Relaxing in Maine: Reading & Viewing

READING

I have several recent novels set in Maine in my book stack and will be reading and commenting on them in the next few blogs.  Below is the first one I’ve just finished which, after a slow start for me, I enjoyed quite a lot.

I received a link to a blog post recommending 12 books set in Maine (thanks to Patricia and Kathy) which I’m including here.  I was pleased to see the novels I will be reading on this list plus other titles by Elizabeth Strout, Anita Shreve, and Courtney Sullivan that I’ve already read.  It’s a good list for anyone visiting Maine or wishing to experience it vicariously.

MAINE BOOK OF THE WEEK

The Midcoast by Adam White

Author White (lcnme.com)

I was intrigued to read this first novel partly because it is set in Damariscotta, Maine, a town near where we stay which we know quite well.  The book is also getting attention and good reviews.  It both was and wasn’t what I expected it to be.

The prologue introduces Andrew, the narrator throughout the novel.  Andrew grew up in Damariscotta, left for school, college, and career, and then returned as an adult with his wife Maeve and two children.  He knew Ed Thatch somewhat as a kid even though their backgrounds were different.  Andrew’s father was an orthopedic surgeon, Ed’s a blue-collar worker.  Now, Ed Thatch and his wife Steph look to be living the high life and he’s a lobsterman.  

Andrew is puzzled and, I would say, becomes obsessed with trying to figure out how Ed has managed it. When Ed’s daughter starts playing lacrosse, a sport unknown to him, he seeks knowledge and advice from Andrew (or Andy, as he calls him) on what colleges she should pursue.  

The novel is an unfolding of the layers of Ed’s life, the challenges wife Steph faces as town manager, Allie’s status as Amherst lacrosse star, and son EJ’s settling in as town policeman. Then comes the ultimate unraveling.  The outcome, but not the reasons why, is partially revealed in the prologue.  

White captures beautifully the feel of the Maine coast, the moneyed crowd who summer there, and the nuances of class and status.  Once I became accustomed to Andrew’s voice as narrator and the jumps back and forth in time as he relates events and later conversations, I was caught up in the suspense of wanting to know how it all would end.  My Maine friends and anyone familiar with this coast should enjoy the novel—if only for the references to familiar hangouts.  

VIEWING—POLITICS & CRIME

Meanwhile, when we are between house guests, we have more time to devote to TV series from Britain and Europe. 

FEMALES IN POWER

Borgen – Power & Glory (Netflix)

Asger & Brigitte (europe-cities.com)

When Borgen, a Danish political drama series, ended several years ago, I and others were sad.  It’s excellent TV fare about the first female Danish prime minister, Birgitte Nyborg, and her challenges in balancing power and family.  

This new season of Borgen (effectively season 4) is eight episodes all built around a single issue, the discovery of oil in Greenland and its ramifications for Denmark, but also for China, Russia, and the U.S.   Nyborg is now the foreign minister working with a younger female prime minister.  In making decisions and even policy, she occasionally forgets she is no longer the one solely in charge.  And she begins to obsess about staying in power.

As in the earlier seasons, the broadcasters at TV1 are always eager to get Nyborg on the air.  Journalist Katrine Fonsmark is now the head of news, having succeeded her colleague and mentor, Torben.  With her brusque style, she is finding her new role more difficult than she anticipated.  There are other familiar characters from the past like Nyborg’s son Magnus, now a climate activist, who clashes with his mother’s views.  A new player, Asger, the acting Arctic Ambassador, is charged with handling the negotiations with Greenland. 

 It is fascinating, well written, compelling drama.  The Chief Penguin and I binge watched the series and highly recommend it!  

QUIRKY CASES IN BATH

McDonald & Dodds (Amazon Prime/BritBox)

DCI McDonald with DS Dodds (theguardian.com)

This British crime series is set in Bath and features a most unlikely pairing of a detective chief inspector and her detective sergeant.  DCI Lauren McDonald is UFL (Up From London) and determined to advance her career quickly by getting confessions.  DS Dodds is a middle-aged bumbling white guy who seems slow on the uptake.  Their respective boss would like to see him retire and urges McDonald to push the idea.  Initially McDonald doesn’t appreciate her partner at all, and he finds her puzzling.  

As they work together, however, she discovers that, armed with his magnifying glass and his propensity to rush off to the library for research, he comes up with key insights into their cases.  Watching their growing respect for one another and the beginnings of affectionate regard add to the delight of the series.

We’ve watched three episodes thus far.  The murder cases have all involved a group of people, be it friends, family, or patients, who know each other well.  The first episode about a wealthy entrepreneur was excellent, the second episode a bit wacky, and the third one about a hot air balloon creative and intriguing.  There are three seasons or 8 episodes total, and each episode is 90 minutes in length.  I call this series fun entertainment.

Header photo of blue chairs ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved).

Maine Leisure: Screen & Page

ON THE BIG SCREEN—WOMAN POWER

(the wrap.com)

It’s hard to accept how sexist the sailing world was in 1990.  The Maiden, a new documentary, is a graphic account of skipper Tracy Edwards and her all female crew’s performance in the Whitbread Round the World Race. In the past women just didn’t compete there or at that level; or, if they were on one of the race boats it was to be the cook, how Tracy spent her first race.  Tracy is one determined individual, and she was determined to obtain a boat, hire a crew and strive to win the race.  

All twelve crewmembers were women and, despite the fact that all the male journalists (and probably the other skippers) expected that the Maiden crew wouldn’t complete that first leg, they did in first place!  And then they did it again in the second leg.  Although the film starts out slowly, it’s gripping with harrowing scenes of high seas and high winds.  What makes it even more enjoyable is that the crewmembers were interviewed in the making of the film so you see them on board and you get to see and hear their reflections today about their feelings at the time and the whole experience.

Kudos to our local non-profit Harbor Theater for screening this! They have done an admirable job bringing first run films and classics to the Boothbay Harbor community.

ENJOYABLE NOVELS

The Oysterville Sewing Circle by Susan Wiggs

Susan Wiggs (ala.org)

It was just happenstance that the novel I picked up after reading No Visible Bruises about domestic violence was also about battered women.  Susan Wiggs writes very good popular fiction.  Her characters are believable and sympathetic and she treats their issues with warmth and understanding.  In this case, fashion designer Caroline both loses her job in New York and simultaneously finds herself in charge of two small children.  She has a rude awakening about the domestic abuse suffered by her friend Angelique.  Returning home to Washington State, Caroline must find a new career and deal with the children while she seeks to learn more about domestic violence.  This is a novel that educates the reader without ever being preachy.  (~JWFarrington)

Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes

Linda Holmes (www.npr.org)

Holmes is a pop culture critic for NPR and this is her first novel. It’s sweet with a happy ending.  But then, like most romances, you know that everything will work out eventually.  Evvie Drake is a young widow who didn’t much like her husband before he died unexpectedly, but no one knows that, and she feels guilty about it.  Dean is a major league baseball player, a pitcher who’s got a case of the yips and is unable to pitch.  Evvie agrees to rent him the apartment in her house and thus begins an unusual friendship. 

Holmes creates two likable characters, each with plenty of mental baggage, and also pulls off a wonderfully enriching friendship between Evvie and her divorced friend and weekly breakfast mate, Andy.  If you like baseball and are intrigued by offbeat individuals, this is a good end-of-summer read. (~JWFarrington)

ON THE SMALL SCREEN—Footnote on Borgen

Cast of Borgen (oldaintdead.com)

The Chief Penguin and I just finished binge watching the last episode of Season 3, the final Borgen And I’m in serious withdrawal.  This Danish political series about a female prime minister is topnotch drama, some of the best television I’ve seen in recent years!  The third season flags a bit in the beginning, but then re-gains its focus. And the last episode brings everything to closure, possibly too neatly, but with a twist.

The acting is superb, the story is meaty, and the main characters have messy and fascinating personal lives.  It’s as much about the people as the politics.  There are politicians and their spin-doctors (Denmark has eight parties vying for power) and TV reporters scrounging for stories and better ratings than their competition.  Intense and gripping. I lived with these folks!

As critic Andrew Romano points out, “every public decision on Borgen has private consequences, and vice versa, which is something Hollywood usually ignores and real politicians, operatives, and journalists have to hide. Finally getting to see these secret repercussions spool out and spill over isn’t just spellbinding. It’s comforting, too.” (dailybeast.com)

Watching, I also felt as if I acquired a bit of Danish.  Borgen is available on Apple TV. The first episode is free and then, if you’re hooked, it’s $24.99 for a season.  Highly recommended!

Note: Text and header photo ©JWFarrington. Header was taken at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens.