02-21-2020, 12:09 AM | #61 |
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It must have been the only acknowledgement of the cruel treatment to which the Acadians were subjected, and so would be highly valued for that reason if for no other.
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02-21-2020, 12:50 AM | #62 |
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I've finally finished Anne, and will go back and read through the comments in the morning. But a few remarks first.
I read Anne at some point long ago, and I believe I've conflated it with Pollyanna in my hazy recollections. The shift from the slow-moving early part of the book to the drama of the last chapters seemed abrupt. Suddenly there were major life-changing events happening, instead of a string of funny episodes. I didn't dislike Anne overall, but some of her flights of fancy got to be a bit much. She seemed younger than her stated age for much of the book. I'm not surprised that this book didn't stick in my memory from childhood; I wouldn't have found much about her relatable--she wasn't a kindred spirit. |
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02-21-2020, 07:12 AM | #63 |
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Catlady, the Disney version of Pollyanna (I've never read the book) was sitting around in my head a lot as I this book. There was something so teeth-itchingly wholesome about it all. (Before reading this I had just finished another book that was full of very sweet people, bar the only viable suspect, and I think it was all starting to get to me.)
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02-21-2020, 09:08 AM | #64 | |||
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02-21-2020, 12:23 PM | #65 | |
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I did not pick up on the prejudice, other than in regard to the peddler who sold the hair dye. Nor did I get enough sense of place to explain why Anne-loving tourists have flocked to the area.
I didn't feel there was necessarily a disconnect between Anne's early upbringing and how she acted--the disconnect I saw was between her circumstances as an orphan going to a new place and her confident talkativeness. I guess that talkativeness could have been covering anxiety, but I didn't get that vibe. Her dismay at the prospect of being sent back didn't seem at all genuine--she'd been so over-the-top already that it seemed merely more of the same histrionics, and at least a little bit manipulative. She was quite overpowering, forcing people to fit into whatever box she wanted them to inhabit. Except for Gilbert, did she ever allow anyone in her orbit to abandon the box she'd put them in, sometimes before she'd ever even met them? When she acts nobly, even at the end when she decides to stay with Marilla, it feels as if she's doing it for the enjoyment of being the self-sacrificing heroine in her own melodrama, rather than because of real depth of character. (Contrast Jo selling her hair in Little Women.) Re cracking the slate over Gilbert's head--sure, it's funny, but is it really meaningful? Anne acts because she's been insulted; I would like it better if her action had been in response to an insult to someone else, if she'd stood up for someone else. As it is, it's just another over-the-top reaction. I did quite enjoy the fall off the roof--laughing out loud (extremely rare for me!) at this: Quote:
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02-21-2020, 12:47 PM | #66 |
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I read Anne of Green Gables when I was around Anne's age and I think I reread it as an adult when I was reading the rest of the series. My recollection is that even at a young age some of Anne's antics in the first book made me cringe. I preferred the later books where she had grown up and calmed down a little.
A couple people upthread mentioned Davy and Dora in Anne of Avonlea. I thought those characters were brought in to give Anne and Marilla a taste of their own medicine. Anne had to be constantly chasing after Davy and dealing with his questions, while Marilla ended up thinking prim-and-proper Dora was rather dull. |
02-21-2020, 01:40 PM | #67 | ||||
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02-21-2020, 01:43 PM | #68 | |
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02-21-2020, 02:00 PM | #69 | ||||
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I think the interaction between Anne and Mrs. Rachel Lynde was a great example of that. Anne's telling off of Mrs. Lynde really got to the heart of Anne's character, especially early, but Marilla's reaction to it was priceless. Quote:
I mentioned this thought of Matthew before but I still think it is a perfect description: Quote:
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02-21-2020, 05:59 PM | #70 | |||
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I also don't like girls getting a pass for behavior that would be unacceptable for boys--if a girl teased a boy and he broke a slate on her head, I'd consider him a nasty little monster, not a champion of downtrodden boys. I'm probably sounding like I despise the character--I don't; I'm playing devil's advocate. But I think there's enough in the text to support an interpretation of Anne as insincere and manipulative, not unlike Rhoda Penmark (The Bad Seed). (I can just imagine myself in a lit class writing a paper on those two!) But maybe I just read too many psychological thrillers. |
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02-21-2020, 09:00 PM | #71 | ||
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02-21-2020, 09:08 PM | #72 | |
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02-21-2020, 11:23 PM | #73 | |
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02-22-2020, 03:15 AM | #74 | ||
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But I'd have to add that a group that read Alias Grace must look askance at Anne and her reactions to her new life: Quote:
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02-22-2020, 06:39 AM | #75 |
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Good heavens you folks are harsh! Anne was manipulative because she admitted her disappointment about the ugly dresses? She was eleven years old. I think you’ve completely lost touch with your inner children!
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