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   Book Info

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Flight of the Maidens  
Author: Jane Gardam
ISBN: 0452283345
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
Here is a great vacation read but it's definitely not a throwaway. Prolific English novelist Gardam, Whitbread Award winner for both The Hollow Land and Queen of the Tambourine, has crafted a story through which readers can step into 1946 England. The war is over and the world is profoundly changed, though some of the old trappings remain, reminders of a faded past. Three Yorkshire girls of considerable intelligence but modest means have earned scholarships to universities in Cambridge and London; the novel is set during the summer before their departure for university. Hetty Fallowes decides "to be ruthless and positive and in charge of [her] own soul." She rebels against her quirky parents, especially her pious mother, who married her intellectual, grave-digging father for love and now regrets it. Plucky Una Vane's mother is using her dead father's office (he was a doctor) as a beauty parlor; Una develops leftist leanings and embarks on a romance with Ray, a boy of questionable background. Lieselotte Klein is a Jewish-German refugee who came to the village as a child to live with a Quaker family. At 17, she is suddenly sent to stay with a strange, elderly Jewish couple in London and finally, briefly, with distant relatives in California. All characters, major and minor, are superbly developed and convincing. The portrait of postwar England as conventions crumble and the country is rebuilt is terrific, drawn by a writer whose attention to detail recreates, lovingly and with bright flashes of wit, another time and place. (July)Forecast: Strong reviews and favorable word-of-mouth will be crucial to help build an American readership for this fine import.Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
It is the summer of 1946 in Yorkshire, England. Food and clothing are still being rationed, and everyone is struggling to cope with the changes brought about by World War II. To the delight of the town, three local girls, best friends from secondary school, have won prestigious scholarships to universities in London and Cambridge. But before they depart, they must survive the summer. While Hetty struggles to escape from her battle-scarred father and possessive mother by reading books, Una haltingly asserts her emerging womanhood with a young man from the wrong side of the tracks and of a decidedly leftist political bent. Meanwhile, Liselotte, a Jewish refugee living with a Quaker family since her arrival in 1939 via the Kindertransport, is whisked off to California to meet her last surviving relative. Gardam, two-time winner of the Whitbread Award for The Hollow Land and Queen of the Tambourine, has written a charming and sensitive story of friendship and emotional maturation in a direct, polished style not without humor and irony. Fans of Maeve Binchy as well as the fine British writers of the 1940s and 1950s will find her prose and characters engaging. Recommended. Susan Clifford Braun, Aerospace Corp., El Segundo, CA Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
The summer between high school and college is always a bittersweet time, but for Hetty, Una, and Lieselotte, this transition is especially trying. Their English village school years coincided with World War II, and even though their futures are bright since all have won college scholarships, their hearts are heavy. Literary Hetty is desperate to escape her interfering and envious mother, if not her beloved grave-digger father, whose spirit was shattered by the First World War. Athletic Una, in love with a boy even poorer than herself, feels responsible for her eccentric but shrewd widowed mother. And shy and intellectual Lieselotte, a German Jewish refugee taken in by Quakers, is wrapped in impenetrable sorrow and loneliness. As each young woman embarks on an unexpected and transformative adventure, Whitbread Award winner Gardam entertains and enlightens with vibrant descriptions and martini-dry wit while subtly musing on the psychic wounds of war, the hazards of sex, the limitations of religion, and the comfort of books. Ebullient, humorous, and wise, this is a novel to savor. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


The New York Times Book Review
Splendid... Gardam's style is perfect...


Atlantic Monthly
Gardam's lean, fast-paced prose is at turns hugely funny and deeply moving... [Her] characters are acutely and compassionately observed.


Baltimore Sun
Quirky, enchanting...with lively, laugh-out loud elan.


Kirkus, starred review
With winning charm and wit... Gardam frames her story in dozens of crisp, brief scenes featuring deliciously dizzy conversation.


Good Books Lately, December 18, 2002
Wow. Absolutely and unquestionably awesome! ...a stunner, a wonder and a must-read for your list.


Book Description
It is the summer of 1946, a time of clothing coupons and food rations, of postwar deprivations and social readjustment. In this precarious new era, three young women prepare themselves to head off to university and explore the world beyond Yorkshire, England. The bookish Hetty Fallowes struggles to become independent of her overbearing mother, Una Vane embarks on a bicycle trip around the countryside with a young man from the wrong side of the tracks, and Liselotte Klein, a Jewish refugee taken in by a Quaker family, heads to London in search of her only relatives to survive the Nazis.

As the three struggle to find meaning and love in a new world, they realize that they still have much to learn, and that their friendship is perhaps the only constant in an ever-changing world.

"Gardam can see deep into the hearts of both parents and children as the balance of power tips . . . her sly style is perfect for this muted but primal struggle." (The New York Times Book Review)

"This novel about a friendship among three 17-year old girls powerfully evokes the people and the period at the end of WWII...At turns hugely funny and deeply moving." (The Atlantic Monthly)


About the Author
Jane Gardam has twice won the Whitbread Award, for The Hollow Land, and Queen of the Tambourine. She is also the author of God on the Rocks, which was short-listed for the Booker Prize, and most recently, Faith Fox.




Flight of the Maidens

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"It is the summer of 1946. It is a time of clothing coupons and food rations, of postwar deprivations and social readjustment. In this precarious, new world Hetty Fallowes struggles to become independent of her suffocatingly possessive mother, whose jealousy of her daughter runs almost as deep as her pride in Hetty's accomplishments. While the bookish Hetty rebels intellectually against her family, her best friend, Una Vane, asserts her nascent womanhood with a sexually interesting fellow from the wrong side of the Yorkshire tracks and the left side of local politics. And Liselotte Klein, a Jewish refugee who arrived solitary, plump and clever from Hamburg in 1939 to be billeted by Quakers, comes through painful trials in London to surprising possibilities." "By the summer's end, all three young women in this poignant, beautifully realized novel have begun to learn that they, like their parents, know neither everything nor nothing - and that a ticket to the future is issued in the past."--BOOK JACKET.

FROM THE CRITICS

Atlantic Monthly

Gardam's lean, fast-paced prose is at turns hugely funny and deeply moving... [Her] characters are acutely and compassionately observed.

New York Times Book Review

Splendid... Gardam's style is perfect...

Baltimore Sun

Quirky, enchanting...with lively, laugh-out loud elan.

Publishers Weekly

Here is a great vacation read but it's definitely not a throwaway. Prolific English novelist Gardam, Whitbread Award winner for both The Hollow Land and Queen of the Tambourine, has crafted a story through which readers can step into 1946 England. The war is over and the world is profoundly changed, though some of the old trappings remain, reminders of a faded past. Three Yorkshire girls of considerable intelligence but modest means have earned scholarships to universities in Cambridge and London; the novel is set during the summer before their departure for university. Hetty Fallowes decides "to be ruthless and positive and in charge of [her] own soul." She rebels against her quirky parents, especially her pious mother, who married her intellectual, grave-digging father for love and now regrets it. Plucky Una Vane's mother is using her dead father's office (he was a doctor) as a beauty parlor; Una develops leftist leanings and embarks on a romance with Ray, a boy of questionable background. Lieselotte Klein is a Jewish-German refugee who came to the village as a child to live with a Quaker family. At 17, she is suddenly sent to stay with a strange, elderly Jewish couple in London and finally, briefly, with distant relatives in California. All characters, major and minor, are superbly developed and convincing. The portrait of postwar England as conventions crumble and the country is rebuilt is terrific, drawn by a writer whose attention to detail recreates, lovingly and with bright flashes of wit, another time and place. (July) Forecast: Strong reviews and favorable word-of-mouth will be crucial to help build an American readership for this fine import. Copyright 2001 Cahners BusinessInformation.

KLIATT

In 1946, while England rebuilds from the war, Hetty Fallowes, Una Vane, and Lieselotte Klein are friends headed to university on unexpected but earned scholarships. The summer after secondary school challenges the three Yorkshire girls who struggle with leaving their small town where they have made their mark and entering the different worlds of Cambridge and London. Hetty tries to distance herself from an overly pious and possessive Anglo-Catholic mother. The independent Una takes up with a delivery boy from a poor part of town. Lieselotte, escaping via Kindertransport from Nazi Germany, lives with Quakers before being claimed by a distant relative in California and then making her way back to England. The story of the three complex young women and the host of characters they meet in town and city is both humorous and touching. The past was filled with deprivation and yet was proudly survived; the present is emotionally painful and strangely exhilarating; the future holds wonderful hope. Secondary students and adults will find entertainment and perhaps some enlightenment here. Category: Paperback Fiction. KLIATT Codes: SA￯﾿ᄑRecommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2000, Plume, 278p., Griffin; Researcher, Everett, MA Read all 7 "From The Critics" >

     



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