From the Bookshelf of Gentle SPECTRUMS…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

After being shelved for about 10 years, I loved “The Hills Is Lonely” in 2016. I hope Lillian Beckwith’s autobiography explains why a young woman needed recuperating in the 1930s. These anecdotes were written with intelligence, admiration, well-balanced observation, and humour but Lillian censored them. I eagerly read “The Sea For Breakfast” a year after, giving four stars to both. Two years later, always in the spring for some reason, I continued with “The Loud Halo”, 1964. My enthusiasm for it
...more