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I Capture the Castle - Dodie Smith
Title: I Capture The Castle
Author: Dodie Smith
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 8/10
# pages: 338
Date read: October, 2006
Summary: Seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain wants to become a writer. Trouble is, she's the daughter of a once-famous author with a severe case of writer's block. Her family--beautiful sister Rose, brooding father James, ethereal stepmother Topaz--is barely scraping by in a crumbling English castle they leased when times were good. Now there's very little furniture, hardly any food, and just a few pages of notebook paper left to write on. Bravely making the best of things, Cassandra gets hold of a journal and begins her literary apprenticeship by refusing to face the facts. She writes, "I have just remarked to Rose that our situation is really rather romantic, two girls in this strange and lonely house. She replied that she saw nothing romantic about being shut up in a crumbling ruin surrounded by a sea of mud."
Rose longs for suitors and new tea dresses while Cassandra scorns romance: "I know all about the facts of life. And I don't think much of them." But romantic isolation comes to an end both for the family and for Cassandra's heart when the wealthy, adventurous Cotton family takes over the nearby estate. Cassandra is a witty, pensive, observant heroine, just the right voice for chronicling the perilous cusp of adulthood.
Review:
dichroic has been speaking very warmly of this book, so when I found that it was available through interlibrary loan, I immediately picked it up (and afterwards discovered that my mum owns it too! I thought I knew all the books she had, but apparently not). I'm glad I did, it's a delightful story. I've always enjoyed books being written as diaries, and I thought the characters were very well portrayed. You got to feel as if you knew them. Unfortunately I'd more or less seen the ending coming, so it wasn't as big a surprise to me as I think it was supposed to be. But thank you for recommending it to me,
dichroic. I have a feeling it'll be one of my regular rereads.
Book List
Author: Dodie Smith
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 8/10
# pages: 338
Date read: October, 2006
Summary: Seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain wants to become a writer. Trouble is, she's the daughter of a once-famous author with a severe case of writer's block. Her family--beautiful sister Rose, brooding father James, ethereal stepmother Topaz--is barely scraping by in a crumbling English castle they leased when times were good. Now there's very little furniture, hardly any food, and just a few pages of notebook paper left to write on. Bravely making the best of things, Cassandra gets hold of a journal and begins her literary apprenticeship by refusing to face the facts. She writes, "I have just remarked to Rose that our situation is really rather romantic, two girls in this strange and lonely house. She replied that she saw nothing romantic about being shut up in a crumbling ruin surrounded by a sea of mud."
Rose longs for suitors and new tea dresses while Cassandra scorns romance: "I know all about the facts of life. And I don't think much of them." But romantic isolation comes to an end both for the family and for Cassandra's heart when the wealthy, adventurous Cotton family takes over the nearby estate. Cassandra is a witty, pensive, observant heroine, just the right voice for chronicling the perilous cusp of adulthood.
Review:
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I usually avoid diary-style books, actually, but this one worked so well. (I don't remember the ending, so can't say if I agree on the predictable-ness of it.)