Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Rhys is enjoying the south of France.

 RHYS BOWEN:  I believe I've shared the beginning of my latest opus, called (for now) Mrs. Endicott's Excellent Adventure.  It's about a respectable middle aged woman whose life is turned upside down when her husband says he wants a divorce to marry a younger woman.  He expects her to go away quietly, live in a cottage with knitting and cats. She surprises him by taking his beloved Bentley and setting off for the south of France, a place she had loved as a girl but never been back to since. (Lionel hates abroad. He's says its full of garlic and flies.)

She doesn't go alone. The bossy elderly spinster who runs the village charities appears at her door and begs to come with her. She only has months to live and longs to see the blue Mediterranean. Ellie can't say no. Then she rescues her cleaning lady from an abusive husband, persuading her to come too. The three of them set out on the adventure winding up in a small seaside town near Marseille.

I know that whole coast well. I've rented an apartment twice in the area near Nice. We've driven all along the coast and the scenery is absolutely amazing. I'm basing this book on the town of Cassis, as it would have been before tourism hit--a small harbor, some pastel houses. What I love about writing this book is that I can be there, all day, at my computer. I smell the flowers and the salt air of the sea. I watch the yachts passing and taste the delicious food.



The piece I am sharing is after the ladies have moved in to a villa on a hilltop (how they get this is a part of the plot so you just have to know they are there).



One morning She came upon Dora, sitting on the terrace, staring out to sea. At first she thought Dora was lost in contemplation but then noticed one hand was on her wrist. She was taking her pulse.
                “Are you in pain?” she asked, going over to sit beside her.
                Dora looked up, startled at being interrupted from her reverie. “Oh no. No pain. It’s my heart, you see. Congestive heart failure. It’s funny but for a while I’d forgotten that I was supposed to be dead by now. All the excitement of coming here, finding this place. I’d really forgotten. And it was only now that I noticed how quickly I became out of breath and how weak my pulse had become.
“Should we take you to a doctor?” Ellie asked in concern.
Dora shook her head. “Oh no, my dear. Doctors can’t do anything. One day it will just stop beating and that will be that. It shouldn’t be a messy death for you.”
Ellie looked at her with tenderness. “Are you afraid to die?”
“Afraid?” Dora shook her head fiercely. “No, I’m not afraid. Only annoyed.”
“Annoyed?” Ellie had to smile.
“Yes, at all the things I never managed to do. I never climbed the Himalayas. I never rode with the Bedouins across the desert. I never wrote a novel or found a drug that might cure cancer. I leave no legacy, no proof that I was ever here.”
“I’m sure you were missed in the village,” Ellie said kindly.
“Missed, yes. But not beloved. That fussy old woman. That bossy old woman. That’s the height of my achievement in life, I suppose. Properly ironed altar cloths and perfect flowers for the church. They’ll miss the flowers, but not me.”
“I’ll miss you,” Ellie said. “Let’s just see if we can keep you around a little longer, eh? Buck you up with some good food.”
Dora smiled at her. “You’ve been a good friend, Ellie. One of the only true friends I’ve had. I’ll be sorry to leave this place.” She turned away, staring out to sea again. Today the Mediterranean sparkled under a cloudless sky. A sleek yacht passed, far out to sea. The breeze was scented with blossom.

This should be a book about a woman finding a whole new life and blossoming as a person. The only complication is that they arrive in this little town at the end of 1938. Their world is about to change and how they handle it becomes a main part of the story.

ONe of my great pleasures when I read is to be taken to another time and place, to savor the smells and tastes. This is why I loved Tony Hillerman. I love Kate Morton, Louise Penny, Cara Black and my fellow Reds because I can go to London or Paris or Ireland or Key West or freeze in Upstate New York

So what about you? Do you love to travel vicariously when you read? Favorite authors who take you somewhere?

56 comments:

  1. Oh, this is so poignant, Rhys . . . I can't wait to read the rest.
    I enjoy traveling vicariously . . . places I may never get to visit, yet somehow reading makes me I feel as if, in some small way, I've been there . . . .

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a lovely passage, Rhys.

    My favorite books are always those that take me somewhere. In addition to you Reds, I love Tony and Anne Hillerman, Craig Johnson, and Elly Griffiths to name a few.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for sharing that passage, Rhys. Dora's musings on her life are very moving and the setting, overlooking the sea, feels visually real.

    One of my very favorite Royal Spyness books is the one when Georgie and Belinda go to Cornwall. I remember feeling like I was driving with them along those narrow lanes and overlooking the crashing waves. You have taken me with you on many adventures. Your settings are alive.

    I'm also thinking of how often readers of this blog have requested a Gemma and Duncan tour of London. How many of us want Hayley Snow as our guide in Key West? Place is important.

    My husband and I usually choose nature travel over cities. Books that take me out into the woods, the rugged countryside, to lakes and oceans, are the ones whose scenes stay in my head. What is interesting to me is that the authors are not necessarily my favorites. Neither are those books necessarily my favorites. But the locations make me want to go there again in the next book.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. so interesting Judy that the places can pull you into another book even if one of your preferred writers hasn't written it!

      Delete
    2. That's interesting Judy about nature locations. DuMaurier's Rebecca was like that for me. I could feel the ocean spray on my face, hear the crashing waves, the wind, the roaring fire... The environment played an important role in the story.

      Delete
    3. That is interesting! I would have to like the style of writing. I get annoyed easily at books that try too hard or are written in a style that grates on my

      Delete
  4. Rhys, can't wait for this one! This may be your Richard Osman moment...

    ReplyDelete
  5. I love this passage, Rhys. What a fabulous setup.

    Besides everyone mentioned, I love going to New Orleans with Ellen Byron, Seattle with Leslie Budewitz, Maine with Barb Ross, Los Angeles with Naomi Hirahara, and more.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I should have added traveling to the part of western PA where Annette Dashofy sets her fabulous Zoe Chambers mysteries!

      Delete
  6. Lovely passage! My son and I spent a few days in Antibes in 2009 and your words took me back. Such a beautiful area. I love traveling through books--including the Reds and many of the already mentioned authors. Right now, I'm spending time in BC with Iona Whishaw's Lane Winslow and 1958 Minnesota through William Kent Krueger's eyes. I also love the Venice of Donna Leon's books.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kent and Donna are masters at creating place !

      Delete
  7. Cathy Akers-JordanApril 24, 2024 at 8:28 AM

    I’ll probably never travel abroad so I really enjoy experiencing all the settings in your books, Rhys. I’m lookin forward to this trip to France!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Since I don't have the money or time to travel to all the places I'd like to go, I rely on books to take me there - and the Reds are some of the best!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hank Phillippi RyanApril 24, 2024 at 8:50 AM

    This is so sweet, Rhys. I can completely hear your voice, as always. You are such an absolute pleasure. And honestly, honestly! I don’t know how you do it. I know writing is difficult, but your work always sounds so effortless. Cannot wait!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wish it were effortless but I’m glad it seems that way

      Delete
  10. Oh Rhys, this book sounds delightful! I can hardly wait to read it.

    I do love authors who let me travel vicariously. Edith named a lot of my favorites, but I would add Sheila Connelly and Sarah Stewart Taylor, both of whom showed me the beauty of Ireland.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. How I miss darling Sheila. She died way too early

      Delete
    2. This is Susan Emerson. I rarely post from my phone and apparently Blogger didn't recognize me!

      Delete
  11. I love love love this snippet! Rhys, it's wonderful to find a book focused on three women who are often overlooked and 'invisible' as we discussed just yesterday--yet who are filled with personality, longing, regret, a will for adventure still! Can't wait to see what's gotten them this far and how they deal with whatever's coming.

    Your books are a prime example of taking me to different times, places. The two great wars, the time between--this resonates so much with me because my parents, my grandparents lived during those years and I was raised hearing their stories. Books bring the wider, historical world home to me and show me what it was like for others as well. I would say that Charles Todd's books did this for me in a very personal way. My grandfather Church was an extremely difficult man, hard to be around, hard to like. Charles Todd put me into the Great War in France and in England--it showed me what the men who fought went through and the aftermath of coming home. When I found out--long after he'd died, that my grandfather fought on the Western Front--so much about him became clearer.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A yes, Flora. The men of that war carried more trauma with them than any other except Vietnam

      Delete
  12. Oh, yes, I love to travel by book, and I am certainly looking forward to taking this trip, Rhys. A wonderful setting, a return to when it was quite different from our time, and Rhys's storytelling? Sounds like a perfect agenda. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Can’t wait to read this one, Rhys! I do love location and particularly someplace that I know. Of course, Googling locations does slow down my reading pace…~Emily Dame

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Emily, so I’m not the only one looking at Google Maps to find the setting of books?! I like to know where I am as I read. — Pat S

      Delete
  14. Rhys, what a beautiful photo of you! And those flowers - I can practically smell them, they look so vibrant!
    I do love books that take place in a location especially one I have visited. Sometimes we don't need to know exactly where we are as Agatha Christie wrote the Miss Marple mysteries in a non specific location but I felt like I was transformed into a small English village and introduced to all the local characters.
    I also love being able to recognize the streets, neighborhoods and sights of places I've been. The Jungle Red Writers do this so well! And Lucy Burdette actually includes local citizens who live in Key West - I feel like I could go there, meet them and feel like I already know them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This works both ways. In 1995 we went on a bus trip to England. We stopped one night in a very old hotel in a proper English village, which on entering put me in the middle of an Agatha Christie story, from the setting room on the the main floor, the elegant elevators, and the quiet, peaceful, dusty library. It was a step into a novel.

      Delete
  15. Loving it so far, Rhys! I enjoy traveling through books all the time. Right now the book I am reading has me in Ireland.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Oh I so look forward to this book! I spent a semester in Aix-en-Provence and was lucky enough to have a friend from Cassis so also spent time there, especially at the beach!
    I now travel exclusively through books and almost don't miss the actual traveling. Plus i have been able to go places that i will never see even in the US. I also love historical novels, being able to see places as they were.
    Thank you
    Atlanta

    ReplyDelete
  17. From Celia: thank you Rhys, waking up to the South of France rather than what’s up in NYC was a blessing. I loved reading your snippet. And like the comments before me I do love to travel via my reading as travel currently is off the cards. But here’s another author whose descriptions of Northumbria draw me to visit - LJ Ross. I’ve also learned so much about the USA from authors such as Hillerman, our JRW clan and am currently in the North Woods with Cork. Thanks again for bringing the sun into a gloomy New England day.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Love this excerpt, Rhys - and your comments on it bring home to me how different it is writing contemporary versus historical. Writing when 9/11 happened, so many of us were trying to figure out whether it should be part of the time/setting for fiction... Around that time the SARS outbreak. And I was writing a paranoid character who would have been profoundly affected by both. Decisions, decisions...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This is do true, Hallie. How do you root in time and place in the present especially when the book will actually be published a year or two later. Great events like 9/11 can only be viewed in retrospect, I think. I don’t believe anyone has tackled Covid yet!

      Delete
  19. Wonderful excerpt. Cannot wait to read the entire novel!

    ReplyDelete
  20. Rhys, I eagerly await this book; even if I have to read it (for some reason your books are not carried as audiobooks in the library.)
    I really enjoy when an author can make me picture the environment, as most places I have not and will not be lucky enough to see, but they are so much of what the book is. As many have remarked, they are a window into another place.
    I also sometimes wonder if you have never been to a place, can you imagine it properly. I just finished an excellent book set in Newfoundland. I knew of the place and of the culture, and so enjoyed it in spite of the content (it was sad), but wonder if any of you would appreciate the underlying influence of the culture of the province. This is much the same as me reading about Louisiana or someplace like that, and being unable to understand the heat, humidity and mosquitoes. I can feel the books set along the coast of Maine, as it is close to our climate and our fishing culture, but Louisiana or San Franscisco or Viet Nam – nope. I depend on the author.
    I would also suggest to writers who place their setting in another time frame, that perhaps you need to reinforce more than once the clothing of the time. I often forget that Maisie Dobbs is walking through blood and mud in a long skirt and sometimes picture her walking unencumbered by fabric. Also the vagaries of social custom – must wear a hat to the WI meeting in Britian in the war or in church – I know small things that probably will have to be weeded out to get the word count down, but so much set every scene.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There are so many tiny details that break the spell of time and place, Margo. Not wearing gloves, manner of address etc

      Delete
    2. Yes! I just had to respond to this because I tried a a popular historical mystery, set in 1915, in which the heroine - not once but twice! - was worried about keeping her skirt properly covering her knees in a business meeting. It took me right out of the story...and I am usually tolerant of the accidental mistake. But women in 1915 wore ANKLE length skirts. And it took me 30 seconds on Google to find photos to support that. These details aren't trivial; the change to knee length skirts in the 1920's was related to huge other changes in women's lives.

      Delete
  21. RHYS: Wonderful excerpt! I so look forward to reading MRS. ENDICOTT'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE. In some ways this reminded me of a movie that I loved - Enchanted April with Michael Kitchen, Miranda Richardson, Joan Plowright, Polly Walker among several actresses/ actors. I could read anything written by you.

    Always loved to travel vicariously through books, beginning with Agatha Christie. I have favorite places to visit in the world. Though there are some places I would Never visit in person, it is always a wonderful treat to "travel" to these places through the novels.

    There are Too Many Authors to list here. I would include All of the Jungle Reds' because they all have wonderful locations in their books.

    Diana

    ReplyDelete
  22. Rhys, I won’t be able to get this out of my head now. I can’t wait to read the book!

    In addition to books written by the Reds (you are all so good with vivid descriptions of locations) and other authors mentioned here, I loved James Michener’s descriptions. I read most of his books, and couldn’t put them down. I read HAWAII before going there. I recognized many locations when I saw them in person because I had read about them in his book. If I ever get to go to London, a place I’ve always wanted to visit, I’m sure I’ll recognize locations from Gemma’s and Duncan’s lives!

    DebRo

    ReplyDelete
  23. I can't wait to travel in time to France with this book. It has shades of Enchanted April as the ladies get to know and care for one another. I really want to find out what they do when war breaks out. I'm sure the three of them will be formidable.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Your excerpt is very poignant and well written. And well chosen because we all want the whole book - now!!
    I am not one who reads a lot of descriptive prose, but sharing the setting is different. It takes the reader there. My husband and I do most of our TV watching together and there have been times where I’ve said, “Oh, we’ve seen another show set here” only to find I’m remembering a book’s setting! — Pat S

    ReplyDelete
  25. I can't wait to read this one, Rhys. I have a friend who lived in Cassis for 6 months, and she said it was beautiful. And I recently saw "The Miracle Club" on Netflix in which several older women, unlikely companions, go to Lourdes, and I so enjoyed exploring the evolving relationships between them. Of course, it is hard to go wrong with a film that stars Maggie Smith, among others. A close friend of my mother's decided to visit Europe just out of high school with a girl friend in 1938. They had no idea what they were getting into, and had the devil of a time getting back to the states. Both survived it, thank God, and my mother's friend lived to 104, and told the story many times.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yikes! They certainly didn't plan on the horrible war going on in Europe did they. That must have been quite a story they lived to tell.

      Delete
  26. This sounds like a fun story. Love the south of France

    ReplyDelete
  27. I can’t wait to read your new book. Your description of the plot sounds so intriguing.
    I do love to travel, both vicariously and in real life. It’s a particular pleasure to read a good book set in a place I have traveled to.
    As well as all the other great authors listed by others here, I would add Martin Walker and his Bruno books set in the Dordogne area of France.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A favorite of mine too

      Delete
    2. I also enjoy Martin Walker's Bruno books. I particularly like that many of the plots are based on true stories told by Walker's many local friends. I'd love to sit down and have dinner with Bruno and his friends, especially his Bassett Hound dog.

      Delete
  28. Oh yes, I love to travel inside a book, and you've already hooked me with this one. Hurrah for women friends and adventures!

    ReplyDelete
  29. This is set in my favorite place in the world! My other favorite place is my old home in Mill Valley, California. I am looking forward to this new adventure. Rhys' books are always a delight. I read most of the authors here and enjoy all of their books.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Rhys, I love this for so many reasons! The setting! The characters! The relationship between the women! And it feels like a bit of a departure for you, which is very exciting. Can't wait for more!

    ReplyDelete
  31. I love to get to travel via the page. It's much more affordable and doesn't take up my vacation time.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Thanks for this lovely excerpt, Rhys. Books have always taken me to different times and places, including places like Middle Earth and Hogwarts, and I always hope that my Polizei Bern books bring readers here to present-day Switzerland.

    ReplyDelete
  33. I haven’t traveled much, but I enjoyed it when I did. This books sounds do good. I can’t wait to read more of if.

    ReplyDelete
  34. When I have a vacation planned, I like to spend the month before I leave reading books set in that destination. It gives me the feel of a place, and makes it feel more familiar. Before the existence of tablets and smartphones, making the internet available other than on a computer, I usually read with a printed US atlas nearby so I could see the area. Now with Google maps on my phone, it is not only easier to zero in on a location, but with street view, you can see it as well. And, if, like me, you read an ebook on the phone, such searches are very convenient.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Rhys, this sounds fabulous. Vicarious travel through books is one of my favorite things, I like books in exotic settings to me like Europe, Japan or Africa. Middle aged ladies like me heading to the south of France, what’s not to love.

    ReplyDelete
  36. The Laurie Case librarian/cat books opened me up to beautiful lakes and mountains. In Hawaii the only lake I visited was actually a reservoir. People riding waves on a lake, wow!

    Li

    ReplyDelete
  37. Sorry, Laurie CASS

    ReplyDelete
  38. It sounds like a wonderful book. I am looking forward to it.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Eager to read it. When I lived in Eastern France in 1998 with a friend and 7 animals, we took the 2 dogs to the beach at Nice on Grandmother's Day in Feb. Almost no one there.

    ReplyDelete