

I occasionally accept challenges so when James Wallace Harris posted (you can read about it here) about D. E. Stevenson’s novel, Miss Buncle’s Book and invited commentators to read the book from 1936 I decided to give it a try.
Here are the words that hooked me for this project:
Why do we love some books more than others? Why are some books so enchanting? Why is it so hard to always find the perfect book to read? Especially when we’re old and jaded and have read thousands of books.
I just finished Miss Buncle’s Book by D. E. Stevenson and I want to explain why I loved it so much.
Miss Barbara Buncle lives in a quaint English town called Silverstream. Miss Buncle, in the middle of the Great Depression, finds her “dividends” are NOT now enough to cover her living expenses. She consults with her maid, Dorcas, on the possibility of raising chickens. Dorcas discourages her boss. So Miss Buncle decides to write a novel based on her life in Silverstream. She changes the town’s name to Copperfield and begins writing her book.
Needless to say, Miss Buncle’s book gets published and becomes a best seller with “John Smith” as the author on the book’s cover. The citizens of Silverstream are not amused by the accurate and honest portraits of themselves in the pages of Disturber of the Peace. Mrs. Featherstone Hogg organizes the community to sue the author of Disturber of the Peace even though no one knows who the author really is.
I found Miss Buncle’s Book clever and fun. I listened to Patricia Gallimore brilliant narration on the audiobook version and loved every minute of it. I also included The Comfort Book Club YouTube link above where Miss Buncle’s Book is discussed. If you’re in the mood for a classic English novel from the 1930s, this book will entertain you from start to finish! GRADE: A (for both the book and the audiobook)









