Although February is a short month, there were some outstanding reads, especially The King’s Messenger, Slow Bomb at Dimperley, and The Spy Coast - links to those reviews are below.Historical Fiction
Slow Bomb at Dimperley by Lissa Evans (2024). A soldier returning to his ancestral home after WWII finds new responsibilities and little in the way of practical help from his family as he copes with death duties and ennui in this amusing story. My review.
Showing posts with label Gwendoline Courtney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gwendoline Courtney. Show all posts
Monday, March 10, 2025
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
The Denehurst Secret Service by Gwendoline Courtney
A school story that contains a mystery and is also an evacuation story – who could ask for anything more, as my friend Fred Astaire would say . . .Mrs. Sherbourne has news for her two teenage daughters, Elaine and Moira. She is sending them to Denehurst, a boarding school in Cornwall, because London in war time is dangerous and their father needs to concentrate on his Foreign Office work. The girls are mildly indignant because they want to do their bit but cheer up when their cousin, Captain Deryk Holroyd, says he might need their help from school. He asks them to conceal their fluency in German, where the family spent three years.
Saturday, June 3, 2023
Six Degrees of Separation - from Friendaholic to Elizabeth of the Garret Theatre
It’s time for #6degrees, inspired by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best. We all start at the same place, add six books, and see where we end up. This month’s starting point is Friendaholic by Elizabeth Day, a nonfiction book about the evolution of friendship. I think her premise is that if you spread yourself too thin, you aren’t being a good friend to others or yourself. I find self-help books quite tedious so am unlikely to read this.
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Bettina's Book Tagging Game
Finishing School: Further Studies in Schoolgirl Literature is primarily a group for literary analysis and general discussion of children's books. This week, my friend Bettina posed a tagging game, asking for a book:
1. Containing a map?
I found several, and chose a book that was my mother’s before it was mine, At the Sign of the Golden Anchor by Ruth Langland Holberg (1947), set in Gloucester, Massachusetts, about an hour away from me. The map is of Annisquam Harbor (Massachusetts), 1812.
2. With a Sunday School prize plate?
This took me much longer to find than I had expected! Long Barrow by Gwendoline Courtney (1950) finally yielded a book plate – Nancy MacIntosh earned it for good attendance in 1956-57. One can’t help wondering why they didn’t give her a more recently published book! They must have been big Courtney fans like me. I think Gill Bilski found this for me.
3. Showing defiant girl on the cover?
I think this heroine, a Paul Revere wannabe, looks pretty defiant in Midnight Rider by Joan Hiatt Harlow (2005).
4. With a character or place with your name?
Constance by Patricia Clapp is an old favorite. She was a real person who sailed on the Mayflower and this book was Runner-up for the National Book Award for Children's Literature in 1969.
5. Which is a Puffin paperback?
I have quite a few but the first one I found was Thursday by Catherine Storr (1972). This is about a troubled teenager who disappears and Bee, his only friend, who tries to find him. I am a bigger fan of her Marianne Dreams.
1. Containing a map?
I found several, and chose a book that was my mother’s before it was mine, At the Sign of the Golden Anchor by Ruth Langland Holberg (1947), set in Gloucester, Massachusetts, about an hour away from me. The map is of Annisquam Harbor (Massachusetts), 1812.
2. With a Sunday School prize plate?
This took me much longer to find than I had expected! Long Barrow by Gwendoline Courtney (1950) finally yielded a book plate – Nancy MacIntosh earned it for good attendance in 1956-57. One can’t help wondering why they didn’t give her a more recently published book! They must have been big Courtney fans like me. I think Gill Bilski found this for me.
3. Showing defiant girl on the cover?
I think this heroine, a Paul Revere wannabe, looks pretty defiant in Midnight Rider by Joan Hiatt Harlow (2005).
4. With a character or place with your name?
Constance by Patricia Clapp is an old favorite. She was a real person who sailed on the Mayflower and this book was Runner-up for the National Book Award for Children's Literature in 1969.
5. Which is a Puffin paperback?
I have quite a few but the first one I found was Thursday by Catherine Storr (1972). This is about a troubled teenager who disappears and Bee, his only friend, who tries to find him. I am a bigger fan of her Marianne Dreams.
Three of these books are set in Massachusetts which is fun but unintended!
Sunday, March 10, 2019
A Coronet for Cathie by Gwendoline Courtney
Title: A Coronet for Cathie
Author: Gwendoline Courtney
Author: Gwendoline Courtney
Publication: Thomas Nelson, hardcover, 1950
Genre: Children’s Fiction
Plot: Following a long illness, 15-year-old Cathie learns she is the heir to the duchy of Montford. Worried about Cathie’s health, her aunt had sought out the girl’s estranged grandfather, the Duke of Montford, to seek his help. At the lavish estate in Exmoor, the ailing Duke lives conveniently long enough to meet Cathie and revise his will; when she wakes up, she is the Duchess. While Aunt Bet returns to school teaching, Cathie is welcomed by her uncle-in-law/new guardian, crusty but kindhearted Colonel Rushton and his three outgoing children, who bring out the lively side of Cathie’s personality. As Cathie regains her health, her demure sparkle and sense of fairness endear her to all. There are adventures with a spiteful governess, interaction with loyal retainers and sycophantic neighbors, a holiday in Devon, and, finally, a day school where Cathie is able to quietly overcome the snobbishness that has become pervasive merely by being herself. Nearing 17 at the end of the book, Cathie has matured, is healthy enough to ride horseback and win at a coconut shy, and is taking responsibility for her tenants’ wellbeing and vowing to be trained in estate management.
Audience: Fans of classic English fiction, especially those who enjoy a rags to riches theme.
My Impressions: You know how much I like orphan stories, and this one is delightful, full of well-depicted characters and a winsome heroine. Cathie’s bemused acceptance of her inheritance is a little like Queen Victoria’s, “I will be good.” If there weren’t modern accoutrements such as motor cars and telephones, it would be easy to imagine this story taking place in the 19th century instead of (presumably) the 1950s. This is partly because Cathie’s illness is so over the top, requiring footmen to carry her about and a loyal retainer who shoos everyone away whenever Cathie’s eyes droop. I do, however, like her gruff guardian who is relieved his son hasn’t inherited the title, wants the best for Cathie, and learns from his mistakes. It is hard luck on devoted Aunt Bet, who has to leave the niece she has brought up since the age of 5, continuing her career as an educator when her niece has become one of the richest landowners in the country. A pity the Duke didn’t provide her with a modest bequest!
Cathie makes friends easily and at school seeks out the smartest girl in the class, although Ruth is looked down on by the affluent students because she is poor:
Helena flushed angrily . . . “But you’re new here, and perhaps you don’t understand. St. Agatha’s used to be a most select school until Miss Morris came with all her new-fangled ideas. Well, naturally we can’t argue with her, but we can show what we think of things by refusing to accept girls like Ruth Neale---”
“What’s the matter with her?” asked Cathie in the same meek tone, though there was a warning gleam in her grey eyes if only Helena had noticed it. She was so angry that her usual shyness was forgotten; besides, it was amazing how much courage she derived from the knowledge that if Helene knew her real identity she would behave very differently. Somehow, knowing that, none of this really mattered; it was just like acting a part in a play.
Helena glared at her. “Her father’s a blacksmith!”
“I don’t see what difference that makes to Ruth,” Cathie objected gently. “I like her, so that’s all that matters.”
Heroine alert! The best ones always have grey eyes and are kind to their vassals. And no one likes a snobbish head girl, Helena! Just as Sara Crewe effortlessly becomes a leader at Miss Minchin’s, Cathie, masquerading under an alias but using her resources (an empty barn on the estate that can become a clubhouse), comes out of her shell to unify the girls who dislike the cliquish behavior of the school leaders (this is partly noblesse oblige and partly just good training by unappreciated Aunt Bet). A real princess thinks of others and treats everyone fairly, whether down on her luck like Sara or newly ascended to the nobility like Cathie. Cathie is solicitous of those around her and, while we don’t see as much of her inner thought processes as of Sara’s, they share the ability to inspire those around them.
The Montford holdings are enormous (a house in London, another in Leicestershire (a hunting lodge, perhaps) and a big place in Scotland), not to mention the land surrounding the castle – when Ruth comes to thank the Duchess for assisting her family, we learn she bicycled 15 miles from her family’s modest estate cottage! It is fortunate that Cathie has been brought up modestly and is dismayed by those who fawn over her status, although by the end of the book she is “beginning to feel that it did not matter much where she was plain Catherine Sidney or the Duchess of Montfort. In either case, she felt capable of dealing with the [snobs] of the world.” Ironically, of course, her grandfather must have been one of those snobs, as he quarreled irrevocably with Cathie’s father for marrying beneath him.
This was a reread inspired by Scott from Furrowed Middlebrow and when I was emailing him about this book, my spellcheck kept changing the title to “A Coroner for Cathie.” As Scott pointed out, that would be a very different book indeed!
Source: Personal photocopy from kindhearted ET. I should have bought a copy from Girls Gone By during the brief window when it was back in print but I didn't realize until it was too late. It is hard to find and copies are expensive. As far as I can tell, the only book by Gwendoline Courtney that was published in the US is Those Verney Girls, which I also recommend.
Off the Blog: Thanks for the sympathy for my car disaster! My brother and brother-in-law have been very generous with cars and rides when needed but I am relieved to have found a new-to-me Toyota and plan to take possession of it this week.
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