4. Anne of Ingleside. L.M. Montgomery. 1939. 274 pages. [Source: Bought] [3 stars, audio book, classic]
First sentence: "How white the moonlight is tonight!" said Anne Blythe to herself, as she went up the walk of the Wright garden to Diana Wright's front door, where little cherry-blossom petals were coming down on the salty, breeze-stirred air.
Anne of Ingleside was L.M. Montgomery's last (published) novel. In the
novel, she is revisiting her most beloved heroine, Anne. The novel opens
with Anne visiting Avonlea in the spring of 1900; she is pregnant with
Rilla. She is spending time with Marilla and Mrs. Lynde, of course, and
making time to spend one whole day with Diana. If memory serves, Diana
is not really mentioned again in the series (Rainbow Valley, Rilla of
Ingleside). After a short visit, she returns to her own home, her
waiting family. There is Gilbert, of course, and Susan Baker, and her
five children: Jem, Walter, Nan and Di (the twins), and Shirley. The
book, I believe, mentions around here that she's been married nine years
and her oldest is seven. Imagine five children under the age of seven
with one more on the way! So Anne is extremely fortunate to have Susan
helping her with all those children! There is one person Anne isn't
looking forward to seeing, Gilbert's Aunt Mary Maria. She comes for "two
weeks" and stays over a year! The chapter on how they accidentally send
her off is one of my favorites!!!
The narration of Anne of Ingleside is interesting. Readers spend time
inside the minds of Anne, Jem, Walter, Di, Nan, Rilla, and perhaps
Susan. I don't recall Gilbert or Shirley or Aunt Mary Maria! Montgomery
devoted a certain amount of time to each child. These chapters capture
different aspects of being a child, different fears and anxieties,
different hopes and dreams. There is Jem's one desire for a dog who
really truly loves him. There is Di's friendship troubles, I believe.
Nan has a chapter about bargaining with God. My least favorite chapter,
unfortunately, is near the end. Anne loses touch with reality and thinks
Gilbert doesn't love her anymore and that he regrets marrying her.
Seriously I'm not sure what Montgomery was thinking with this one!
I read this one trying to always keep in mind that this book serves as a
goodbye. The original Anne audience would have been born circa
1895-1900. The first book was published in 1908. The last book was
published in 1939. Those that grew up with Anne would have been able to
introduce their children to Anne as well! Anne may have felt like a
kindred spirit indeed, as her original audience was reaching their
mid-to-late teens, Anne was falling in love and getting married. (Anne
of the Island was published 1915. Anne's House of Dreams was published
in 1917.) The following books, which focus on her raising a family.
Rainbow Valley and Rilla of Ingleside were published in 1919 and 1921.
This was "the" Anne series for almost fifteen years. Anne of Windy
Poplars was published in 1936 and Anne of Ingleside in 1939.
When I first wrote this review in 2013, I am not sure I was aware of how L.M. Montgomery ended her life. This greatly saddens me. AND I can't help wishing for one more visit with Anne and her family. To see Anne as a grandmother--to see her children grown, married, with children of her own. Perhaps gathering the grandchildren around to tell them stories, to hear their stories. Or perhaps to take nature walks with them. I could imagine scenes where young children want to hear more, more, more of her stories.
As for rating this book, it's hard. There are chapters I absolutely LOVE. There are chapters I merely like or tolerate. There are chapters that seem to flow EASILY together--those near the start of the novel. And then others feel like added on vignettes. I do wish more time had been spent on ALL the children. We get a lot of Nan and Di with a few of Jem. But not as many for Walter or Shirley or Rilla.
Favorite quotes:
The only time I feel I'm getting along a bit is when I look at pictures
in the magazines. The heroes and heroines in them are beginning to look
too young to me.
We'll enjoy each other's friendship today even if we are to be parted tomorrow.
Our friendship has always been a very lovely thing, Diana.
Yes...and we've always...I mean...I never could say things like you,
Anne, but we have kept our old 'solemn' vow and promise' haven't we?
Always...and always will.
Anne's hand found its way into Diana's. They sat for a long time in a silence too sweet for words.
It was never quite safe to sit down on a chair at Ingleside without first making sure there wasn't a cat in it.
This is no common day, Mrs. Dr. dear, she said solemnly.
Oh, Susan, there is no such thing as a common day. Every day has something about it no other day has. Haven't you noticed?
Half an hour later, Susan, reading her nightly chapter in her Bible,
came across the verse, "Withdraw thy foot from thy neighbor's house lest
he weary of thee and hate thee." She put a sprig of southernwood in it
to mark the spot. Even in those days, she reflected.
If a minister preaches a sermon that hits home to some particular
individual people always suppose he meant it for that very person, said
Anne. A hand-me-down cap is bound to fit somebody's head but it doesn't
follow that it was made for him.
I do not think, Mrs. Marshall Elliott, that people in these parts say half the things they are reported to have said.
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