It's Book Review Friday again, and this is one of my favorite books that I reviewed for
Sacramento Book Review.
I've always loved reading about the Brontës. I read biographies about them when I was a teenager, and even tried to write an itty-bitty novel in tiny handwriting, like they did. (I was a Brontë wannabe.) I loved various movies made of
Jane Eyre. Of course, I now realize what a creepy guy Rochester really was! (Would
you want
your daughter to marry a man who kept his mad wife hidden in the attic, and
said she started the very fire she died in?) But
Jane Eyre and
Wuthering Heights were favorite reads of mine. Both were tightly written, suspensful books that kept me turning pages. Those sisters knew how to keep a plot moving.
Likewise, I'm always charmed by how English writers can tell a tale. So I was delighted to read a novel that had
Brontës in the title, written by an English writer with a sly sense of humor.
The Brontës Went to Woolworths, a revived classic by Rachel Ferguson, does not disappoint.
One of the joys of writing reviews for
Sacramento Book Review , by the way, is that they send me FANTASTIC BOOKS! Go check out their site: They have tons of fine reviews of great books by really good reviewers.
Here we go with today's shared review:
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By Rachel Ferguson
Bloomsbury Press, $14.00, 188 pages
The Carne family – a widow and three daughters – live in 1930s London. Dierdre, a journalist in her twenties, is writing a novel. Katrine, also in her twenties, studies Drama. Shiel is young enough to have a governess – the distraught Miss Martin, ever befuddled by this family’s favorite entertainment.
The Carnes have invented a game turning actors, literary figures, even their dog and a doll into imaginary friends who ring them up and give them birthday presents. They invent dialogues for these characters, quoting them in a heartbeat. Miss Martin never is sure what’s real and what isn’t.
Then Dierdre accompanies her mother to jury duty. When Judge Toddington sweeps into court, he becomes woven into the game as “Toddy”. One day Dierdre covers a charity bazaar where the real Lady Toddington has a stall. Lady Toddington takes a liking to Deirdre, inviting her home. Very funny scenes unfold as a friendship develops between the two families, just when Miss Martin is sure the relationship is fictional.
In this sly tale, all of the characters captivate, including the governess and the Toddingtons.
A séance brings the Brontes into the story. So as not to be a spoiler, I’ll say no more.