408 of 423 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An unexpected delight, 23 Jun 2008
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Programme (What's this?)
This is a truly delightful book. I worried before it arrived that an amusing and whimsical title might have persuaded me to request something which would turn out not to be very good, but I was wholly wrong. I enjoyed it immensely; it is witty, erudite without being smug, interesting, laugh-out-loud funny in places and very moving in others.
The novel is set in 1946 and is in the form of letters, mainly to and from the central character, Juliet Ashton, a successful writer who becomes, wholly coincidentally, involved with a group of people on Guernsey who lived through the wartime German Occupation. The characters are thoroughly engaging and Mary Ann Shaffer (although born in the USA) manages to capture the English voice of the time beautifully: the prose is a pleasure to read.
It is very hard to summarise any of the developing stories without giving away more than I'd have wanted to know in advance, so I won't try, but the book has something to say about all kinds of things. Among them are friendship, suffering, forgiveness, goodness and wickedness, the resilience of humanity in desperate circumstances, how reading may influence us and the history of the Channel Islanders during the war. All this makes it sound a bit worthy and turgid, but it's neither - anything but, in fact. I never felt that I was being lectured, the history forms a really interesting and beautifully evoked backdrop to a thoroughly involving story and the observations on other things are either implicit in the doings of characters I really cared about or made directly with wit and flair. And there's a really tense will-they-won't-they love story which Jane Austen would have been proud of and which kept me in nail-biting suspense right up to the last page.
One theme in the book is the impact of reading on hitherto unliterary characters, which carries a risk of being patronising or sentimental. Shaffer has a sure feel, though, and avoids both. She does, naturally, use the device to give her views on some of her favourite authors, but it's very wittily and sometimes touchingly done. For example, one of her characters says of Wilfred Owen, "...he knew what was what and called it by its right name. I was there, too, at Passchendaele, and I knew what he knew but I could never put it into words for myself." As a definition of poetry, I think you could do a lot worse than that. And in the same letter there is a paragraph about Yeats's omission of Great War poetry from his Oxford Book of Modern Verse which made me smile and brought a great lump to my throat at the same time.
Another of Shaffer's characters writes, "Reading good books ruins you for enjoying bad books." That's a very dangerous thing to write in a novel lest it be turned against you, but there is no chance of that here. This is a very good book indeed and I kept wanting to get back to reading it. I was completely carried along by it and when it ended I was very sorry that there was no more. I urge you to read it. I loved it and I'm sure others will too.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
65 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A good way in to finding out more about this subject, 21 Jan 2009
Remembering two other excellent books that I had read several years ago about the German Occupation of the Channel Islands during World War II - Island Madness by Tim Binding and The Book of Ebenezer Le Page by G.B. Edwards - I found this jolly romp to be a 'lite' version of the other more deep and informative books. However it had a checklist of the various bullet point 'must mentions' (A German killing and roasting a cat, starving Todt workers escaping, Islanders being betrayed, a love affair between a German Officer and a local girl..) This book is, as another reviewer described it, suitable for Year 12, early adult reading. It is charming and different being in the format of letters. Gosh the postal system must have been as good as emails in those days! Sad to read that this is the only book published by Mary Ann Shaffer and good for her niece tidying it up at the end. The last pages make sad reading for that reason. I can recommend is a quirky quick read with a satisfactory ending and some fun characters that you grow to admire. The descriptions of the child Kit are especially well drawn. I think that the reviews written by today's Islanders are well worth reading. They have picked up on anomalies which annoy the practiced ear.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
100 of 107 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Charming, 10 July 2008
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Programme (What's this?)
Told in epistolary form this book is comparable to 84 Charing Cross Road but also has a charm all of its own. Set in 1946, we meet Juliet, a writer who is searching for inspiration to begin a new book. By a string of coincidences she learns about The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society and becomes intrigued by them. They all begin writing to each other and sharing snippets of their lives. Some of their wartime tales are of heroics; some of love, some are humorous and some are heartbreaking. Through everything that they endured they became united by a shared passion for books. Although, in fact, the book group was originally just a subterfuge to outwit the German soldiers, but became a reality as a love for books was discovered between them all. The surprise at the end is wonderfully warming and such a delight.
Mary Anne Shaffer has told a story of wartime horrors and hardships, yet kept the tone gentle and just bearable to read, without taking away the awfulness of the Nazi occupation in Guernsey. This book had me entranced from the very beginning and will stay with me for some time to come.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No