THE
NOVEL IN THE VIOLA
BY
NATASHA SOLOMONS
THE
BLURB:-
In
the spring of 1938 Elise Landau arrives at Tyneford, the great house
on the bay. A bright young thing from Vienna, forced to become a
parlour-maid, she knows nothing about England, except that she won't
like it. As servants polish silver and serve drinks on the lawn,
Elise wears her mother's pearls beneath her uniform, and causes
outrage by dancing with a boy called Kit. But war is coming, the
world is changing, and Elise must change with it.
At
Tyneford she learns that you can love more than one person- and that
you can love more than once.
THE
REALITY:-
An
unusual novel with an unusual title. We all know the gist of what
went on during the Second World War, but it's always interesting to
learn personal stories, especially those you may not have considered
before (in this case, an Austrian Jewess from a good echelon of society coming to work, as a refugee, as a maid in an English
household).
The
characters were all highly believable and I loved the idea of a
“ghost village” that was requisitioned during the war, never
re-occupied and then left to rot in its original 1940s style. Like
the author, I found this concept haunting (so much so that I would
like to visit Tyneham, the real place on which the book was based)
and a brilliant springboard for a novel.
Maybe
it would have been nice for the novel in the viola to have not faded,
so that we can read Julian's last work. But I suppose that would
defeat the basic point of the book, where Elise writes her own life
story, through the medium of her altered circumstances. I am also
glad to have learnt a new word- palimpsest:- writing material on
which the original writing has been effaced to make room for other
writing. I am going to make it my business to learn a new word every
day!
I'm
glad Elise got a happy ending- or as near to happy as she
could under the circumstances. That essential point is driven home,
which is good, as we all know that this period of history was
somewhere between difficult and horrific, for so many people.
Recommended
as a good summer read.
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