Just finished Egg again, followed by Blanche Caffiere's book on her life and connection with the Bards, and now it's on to Plague. This time with Egg, I noticed more of the awkward spots, where either the editing was a little spotty, or I just didn't understand connections. I would have to go back now and locate those spots to give specific examples. I would love to get my hands on some of the notes Betty made for the book she was supposed to have started in Carmel, before she became ill. I understand the University of Washington might have some of her papers archived. That would be a treasure trove, wouldn't it?
I have just read Blanche's book again and enjoyed her stories. It is interesting to read about Betty and her family from an "outsider's" perspective. I also found her descriptions about the day to day life and social customs of the era in which she and Betty lived fascinating.
Pat, I liked those parts as well. The pressure for Blanche to keep up the facade that her family had a higher standard of living than they actually did, reminded me of the accounts I've read of upper class families in Victorian and Edwardian England, who had always had money, but who had fallen on hard times. Rather than downsize their homes or be seen to have fewer servants than they once did, they spent every spare cent on maintaining the visible parts of the house, hosting at least one ball or formal society dinner, and ate bread and gravy behind the scenes the rest of the year.
While I'm thinking about it, I wanted to say that when reading the letter Betty wrote to Blanche about buying a dog from a breeder, I was struck by the fact that even though Betty was a little miffed at the woman, that breeder was decades ahead of her time. I do a lot of work with animal rescue and the questions the breeder asked Betty, and which Betty found intrusive, are standard questions now. I hate to think that Betty and I would have been at odds about anything, but in this case, I would have been on the breeder's side.