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Carregando... Follyde Marthe Jocelyn
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. For all it promised, this period piece was just okay. ( ) Ahhh, here's a book set in the 19th century. No Jack the Ripper wannabe ghosts in this here book. When Mary's mother dies, Mary assumes all the responsibilities of keeping their poor, rural household together and caring for her younger siblings. It is a hard life, but Mary loves her brothers and especially her baby sister. When her father remarries her mean-spirited stepmother sends her away to work at her sister's inn. While at the inn, Mary meets a young, upper class mother who has no idea what to do with her baby. They hire Mary for the journey to London and give her a place in their house as a scullery maid. Mary falls in love with a young boy from the regiment nearby and well, you can guess the rest. Told from the perspective of four of the main players and slipping in and out of past and present, Jocelyn uses this Dickensian story of a young woman at the mercy of her time to describe aspects of Victorian London (I love Victorian London- it is so delightfully contrapuntal). Descriptions of the upper crust Victorian houses, as well as the fear of the workhouse and an in-depth glimpse into the foundling hospital give this short novel a lot of flavour. Jocelyn also brings the character of Mary alive by writing her character in a first person, with a dialect I can only guess would be close to what the rural poor would be speaking at the time. Eliza, the bitter, jealous maid is less crafted, if not perhaps more interesting. Her story smells of the sort of Downton Abbey-esque machinations. Oliver, the former foundling turned history teacher is kind if a little benign and the little foundling James rambunctious. Having said all that, I can't help feeling that the novel fell a little short. The plot is typically Victorian - the tale of a fallen woman who finds redemption. As predictable as the happy ending unbelievable. The links between the characters is guessed at very soon in the book, making the reader wonder less what is going to happen and more how will it all come together. Still, an enjoyable read and one I would not hesitate to recommend for the grade 7 historical fiction reading circle. The book folly by Marthe Jocely perfectly imcorporates romance with the victorian age. Folly is told in a different point of view for each chapter rotating between the three main characters of the book. Mary Finn, Caden Tucker, James Nelligan, and other various characters in the book. The book takes place in 19th century London during the victorian era and revolves around the lives of Mary and James as they try to survive life as poor and orphaned children in London. In the end their stories intertwine to reveal a surprise ending that brings the whole story together. I believe this book was wonderful and it also helped me to learn a lot more about the victorian age. Esta resenha foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Resenhistas do LibraryThing. I desperately wanted to like this book, especially after enjoying the author's other book, "Would You?", but I just could not form an attachment to any of the characters. The setting was well described and I liked the pacing, but I just did not find myself caring about the characters and the plot. It took me several tries to finish the book, and if I hadn't gotten it as a early review book i would not have finished it. Stellar historical fiction set in Victorian London with alternating narratives following the lives of an orphan boy in a foundling hospital and a young servant girl. After I got a handle on distinguishing the two main story lines I was equally captivated by both. Although the cover is quite appealing with a certain gritty glamour to it, it's not really representative of the book itself. Folly belongs in the hands of teens who are looking for a more serious, sophisticated YA read. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
In a parallel narrative set in late nineteenth-century England, teenaged country girl Mary Finn relates the unhappy conclusion to her experiences as a young servant in an aristocratic London household while, years later, young James Nelligan describes how he comes to leave his beloved foster family to live and be educated at London's famous Foundling Hospital. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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