Thursday, February 25, 2021

Announcing the 2021 March Madness Book Bracket

 "Real" March Madness may be actually happening this year, but we all know which tournament I'll be following. Here's how this is going to work:


The tournament will begin on March 4. Two matches will take place each day until the final on April 4, the day before the NCAA final. 

All matches will take place on the Talking Lit with Aunt Mary facebook page. Two books will be presented, and you may cast your vote using the reaction buttons: "like" reaction for one choice, "love" reaction for the other. Voting will be open for 24 hours after the post goes up, and then a winner will be declared. I personally will vote only to break ties, but do not claim neutrality. 

The books for the tournament bracket are chosen based on: 1) how well they fit into snarkily-named "divisions," and 2) the need for most of them to be books with some name recognition. (Also, yes, there is an obvious bias towards books that I have personally read. Deal with it.) In no way do I consider this some kind of definitive list of Good Literature. There are books in the tournament that I love and some that I love to hate. There are books I love that do not appear but perhaps did last year, and books I love that have never been in the tournament at all. So if you're wondering why your fav isn't in here, don't take it personally. Trust me, my love for George Eliot (to name but one example) transcends my snarky bracket tournament. 

I am upholding the tradition of retiring previous years' winners to keep it interesting. For those of you keeping track, the following books have been crowned champion in the past and thus will probably not appear in future tournaments:
2017: Pride and Prejudice
2018: Frankenstein
2019: 1984
2020: Les Misérables (Damn, the title really fit the year, didn't it?)

So, without further ado, I present to you the 2021 March Madness Book Bracket. See the google doc for printing or enlarging. Grab a cup of coffee and start filling out your bracket. Let the fun begin. 





Friday, February 12, 2021

Gothic Novel Plot Point or Real-Life Scandal of the Clergy and Nobility of Wild Centuries Past?

 I take a guilty pleasure in fiction that ups the ante in terms of sheer outrageousness. 

Like, a nefarious Italian count with a secret? 

It’s a good start. 

With a weird entourage of animals? 

Even better. 

Who is a spy for a secret society against another secret society? 

Go on. 

Who challenges the hero to a duel for uncovering this secret? 

NOW you’re talking.*




*I just described Count Fosco of The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, on whom I wrote a previous post.


No genre better satisfies this desire for the outlandish than the early Gothic, with its haunted castles, duels, and vengeful counts, baronesses, and nuns. But truth is often stranger than fiction, and, well, rich and/or powerful people are and always have been WEIRD. Can you guess whether these far-fetched deeds were cooked up by Ann Radcliffe and her ilk or whether they were real, historical scandals, perpetrated by the eccentric ruling classes of ages past? Decide whether each is fact or fiction, then look at the answers below to see how you did. 


  1. A young Spanish monk reveals to his superior that he is a) actually a woman in disguise, and b) in love with him. Both end up before the Inquisition.

  2. During a religious procession, the crowd attacks a prioress, seeking justice for a young nun whom she is said to have murdered following the discovery that the sister was pregnant by a handsome Marquis. 

  3. A princess accuses the nuns of a certain convent of myriad sexual transgressions, heresy, AND trying to poison her.

  4. A vengeful pope orders his predecessor dug up from his grave and puts the corpse on trial. 

  5. A young Italian noblewoman’s brother murders both her lover and her husband. 

  6. A child of mysterious parentage is born to a prominent Italian family. A father and a son both claim paternity, but rumors fly that both are covering for their daughter/sister and her lover, said to be the child’s real parents. 

  7. An Italian Marchesa conspires with a priest to abduct the young woman beloved by her son in order to prevent an inconvenient marriage.

  8. After the sudden death of her fiancé, a young Sicilian bride finds herself unwillingly engaged to her former betrothed’s father, who fears the end of his line.

  9. A German woman discovers that her husband, a French aristocrat, is a secret member of a band of outlaws, and must flee across France lest she become his next victim.

  10. A professor challenges the author of a satirical novel to a duel to defend the honor of the dead author being satirized.




ANSWERS: See how you did.


  1. FICTION

The Monk, by Matthew Gregory Lewis. And the identity/love reveal is just the second chapter! Highly recommended as a “so bad it’s good” kind of read. 

  1. FICTION
    This is actually from the same book. It’s just that crazy. 

  2. FACT
    It’s actually kind of wild.

  3. FACT
    Lol yes this happened.

  4. FACT
    Well, most likely. Details unclear.

  5. FACT
    The Borgias again.

  6. FICTION
    The Italian, by the mother of the Gothic herself, Ann Radcliffe

  7. FICTION
    The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole. And let me just say this is the least weird part of this plot. 

  8. FICTION

The Grey Woman, a novella by the usually not-so-Gothic Elizabeth Gaskell

  1. FACT
    I can’t give you an internet citation for this one because I found the challenge in the state archives of Milan, so you’ll have to take my word for it. (Ok, I might have a picture buried in my research materials but I'm not gonna look for it.) The author challenged was Guido da Verona; the satirized, dead author was Alessandro Manzoni. The duel may or may not have been a joke, but da Verona did cause a much bigger stir than he probably expected with the book.