
An epistolary novel is one whose story is told through the medium of letters written by one or more of the charactersSo this week, I found myself reading not one, not two, but THREE novels of the epistolary genre! Quite by accident (another case of bookendipity).
First up was The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society - a novel
The next book I grabbed off the shelf was Ella Minnow Pea -a quirky, clever dystopian novel about the fictional island nation of Nollop, where the national hero, the island's namesake, is worshipped to godlike status. He was the author of "The quick red fox jumps over the lazy dog," an alphabetical feat they think cannot be duplicated.When letters start falling off Neville Nollop's statue, the island Council takes it as a sign from the deceased Nollop and forbids the citizens to use, in speech or writing, any of the disappeared letters. As they fall one by one, life becomes nearly impossible for the citizens, whose main mode of communication with each other is via written letters. Near the end of the novel, so much of the alphabet has fallen that the Council approves using substitute letters (ph for f) or homonymns. (This part reminds me of the Anguish Languish version of Ladle Rat Rotten Hut which used to send me into fits of giggles as a child when my mom read it to me. I've always loved word play!) Fun as this novel is, there is a serious undertone about censorship, the power of words and fascism.
Another book I started dipping into, Radical Prunings, turns out to be a collection of fictional garden advice columns - letters to and responses from Mertensia Corydalis (which, of course, is the name of a plant). Mertensia has a biting sense of humor, is not very kind and has absolutely no use for lawns.
Q. I'm new to gardening and want to try my hand at roses. I recall a bright orange one my parents were particularly proud of called Tropicana. Should I buy one potted or bare-root? --Lois, Dudley
A. Lois, Lois. Where is your brain? Why in the world would you crave a rose the color of a vinyl couch in the waiting room of your local muffler shop?
Some other epistolary novels I've read recently: 84, Charing Cross Road - a delightful exchange between author Helen Hanff and a bookseller in London. Some people have tagged Dear American Airlines as epistolary, but I think that's stretching it.
And of course, there's the wonderfully creative Griffin and Sabine series, which brings me to the second $100 word in the post title, philately (the collection and study of stamps). In the Griffin and Sabine books, Sabine creates the stamps for the little island of Katie where she lives. I love the artwork in these books and made a little philatelic collection of my own:
Wishing you all a spectacular Sunday and a wonderful week.
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