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At Home Place, the windows are blacked out and food is becoming scarce as a new generation of Cazalets takes up the story. Louise dreams of being a great actress, Clary is an aspiring writer, while Polly, is burdened with knowledge and the need to share it.
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5 primary booksCazalet Chronicles is a 5-book series with 5 primary works first released in 1990 with contributions by Elizabeth Jane Howard.
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Volume two of the Cazalet Chronicles begins with the formal outbreak of World War 2 and follows the family's fortunes through to the winter of 1941. Focusing for the most part on the three elder Cazalet daughters, Louise, Polly and Clary, Howard again pulls off an astonishingly good book, every bit as good as the first.
Howard's ability to let her characters evolve and change as they age, as well as with each new experience, is masterly. In a lesser writer's hands this could all descend into soap opera, but here you end up caring deeply what happens to these people, in all their flawed, human glory. For these are not paragons of virtue. There is infidelity, jealousy, illness and grief to deal with. Plans are thwarted, the war brings new hardships as the eldest brother Hugh struggles to keep the family business afloat, while the youngest, Rupert, goes missing in France.
The three teenage girls are growing up fast, Louise trying to pursue a career as an actress in the face of her mother's cold indifference, while finding herself courted by an older naval officer; Clary clings to the hope that her father is still alive in France; Polly finds all her certainties eroding as the war grinds on with no end in sight.
But this is no anodyne “family at war” saga. There is real heart here, with each character brought to life with superb prose. You feel as though you are inside their heads listening to their innermost thoughts.
Two books in and no drop in quality. An amazing achievement.
Je suis rentrée plus rapidement dans l'histoire. Je me pose un peu trop la question de ce que je trouve dans ce livre : si c'est vraiment du plaisir, ou une lecture débutée à finir. J'aime bien l'évolution de quelques perso : Polly et son questionnement sur qui elle veut devenir, Clary et son obstination pour son père. Pour Louise, je n'arrive pas à accrocher. Je ne saisis pas la relation avec sa mère, l'agression de son père sert de base à sa fuite familiale, mais je trouve la ficelle un peu grosse ou alors ça me saoule que ce mec s'en sorte sans conséquence en manipulant toutes les femmes de son entourage (sa femme, sa mère, sa maitresse, sa secrétaire).
J'attends plus pour la suite !