Notes from a Small Island by Bill Bryson
A Glimpse of Great Britain, Bryson-Style
It’s his keen observation
and a sharp wit, that kept me turning page after page. I had to laugh as he
pointed out how British life is touched with a kind of genius for names of
prisons (Wormwood Scrubs), to pubs (Lambs & Flag) to flowers (Lady’s
bedstraw), to the bizarre names of towns:
Whiterashes, Wigtwizzle, Blubberhouses, Titsey, Lickey End, and
more.
Bryson praises the
Britons’ cheerfulness and uncomplaining manner as they smile and laugh easily,
yet they can also been unyielding in their ways and you could be a target of
their ire for merely standing in someone's usual spot at a train station.
It is evident
throughout the book that Bryson has a particular love for old architecture,
and he laments that the British heritage, set in “445,000 ancient or historical
buildings, 12,000 medieval churches, 1.5 million acres of common land, 120,000
miles of footpaths and public rights of way, 600,000 known sites of
archaelogical interest,” [1]
is being nibbled away instead of preserved.
He complains about
the rain—“that special kind of English drizzle that hangs in the air and saps
the spirit.” [2]
And he notes how
he “had never had tea with milk in it before or a cookie of such a rocklike
cheerlessness. It tasted like something you would give a canary to strengthen
its beak.”[3]
I can attest to
the density of British biscuits, as they’re called, because lately I’ve been
hooked on The Great British Bakeoff show where highly skilled amateur bakers whip
up fantastic desserts that look like something from a magazine cover. I was so
tempted by their creations that I broke down and bought British master baker, Mary Berry’s, Baking Bible. Just to get my feet wet, I
thought it wise to start in the “kids” section.
My first attempt at Pinwheel biscuits. |
Unfortunately, my first attempt at it didn’t
go so well. My biscuits looked more like
flat potatoes than chocolate and vanilla pinwheels. The second batch looked
more like that tempting photo. But looks
can be deceiving, because they tasted just like Bill described…rocklike
cheerlessness. (I did have more success
with the cakes that not only looked good but tasted delicious, if I must say so myself.)
My Hazelnut Meringue Cake and my French Apple Tart. |
But just watching
that show set in such a verdant, gorgeous location made me want to pack my bags
and jet right over. And I believe Bryson
when he wrote “Britain still has more landscape that looks like an illustration
from a children’s storybook than any other country I know.”
Crikey! I think it may be time for a visit.
As a side note, my
husband has read a lot of his books. He
particularly liked The Life and Times of
the Thunderbolt Kid, Neither Here,
Nor There, In a Sunburned Country, and A Walk in the Woods (which I also read and loved).
Happy
Reading,
Comments
I am a huge Bill Bryson fan, and if you would like to see my reviews of all his books I read, here is the list.
I hope you will readd many many more of his books. I can vouch for what he wrote about England, it really is the way he describes it, I love it just as much as he does.
I always love reading your reviews. Thank you.
Marianne from Let's Read
Thank you so much for that review, I have read Notes from a Small Island for the first time when I was living in the UK, I had to laugh so much. Then I read it again shortly before The Road to Little Dribbling was published, as I wanted a short reminder, not that I needed it, his books are unforgettable.
I am a huge Bill Bryson fan, and if you would like to see my reviews of all his books I read, here is the list.
I hope you will readd many many more of his books. I can vouch for what he wrote about England, it really is the way he describes it, I love it just as much as he does.
I always love reading your reviews. Thank you.
Marianne from Let's Read
Have a happy reading year.
Marianne