Girl from the South
Trollope, Joanna
Girl from the South / Joanna Trollope. - London : Bloosbury , 2002. - 311 p. ; 21 cm.
An admired English author of wryly intelligent family dramas, Trollope has never enjoyed a particularly wide American readership. This very likable novel, which features a protagonist from South Carolina involved with an English visitor, might change that. It even offers the notion that American family traditions, particularly Southern ones, offer a stability that contemporary English relationships often lack. Gillon Stokes is the odd girl out in her tradition-bound Charleston family, and when she goes to London on a typically whimsical impulse to pursue art research, she catches the eye of nature photographer Henry. When she casually invites him back home for a visit, Henry is charmed by the same folkways that Gillon finds so stifling, and he soon becomes so much part of her family that he begins turning their sense of themselves and each other upside down. Back in London, Henry's girlfriend, Tilly, is having problems keeping his friend William at bay, and discovers that she cares more than she expected she would about Henry's defection. The contrast between the casual, rootless Londoners and the rather rigid, assured Southerners is deliciously pointed, and Trollope offers two splendid scenes of very different mothers and daughters coming to terms with their dissimilarities. This is subtle, delicate entertainment that skillfully avoids romantic cliche while offering a group of believably quirky characters learning to adjust to new maturity.
0747558779
2002527426
British----Fiction
Americans---England----Fiction
Women art historians----Fiction
Photographers----Fiction
Friendship----Fiction
Charleston (S.C.)----Fiction
London (England)----Fiction
Domestic fiction
Bildungsroman
PR6070.R57 / G57 2002b
FIC TRO
Girl from the South / Joanna Trollope. - London : Bloosbury , 2002. - 311 p. ; 21 cm.
An admired English author of wryly intelligent family dramas, Trollope has never enjoyed a particularly wide American readership. This very likable novel, which features a protagonist from South Carolina involved with an English visitor, might change that. It even offers the notion that American family traditions, particularly Southern ones, offer a stability that contemporary English relationships often lack. Gillon Stokes is the odd girl out in her tradition-bound Charleston family, and when she goes to London on a typically whimsical impulse to pursue art research, she catches the eye of nature photographer Henry. When she casually invites him back home for a visit, Henry is charmed by the same folkways that Gillon finds so stifling, and he soon becomes so much part of her family that he begins turning their sense of themselves and each other upside down. Back in London, Henry's girlfriend, Tilly, is having problems keeping his friend William at bay, and discovers that she cares more than she expected she would about Henry's defection. The contrast between the casual, rootless Londoners and the rather rigid, assured Southerners is deliciously pointed, and Trollope offers two splendid scenes of very different mothers and daughters coming to terms with their dissimilarities. This is subtle, delicate entertainment that skillfully avoids romantic cliche while offering a group of believably quirky characters learning to adjust to new maturity.
0747558779
2002527426
British----Fiction
Americans---England----Fiction
Women art historians----Fiction
Photographers----Fiction
Friendship----Fiction
Charleston (S.C.)----Fiction
London (England)----Fiction
Domestic fiction
Bildungsroman
PR6070.R57 / G57 2002b
FIC TRO