Her uncle and aunt decide to go stay with relatives in Devonshire and are astounded when Frances, desperate for a life of her own, says she is going to take a holiday in Scotland.
“I shall need you,” said Mrs. Wheeler. “It’s a busy house and Clara has several evacuees. There will be plenty for you to do –“Frances had seen a painting of Cairn, a coastal village in Scotland and, encouraged by her aunt’s doctor, decided she would have several weeks’ holiday there, then look for a job (and who would want to go slave for the aunt in Devonshire?). She winds up at the Bordale Arms, where the locals are puzzled by her arrival and assume she must be an artist because she doesn’t look like a fisherman! Taking a room, she is perfectly content to take walks and observe those around her, but fate has more in store for her than the passive life she’s has thus far! A battalion is about to make its camp in Cairn and she meets three of the officers’ wives who have come ahead to look for houses to rent, so they can be close to their husbands. Tommy, Elise, and Tilly are Frances’ first friends (she always had a governess so never went to school) and they sweep her along into their plans and worries. She is shy at first, especially when their husbands and other officers arrive, but slowly she gains confidence and is able to hold her own and feel part of a lively group.
“I’m not coming,” said Frances.
She said the same words over and over again. She clung to them as a drowning man might cling to a raft, but more than once she was tempted to let go of the raft and drown.
Although WWII is ongoing and the army is on the alert for air raids or invasions, it is a happy time for Frances, who is making decisions about what she does and where she goes for the first time in her life. She becomes particularly close to Tommy and Elise and to Tilly’s son Winkie. She learns how to tell stories to Winkie and to make jokes to dashing officers. She even gets cut off by the tide with a handsome officer, just like one of the improbable romances by Janetta Walters that her aunt used to insist they read. Frances notices her new friends rarely talk about the war – they are used to focusing on life as part of a community, which means a stiff upper lip about the underlying danger facing the military.
Of course, there is danger on the home front as well, not just from bombs but also from misunderstandings. However, Stevenson creates a magical atmosphere—capturing the arrival of spring as a time for new opportunities for Frances and others. Rereading this made me think it might be my favorite DES novel. In addition to Frances’ awakening, the book is full of appealing and relatable characters, including elegant Elise, who tries to give Frances the lowdown on being an army wife (Frances is clueless to any possible motive); the local laird, who develops a crush when Frances help organize his papers; Alec, the pensive fisherman; Tommy, caught in an unhealthy marriage; and the kindly Colonel of the battalion, who is oblivious to the trouble his spoiled daughter is causing in the battalion.
I love the overall warmth of this book, the army background, the outgoing wives, and the relationships of the officers to everyone else. While there is romance, I think this is more of a coming of age story with the army and the village of Cairn as a pleasing backdrop. Although my copy is an old paperback, Dean Street Press and Furrowed Middlebrow have brought this and other quasi-classics back into print so this is one to try if you have never read DES.
Title: Spring Magic
Author: D.E. Stevenson
Publication: Ace paperback, 1969 (originally published in 1941
Genre: Fiction
Source: Personal copy
If you subscribe to Staircase Wit, you may notice a new interface sending out each post. A special thank you to my friend Emily W for making time to change the feed to Mailchimp, which I could not do myself but which I think will be a big improvement. The old Follow.It feed will be deleted now that the new one has begun.
Title: Spring Magic
Author: D.E. Stevenson
Publication: Ace paperback, 1969 (originally published in 1941
Genre: Fiction
Source: Personal copy
If you subscribe to Staircase Wit, you may notice a new interface sending out each post. A special thank you to my friend Emily W for making time to change the feed to Mailchimp, which I could not do myself but which I think will be a big improvement. The old Follow.It feed will be deleted now that the new one has begun.
10 comments:
Oooh. This sounds interesting. While modern WWII books have their moments, you don't get the excellent historical details that a book written at the time has. I may have to look for a copy of this one!
Oh, I like Stevenson, so this sounds good. Thanks.
Thank you for bringing this novel to our attention. Your review was so enticing that I went ahead and purchased a Kindle version. I am so glad that I "discovered" your site!
I am so glad! Please come back and tell me if you liked it.
There was no mention of rationing, which began in 1940, but maybe she started it before that.
I was so satisfied after reading it that I increased my rating from a 4 to a 5, which rarely happens at 2 am - usually, I just turn off the light and think how soon the alarm will go off!
I was able to order a new copy of this book via Amazon - nice review and thanks for the recommendation, I can't wait to read it!
Ha! It's all about the 20th century classics, Emily!
Nice review of one of my (many) favorite novels by D. E. Stevenson. Those who have read The Two Mrs Abbotts will see a fun connection between the two novels, as the author of the Janetta Walters novels that are mentioned in Spring Magic is a character in The Two Mrs Abbotts (the third "Miss Buncle" book.)
I thought about mentioning some of the books in which she is mentioned but did not get to that, so thank you! I have not reread The Two Mrs. Abbotts for ages so maybe that will be next (although there are many library books waiting for attention).
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