
Back to Prince Edward Island.
My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.
Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below.
Anne of the Island by L M Montgomery AThis volume recounts Anne's four years in college. And though, like all the books in this series, it is episodic, however, there is much more of an overarching plot to this book than in Anne of Avonlea and I enjoyed it a lot more.
L M Montgomery spends a lot of time describing the scenery, and while I can't really picture it, I can imagine being there even so. She is also a wonderful character writer; you get to know all of the major characters in her books. Each has their own personality that stands out on the page. They are observed lovingly, but not blindly, each has their strengths and flaws, and as a result, they come across as real people. And I enjoy the subtle wit and charm of her writing as well. It is easy to see how these books have lasted and been loved for more than a century.
On a more practical level, they offer perhaps a slightly romanticized picture of life in the countryside at the turn of the last century. You get glimpses of the small details of life, and of the hardships. And of the society of the time. The fact that there seemed to be no shortage of widows and widowers, suggests how easy it was to die of something back then. Death was a commonplace experience for the the young, and middle aged, as well as the old, who by today's standards, weren't all that old.
I am going have to watch the two Anne of Green Gable shows again to see how they fit the various stories together. I can tell that they rearranged events, and perhaps characters as well. I don't recall the college years in the show, but that might well be due to my poor memory. I know that the next book in the series (below) covers her year(s) as a principle at a high school. And that during that period she had something of a romance with a wealthy man with a daughter, but I don't think that will be the case here, as the show ended with Anne and Gil finally together, as did this book. We'll see. And you'll see, once I add Anne of Windy Poplars below.
Anne of Windy Poplars (AKA Anne of Windy Willows) by L M Montgomery A-This volume recounts the three years Anne was the high school principle at Summerside on Prince Edward Island. It was first published 28 years after Anne of Green Gables. A significant part of the book has Anne telling her story in letters to Gil Blythe, who is at medical school training to be a doctor. As with many of the Anne books, it is an episodic novel, with character studies at the core of the story. Indeed, it is the characters, both young and old, who are often spun out of their unique conversations that are the great appeal of this story to me.
Perhaps it is for the convenience of the story, but as I mentioned above, there are certainly a lot of widows about in these stories, and tales of deaths at any age, young, middle aged and old of natural causes. Perhaps a lesson the anti-vaccine people might want to take to heart. It is also interesting that unless you lived at home, or were married, you lived in boarding houses - a room and a meal provided. Even the principle of the high school was apparently not paid enough to have her own flat. Though that might also reflect society of the time, where even the middle class of the day employed a maid and a cook. With wood or coal burning furnaces and hot water heaters, and wood burning stoves, it would be hard to have a full time job, and then have to come home to get everything fired up to eat and live without employing a servant to do so. Anyway, an interesting glimpse into everyday life a hundred years ago.
What was also interesting was how the 1987 TV show adopted the books subsequent to Anne of Green Gables into the sequel mini-series. What they seemed to do was to consolidate a lot of characters, giving them storylines taken from different characters in the book, as well as eliminating many characters, and consolidating the time-line. This book covered three years, and I seem to remember it was only one in the TV series.
One example of consolidated characters; in the TV show has a wealthy man with the semi-abandoned daughter what a love interest in the TV show. This child is a student of Anne. In the book this love interest plays out as Anne's collage boyfriend in Anne of the Island. However, there is a story about an abandoned daughter in Anne of Windy Poplars but the child is only eight years old and her father only appears at the end of the book. Both versions of the child had her living with the matriarch of the Pringles. However his matriarch character was also consolidated with another ancient widow in the book who kept her 40 year old daughter waiting on her hand and foot. In any event, there are elements in the books that recall the TV series, but are still quite different as well.
I will have to watch this again this winter. But the long and short of it is that in these last three books, you get bits of pieces of the stories in one form or another that appeared in the TV show, with some new material. However, you also miss a whole lot of what was in the books, as one might expect going from books to a TV show. Still, I am fond of both versions of Anne. I think the TV show did a very good job of building a charming cohesive story out of the episodic nature of the material they used, without betraying the true Anne of Green Gables.
There are four more Anne books, cover her life until the age of 53. Plus some books about Avonlea, that she might make cameo appearances in. I think, however, that I will leave Anne still in her youth, and maybe read one of the Avonlea books. I have one on my ebook reader. But for now, it's time to move on, though were to, I have no idea. Stay tuned. Next week you'll know.
NOTE:
Wikipedia says that the original title was Anne of Windy Willows, but the US publisher thought it too close to Wind in the Willows, and there was some gory stuff that they wanted removed, so she did for the US version. My version, though a free Canadian ebook version used the American version.
It was also interesting how Anne is portraited on the book covers I searched for; she is often portraied in the style of women of at the age of publication. I had a lot of covers, and so Annes, to choose from.