skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (tea party!)
[personal profile] skygiants
[livejournal.com profile] jothra (and possibly one or two other people as well?) enthusiastically recced me The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society, and I am very glad she did, because otherwise I probably would never have gotten around to reading it. It seems sort of odd to call a book that's so intertwined with many of the horrors of WWII as "adorable," but . . . I am sorry, it really is!

The book is set in 1946 and is written in epistolary format, which is something that is understandably a turnoff to some people but for me is often a key to my heart - I love first-person voices and unreliable narrators and things that come in between the lines of what's said, and novels written in letters are often very good at all of that. I also have a weakness for 1930's and '40s British lady writers (see also: I Capture the Castle, Cold Comfort Farm) and therefore I was thoroughly charmed by the authors' attempts to capture that style.

Juliet, the protagonist, is a writer who made her success writing humor columns during the war and is now looking for a subject for her next book. She finds it when she receives a letter from someone on Guernsey - one of the Channel Islands that was occupied by the Nazis - who has fallen in love with a book that she used to own and wants to inquire if there is any more available by that author. Eventually, Juliet starts to correspond with all the members of the book club that was formed mostly by accident on occupied, starving Guernsey and gets involved in their stories, along with an awesome mixture of book-talk (one character, when introduced to Jane Austen after reading Wuthering Heights, is SUPER EXCITED to discover love stories "not riddled with ill-adjusted men, anguish, death and graveyards!" AMEN.) The author really does manage to do a good job of balancing the weight of the backstory, and the different experiences of suffering during the war, with the relatively light social/romantic/literary comedy of the present. Also, it really was fascinating to learn about the occupation of the Channel islands during the war - I honestly had had no idea, which I would feel even worse about if I didn't suspect that the authors knew this and wrote the book in part for that purpose.

Anyway, one other thing about this book is that it has gotten me into a very letter-writing mood! So if you would like, drop me a comment with a mailing address over at this screened post, and within a few weeks you will receive a possibly-incomprehensible handwritten scrawl in your mailbox! I feel I should warn you however that my epistolary style is impressionable like warm wax, so any letters may slip into a terrible wannabe 1940's-British pastiche thing AT ANY MOMENT.

Date: 2009-11-10 04:23 pm (UTC)
tiltingheartand: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tiltingheartand
THAT IS EVEN MORE REASON FOR ME TO WANT A LETTER FROM YOU.

Date: 2009-11-10 04:26 pm (UTC)
newredshoes: possum, "How embarrassing!" (another era)
From: [personal profile] newredshoes
I LOVE THIS BOOK. It's one of my Yuletide requests!

Date: 2009-11-10 04:32 pm (UTC)
newredshoes: possum, "How embarrassing!" (jaunty mother's son)
From: [personal profile] newredshoes
How could I have lived a day longer than I wound up doing without Isola Pribby in my life? OH MY HEART, GUERNSEY. <33333

Date: 2009-11-10 04:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blacksheep91.livejournal.com
Okay, I. LOVE. THAT. BOOK.

My mom plays books on tape everyday so she has something to listen to on the way to work, and as I ride with her to go to uni. I basically have to listen to whatever the book is.

I LOVED THIS ONE! BRITISH! And....WORLD WAR 2 okay maybe that part was kind more sad than anything but it was still awesome!

The perhaps best thing about the book on tape is that they got different people to play all of the characters, so it isn't just one person trying to do all of the voices (which granted is an admirable feet but sometimes they can sound utterly ridiculous doing voices for members of the opposite sex who don't have a wacky accent.) It was like listening to a play. Avery witty play about a book club. And dishonorable American men. ^-^

Date: 2009-11-10 04:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blacksheep91.livejournal.com
YES, IT IS. AND YES, YOU DO.

Date: 2009-11-10 05:48 pm (UTC)
newredshoes: possum, "How embarrassing!" (the singing soldiers of the 506th!)
From: [personal profile] newredshoes
I need this audio recording like I have never needed anything in my life. Ahhhhh!

Date: 2009-11-10 05:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] obopolsk.livejournal.com
My roommate just read that book and really liked it! It is on my list (as are so many things...)

Date: 2009-11-10 06:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emmaco.livejournal.com
I read this book after it made this list (http://www.smartbitchestrashybooks.com/index.php/weblog/comments/escape-and-respite-books/) of escape and respite books on Smart Bitches Trashy Books. And although I cry when I read it, I agree it's still a feel good book (I bought a copy and filed it mentally under comfort read). And it's very likeable - I know all sorts of people who have enjoyed it.

Date: 2009-11-10 06:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] obopolsk.livejournal.com
Especially if you are ever looking for a feel-good book, since I know your list does not tend to be packed with those . . .

Hahaha, so true!

Date: 2009-11-10 10:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magwana.livejournal.com
YES YOU DO. Audible has it! I got it when I was trying Audible out. It is delightful.

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