Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion

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A View Of The Harbour
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A View of the Harbour
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Sara, Old School Classics
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rated it 5 stars
Jun 29, 2021 01:30PM

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When does the actual discussion start, Sara?
Anytime after the first is fine, Anne. I haven't started the read yet, so I will not be commenting for at least a few days into July. I'm off my schedule completely at this juncture, but it is my first read for the month.
So glad to have you here, Michaela!
So glad to have you here, Michaela!

Diane, I will be starting Corrag soon as well. Waiting for my library copy.

I've got my copy of A View of the Harbour ready to go. I'll start it up once I finish A Town Like Alice :)











I also found this a slow start, but events in Chapter Four brought my interest level up a notch. I am also catching and enjoying the bits of dry wit. Bertram is an interesting character--I'm not sure if I like him or not.


I also know that small town dynamic, Diane. We are told Lily doesn't worry about any gossip because she is doing nothing wrong with Bertram, but of course, I know there is bound to be gossip...small towns love it.
I like the device of Bertram as the outsider. He sees through these people and is often having thoughts that are revealing or insightful. When he is talking to Tory about Robert To himself, he thought: "So she can describe everyone, but not him." And, we of course, know why. Very subtle, but very effective.
I like the device of Bertram as the outsider. He sees through these people and is often having thoughts that are revealing or insightful. When he is talking to Tory about Robert To himself, he thought: "So she can describe everyone, but not him." And, we of course, know why. Very subtle, but very effective.

She does that very seamlessly Sara, showing us their thoughts as opposed to their spoken words. I was listening to NPR reporting on things people missed most in the pandemic, and a couple of people said real live gossip, that and the fact there was nothing to gossip about during the shutdowns.
Michaela wrote: "I haven´t started yet, but a question: Are there spoilers in this thread?"
I would not consider anything a spoiler, Michaela. There is some discussion of how the characters are treated in general, but it does not reveal any plot elements.
I would not consider anything a spoiler, Michaela. There is some discussion of how the characters are treated in general, but it does not reveal any plot elements.
OK, Wow, I finished and I love the way Taylor seems to be telling such a simple tale in the beginning, uneventful, and then you close and realize she has hit on just about every emotion and relationship in existence.
(view spoiler)
(view spoiler)


Just click on the word spoiler. It might not work in the Goodreads App though (which is one of the many reasons why I removed that app from my phone)

Beth's obsession with her writing made me a little uncomfortable. Not because I write, but because I read. At times I am guilty of "let's get this over with so I can get back to my book."
Antoinette, if you cannot open them on the app, just sign into your account directly on the web and they will open for you.
Diane - I also thought the lighthouse was a major symbol in this book. Every view of the harbour pivoted around the lighthouse, but the light was intermittent, so there were always periods of darkness, things that remained hidden.
Ouch, guilty also of being more absorbed in my book I am reading than the life going on around me. Beth not only used the book she was writing to escape her life, but she knew that was what she was doing and she chastised herself for it. Interestingly, however, whenever she tried to reverse that, everything seemed to blow up in her face. The scene with Stevie over the fairytale was so poignant and meaningful to me...it was Beth who wanted and needed the fairytale, Stevie abhorred it and was frightened by it. I admire the way Taylor could layer an incident so that it was both a common, everyday occurrence and yet also a crucial comment on the lives of these characters.
Diane - I also thought the lighthouse was a major symbol in this book. Every view of the harbour pivoted around the lighthouse, but the light was intermittent, so there were always periods of darkness, things that remained hidden.
Ouch, guilty also of being more absorbed in my book I am reading than the life going on around me. Beth not only used the book she was writing to escape her life, but she knew that was what she was doing and she chastised herself for it. Interestingly, however, whenever she tried to reverse that, everything seemed to blow up in her face. The scene with Stevie over the fairytale was so poignant and meaningful to me...it was Beth who wanted and needed the fairytale, Stevie abhorred it and was frightened by it. I admire the way Taylor could layer an incident so that it was both a common, everyday occurrence and yet also a crucial comment on the lives of these characters.

message 42:
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Sara, Old School Classics
(last edited Jul 07, 2021 06:37AM)
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rated it 5 stars
If you have spent much time around a child of five, Stevie rings dozens of bells with you. I loved the shaving brush made of feathers...she would have expected him to use it, and yet she was quick to realize she couldn't make a feather hat for her mother--too complicated. Crying to go with Beth to London and then immediately happy after Beth had left. She nails mothers too. Stevie had moved on, but Beth was still anguished over it on the train.

Taylor certainly gives you lots to think about.
That ending , Diane. I agree, wow. I wish there was a sequel. I read somewhere that Taylor liked open endings. She certainly gave us one in this book.
Agree, Antoinette. All mothers, I'm betting, are all three of these at some time in life.
Taylor's open endings always say to me...I've shown you this moment in time, but time isn't static, so it continues to throw things at us, even when we think the story is done. The only way we are truly out of it is when we die...and then, who knows?
Taylor's open endings always say to me...I've shown you this moment in time, but time isn't static, so it continues to throw things at us, even when we think the story is done. The only way we are truly out of it is when we die...and then, who knows?

I didn't particularly want to sit down to tea with a single one of them, but I also didn't really hate any of them either. People like Mrs. Bracey make me mad though - keeping others down just because her life (while I did feel sorry for this) has taken a nose dive. I felt her pain in some sense, but I can never understand why anyone, in particular a mother, would want to make someone else's life (especially that of her own offspring!) just as miserable as his/her own.
I loved the symbolism of the lighthouse. And then the painting that was already on the wall and then the one that Bertram though he would paint and therefore improve upon the existing one. Did he in fact improve upon it?! That's a good question!
(view spoiler)
Interesting question about the paintings, Candi. (view spoiler)
I am still thinking about this one and your post dragged me right back into it, Candi. I love your thoughts on the cast of characters, because you are so right, most authors fail to make them individuals when they tackle so many.
I am still thinking about this one and your post dragged me right back into it, Candi. I love your thoughts on the cast of characters, because you are so right, most authors fail to make them individuals when they tackle so many.


Diane, interesting that you've felt similarly for characters in other Taylor books. It must be her trademark of being able to make such observations without necessarily attaching the reader to any particular one. I'm anxious to read about Mrs. Palfrey and it may very well be my next Taylor pick!
Books mentioned in this topic
A View Of The Harbour (other topics)Angel (other topics)
The Soul of Kindness (other topics)
In a Summer Season (other topics)
Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (other topics)
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