Basically,
the aim is to travel round England from the comfort of your armchair (or wherever
else you like to read), pausing on your peregrinations to read a book in each
county to read a book set in that area. There’s lots of scope with this
challenge, because your chosen volumes can be fiction or non-fiction, and can
include poetry, plays, biographies, autobiographies and all sorts of other
things, as well as novels. Re-reads
are allowed (which is good if you want to immerse yourself in an old
favourite), and so are foreign authors – for example, Henry James is
American, but The
Turn of the Screw is set in Essex.
According to the rules, the idea is to read a different book for
each county, but books can count for more than one county if the setting moves
from place to place, like Bram Stoker’s
Dracula, which moves between Kent and Yorkshire.
The only other criterion is that all your books should be classics, but the organiser has left it to individual participants to decide what constitutes a classic, which gives you a lot of leeway. However, perhaps we should all be prepared to defend our choices if other bloggers question our judgement! To help, she has compiled an
excellent list of titles on her blog, and has also set up a board
on Pinterest with suggestions for each county, which will be updated
throughout the year. But you don’t have to stick with her recommendations – you
can select some or none of them, and are free to make your own choices, and you
can plan ahead, or pick books as you read them.
The only other criterion is that all your books should be classics, but the organiser has left it to individual participants to decide what constitutes a classic, which gives you a lot of leeway. However, perhaps we should all be prepared to defend our choices if other bloggers question our judgement!
I must admit I’m bending the rules a bit, because a few of my
authors have strong connections with a county, although their books are not set
there, and would in any case be difficult to categorise geographically, so I
hope that is OK. And I’ve altered the list of the counties. I’m sorry about this, and I don’t want to
offend anyone, especially the organiser, who has worked so hard on this challenge, but I’m using the 39 regions generally regarded
(in the UK at any rate) as being the old, traditional counties. It means I’ve
ignored recently created places like Cumbria, and reinstated disbanded ones
such as Cumberland, Huntingdonshire and Middlesex. I haven’t included London
because technically it was never a historic county. To be honest, there have
been so many boundary changes over the centuries that it is almost impossible
to draw up a definitive list of counties.
There are four levels, and I opted for Level Three, because when I signed up this seemed achievable, but now we’re almost halfway through the year I’m not so sure! The levels are: Level One, 1-3 counties; Level Two, 4-6 counties; Level Three, 7-12 counties; Level Four, 12+ counties.
I started off all enthusiastically back in February with Pot-Pourri from a Surrey Garden, by Mrs CW Earle, for Surrey, then kind of forgot about it and got side-tracked by other reading. Now I'm panicking, so I decided a little organisation is called for. I’ve created a 'Master Plan', with a chart to keep track of where I am, and links to published posts - just click on the link and it should take you to the right post! And I’m trying to put together my own list, though entries may be replaced by other titles as I go along. If anyone has any suggestions about books connected to specific counties I would love to know, and would be grateful if you leave a comment.
COUNTY
|
BOOK
|
AUTHOR
|
Bedfordshire
| ||
Berkshire
| ||
Buckinghamshire
| ||
Cambridgeshire
| ||
Cheshire
| ||
Cornwall
| ||
Cumberland
| ||
Derbyshire
| ||
Devon
|
Lorna Doone
|
RD Blackmore
|
Dorset
|
Moonfleet
|
J Meade Faulkner
|
Durham
|
History of the English Church and People
|
The Venerable Bede
|
Essex
| ||
Gloucestershire
| ||
Hampshire
| ||
Herefordshire
| ||
Hertfordshire
| ||
Huntingdonshire
| ||
Kent
| ||
Lancashire
| ||
Leicestershire
| ||
Lincolnshire
| ||
Middlesex
| ||
Norfolk
| ||
Northamptonshire
| ||
Northumberland
| ||
Nottinghamshire
| ||
Oxfordshire
| ||
Rutland
| ||
Shropshire
| ||
Somerset
| ||
Staffordshire
|
Samuel Johnson
| |
Suffolk
| ||
Surrey
|
Mrs CW Earle
| |
Sussex
|
Puck of Pook’s Hill
|
Rudyard Kipling
|
Warwickshire
|
Scenes of Clerical Life
|
George Eliot
|
Westmorland
| ||
Wiltshire
| ||
Worcestershire
| ||
Yorkshire
|
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