You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion

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Letters from Skye
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Letters from Skye
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Peggy
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Sep 01, 2016 02:52AM

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I will get started on this one in the weekend (I think I have to work on Saturday too though) but I'm afraid I will get behind soon and won't be able to be super active in the discussion.
I'm very sorry, this never happens to me.

I am still willing to do the buddy read, and at least you will have a place to come back to when you can have time to read the book and make comments. I would be reading it anyway, because it is one for my Geochallenge list. Hopefully Ariane and Casceil can stall join in too.


I know two off the top of my head, the guernsey literary and potato peel society (or was that only partly in letters?) and dear rosie (is it that one? or another cecelia ahern book).

I'm looking forward to hearing what you all think of this. I recently bought a copy but I won't be able to join in with this buddy read because I have too many other books that I need to get through.


I'm glad this one's not too long!

I like these letters. I wasn't sure about the letter format before, if letters are very long and detailed and that's all there is, I tend to get bored.
I wonder about Elspeth and David. (view spoiler)
One thing I'm wondering about the letters: they are written with only a few days in between (the ones between Elspeth and Margareth at least) and sometimes contain only one or two sentences. Do you think that during the war and when rationing was in place, people really sent letters that often with so little content? And that they were delivered in 2 or 3 days with a war going on?

The story of Margaret and her mother has introduced a mystery and a potential link to the past time line of David and Elsbeth. It seems exciting with the possibility of things having gone wrong. Where has the mother disappeared to? Why did she go like that?

I started to find Elspeth a bit condescending, is that the right word? The way she keeps writing to David as 'boy' even though they're only a few years apart.

I enjoyed it and the mystery of what happened kept me reading. But I never really connected to the characters, it feels like it could have been more. I'll give it 3 stars.

I thought it was interesting how the letters between Elsbeth and David have changed over the three years. At first, I didn't think Elsbeth was really married. That was a surprise. It seems like she and her husband were not very close when he went to fight.
(view spoiler)
Peggy - Re your remark about E being condescending to David and calling him "my boy". I think it her way of teasing him because she IS older, even only a few years. It is also a swipe at his maturity, since she is married. She prefers to think of his college antics as boyish charming and fun. Their letters have taken on a life-line quality for both of them.
I did not know that the Americans could go to France and drive ambulances. They don't get paid??? Is it part of the Red Cross or something? I will look it up tomorrow.
I am going to bed. I am looking forward to reading the letters between Margaret and her Uncle. I want to know why he left Skye and never went back. I am interested in what Margaret has to say about her mother and what she knows.


Isn't it wonderful how the letters have changed? So much longer and so much background information. Sue/Elsbeth and Davey/David are becoming so much more real and filling out. (view spoiler)
End of Chapter 10: London 10 August 1940 (view spoiler)

I was mad at Margaret for a few minutes this afternoon, when she told Paul that she did not know how her mother had ever met an American up on the Isle of Skye. It sounded so snotty. I can understand her having questions. And Elsbeth has written to the old address where David's family used to live. Oh, I want to know as much as Margaret and more!
I am really enjoying reading these letters and this story. I can't believe you read the whole thing over the weekend. I want to know, but I almost don't either. Right now, I don't want it to end.

I have to remember to read your spoilers when I get to work today!

I just finished Chapter 16 and am ready to start on 17. 1916 - Why isn't David writing? What happened to Iain?
1940 - I thought it was wonderful how her grandmother was waiting for Margaret at Elspeth's old house on Skye, when she got there. And that Elspeth had sent all of the letters and photographs of Margaret to her mother, all of those years that Margaret was growing up in Edinburgh.
To me, all of the letters that Elspeth is sending from London to the states, looking for information on David or his family, sound so sad. Did she loose him?

I was touched by those letters and pictures too!

Isn't it wonderful how the letters have changed? So much longer and so much background information. Sue/Elsbeth and Davey/David are..."
(view spoiler)

Isn't it wonderful how the letters have changed? So much longer and so much background information. Sue/Elsbeth and ..."
re your spoiler. Yes, I agree. (view spoiler)


(view spoiler)



I think the author could have taken the stories she was weaving in many other directions and given a completely different ending - I could think of several. What she gave us was a glimpse into the lives of people that we could only know through their letters. I thought she did it very successfully. Yes, maybe we wanted more details about their environment and other life circumstances, but we could only go with what she chose to give us. It was enough for me and I was happy with the outcome.
I know you read The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society and did not enjoy it as much as I did either. We obviously look for different things in the books we read and feel differently in the way that the stories move each of us.


I agree that Elspeth is definitely an independent person not bound by the social mores of her time. (view spoiler) . Maybe it's easier for her to be that way, living in such an isolated location. Curious that she identifies herself as "Mrs." but never mentions her husband.
When the letters switch to Margaret/Mother(Elspeth)/Paul we see that (view spoiler)

All good questions, hehehe, and I agree with your letter writing comments.
I did not think about Elspeth being especially independent. It made sense to me that she would wear pants sometimes, especially as she was alone and so isolated. I wish I knew more about Skye, but you are not going to get it here. I might have to do an internet tour one of these days.
I wondered why Elspeth kept the letters hidden too, but I think she did it because she was very private and in hiding them, she did not have to share. Lisa and I commented about the "Mrs." too. I think the first time, I thought she might have been joking.

The letters are definitely getting longer after June 1914 (view spoiler)
I think Elspeth (view spoiler)
I'm going back to my reading now.


Regarding the letters, (view spoiler)
Don't read this until you finish:
(view spoiler)

