Friends, lovers, chocolate / Alexander McCall Smith.
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- ISBN: 9780307370419 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 0307370410 (electronic bk.)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource.
- Publisher: New York : Pantheon Books, [2005]
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Electronic resources
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2005 July #1
/*Starred Review*/ Moral dilemmas and mysteries of the heart suffuse this second installment from the Sunday Philosophy Club, Scotsman McCall Smith's latest series following the wildly popular No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency. Fortysomething Scottish-American moral philosopher Isabel Dalhousie seems destined to become entangled in other people's lives. It's not nosiness, she tells herself. After all, isn't it human nature to want to help fellow souls in distress? There's dapper psychologist Ian, whose newly transplanted heart prompts troubling visions. And Isabel's niece, Cat, with her tendency to take up with the wrong kind of men (the latest is Salvatore, a dashing Italian who drives a vintage Bugatti. "A breaker of speed limits--and hearts," says Isabel.). Pondering these prickly predicaments makes the perfect complement to Isabel's part-time work as editor of the Review of Applied Ethics. It also keeps her mind off her own solitary state (if only sensitive bassoonist Jamie were a bit older . . .). Fans of McCall Smith are sure to savor this wise and whimsical offering filled with lively descriptions of Edinburgh and droll moral observations: Isabel "did not approve of promiscuity, which she thought made a mockery of our duty to cherish and respect others; an emotional fast food, really, which one would not wish on anybody. But at the same time one should not starve oneself." ((Reviewed July 2005)) Copyright 2005 Booklist Reviews. - BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2005 November
Adventures of a Scottish philosopherI've been told all my life that I think too much, so I was delighted to make the acquaintance of Isabel Dalhousie, a 40-ish spinster, Edinburgh resident, editor of Review of Applied Ethics and the heroine of Alexander McCall Smith's Sunday Philosophy Club series of novels. Isabel is, by profession and by personal inclination, a thinker. She thinks about everything, from the moral difficulties caused by chocolate, to economics, to age differences (the old have been young, but the young have not been old, so "[i]t was a bit like discussing a foreign country with somebody who has never been there").
Isabel is easily drawn into others' lives, including those of strangers. When she meets a recent heart transplant patient who tells her about the strange, life-threatening visions he's been having, Isabel becomes involved, researching the theory of cellular memory and investigating the lives of those who might have been her new friend's donor. Ever self-aware, Isabel recognizes that her motives are open to interpretation, acknowledging that "some would call it indecent curiosity. Even nosiness."
Isabel is appealing because she's so human. She's in love with Jamie, a musician younger than she who is still in love with Isabel's niece Cat, who is no longer in love with him. Isabel's only romance ended badly and she worries that "men don't like women who think too much." She's well-off, but lonely, reflecting as she makes her way home from a concert that "nothing awaited her at home but the solace of the familiar."
McCall Smith is a lovely writer (the dead are described as being "like a cloud of love, against which weather we conduct our lives") and, although his books are often called mysteries, readers not interested in that genre should still enjoy this novel. It's a wonderful addition to the fall reading season. Copyright 2005 BookPage Reviews.
- Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2005 July #1
Gently starchy Edinburgh ethicist Isabel Dalhousie (The Sunday Philosophy Club, 2004) slips into another sedate but vexing mystery.To accommodate her niece Cat, who's been invited to a wedding in Italy, Isabel agrees to supplement her part-time duties as general editor of the Review of Applied Ethics by working for a week in Cat's delicatessen. It's there that she meets Ian, a psychologist who's avoiding chocolate because the doctors tell him it's bad for the heart he recently received from an unknown donor. Ian soon confides that he has more serious troubles than the ban on chocolate. He's been having disturbing visions of an unfamiliar face-a face he suspects his new heart remembers. Quietly inserting herself into his nightmares, Isabel tracks down the likely donor's mother, Rose Macleod, and instantly recognizes in her partner, Graeme Forbes, the face that's been haunting Ian. Is it coincidence, cellular memory or something darker? While she's wondering what to do about her unwelcome discovery, Isabel faces a dilemma considerably closer to home: the possible loss of Cat's ex-boyfriend Jamie, a bassoonist who's become perhaps Isabel's best friend. Both problems edge toward solutions as gradually and believably as Isabel first slid into the problems. The dénouement is pure magic.Beneath the slender mystery is a celebration of Isabel's fallible but resolutely ethical approach to life, charming and light but with a refreshingly unapologetic gravitas. Copyright Kirkus 2005 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2005 May #1
The second entry in the "Sunday Philosophy Club" series has precociously curious Isabel Dalhousie and her no-nonsense housekeeper, Grace, in another Scottish caper. Smith lives in Scotland. 11-city author tour. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2005 July #3
The second installment of McCall Smith's Sunday Philosophy Club series sports a charmingly meandering plot and winningly hyperverbal characters-no surprise to fans of Isabel Dalhousie's debut, The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency books, or any of McCall Smith's 50-plus titles. Once again, Edinburgh's Dalhousie, intrepid editor of a philosophy journal, finds herself analyzing other people's problems when asked to fill in for her niece Cat, at Cat's gourmet food shop-cum-delicatessen. At the shop, Isabel meets Ian, who is haunted by visions of a man he comes to believe must be the murdered donor of his transplanted heart. As McCall Smith lovingly takes Isabel sleuthing across Edinburgh, the donor's stepfather (a man Ian has never seen) turns out to look much like the man of Ian's nightmares. Meanwhile, Cat's romantic rejects find their way, via the shop, into Isabel's social set, including former major beau Jamie, a classical musician who, though 15 years younger, becomes Isabel's confidant. A delicious mix of the unlikely and the tried-and-true, this latest cozy from an undisputed master will make readers feel just that. 9-city author tour. (Sept.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information. - School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2005 December
Adult/High School -Isabel Dalhousie, the charming and well-intentioned editor of the Review of Applied Ethics , is back. She does not actively seek out trouble, but her inability to ignore those in need has a way of drawing her into peculiar situations. Her adventure begins when she meets Ian, who has recently had a heart transplant and is disturbed by a menacing face that keeps appearing in his memories; he and Isabel wonder whether there is any credence to the theory of cellular memory, and whether Ian could be recalling the person who was responsible for his donor's death. In much the same way that "The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency" series opens a door to the dusty roads of Botswana, this one allows readers to experience the long, sunny days of a Scottish summer. The history and charm of Edinburgh are apparent in the detailed descriptions of the cobblestoned streets Isabel walks as she contemplates philosophical questions and attempts to make sense of Ian's issues as well as her own sudden romantic interest in a much younger friend and recent fiancé of her niece. The characters and plots are thoughtful and thought-provoking, and will stay with readers well beyond the final page.-Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Library System, VA
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