I have never participated in Top Ten Tuesday before, but something about today’s prompt called to me: “Top Ten Books We Enjoyed That Have Under 2000 Ratings On Goodreads (we’ve done underrated books a bunch of times in the past 6 years but thanks to Lenore at Celebrity Readers for suggesting this topic as a new way to talk about underrated books especially when underrated is subjective.)”
I took a page from River City Reading’s post on this topic, and limited myself to books that have under 1,000 ratings on Goodreads.
- The Cloud Garden: A True Story of Adventure, Survival and Extreme Horticulture by Tom Hart Dyke and Paul Winder
In 2000, Tom Hart Dyke (English horticulturalist and first cousin of actress Miranda Hart) and his travel companion Paul Winder were kidnapped by guerrillas in the Darien Gap (Panama/Colombia) and held for nine months. The manner in which they are freed is something you just can’t make up.
2. Spoonhandle by Ruth Moore
Set on a small Maine island in the 1930’s, Spoonhandle captures a disappearing way of life without glossing over the prejudice and sexism of that community. The novel is funny, romantic, warm and tragic. Born in 1903, Moore grew up on a Maine island herself, and her intimate knowledge bears fruit in her storytelling. Moore also spent twenty years away, living in New York City, California and Washington D.C. (including four years working for the NAACP) before returning to Maine island life with her lifelong companion Eleanor Mayo.
3. Intimate: An American Family Photo Album by Paisley Rekdal
Intimate blends poetry, photographs, biography, imagined biography, memoir and essay. On one level, the book’s subject is the photographer Edward S. Curtis and his Apsaroke assistant and interpreter, Alexander Upshaw. Curtis famously photographed American Indians in the early 20th century, but only according to his ideas of authenticity: no contemporary clothes, no technology, no mixed-race children. Rekdal mulls her own mixed-race heritage alongside of Curtis’ legacy and Upshaw’s life.
4. The Goats by Brock Cole
This 1987 classic young adult book about a boy and a girl who run away from summer camp after being bullied is simply lovely. I have to guess that its age accounts for its low rating on Goodreads, because I thought it was a fairly well-known book in children’s literature.
5. Here is Your War by Ernie Pyle
Pyle was a World War II correspondent. This book is a collection of his writings from the North African front. He was killed on Ie Shima in 1945. From the book:
On the day of final peace, the last stroke of what we call the “Big Picture” will be drawn. I haven’t written anything about the “Big Picture,” because I don’t know anything about it. I only know what we see from our worm’s-eye view, and our segment of the picture consists only of tired and dirty soldiers who are alive and don’t want to die; of long darkened convoys in the middle of the night; of shocked silent men wandering back down the hill from battle; of chow lines and atabrine tablets and foxholes and burning tanks and Arabs holding up eggs and the rustle of high-flown shells; of jeeps and petrol dumps and smelly bedding rolls and C rations and cactus patches and blown bridges and dead mules and hospital tents and shirt collars greasy-black from months of wearing; and of laughter too, and anger and wine and lovely flowers and constant cussing. All these it is composed of; and of graves and graves and graves.
6. Brazilian Adventure by Peter Fleming
Peter Fleming (brother of Ian Fleming) penned this travel memoir about the time he joined an expedition to the Amazon to look for the famously disappeared Colonel Fawcett. Fleming is self-deprecatingly funny in this and it’s also a fascinating glimpse of that place and time in the 1930s.
7. Bab: A Sub-Deb by Mary Roberts Rinehart
Comic 1916 novel about a self-absorbed but hilarious seventeen year old girl named Bab who gets into a number of misadventures. There are some things about teenagers that never change.
8. Saplings by Noel Streatfeild
A psychologically astute novel about children growing up during World War II in England.
9. Caught in the Act / Edge of Night by Jill Sorenson
Sorenson is a new romance author find for me. Caught in the Act and Edge of Night are romantic suspense novels that both take place in San Diego (where the author resides). Sorenson’s doesn’t shy away from illegal immigration, the drug trade, and gangs as part of the environment and plotlines of the characters, and letting it be messy and not easily resolved.
10. The Europa Suite (The Autumn Castle / Giants of the Frost / The Veil of Gold) by Kim Wilkins
The three novels that make up Australian author Kim Wilkins’ Europa Suite are standalone fantasy novels where characters from the modern world interact with the world of mythology and folktales. The Autumn Castle draws from German fairy tales; Giants of the Frost takes its cues from Norse mythology; The Veil of Gold pulls in Russian folk tales. There’s horror and romance influences in each book. The Veil of Gold may be the best one, though The Autumn Castle is a close runner-up in my eyes.
The only one I have read is Bab: A Sub-Deb and I really enjoyed it. Thanks, I’ll take a note of the others.
One can hope that Spoonhandle will miraculously show up in a charity shop in Scotland for you to find!
Does Peter Fleming find the person! (I guess probably not.)
No they don’t. I get the impression that no one on the expedition expected to actually find him, but thought they might get a better clue of what happened to him. For his part, Fleming just sees it as a good story to follow. Some years ago, David Grann wrote Lost City of Z which was also, I understand, about solving the mystery of Fawcett’s disappearance. I keep meaning to read it.
I am seeing a lot of books I have definitely never heard of in this weeks theme!
That’s the power of choosing these literally under-rated books! 🙂
I really must read Saplings one of these days. I enjoyed Streatfeild’s children’s books, but keep hesitating about this one because it seems like it is much bleaker.
I haven’t read her children’s books, but it is not a happy book, it’s true. But I did not find it oppressively bleak, and though some adults really let the children down, there are other adults who are looking out for them, and I found those scenes especially touching.
The Europa Suite sounds really interesting. With all my love of books based on folklore, I have never come across that one. And Spoonhandle (again) sounds so wonderful! Must track down a copy soon.
I’m not a folklore aficionado, but I felt like the Veil of Gold did an especially good job with the atmospheric aspect. Wilkins definitely has a handle on the creepy aspect of folk stories.
And I think Spoonhandle is going to be that book that I will constantly be pushing to others.
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