Ratings7
Average rating3.9
With an introduction by Joanna Lumley The Light Years is the first novel in Elizabeth Jane Howard's bestselling five-part series, 'The Cazalet Chronicles'.Home Place, Sussex, 1937.For two unforgettable summers the Cazalets gathered together, safe from the advancing storm clouds of the Second World War. In the heart of the Sussex countryside these were still sunlit days of childish games, lavish family meals and picnics on the beach.This is the beginning.Howard's beautiful saga is the story of three generations of the Cazalet family. Their relatives, their children and their servants - and the fascinating triangle of their affairs . . .
Featured Series
5 primary booksCazalet Chronicles is a 5-book series with 5 primary works first released in 1990 with contributions by Elizabeth Jane Howard.
Reviews with the most likes.
Quite Enid Blyton for adults at times in the way that the children's adventures and the meals they have are described. This is a comforting book but layered with the tension that the family who have already been affected by one devastating conflict, wi soon be affected by another. There are continual undertones that behind the idyllic life of the family there are secrets lurking. Although this is not an explicit book, I do wish that she had been a little braver with Rachel's relationship with Sid. I understand that the way that it is portrayed is completely in character, but to me it is getting a bit too close to the unhappy homosexual trope. Still, this could be rectified in a later book.
Domestic worries
kids, spouses, that Hitler chap
surely none would lie.
Although there was nothing fundamentally wrong with the prose, I just couldn't get excited about any of the characters and as a result, wasn't particularly interested in what happened to any of them.
I'm a sucker for novels set in and around the War years (Brideshead Revisited, some of Anthony Powell's A Dance To The Music of Time etc) and I'd heard good things about The Cazalet Chronicles so I thought I'd give The Light Years a go. It's an astonishingly good book. At first it seems very “frightfully, frightfully” with the focus being on an upper middle class family as they spend the summers of 1937 and 1938 in the countryside under the looming shadow of war. But Howard's skill as a writer gives each of this huge cast of characters (from the main family themselves, their children down to servants and tutors) a unique voice of their own. You come to see them as living, breathing people not just words on a page. It's a magnificent achievement.
The Cazalets consist of three brothers (Hugh, the damaged World War 1 veteran; Edward, the ladies man; and Rupert, the failed artist making a living as a teacher), their wives and children and the grandparents - The Brig and the Duchy, and an extended family of blood relations and servants. The family business is in wood - hardwoods, veneers - and they spend the summers at Home Place in the Sussex countryside. This could easily have become a cliché-ridden “upstairs downstairs” tale (yes, Downton Abbey, I'm looking at you), but instead we get a nuanced, emotional, deeply engrossing story of a family at the tale end of the 30s, where Hitler looms large and thought of another war haunt even the children.
Their interactions, worries and troubles are superbly and subtly written, with each character a fully rounded person. What's even more impressive is how they change across the 500 pages of this novel (which, for a big book, never felt like a slog to read). Actions have consequences. People cope with the possibilities of unwanted pregnancy; public school bullying; the after effects of war; the pressures of business; affairs and the gulf between those who are “comfortably off” and those who struggle to make ends meet. Class is ever present, but it's not the focus. It is merely presented as “the way things are”. It sets the stage for a world about to be swept away by war.
Now I can see what all the fuss was about and I'll be reading the rest of the Cazalet Chronicles as soon as I can. Very highly recommended.