill/Clarissa and hurt/comfort are just the perfect combination. :D

A Fortunate Day (6443 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Malory Towers - Enid Blyton
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Clarissa Carter/Wilhelmina "Bill" Robinson
Characters: Wilhelmina "Bill" Robinson, Clarissa Carter
Additional Tags: Hurt/Comfort, Nearly Fatal Accident, Sharing a Bed
Summary:

Out riding along the cliffs, Bill suffers a terrible accident.



Freeform-matching exchanges have always seemed a little intimidating, but having managed to get my head round this one, I may well sign up next time. An entire exchange dedicated to hurt/comfort is certainly relevant to my interests...!
regshoe: Black silhouette of a raven in flight, wearing a Santa hat (santa hat)
Well, I am one very fortunate Yuletide participant this year...! I have received five (!) gift fics, covering all my requested fandoms between them, and they're all really, really good. I am utterly delighted, and I highly recommend them all. :)


Five amazing fics—fandoms are Travel Light - Naomi Mitchison, Quatrevingt-Treize | Ninety-three - Victor Hugo, Malory Towers - Enid Blyton and Lolly Willowes - Sylvia Townsend Warner )

I've made a start on reading round the rest of the collection—it looks like being a good year for both Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell and Piranesi, and I've come across some real gems in smaller fandoms as well. Expect a general recs post later on this week!

And I've also received some lovely comments from my own recips—but more on what I wrote after author reveals. :)
regshoe: Illustration of three small, five-petalled blue flowers (Pentaglottis sempervirens)
Here we go :)

The Trees Are Sweetly Blooming (2232 words) by regshoe
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Malory Towers - Enid Blyton
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Clarissa Carter/Wilhelmina "Bill" Robinson
Characters: Wilhelmina "Bill" Robinson, Clarissa Carter, Miss Peters (Malory Towers)
Additional Tags: Pre-Relationship
Summary:

After the School Certificate exam, Bill, Clarissa and Miss Peters go out for a ride.

regshoe: A stack of brightly-coloured old books (Stack of books)
Upper Fourth At Malory Towers, In the Fifth At Malory Towers and Last Term At Malory Towers by Enid Blyton (1949, 1950 and 1951). Finished the Malory Towers re-read, which has continued great fun! I really enjoy the structure and organised setting of boarding-school stories, and Blyton is undoubtedly very good at telling interesting stories within those constraints. Some of the ideas are a little dated (there's a streak of cruelty in Blyton's writing which got a bit strong for me at one point in In the Fifth, although to be fair the girls do eventually realise that they've gone too far)—but the overall portrayal of Malory Towers as a place that grows the character of its pupils, through the various challenges and adventures they face as part of the plot, the social dramas and small-scale power struggles and moral dilemmas and practical jokes and midnight feasts and so on, is really lovely. Last Term has a quietly poignant feeling of a sort of pre-emptive nostalgia about it, that felt very deserved.

And the characters are great, of course! My fave Mary-Lou doesn't have a big role in the later books, but it's clear that she has grown up a lot and is going to do great things in the world. Bill and Clarissa... what can I say, I love them both :D Such great characters, and so good for each other—I love how they find that they have things in common and just instantly click, then they're always together, they appear in the plot as a unit, they're planning to set up a riding school together after they leave school, and everyone just accepts the whole thing and takes it for granted that they'll still be together years later. Darrell and Sally's relationship is lovely, too—a more quietly steady thing that's very good for them both.

...I may or may not already have about a thousand words of Bill/Clarissa fanfic in my drafts, but I'm finding my lack of horse knowledge a bit of an obstacle. If anyone here happens to know about horses and riding and would be willing to give me some help with this, it'd be much appreciated!

And this morning I added another small entry to the D. K. Broster read-through with the short story The Questionable Parentage of Basil Grant (1905)—many thanks to [personal profile] theseatheseatheopensea for bringing it to my attention! It's a weird but very funny parody of the detective stories of the period, especially the Sherlock Holmes stories. I kind of felt like I was missing some of the background I needed to really get the joke (despite knowing the Holmes stories pretty well—it's the context, I suppose), but it was very enjoyable all the same. And surprisingly many things to remind me of FotH—there are multiple Scottish characters, including a family named Grant, and several light-hearted references to Scottish history, ballads and Jacobites!
regshoe: A stack of brightly-coloured old books (Stack of books)
It's been a weekend. Beautiful warm weather until today—I was sat out on the grass in the garden yesterday reading all afternoon, which was lovely. I wanted to bake some brownies, but alas, there's still no flour to be had at the shop, so instead I bought some chocolate and made chocolate mousse, which was very nice.

Also, I saw the first swifts of the year! They're always such a beautiful sight wheeling through the sky, one of my favourite species to watch out for as the summer approaches. <3

Anyway, books...

Second Form At Malory Towers and Third Year At Malory Towers by Enid Blyton (1947 and 1948 respectively). Aww, I'm still really enjoying this re-read. The plots are great fun, mostly low-stakes school drama with occasional more seriously dramatic moments. Both of these books have climactic scenes where girls are almost killed in accidents—these may not be Blyton's adventure stories but there's plenty of adventure. I love Mary-Lou and her timidity and bravery, and her loyal devotion to Darrell (there's one bit where it's like, Mary-Lou knows she'll never be Darrell's ~special friend~ because that's Sally, but she's OK with that, she's happy just to be around Darrell and know that she likes her :) and I'm like, ouch). I enjoyed Sally's jealousy of Alicia in Third Form (everyone loves Darrell too much, that's the problem!). And, of course, Third Form also introduces my absolute fave, Bill, a 'boyish' girl who wears her hair short, goes by a boy's name (she's technically Wilhelmina), is forthright and honest, a bit of a loner and fanatically passionate about horses. I was never much of a horse girl myself, but the rest is very much my kind of thing, and I like her a lot. I'd forgotten that one of the subplots in this book involves Bill first clashing with and then befriending her form mistress, a fellow horse fan who also has a very similar attitude towards gender conformity—at one point the narrator is like, Miss Peters was mannish and Bill was boyish, so of course they understood one another! It's charmingly benevolent stereotyping, and I want to write fic all about their friendship. Anyway, if I remember correctly Bill gets a girlfriend ~special friend~ in the next book, so I'm looking forward to reading that.

The Diaries of Lady Anne Clifford (written in the 1600s, edited and published by D. J. H. Clifford, 1990). Lady Anne Clifford was a seventeenth-century noblewoman who owned about half the northwest of England, wrote extensive diaries and had a very interesting life. As a young woman she fought a long legal battle to gain control of her family estates—despite an entail stating that they were to pass to the heir whether male or female, her father's will tried to grant them to Anne's uncle and male cousin instead of her. She refers to the affair as 'my Business', and writes pretty dispassionately about how her husband, various friends and family and King James I all opposed her attempts to regain her inheritance, but she persisted. She eventually won only because the uncle and cousin both died and there were no more male heirs. Anyway, she went north to claim the estates, and spent the rest of her life travelling between her five castles (!), arranging various building works and improvements to the castles and other bits of her property, which between the uncle's neglect and the Civil War were in a poor state, receiving visits from her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren and generally acting as the evidently benevolent and well-beloved ruler of a little kingdom in Westmorland and Craven. She's a fascinating figure, and I greatly enjoyed reading her diaries. As I said, she kind of underplays the more dramatic parts of her life—a lot of the diary is taken up with rather repetitive accounts of family visits, journeys back and forth and that sort of thing—but there are some really interesting little insights into the daily life of the seventeenth century, as well as references to the major historical events of the time (one of the early entries describes her memory of Queen Elizabeth's funeral, where her aunt was a pallbearer but she wasn't allowed to be one because she was too short—she was thirteen at the time). Well worth a read! (And I'd love to know what Lady Anne would have thought about John Uskglass :D)

Patience and Sarah by Isabel Miller (1971). I was getting a bit sick of all the het romance in books I otherwise like, so I decided to read something that's actually about lesbians for a change. This book was exactly what I needed <3. It's the story of two women in the northeastern USA in the early nineteenth century who fall in love and, after various intervening troubles and adventures, end up going off to live together on a farm. The narrative style was not really my thing (it's a very 'modern' prose style, fast-paced and close POV and switching tenses and perspectives and that kind of thing), but the characters, the story and the general attitude of the book, which despite the hardships the characters face remains optimistic in a sort of gentle, charming way, were all very good indeed. Patience and Sarah's actual relationship is lovely, if not always an uncomplicated romantic ideal—they get together very early in the book and spend the rest of it working through various misunderstandings and conflicts, and we see the way the opposition of their families and society challenges them but fails to defeat them. (I loved the bit where Patience's brother is like, you've brought shame and dishonour on the family by falling in love with a woman! there's nothing to do about it but send you away! to a farm where you can live peacefully away from everyone here! oh yeah, and I guess she can go with you, idk, as long as it's not our problem anymore? Quite the solution!) Very, very good, my favourite lesbian book since The Well of Loneliness (which is really good but also really miserable, and there's definitely something to be said for more books that aren't like that :P).

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